353 Lotus blogs updated hourly. Who will post next? Home | Downloads | Events | Jobs | Twitter | Bookmarks | Pods | Forum | Blogs | Search | myPL | About 
 
Latest 7 Posts
These videos are made of win
Wed, Feb 1st 2012 312
You just can't make this stuff up
Mon, Jan 23rd 2012 401
Lotusphere 2012 OGS
Mon, Jan 16th 2012 273
RAAWWWWRRRR!!!
Tue, Jan 10th 2012 741
A thought experiment
Sun, Dec 11th 2011 65
Do not settle
Thu, Oct 6th 2011 36
Welcoming our newest colleagues
Thu, Sep 29th 2011 50
Top 10
RAAWWWWRRRR!!!
Tue, Jan 10th 2012 741
You just can't make this stuff up
Mon, Jan 23rd 2012 401
These videos are made of win
Wed, Feb 1st 2012 312
Lotusphere 2012 OGS
Mon, Jan 16th 2012 273
The ultimate Domino Designer performance improvement for XPages developers
Mon, Sep 19th 2011 67
A thought experiment
Sun, Dec 11th 2011 65
Now running 8.5.2, and a hidden gem
Tue, Aug 24th 2010 61
Google+ is already stupid
Wed, Jun 29th 2011 56
True then, true now
Wed, Aug 24th 2011 54
YellowDay: LotusLive Notes and the meaning of Hybrid
Wed, Aug 11th 2010 51


An even better hidden gem in Notes 8.5.2
Nathan T Freeman    

After much gnashing of the teeth and bearing of the claws over this item since Notes 8.0, IBM has finally added "Delete" to the context menu in the Mail address type-ahead. This is an excellent way to purge email addresses that you know are defunct.

In fact, I'd very much appreciate it if you'd take a moment and do this for me by removing my old lotus911.com address!

Unfortunately, the process displays a rather annoying confirmation dialog, but it's still a huge improvement over the old technique of going to the recent contacts list, finding the entry, pressing delete, throwing some chicken bones, chanting "there's no place like 127.0.0.1" three times, and then rubbing your armpits vigorously.  At least I think that was the old way to remove an automatically added contact.

Enjoy!

---------------------
http://ntf.gbs.com/nathan/escape.nsf/d6plinks/NTFN-88NL9Z
Aug 25, 2010
20 hits



Recent Blog Posts
312


These videos are made of win
Wed, Feb 1st 2012 9:30p   Nathan T Freeman
It has long been my opinion that good software designers should understand the basic economics of trade. Ours is a highly specialized practice, and it produces an absolutely staggering surplus when we trade. But this can be very difficult to understand unless you grasp the concept of Comparative Advantage. (Understanding Asymmetrical Information is also a good idea, but let's save that for another day.) Because of the absolutely marvelous title, I stumbled upon these videos from Prof [read] Keywords: ntf
401


You just can't make this stuff up
Mon, Jan 23rd 2012 8:40p   Nathan T Freeman
Just noticed on Planetlotus.org that IBM has a new Redbook out on WebSphere Transaction Cluster Facility. WebSphere TCF must have been so-named by someone leaving for a new job at Microsoft that week. [read] Keywords: ibm ntf microsoft planetlotus planetlotus.org websphere
273


Lotusphere 2012 OGS
Mon, Jan 16th 2012 6:40a   Nathan T Freeman
Special guest: Michael J. Fox Frankly, I think that sums it up. No point in staying... [read] Keywords: lotusphere ntf
741


RAAWWWWRRRR!!!
Tue, Jan 10th 2012 11:00p   Nathan T Freeman
There's some tuning left to do, but I wanted to get this out to the world before Lotusphere. I've created an XPages SDK for Eclipse RCP, so you can install the latest version of Eclipse and easily set up Notes or Domino as your target platform for your Java code. I assigned myself the task of documenting this internally for GBS in January, and I realized that I could spend a day documenting it, or spend two days writing a program that would do it automatically. It was really n [read] Keywords: domino lotusphere notes ntf xpages apple eclipse java mac openntf
65


A thought experiment
Sun, Dec 11th 2011 10:50p   Nathan T Freeman
In this time of vibrant political debate in the US, I am frequently confronted by the notion of the social contract. I find this idea very challenging; both to accept or to refute. So I created a thought experiment that sums up the issue for me... Let us hypothesize for a moment that you are a slave. In your captivity, you are permitted to procreate. Your owner proposes the following: "I will buy your unborn child in exchange for an extra meal for you and your spouse each day. [read] Keywords: ntf exchange exchange wiki
36


Do not settle
Thu, Oct 6th 2011 12:10a   Nathan T Freeman
Forget what you know about Apple products. Learn from Apple's founder. "You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart." You will be missed, Steve. [read] Keywords: ntf apple




50


Welcoming our newest colleagues
Thu, Sep 29th 2011 10:48a   Nathan T Freeman
If you read this blog, you've probably heard by now that Synaptris is part of GBS. I'm very pleased to welcome our new colleagues. As it happens, my team has been working closely with Synaptris engineers for several months now. We tapped them to work on our Dojo Grid control for surfacing Domino views presented in Transformer apps. They have done a spectacular job. We're looking forward to deepening the integration even further to leverage their expertise in content searching and [read] Keywords: domino ntf xpages applications dojo email integration
67


The ultimate Domino Designer performance improvement for XPages developers
Mon, Sep 19th 2011 10:10a   Nathan T Freeman
If you're an experienced XPages developer, chances are you live in the Source tab of the XPages editor. But even if you live in that editor, you'll notice that various things seem to slow down Designer with mysterious causes. If you're willing to give up some of the bells & whistles, like drag/drop from the Controls Palette, custom editors for Properties, or icon cues on the Outline, you can switch from the XSP editor to the native XML editor using the following preference se [read] Keywords: domino ntf xpages properties xml
54


True then, true now
Wed, Aug 24th 2011 6:43a   Nathan T Freeman
Economic reality hasn't changed. We'll miss you, Mary Beth. But the world needs a serious UX effort put into 3D modelling software. When you leave it to code slingers, you get this. Please end the suffering. [read] Keywords: ntf interface
43


April 24, 2002
Sat, Aug 6th 2011 9:43p   Nathan T Freeman
Name that speaker.... The congress and the president will shift radically towards expanding the size and scope of the federal government. This will satisfy both the liberals and the conservatives. Military and police powers will grow satisfying the conservatives. The weflare state, both domestic and international, will expand, satisfying the liberals. Both sides will endorse military adventurism overseas. This is the most important of my predictions. Policy changes [read] Keywords: ntf policies security




Created and Maintained by Yancy Lent - About - Blog Submission - Suggestions - Change Log - Blog Widget - Advertising - FAQ - Mobile Edition