Saturday, January 30, 2010

iPad Mania

The iPad has at this point generated probably almost as much if not more hype than the iPhone. However the difference is in the quality of hype. When the iPhone was coming out, almost everyone I knew either wanted one or at least was aware of it. This iPad buzz is an entirely different phenomenon. I have a few friends and relatives that I use as my test points when I am curious about how far an industry meme has penetrated into mainstream userdom.
None of them have heard of it. When I decribe it they all have had the same reaction.
So it's a really frickin big phone? Ewwww. This is a fascinating product to those in the blogosphere and in the tech press. Outside of our rarified world nobody cares. Ipods are great because they are smaller than a cd walkman and you can take them with you everywhere in your pocket. Obviously, the ipad isn't that!

I don't want to join the chorus of naysayers that predict doom and obscurity for Apple and it's latest product. But let me just say, this product is doomed for failure and will be the undoing of Apple. (I said I didn't want to, not that I wouldn't!)


I have been saying for a while, "gosh I wish I had a device that bridged the capabilities of a notebook and a cell phone." Something I can use for google maps, excel spreadsheets, email and web. This device seems to fit the bill but it utterly fails in a couple of places for me. That is why I will keep searching, or settle for a lesser device. It also has one or two major points in its favor.
The Failure Bowl
  • iBook store. I don't have to go to a different store to buy books, CDs or Mp3s on Amazon. But then maybe this is something to do with different content provider types.
  • No keyboard, sure you can hook one up via the dock port, or I assume bluetooth, but it really puts a cramp in portable as soon as you have more than one thing and cables involved.
  • Proprietary processor. I can't believe Apple acquired a chip designer and had their own chips made. Supposedly very fast, but if memory serves me correct Apple just got out of the chip business not too long ago for speed reasons.
  • No USB without Dock adapter. I use so many USB devices. Thumb drives, cameras, audio recorders and so on. USB is very necessary.
  • No SD card slot. I have a lot of these and they have started to become kind of the standard (finally!) for memory cards. This would be a killer in-field photo review box if it had an SD card slot. Field audio or video editor?
  • The apparent requirement of a host computer for iTunes? Am I reading the tech specs right? Do we need to have host machine to download apps/books/tunes to this guy?
  • The economy is in a dumpster. Not a good time to come out with a premium version of one of your more successful products.
  • Awfully big for an iPod.


The Success Bowl
  • The cheap data plan. AT&T will be offering two data plans apparently. One is $14.99 for 250MB of data a month. The other is $29.99 for unlimited download. All 3G iPads will be unlocked, meaning they can be used on other carriers. Also, these plans are month-to-month. No contract! This is really the killer app on this box that no-one is talking about. I am looking at you. How much do YOU pay right now for your puny cellphone's data plan? $40 a month? $480 a year? They must have really twisted AT&T's arm!
  • It already has all the App store apps to get it off the ground. Supposedly 99% will run. That 1% is a sliver of doubt though.
  • great size/form factor, nice light weight for a netbook.
  • Screen resolution of 1024x768. That's my 15" laptops screen resolution! On a 9" screen!
  • It is very Star Trek.
What it boils down to is Apple needs to decide whether this is a sub-notebook or a big-ass iPod. It seems to have features of both but is leaning towards the latter. I don't know if it is wise of them to revisit the path of micro-segmented product line. That was one of the often pointed out problems of the Jobs-less Apple that was remedied when he came back.
Look at how many iPods they have out now? Four seperate product lines with various memory tiers within each. With the iPad that makes 5. It also has a very small amount of storage in my opinion. 16, 32 or 64 gigs? really? For this to be the "one ring" of netbooks meets e-readers I would have thought triple digit storage capacity (or an SD slot!) would be crucial. Like many Apple products this may take another product cycle or two to reach its potential.
You could also say that they are finally making a sub-notebook at half the price of the white macbook. I know some kids will be trying to convince their parents with that argument!

