Saturday, December 18, 2010

Laptop Screen Repaired!

Just finished replacing T's laptop screen - someone evidently sat on it whilst it was snuggled away on top of a beanbag seat - and it was easier than I expected.

Had a great experience ordering from SCREENAID - try them out if you need a laptop screen fix - cost me a hundred bucks.

T's laptop screen photo

Of course, I'm a DIY sort of guy - no instructions specific to the model laptop but it was fairly obvious how to replace it. I will say a credit card edge is one of the best tools for splitting the snap edges without scratching the plastic case of the laptop.

And small screws require a towel to keep them from bouncing when they fall. It took 10 minute to find one very specifically small and unique screw that bounced into a crack on the floor!

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Perfect day

If you are a duck. Makes me want to stay home and listen to The Cure!

Monday, November 8, 2010

What I Did This Weekend

original feast of souls book cover

I had a no phone weekend and was able to get a few things together, catch up on sleep (sleeping when one wants with no obligation to daylight or schedules is a wonderful thing!), and read C. S. Freidman's Feast of Souls. I enjoyed the book but not quite as much as her other Coldfire series. The ideas and concepts of magic were somewhat related in both books; magic being a thing of thoughts and spirit, tied to our souls.

So, although enjoyable, I didn't think this book as complex as the Coldfire series, and without noting anything of the plot or approach, give this a "good weekend reader" and a "warily bought the second book in the series". I'll journal if it improves!

Saturday, October 23, 2010

I'm of one mind on this decision...


Watched Jekyll on Netflix and have to say I really enjoyed it. It was different that expected, had it's weaknesses in acting and development of characters, but on the whole very enjoyable flight of fancy.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Recommended MP3 Cleanup: MusicBrainz Picard

Having several computer systems, in the inevitable process of moving music content from one computer to another, ripping on one computer, and pulling them into one library, managing things sometimes get confusing. That includes using different music managers that have different capabilities for managing MP3 tags metadata.

screen capture of musicbrainz picard program

I've found MusicBrainz Picard to be very useful for auto scanning, fixing, and identifying tracks. It it also multiplatform - important to me as I use several different operating systems and several versions of those operating systems.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Really Enjoyed Her Voice

Found what is to me a new sound - maybe you've heard her before - like her voice and the sound arrangements too!

Natly Dawn on YouTube


Pomplamoose Music has a few of her other tunes. I like her cover of "Telephone" too. Check them out via http://www.youtube.com/user/PomplamooseMusic

Monday, June 14, 2010

Urgent Security Hole?

I started up my Windows XP operating system for some testing, Firefox updated and warned me to update my Adobe Flash immediately. Had their own splash page with the notification that "You should update Adobe Flash Player right now".

If you click it goes to Adobe's download page where it automatically has selected to download McAfee's virus tools. Unchecking that and continuing on (no, that isn't part of an update, thank-you-very-much) and then it requires that you install their plug-in to update. There are plenty of _older_ versions that linked directly to the download if any failures, but no longer; you can't download the installer directly from those pages.

So screw them; I've uninstalled Adobe's products (Flash, Macromedia, and Acrobat) from my MS Windows image. I still use a 3rd party PDF viewer.

The only thing I miss is I did like the Fligo screen saver that needed Flash. The rest of the websites, although they indicate they need Flash, really don't - most of the functions have been banner checks, Instant Messenger functions, or "you've got mail" notifications.

The only other site I use that might need it is YouTube, as the Firefox stable versions don't support HTML5 unless you use the nightlies (firefox-3.7a5pre.en-US.win32.zip), so I guess I'll get the nightly for use on YouTube, and keep the stable version for all my plug-ins.

I imagine Adobe is doing this for their best interest, but as and end-user, I say "screw you for screwing me". You should at least make the barrier to entry (that is, acquiring your software) as low as possible, if you want it used. Based on the hope that we don't need Flash in the near future, keep on pissing on your users, and we'll go on to something else.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Tired in CA

Long day of travel and although the weather is nice I'm tired in CA.
This time change is getting to me quickly.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Nexus One versus iPhone

Potatoe, potato - do they convey the same information?
photo of iphone 2g and google phone or android nexus one phone
No, they don't.

