Posts from March 2008

ExpanDrive

There's a lot of buzz in the Apple-related blogosphere about ExpanDrive. John Gruber likes it a lot, and so does TUAW. Based on very brief experiments, I have to say I rather like it too.

If there's a remote server you can connect to with SSH or SFTP, ExpanDrive lets you mount the filespace as a drive. I've mentioned MacFusion before, which does the same thing. They share a common heritage:

  • FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a project which originated on Linux. It provides a framework for creating things which look like filesystems in ordinary programs, rather than them having to be part of the operating system. There's a variety of fun stuff you can do with this.
  • MacFUSE is a Google project which implemented FUSE for the Mac.
  • ExpanDrive and MacFusion provide a nice GUI that implements the 'remote SSH server as local disk' in a way that ordinary users can make sense of it
The upshot is that you can open a file in any application just as if it was on your local machine, even if it's on the far side of the world. MacFusion is free, ExpanDrive costs money. They both work. But at present, the latter seems to be faster and more reliable, so I'm quite likely to hand over some of my hard-earned pennies.

The light fantastic

Developments in alternative energy sources are accomplishing some wonderful things. Yes, yes, so they could reduce greenhouse gases and our dependency on polluting fossil fuels. But that's old news.

More exciting things are in store. Take, for example, these illuminated garden birds.

Solar powered illuminated garden birds

Admit it, you've been wanting these for years! Well, now you can have them without the wiring hassles which have plagued installers of illuminated garden birds in the past.

Staying Alert

Adrian and Pilgrim

The FT has an article about my pals at AlertMe. (They have a fun product - low-power wireless devices that monitor your home and can report back to you in a variety of ways. We have one of their early kits in the CamVine office.)

The article talks about the benefits for a UK startup of getting US-based funding, something we also did for DisplayLink in the early days. I suspect, though, that the relative speed with which they accomplished it is more down to the nature of the funding round, the particular fund they attracted, and the fact that there was only one investor rather than several, than it was to a real difference between the US and UK.

With CamVine, I decided to go for Angel rather than VC investors for the first round, and even stayed clear of Angel groups. I think dealing with just a few individuals made everything much easier. Perhaps we were just lucky, but we got a great group of investors... from this side of the Atlantic!