Me, I plan on picking up a netbook, by Asus. I really need USB and SD card slots. Being an old goofball with stubby fingers I really need keys as well. I was hoping that Apple would pull off some amazing slider type device that has a thin metal keyboard (like the current bluetooth keyboard) that tucks away when not in use. Well it was nice knowing you Apple.
Expect a brisk early adopter sales frenzy followed by a long decline.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

BINGberry =bitter pie


Verizon Wireless pushed out a new app to it's RIM Blackberry users on December 16th. Some of you may have noticed an orange bing logo on your handsets desktop. This wasn't actually the new app, but an installer for a new app. Once you click on it Bing is installed on your device promising powerful search features and mapping content.
I figured why not. Microsoft has been batting 1000 lately so I will give it a chance.
Now having had the Bing app for a month it has to go.
It looks very nice. Wonderful job done in the UI side of things. Very Stylish.
the searches provide very nice results and are helpful and relevant to what I am looking for.
Reasons it has to go;
  1. Slow to the point of pain- It takes too long for Bing to find and display search results. when one of the search results is a location and a map is going to be displayed you may as well order a refill of that coffee.
  2. Crashes badly- When you try to just say screw it and exit to the blackberry desktop before it finishes fetching content (maybe to get a faster result from google?) Bing just folds in on its self like the house at the end of Poltergeist. Usually necessitating the blackberry equivalent of the 3 finger salute; depress silver button, slide back cover up, pull battery down and out, re-insert battery, wait for your berry to finish re-booting.
  3. Maps are not any better than Google-The splash screen graphics are pretty and follow the same graphic conventions as bing.com. which is stupid. This is a mobile device! Even at 3G speeds this is too much data to be fetching. Especially when I am trying to find the Caltrain stop in South San Francisco (which is pretty well hidden!). The Google maps app on my Blackberry is easily 10 times faster. Google maps satellite view displays much better and is easier to navigate by.
  4. Can't get rid of the Bing Icon-So the affair is over. Or should I say fling? Bing is a pig, hogs the covers and flirts with my roomates. I go to the uninstall page and yank that sucker out of there. Fleeing back to the waiting arms of google. Go back to the desktop to be greeted by...the same Bing icon. Even after it is uninstalled, the Bing installer will still hang out on your desktop. You can not remove it. All that you can do is "hide" it. It will still be there later on when you click"show all". Ready to be re-installed as if you had never had this awful experience.

Friday, January 15, 2010

XML

I have been doing some web work for a friend of mine. While I am not a hot shot web designer by any means, I am familiar with most of the technologies involved and have put together a few websites. Though I am not nearly artistic enough to 'design' a site nor crafty enough to put together all those fancy clever scripts and such that coders use to coerce the DOM into doing what it should in the first place.
This website was interesting to me as it is based on Flash. Flash is used in those annoying animated ads you see on your webmail page, as well as in those design-ey websites. It is also how more than a little 2D animation gets done these days. South Park being a well known example of Flash being used for broadcast production. I am under the impression that much of what is done over at Williams Street is based in Flash as well.
At first I thought I had an onerous Flash website task in front of me, so I downloaded the whole site to my drive and dug around looking for some FLA files.
Nothing! If you are going to design a site for someone it is only common courtesy to give them the source code of any live deliverables in case future updates need to be made. Sure they could come back to you for future jobs but guess what, you may be dead, had your laptop stolen or switched careers by then.
After further tinkering with the local copy of the site I deduced that even though it is based in Flash, the content is configured in a few XML files. This is fairly clever as editing Flash requires a copy of Flash CS4 be installed on your computer, while editing XML can in theory be done with the simplest text editor you can imagine, like Notepad or Simpletext.

I mapped out the directories and dug around in the HTML to figure out which directories were live. This was not easy. Some images appeared in multiple directories. The HTML basically only shows that a Javascript is pushing out the Flash content.

I ended up viewing "page info" in firefox to ascertain which flash files were active in which HTML pages.
I changed the name of the image directories until a name change broke the code and made the Flash literally draw a blank.

Then I was looking at the XML directory's files thinking that it might belong to the webhost's site control panel. Maybe it will give me a site map? I already unsuccessfully tried mapping the site manually into an Excel table. What can I say I like organizing things in Excel. All that did was waste a day and point out that a previous webmaster had been backdooring the site to host their (or a friends) resume!
Turns out the XML files pointed to the directories I had already sussed as likely the correct picture repositories.
So then I do the responsible thing and make a safe copy of the XML files. Then I start monkeying with them. Looks like I am on to something! I change the name in the XML. The name changes in the Flash! Well it works for the text. For images I have to clear my browser cache and restart the browser before I see changes.