They can sound the same, perform the same function, but they are different and convey a different meaning in values, a different focus on the importance of meaning, and a different awareness and perspective of what is important.

My experiences thus far with the Google Nexus One, running the Android OS and the Apple iPhone 2g have been functionally similar and vastly different to what a desired experience with a smartphone means to me.

I was using a pay as you go plan on t-mobile before and happy with my iPhone. It is a very pleasant user experience for me for a variety of reasons. Most importantly the screen is nice to view web content and the web browser is pretty decent. The applications are consistent in their behavior and one quickly learns what to expect, including any of the things that might seem lacking by comparison to a newer model smartphone.

Of course, I jailbroke my iPhone early.

Not as soon as I received it, but as soon as I could figure out how and find the correct software and setup the correct configuration of software and iTunes on my PC under Windows. While I normally prefer to run Linux, I use Windows XP for gaming, when I need to test in a Windows environment (including helping family and friends), and specifically when I need iTunes.

Those Linux users among you know where this is going. The biggest issue I have wasn't necessarily using iTunes - although that is a decent program and does what it is designed to do successfully -but the technical restrictions on using my phone the way I want and actually feeling like I was owning my phone. Thanks be to those wonderful explorers that found out how to jailbreak the iPhone and shared that information with the rest of us. If it wasn't for them I personally would not have gotten as much out of the phone.

Honestly, jailbreaking the phone didn't give me all that much more than the iPhone already had, or already had the capability to do. I like to tinker and hack around with my technologies, so that is reason enough, but I also found a few applications that I wanted that were only available if I jailbroke my iPhone and installed them myself. I couldn't get them from the iTunes store. Google Voice Mobile - excellent. Toggle for turning off data services (so I didn't get charged while using my month to month for cell only; I used wifi for data access) - excellent. Cydia to install GPL and other apps at a whim - excellent. And my favorite, Moleskin which is now Noteskinnery+, wasn't available in the iTunes store. What was nice was being able to manually backup my iPhone and wander around the operating system to backup program settings. Saved my contact data and personal information when iTunes was too helpful and reset everything for me.

And that is not to say there aren't really neat programs in iTunes Store to download. There are and I have a few (Yahoo Messenger, Facebook App, WoW Armory, Blizzard Authenticator, Guitar tuner).

But the real experience in the iPhone is that it is nice. The screen is crisp. The touch sensitivity is really good. It has buttons - actual real world buttons - where it should. Where it is not so nice is when it is busy and you have to wait for it - whatever application you are running at the time - to finish and respond to the button or action you want but it blissfully seems to ignore. However, it is quite loyal in showing you that it is busy thinking. Like when your dog ignores you and cocks it's head sideways with that blank look on it's face, but still has the decency to pant with it's tongue out to let you know it is still breathing.

Enter the "Google Phone" or HTC Nexus One running the Android OS.

Now I ordered this on day 2 when it became available. It arrived quick and I happily tried to register and experienced one of the worst end-user consumer phone experiences I've ever had. It wasn't horrible - just the worst. It was due to the lack of any printed material or instructions to use the phone.

I couldn't figure out how to open the back of the phone up to put in the battery. I don't consider myself an idiot - but I felt like one so I must have been. I don't like technologies that make me feel like an idiot. Mom, I apologize profusely for ever letting you run Windows ME or buying those Lexmark printers. But I digress.

