Scott Hanselman

Hanselminutes Podcast 215 - World Airplane Travel Tips with James Senior

May 28, 2010 Comment on this post [3] Posted in Musings | Podcast
Sponsored By

Camera_mug__604x640_ My two-hundred-and-fifteenth podcast is up. Scott and James are on a world tour and racking up the miles. James shares some of his best travel tips and tricks, and Scott shares how he moves through airport security as fast as possible. It's Techie Travel with James and Scott this week on Hanselminutes, recorded from Sydney, Australia.

(Ya, I know, I'm late to post this.)

Subscribe: Subscribe to Hanselminutes Subscribe to my Podcast in iTunes

Download: MP3 Full Show

Links from the Show

Do also remember the complete archives are always up and they have PDF Transcripts, a little known feature that show up a few weeks after each show.

I want to add a big thanks to Telerik. Without their support, there wouldn't be a Hanselminutes. I hope they, and you, know that. Someone's gotta pay the bandwidth. Thanks also to Carl Franklin for all his support over these last 4 years!

Telerik is our sponsor for this show.

Building quality software is never easy. It requires skills and imagination. We cannot promise to improve your skills, but when it comes to User Interface and developer tools, we can provide the building blocks to take your application a step closer to your imagination. Explore the leading UI suites for ASP.NET AJAX,MVC,Silverlight,Windows Formsand WPF. Enjoy developer tools like .NET reporting, ORM,Automated Testing Tools, TFS, and Content Management Solution. And now you can increase your productivity with JustCode, Telerik’s new productivity tool for code analysis and refactoring. Visit www.telerik.com.

As I've said before this show comes to you with the audio expertise and stewardship of Carl Franklin. The name comes fromTravis Illig, but the goal of the show is simple. Avoid wasting the listener's time. (and make the commute less boring)

Enjoy. Who knows what'll happen in the next show?

About Scott

Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.

facebook twitter subscribe
About   Newsletter
Hosting By
Hosted in an Azure App Service
July 08, 2010 19:54
Hey Scott, this was a great podcast. One question I had was your take on Evernote security. I really liked the idea that you saved "everything" in Evernote, including where you parked your car, your airline tickets, etc. As you mentioned, even if you lose your phone your info is accessible since it's in "the cloud".

However, it seems that this could be a potentially bad idea. All you need is one well placed disgruntled Evernote employee, which is certainly a not unheard of scenario with other companies. Then your private data may be available to a few or the masses. Having potentially let others know exactly where you parked your car and that you will be gone for a couple of days or, for all your adoring fans, exactly what plane you are on and where you are sitting, could be an issue.

While we commonly have sensitive data in the cloud such as our email on Live Mail, gmail, etc, these systems are usually tried and true. Evernote is a newer company without this robust history and credibility yet.

Are you worried about this? I noticed that if you upgrade to the paid account you can encrypt your notebooks, however, does this affect searching? It seems that searching is one of the biggest draws of Evernote and to cripple this feature would potentially make it nothing more than a cloud drive.

I would be very interested in hearing your take on this as the tips you offered were great and I would really like to start using them.

Thanks!
July 08, 2010 21:26
Matt - Interesting question. Hadn't thought of it much. Certainly if I my password was "password" or I didn't trust the guys at Evernote this could be a problem. Encrypting the data shouldn't affect searching but it does mean my password needs to be extra secure.

When I say everything, I don't save passwords in Evernote, but I hear what you're saying. Ultimately though, we all live in public. If someone is going to come looking for you, they will likely find you.
July 19, 2010 19:54
Completely agree. Usually when family or friends complain about the lack of privacy these days I let them know that nothing is private. They don't like that response much. So, I tell them that I am private by anonymity; meaning that no one really knows or cares about what Matt Penner is doing. :) Scott Hanselman might be a different story. :)

Comments are closed.

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.