Well I got all the pretty pictures up, but the text, which I thought was the easy part, is not cooperating. It shows up properly in the right place and time. However for some reason when I duplicate the syntax as it appears in the old version I get double spaced line breaks. The original is somehow able to get single spaced line breaks without resorting to any XML properties that I can see. Okay, well maybe the problem is that I am not seeing all of the XML attributes properly when I open it in Notepad. I think I need to try an XML editor? So I make the big mistake of downloading and installing Microsoft's XML Notepad 2007. Not a good idea. Completely hosed all the XML that I had already edited! Do not download XML Notepad 2007. Do not install it. Do not open work that you only have one copy of and edit it!
The edited work has a bunch of escape characters everyplace I inserted whitespace or tabbed things into place. This has the effect of breaking the XML and causing the Flash viewer to parse it as garbage.
So do I go back to my saved version and edit out the garbage or re-do it?
I am a lazy man so this is quite a conundrum.
I drink more coffee and do it all over again.
As of this writing I havent solved the double line space problem. It looks alright, but not as tight. I think I may need to edit it on a mac?

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Cisco Switch fun!

I recently was called out to swap a new switch for a failing switch. I was very excited about this job. I have mostly done desktop and server moves lately with very little "hard" networking involved.
I was going to be on my own for this project. No safety net!
It is a simple job;
  1. Label all patch cables to insure they get plugged back in to the same ports.
  2. Unbox the new Cisco switch.
  3. log into the new switch via Hyperterminal using a console cable.
  4. Configure an IP address for the switch's management Vlan. Make sure that it is on the same subnet as your computer.
  5. Use TFTP to transfer the config file to the switch (copy tftp start).
  6. Check to be sure the config copied over and there are no garbage characters. (Show start)
  7. Yank the old switch and swap its rack ears over to the new switch.
  8. Reconnect all the patch cables to the correct numbered ports, as well as the fiber interfaces and cables.
  9. Power up and you should be gold!
Labeling the cables was a cinch. One of my relatives gave me a Brother P-Touch label printer for my birthday about a month ago. So I printed out all 48 ports on one long strip. If I had printed them out one at a time I would have a bunch of little stickers I could lose. Also the P-Touch always advances and cuts off 3/4ths of an inch or so before it prints out. I would have thrown away about 3 feet of tape!
Logging in via Hyperterminal was a task. It normally is a walk in the park initiating a console session from Hyperterminal. Two obstacles came up.
  1. My laptop does not have a serial port
  2. Windows 7 does not have Hyperterminal
I dug around on the internet and found Hyperterminal on the website of the original developer. It is kind of expensive, but there is a free trial version. I suppose if I get more Cisco jobs I can buy it. Or I can probably use another terminal program like Putty.
The second problem was more trouble. I already have a USB to Serial box but it was not working with Windows 7 for some reason. I had re-installed it and gone up and down the registry several times. I emailed the manufacturer and got the latest "win 7 compatible" driver. No dice. I went to Central Computer and bought a different brand USB-Serial adapter. No luck, same chip. Same driver. Returned that one for a refund and went across town to Sweet Memory.
It's already 5pm and I needed to be onsite at 6pm! I headed around the corner to Subway and got a 6" veggie, anticipating a long night without any breaks. Once fed I whipped out the new serial adapter and my Leatherman, cut open the clamshell packaging and fished out the disk.
Ran the install disk and...its the same chip! On a hunch I checked the device manager and delete the "Blackberry virtual com port" device. Then I plugged the serial adapter in and bingo! the driver loads and starts! I could have saved 2 hours of stress and $20 if I had done this last night.
I finished my sandwich, run around the corner to the jobsite and...waited in the security office until exactly 6pm so they can sign me in (dorks).