Where was I? Oh yes. Idiot. What seems to be an easy affair of popping the case open wasn't. The device - being new - was tight. The backing has this cover over the camera that for all intents and purposes looks as if maybe you'll tear the phone apart if you tried prying that off. So I looked elsewhere. No high-tactile grabby thingies (I'm sure that is high-tech user talk), no symbols. The bottom looked like it could come off (but of course, it doesn't). So, what will seem obvious only after one figures it out, is to put a fingernail in the microphone hole and pull. Hard. And don't be all wimpy when your nail peels off and scream like a little girl. Not that I ever would mind you. >.>

So there. Got the battery in. The sim card is in. I power it up. That was the end of my horrible experience! No. Not really.

The worst part is still yet to come. I started in, excited to see the walk through screens and it steps you through entering in the information you need to setup your phone screen by screen. And noticed something very important. The touch screen seems no where near as sensitive -as accurate - as the iPhone. No big deal, not a big complaint, until it affects your user experience and you can't get to the next screen.

You see, for anything that is a data entry or text entry field, the device very faithfully pops up a qwerty-like keyboard. Near the bottom right of this onscreen keyboard is "Del" above "Go" above another 'button' on the screen "Search". Let me tell you when you want to type in your name and password information, and you have characters in your name that cause you to shift the on screen keyboard to different modes and back, you most certainly, maddeningly, will not wish upon your enemies that your entire entry is automagically deleted by the "Del" key when you actually want to "Go" ahead and submit your information!

I've decided not to write up the screaming and expletives. Let me just state, that the wonderful thing about the Nexus One is "rooting" it (or jailbreaking it in iPhones terms) is pretty much as easy as downloading your phone's operating system image and clicking "Yes, I know I'll void my warranty", but since you own it they'll let you anyway. It was wonderful. I felt like I owned my phone. And I did own my phone *geek giggles* right after I set it up. Which brings me to my point about the "del" and "go" key above - when you reset it, you'll have to do that all again. -.-

So anyone who wishes to experience the uh, experience can easily do so. I don't suggest it, although it was good motivation for me to learn how to backup and restore my entire system and configuration as quickly as possible.

That is also one of the things I don't like about the Nexus One - the onscreen keyboard positioning of items could be much better. Also, the other "onscreen" touch buttons (not really buttons but stenciled onto the glass at the bottom of the screen as touch-points) is the "back" arrow button, the "menu" button, the "home" button, and that pesky "search" button I mentioned earlier that likes to get attention when the 'go' button is too busy.

That back button, it's finicky. It functions as a back function, when you are in a function (in an app) and eventually a sort of "escape" key to get you back to the top level screen. You can get to that top level using the "home" button - but it doesn't seem to always work unless you press again to remind it what you wanted.

Also, that menu button. It is modal. It changes what it does depending on where you are and what program is running. Pros: You got an app running and you don't know what is happening, hit the menu button and see what options are available - and that the app responds. As opposed to the iPhone where you look at the busy spinner and can only press home to escape. Cons: it changes and isn't consistent from app to app and many time the options then throw you back to the touchscreen, and then you might select something that you could then find another use for the menu button. It just feels weird. I'm sure that is a technical term used by those usability studies people too.

So. Here I am, using the Nexus One today. I've been using it for weeks. What is really nice about the Nexus One is a few things. First it feels fast. It is fast.

Not to belittle my iPhone, but the hardware is simply newer and designed to be faster.

There are plenty of applications that I can get from the store that are wide and varied (including wardriving wireless access point fun and other OMG! I want to see what that does sort of proggies).

There is something hidden about the Nexus One that they don't advertise. That is: they don't advertise the features of this phone! Oh. My. Gods. This thing rocks. Google maps rocks. Google EARTH is awesome. Using my normal number or google voice rocks. Being able to select either or is awesome. The applications - barcode scanner that looks up prices in the local area and online, check! Awesome, CHECK! MyTracks application that puts my travels on a map via GPS and allows me to record it and upload it later, check! Nice camera, check! Ability to upload images taken via Picasa and check that little box to "auto correlate time and location data" and have all my pictures magically fill out on the google map where I took them - AWESOME. Having a command line shell; rocks. OK, I lost you non-geeks there.