Now the fun part, I connect the blue Cisco console cable to the new switch and power on. Awesome, I see the bootloader and POST messages! So at least I know that the software I installed last night and the adapter I bought one hour ago both work.
I logged in with the default Cisco password. (hint it rhymes with 'Frisco). Got to the configure terminal prompt, add an IP address to the management Vlan. Then I Telnet into the switch to be sure its up and do some pings back and forth. Then I open the Solarwinds TFTP server on my laptop to transfer the config file which one of the techs had emailed to me. Balls of fire, it worked! In case anyone is wondering you grab the file off of the TFTP server by typing copy tftp start, then you are prompted for the name or address of the server and name of file. There may be some cool way to push it from the server side but I am not aware.
I exited from the config terminal prompt to the enable prompt. I typed show run to see the current (modified default) configuration, then type show start to see the new configuration.
I then power cycle the switch to be sure it will start with the correct config. Of course I had previously taken the precaution of rooting through the new config to find the IP address of the management VLan and the enable password and VTY password. The telnet password of course is using service encryption so it is unreadable.

Now the boring part, de-racking the old switch, yanking the hardware off of it and installing the ears on the new one.
After I get off the phone with the tech at corporate headquarters I yank all the cables and pull the rack bolts. The switch barely moves?! Turns out they had installed the ears with the roundhead machine screws that come on the chassis instead of the flathead screws which you are supposed to use. when you add the height of the ears to the height of the roundhead screws they just dont fit inside a standard 2 post relay rack.
I ended up having to yank the cable management installed beneath the switch so that I can twist it sideways and remove it.
Ears swapped.
Switch bolted in.
Cable management bolted in.
Cables re-plugged.
The tech at corporate says he cant see the switch.
WTF?
I console in and everything looks fine?
I list all the interfaces and those are all up if they are plugged in. By the way if you do a straight show interface on a switch it can take forever! You may want to use show interface e 0/4 for example to see a specific ethernet interface or show ip interface brief so you don't have to scroll so much! Then it ocurrs to me to check the Vlans with show vlan. The vlans of interest (the ones which are supposed to be trunking to the router) do not exist? They are in the config but apparently this is not enough. So I create the vlans Set Vlan 666. That was all that was needed?! The new Vlans picked up the configs for each of the appropriate numbered vlans in the config. Crazy. After that it was just a little cable management and boxing up the old dud switch for RMA to Cisco.
Only took 4 and a half hours.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

O'Reilly plus Microsoft redux


Wow so this is the future of the Microsoft Press under O'Reilly? Note the AppleMacbook and Iphone front and center. Not sure if the brand clash is intentional but pretty sure someone is angry in Redmond.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Yahoo Goes...


Yahoo, sadly, has discontinued their "Go" service for mobile phones. This is quite disappointing to those of us that enjoyed accessing Ebay, Caltrain schedules and Flickr via an interface reminiscent of an early Palm pda.
To quote Yahoo on their departure from the web-portal-in-your-pocket game:
"November 18, 2009,
There are many reasons. There are more sophisticated mobile devices and browsers available to you, and your needs are changing. You need easier ways to access your favorite Yahoo! content and services from your mobile phone. To respond to these changes, we have created a new mobile homepage. It is available across more than 3,000 devices at http://m.yahoo.com. In addition, we have feature-rich applications for a variety of devices. We will make mobile versions of more Yahoo! services, improve existing offerings, and develop new and engaging experiences that integrate Yahoo! Mobile services and reach many mobile devices and browsers."

I guess the eggheads in Sunnyvale saw the writing on the wall in Cupertino (or Palo Alto!) and figured that competing against the iPhone onslaught whilst simultaneously facing the rising of the Androids was a losing battle. Especially when their offering was akin to a circa 1994 Apple Newton, in color.

The idea behind "Go" was essentially a portal type environment, not unlike a My-Yahoo page, with various widgets thrown together by independent developers on their own initiative. None of the widgets I used had any cost attached, so there was the added benefit of adding functionality to my mobile device without having to visit some "app store", negotiating multiple pages of an end user liscense agreement, giving a pound of flesh, and agreeing to be billed on my cell providers bill. (wait was that a one time charge or recurring?).Okay I won't lie. I used Yahoo Go to access Ebay from my blackberry. Frequently. It also had some nifty little widgets for several San Francisco Bay area transit agencies.
Of course Yahoo Go went nowhere. The initial offerings by Yahoo brand sites like Flickr were joined by a few others that are strategic partners like Ebay, and a few more that overachieving Stanford students found useful, like Caltrain ans sports scores. Then nothing. The Carousel interface was just silly. Once you had more than 5 or 6 items in there it became a pain in the ass. There was also the opaque functionality of it. It took me a couple of days to figure out how to properly exit from Go so my Blackberry's battery wouldn't die quite as fast.
So basically Yahoo realized, our mobile presence sucks.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Most Stylish Supercomputer


Jaguar



The Jaguar Supercomputer takes home the best dressed supercomputer in the petaflop or better division.


The Jaguar Supercomputer, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, US. (1.759 petaflops; 224,162 processors).
Though the color coordination may seem a bit out touch for a happening number crunching monster of the late 00's, the nearest competition is quite a bit dowdier in comparison. Both sartorially and in terms of brute hexadecimal obliteration.

IBM Roadrunner

Sporting the traditional IBM powder-coat black and Prussian blue, which of course dates back to the 80's and beyond, the IBM Roadrunner (Los Alamos National Laboratory, US ,1.042 petaflops; 122,400 processors) may be a heavy hitter in terms of numbers, but is not easy on the eyes.

The Chinese fielded an entry for the first time this year. Of course the Chinese entry Tianhe-1, National SuperComputer Center, China (563.1 teraflops; 71,680 processors), failed on both parts. Being neither a petaflop capable system, nor very well dressed at all.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Windows 7 tricks

Geeky Shortcuts

Big one and little one If you are eyesight challenged (like me) pressing the Windows key and the + key will zoom in on your display. To make it smaller again, Windows key and the - key.

the fun one-press the windows key + tab. Windows will show a 3D rotating view of your open windows.

Snappy one. Try pressing the Windows key plus any of the arrow keys. This causes your open windows to snap open or closed or...

Invisible one. moving the mouse cursor over the small rectangle at the lower right of the screen will make all open windows transparent. To do this without your mouse, press the Windows key + space bar.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Bass







I was just working on my
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Mesa-Boogie Tube Bass Amps

Visit this group

Friday, October 23, 2009

Macintoshes, Not as safe as you think



Most of us are familiar with the Macintosh "feature" that they are supposedly less suceptible to viruses and hacks in general than Windows computers. Apple has put this out there in its marketing and TV commercials. Both implicitly (in the case of "just wanting an computer to work") and in explicitly in overt claims that the mac platform is virus free.
Trendmicro, the home of Housecall free online virus-scanning service has recently published a little piece about Macintosh security threats.
The Article details 4 trojan type threats which prey upon the ease of installation which Apple computers are known for.
Two of these trojans are inserted into pirated versions of Mac software, iWork 09 and Snow Leopard, which once installed compromise the security of the systems. Apparently these have been making their way around the torrenting community
One of the trojans uses an age old trick from the Windows side. The executable file presented as a pornographic video gambit.
The fourth is not so much a security threat as just bad sportsmanship. A "free" program known as Macsweeper (not to be confused with Mac Sweeper) will do a systems scan and reccomend a course of action. However at this point you must pay to continue! Also pushing it over into the malware category is the difficulty of removing the Macsweeper program. Apperanlt it has also surfaced as Imunizator.
I would like to also add that Macs, being based on the BSD unix platform are often able to be compromised from the shell session prompt. Not a lot of folks are familiar with the workings of Unix, but there are still those of us out there that remember logging into University Unix servers and using VI, nano etc.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

O'Reilly plus Microsoft?


Wow this is either awesome or awful. Apparently OReilly press, the alpha and omega of IT and programming books, will be co-producing and distributing Microsoft press books.
I am hoping this will mean that future Microsoft press books will be a bit easier to follow, less error riddled, and will stick to the exam topics for which they are intended.
I have had some bad experiences in the past with studying for an IT exam, then when exam time rolls around I am presented with questions that were not covered in the book. Or more commonly, the books cover material that is quite out of date. (IPX SPX?)
Now I am off to play another game of HRmageddon.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Its HERE!

My Windows 7 Party pack has arrived. There have been a lot of posts about this elsewhere. Even an unboxing on youtube. Which was posted on October 3rd? How did he get his so damn fast! I also have to say that I am disappointed in the balloons. Plain color balloons. No "Windows 7" logo or even a "Microsoft" logo? How else will my prospective guests find their way to my hovel, and not to all of the garage sales or bounce houses which infest my neighborhood on weekends. Jeez, printed balloon technology is pretty mature Steve Ballmer. Bill Gates used to spring for em all the time. and you know if you dont measure up as cool as Gates. Thats saying something.