The best thing I can draw an analogy to would be the iPhone is just like my trusty MacBook. Consistent and not nearly as fun unless I can pull in some of those non-trusty apps I love and use. The Nexus One is a mobile linux server that lets you do what you want to with it and has access to much more of the open source world than the iPhone without any real effort. The only real con is you pay for that power - battery life is not nearly as good as my trusty iPhone. Once I discovered factory settings were defaulted to high brightness and all wireless on, I configured it better to get better life out of the battery - but it really is a once a day charge sort of thing.

So, which do I prefer? Well, I like them both, but would rather carry around a brick of power than a deck of elegance, so for now, I prefer the Nexus One.

Clickity-click-click or glowity-glow-glow

Wooty-woot! I got a new keyboard on the way, a Luxeed color changing keyboard!

picture of glowing keyboard in rainbow colors

I've been using the original Logitech G15 keyboard for some time now. I really enjoy the back lighting in low light conditions (which I usually keep at home). I don't have time to modify my own - ok, I'd rather spend the time doing something else!

Monday, March 1, 2010

Gildas, is that you? No, I am not myself.

Recently, I had reason to believe someone logged into my web mail that was not me. Freaky! That, plus information I may have had in that account (that account is where I would have had sent any 'reset' my password notification for instance) and some other things that made me think to question what information is in my account, how easy is it to take over "the virtual me", and how can I reset or re-authenticate quickly and reliably.

Related to my Buddhist studies, I also find that isolating an idea or going without for awhile tends to show one the subtle touch points of interaction and thought, the cravings, the habits, that were always there but one might not have noticed.

Combining that with a desire to keep to self-sufficiency (I rely entirely too much upon Facebook because it makes it so easy; if they charged $50 bucks a day tomorrow, I might have paid to get my information out), belief in the personal ownership of my information (Facebook can leverage my profile in ads, I don't trust them to delete things permanently), the fact people must be *in* Facebook to get to information that isn't public (no email or adding people to groups using OpenID), and the fact that I realize I can - and perhaps keeping to my ideas, should - be doing it myself in ways I can learn from and improve upon, I decided to delete my Facebook account.

So, I deleted my Facebook account.

The experience has been interesting:

  • facebook doesn't make it obvious how to delete your account
  • facebook does everything in their power to get everyone else to use facebook to view your content - no anonymous browsing really
  • facebook gets advertising and make money off me wanting to connect to friends
  • people react differently to my virtual facebook suicide - some panic - within minutes (you know who you are), some initiate contact via email or phone and are concerned, some wonder, and some don't seem to notice!
  • people think reading a posting from someone on facebook is actually being actively involved in their life! Ego trumps reality, but reality shows people perceive things that are just not truly present!

I've created a new profile with a "scorched earth" approach - restricting all access to no one, then adding my friends.

Facebook does not make it easy, nor quick, nor even possible in some instances to set restricted access. They must target making money off of the social network and not as much the details of an individual.

The other interesting thing of note: it seems one can no longer disable the "Friends" section on the public profile. Anyone looking up "Gildas Talmadge" can see all my friends (that might be you, btw) and although in the past you could make that private, it seems that is no longer the case.

It is particularly interesting given that for many of you, simply by seeing your connections I can have a reasonable chance of figuring out "that is you". I wonder if to a casual observer if they can easily deduce who I am without knowing any one of you.

Back to mentioning the process of deletion: So much to not only delete, but if one wishes to move it, make it portable, and even put it back, well, that facility doesn't exist. The information about us isn't as nearly important as the way we organize and thus express ourselves, the relationship between the various information posted about ourselves, and if we want it to have meaning, about who we are and what we do!

It makes me wonder how would one pull all this information in a portable way. The best I could do was to to a HTML crawl of the data - it is now in a "HTML diary" entry for the day my Facebook page died. :)

I'll by trying to post more regularly here and perhaps on my own URL/site in the near future.

UPDATE: Related idea to keep an eye on: web suicide.