I haven't seen any mention of the other contents. Or perhaps my box is "regionalized" for the cynical west coast with extra incentives? In addition to all the other goodies, there are a good wad of flyers or what may better be described as handbills.

1-"Thank you for attending our windows 7 launch party" cards. Business card sized containing a URL which will allegedly have special offers on Oct 22nd and thereafter.

2-14 day free tryouts for Zune. Apparently Zune is a monthly fee with unlimited music. Still I can't see installing a media program like Zune for only a 14 day tryout. A month, maybe.

3-Flyers for Corel WinDVD pro and Digital Studio. Also with a discount code for 50% off. Neither of these appeal to me as I already have Sonar 7, Cubase 4 and Logic 8. I also already play DVDs on my computer everyday, woth no problem. ($99 for dvd/blue ray software? What does a standalone player cost, $101 dollars?)

4-Postcard sized flyer from Sonic Solutions for a package deal on Nero 9 and "Backitup and Burn it". Never heard of the latter product. Nero has worked well for me in the past.

5-A postcard good for a 40% discount on Norton Internet Security 2010. Nothing good to say about Norton.

6-Finally, postcards for a free download of Kaspersky and an entry into their contest for a Kaspersky themed martini party. Yeah that sounds like fun, distilled spirits and anti virus software. With olives.

Yeah, pretty mundane stuff.

Virtual Shmirtual

Went to an IT event last night at the Ritz Carlton. The focus was desktop virtualization. Noticably absent were Oracle and Sun who have been huge proponents of the thin client/virtual client thing. It was an HP, Citrix, Intel Micorsoft party.
The food was excellent. The prizes were neat (an HP netbook and some core 2 duo processors). I wish I had won one! There were some gee whiz demonstrations of the flexibilty of the technology. I like the one where the guy opened up powerpoint in an XP desktop, then opened vista and it migrates there, then he opens a windows 7 desktop and it automatically migrates there as well.
A couple of questions come to mind though.
If everyone is accessing their desktop 'virtually' over the network this will mean you probably need to upgrade network infrastructure. Especially if they are relying on thin clients that cant do any lifting of their own. A network outage will be even more paralyzing than with regular desktops!
Also, this seems like it takes work away from low paid entry level workers and shifts it to middle management, back end MIS types. So the job you used to pay 5 guys $30k to do, you are now paying 2 guys $80k to do. and youhave less coverage of the 'floor'.
It's like with printers. Network printers are supposed to put a stop to waste and make things more efficient. But almost every company I work for has multiple local printers in addition to the big HP 8100's at teh end of each cubicle row.
I dont think virtual desktops will replace regular desktops. They do fill a niche rather well. For instance for telemarketers and customer service people that have a high turnover and not much personalization. Also for medical profession workers this may have some benefits.
I think I will download the demo and play with it for kicks though.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Party Pack!


My UPS notification came on Thursday. My "party pack" is on its way! The contents of which are intended for my Windows 7 party.
The alleged items in the box;
win 7 ultimate "Steve Ballmer signature edition"
Win 7 64 bit upgrade disk
Win 7 playing cards
10 Win 7 tote bags
Win 7 napkins (no table cloth?)
a Win 7 puzzle
Win 7 balloons
and a poster.

There may be some other stuff as well. If there is it slipped my mind.
I had originally intended for my party to be a "Win 7 does music production party".
Instead I think I will make it more a Win vs Mac party. I have a mac mini running 10.5.5 and my Lenovo laptop running Win 7 RC. They both have the same Intel 945 chipset, almost identical cpus and ram. The laptop has a much bigger faster hard drive though.
The laptop shreds the mac mini! It can't be just the hard drive. The Mac mini is'nt just slower, its agonizing!
I think it will also be interesting to see the differences and similarities between the two.
BTW I snagged the photo of the box from another fellows blog. Interesting story. He went to the Win 7 House Party website and tried to sign up as a host. Apparently his tiny Carribean nation was not represented! He wrote Microsoft about this (or emailed I am not clear) and was sent a full party pack! So even though he isnt officially hosting a party he seems to be among the earliest folks to receive their party packs!
It also bears mentioning that some people are selling theirs on ebay. Not very sporting, but not surprising.

Monday, September 28, 2009

H4N, Windows Party

So I made it to the finals for the windows party. Then because I completed the "finalist" steps immediately after receiving the confirmation email, I was apparently confirmed as a party host just by virtue of my promptness.
The theme of my Windows 7 release party is "Windows 7 for Audio Production: ready for prime time?" I will be running my RTM candidate version of win 7 with Sonar 7 and Cubase 4 audio applications.
check it out if you are interested. Feel free to bring some chips and dip.
http://www.houseparty.com/party/183483

In more annoying news I noticed just recently that ZOOM/Samson does not offer a Macintosh driver for the H4N portable audio recorder. So if I decided to upgrade to a Macbook I would have to boot to Windows in order to access the device? This is annoying as I had hoped to use Logic on a Macbook. Part of my long range plan for upgrading my audio production facility. So now if I want to rock Logic on a Macbook I will be buying a 3rd audio interface!

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Windows party?

So I get this email last week asking if I would like to host a windows 7 party in early - mid october. i would get a windows 7 party host kit and a fresh off the presses copy of Windows 7 Ultimate.
Hells yeah! So I go and sign up and fill out all the weird forms. Its done through a third party site which is apparently just for organizing parties, called houseparty.com.
Ooh I hope they paid a marketing firm to come up with that name. Well I guess all the good ones are taken already?

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

More DNS-ing

Well last night I decided to take a brilliant leap of faith and convert my entire second disk (data disk) from basic to dynamic. the Server 70-290 book swears up and down you can do this with no repercussions. So I open up disk management and click on the status box next to the data disk, and its 4 partitions (ok volumes). I select convert to dynamic disk, expecting a lengthy ordeal of every single directory being re-created in the dynamic disk world.
Well i guess it just changes how the partition table sees things, as it only took a few seconds to finish.
However, and you knew there had to be a however, the DNS/DC was taken off line by this operation. There really should be a big red flashing box that warns you about this when you convert the disk it resides on. It would be nice if it was mentioned in the books as well.
I got up this morning and tried logging in with one of my 'users'. No dice. Then I went to the server and popped open users and computers. What the hell! Nothing is visible! I can't look at users, computers, cant even open disk management on the server?
Well I looked at all the perms for the various folders and they seemed the same.
So I restarted the system thinking that, maybe the paths look funny to the DNS, after a restart it will work with the new version of the partition table.
It works now.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

I control the domain

Well got my Domain controller up a few weeks ago. Still trying to get it to play nice. I keep getting errors back from my webhost's DNS sayingI am stepping on their toes. Think I need to revise my forward and reverse lookup settings.

Today my KVM cables came, so I cam disconnecting everything and patching in my 4 port KVM.
This means I get to go back to 2 monitors for my main system and the Mac gets relegated to one of the KVMs ports!

Sunday, June 14, 2009

I went to NYC for a few weeks recently. It sure was fun to spend my breakfast working furiously at my laptop in various wifi enabled cafes around Brooklyn.
Two that I can reccomend are Gorilla coffee in Park Slope

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and Atlas Cafe in the less hip area of Williamsburg.

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Before my trip I procured a nice new gadget. Its called the H4N handy recorder by Zoom of Japan.
Its not as small as I would like as I prefer to travel light. Literally one carry on was all I had for my laptop, gear, and clothes. But it does everything you could want in an audio gadget, well nearly.
It is primarily a field recorder.
Recording to SD flash memory. I used a handful of 512mb and 1gb chips I had for my canon e320. I plan on picking up some SDHC jobbers in the near future.
It works extremely well as a field recorder. I got some great snippets of subway noises, streetcorner preachers and some kickin tunes of some bands I saw, such as 5 dollar priest and Marcia Ball. In addition to that it can also be used as a plain old 4 track, think Tascam 424MKII. I have yet to explore this option as I have a perfectly good laptop with Twelve Tone/Roland's Sonar 7 producer. Who needs 4 tracks whenyou have unlimited!
This is also where the H4N does its big trick. It's also an audio interface!
I was skeptical of the utilityof this, but it works great in ASIO mode, even in Windows 7!
You can even record from the built in mics straight to Sonar.
Needless to say, this has replaced my blackberry 8320 as my new favorite toy.
If you are ever in NYC and are a camera, video, or audio geek, you sincerly owe it to yourself to stop by B&H. Fry's has nothing on this place for sheer geekery.

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