Read posts about tech

October 8

A really good article about how all this mess will affect the tech industry (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

Most of my friends on here are either in or closely related to the tech industry during this crisis. This was forwarded around at the office by a manager I really trust, and links like these are part of that.

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20080929/0426042403.shtml
In the short term, there's still going to be a fair amount of bloodshed, and the downside will impact companies outside of the financial sector, but for those in tech, the good news is that we're probably more isolated than other industries, though certainly not completely isolated. And, since everything is changing so rapidly, you never know what shoe might drop next.

However, in the long run, there is still money out there, and there are still opportunities. People will need to put that money to work one way or another, and rather than freaking out, now is a time to be looking for the opportunities created by this mess, and the tech industry is likely to have a lot of those opportunities. Remember that for every bubble bursting, something ends up getting devalued below its real value. The trick is just figuring out what it is before anyone else notices.


My company is doing fairly well, actually,. We just got two huge government contracts which I am not at liberty to discuss, obviously, but it was enough to reinvest in our core infrastructure before it became outdated, and guess who's on the top of that pile? That's why I am getting the certs, man, while the gettin's good... :D Posted in: computers , linux , tech , work
August 23

twitter clients (multifarious miscellany (kitters)) by ami

After having my iPhone for a month and a half now, I’m still trying to wade through all the applications that are available for it. Nearly all the ones I have are free, because free is good :P The only thing I’m having issues with is finding a (free) Twitter client that doesn’t annoy me in some fashion. Sure, I can use the mobile web version, but having an actual client is nice. The ones I’ve tried so far:

  1. Twitterific: It’s pretty. It’s functional. It has a built in mini-browser for viewing tweeted URLs. What drives me absolutely batshit insane is that if you select a tweet, it will automatically load to that one the next time you open the app. The free version displays an ad at the top of the screen, but that doesn’t bug me so much.
  2. Twittelator: This is the one I currently use. Visually simple and pretty. Built in mini-browser. What I don’t like? If I haven’t checked Twitter in a while (overnight, for example), it will only display what amounts to the first page of recent tweets.
  3. Twinkle: It’s a little much, visually, but very full-featured. However, I don’t really care about most of the features, like the nearby Twinkle users. For some reason, it also shows new notifications for tweets I’ve already read and direct messages I’ve already received. The biggest gripe I have about this one is the lack of built in mini browser.

I think if I could combine Twittelator and Twitterific, I’d have the perfect (for me) Twitter client. It’d be… Twittelatorific. Or not. Maybe I should just stick to playing Trism :P

Posted in: tech
August 13

Time for a high-def ollie 180 (Eighty1 (Thallium)) by eighty1

It seems as though AMD/ATI is back in the game. The new Radeon 4870 X2 trumps NVIDIA’s offerings fairly well and despite the price for the X2 part (roughly $550), they’re actually more economical overall than a GTX 280 SLI configuration. Interesting. It’s been a long time since ATI has been a serious player in the graphics market and although I own an NVIDIA 8800GT and a 7800GT, it’s nice to see the underdog coming back around. I had a Radeon 9700 Pro for years and knowing that the market is going to heat up as the two big players compete makes the gamer in me very happy. Hell, prices might even come down enough for me to replace the 8800GT with a 4850 X2 at some point.

Speaking of gaming, I picked up skate. for my Xbox 360 a few days ago and it’s a lot of fun. The Flickit control system is great and while it takes a little getting used to, it provides for great moves and stunts. The city you can ride in is large enough that you don’t feel too closed-in and even if you spend an hour or two in one area, there’s always some new trick to try out or new challenge to win. Great stuff.

Finally, I’ve gone ahead and reserved a Christopher Ward C8 Blackhawk watch and requested serial number 81. I’ve been pining for this watch since CW announced it earlier this year; it’s a 44mm 100% Swiss pilot watch using the legendary ETA 2824-2 automatic movement. The Blackhawk edition is all black and coated with a black ionic casing to improve durability and resistance to scratches and dings; I think it will complement my two current watches (a Christopher Ward C4 Peregrine and a Citizen Calibre 9000) quite nicely.

Posted in: gaming , news & such , tech , watches
August 6

When Ghost fails you (LtParis) by LTParis

I recently purchased some new Dell Optiplex 755’s and ran into an issue with one of my most tried and true tools, Ghost. I have used Ghost for a very long time but there is a growing issue with SATA drivers that rendered using ghost useless since it wouldn’t recognize the DVD-R drive. In a quick rush I started to research alternatives and ran into Windows Deployment Services (WDS).

I used it’s predecessor (RIS) a couple times in the past and really didn’t like it, so I was walking into this project with the notion that I could dislike it. I can say that ended up being farthest from the truth. Since most of my machines are PXE enabled I can boot off the network, and with a couple tweaks to my boot image (I needed to seed some network drivers into it) I have a great WinPE booter to work with.

I’ve been transitioning my images to WDS now which was a great starting point since I needed to start creating images with XP SP3 and Vista SP1. I can honestly say I am not looking back at Ghost.

Posted in: tech
July 30

it hasn’t killed me… yet (multifarious miscellany (kitters)) by ami

All those people who told me that having shingles would really hurt were all correct - unfortunately. I’ve at least now reached the point where I no longer dread touching my own skin, but there’s still a great deal of burning, muscular pain, and overall discomfort.

The good thing that has come out of this is that I’ve had ample time to get to know my iPhone a lot better :P In fact, this post is being written and published using the WordPress app. I wouldn’t want to do a super long post with it, but not bad for blogging on the go.

Naptime again…

Posted in: not so good things , tech
July 23

bi-monthly update (multifarious miscellany (kitters)) by ami

I’m nothing if not consistent about not being consistent. With the annual camping trip, new geek gadget, and now Vacation Bible School at church, blogging’s been the last thing on my mind. Actually, that’s not true. There have been several instances when I’ve thought about it, but have been too lazy to follow through with it :P

This was probably the best year so far for our camping trip - six families from church, kids that all got along, perfect weather, and plenty of food. It took a little longer than usual to get completely set up due to one of our sites being occupied until 2:30 (checkout is 2:00), but by the time we were all situated I was definitely ready to slip into camping mode. Friday was (mostly) a chill out and do whatever kind of day, with the entire group going down to the amusement park after dinner. After a Saturday morning session of laser tag for half the group, everybody headed over to the pool. I was perfectly content to just relax in the water, but the husband had fun dunking all the teenagers (who still think they can sink him) and generally acting like, well.. a kid in a pool :P The plan was to stay around for most of Sunday, too, but we ended up heading out around noon. Overall, it was one of the better group vacations I’ve ever been on.

I say Friday was mostly a chill out day because the Friday we were gone was also iPhone 3G release day. The husband was nice enough to be dragged away from the campsite before 7am so I could go park myself in line. Truth be told, the wait wasn’t nearly as horrendous as I expected. The campground is in a tiny town, so there just weren’t many people around - probably 20 people in line, total. It took longer than it should have because of all the activation issues that have been written about time and time again, but at least the store employees were nice about everything and came outside to talk to us every now and again. At some point they decided that they were going to stop activating in store, so I ended up leaving with a totally non-functional phone and was completely disconnected for the rest of the weekend. Kinda nice, actually.

Yesterday was the husband’s birthday, which we will celebrate once VBS week is over. I don’t know how we did it last year without the week-long break between camping and VBS. It’s only Wednesday and I’m already tired :P At least with this year’s Western/Cowboy theme, I don’t get picked on for saying “y’all” all the time. Now if only I could get them to learn that the plural form is “all y’all”…

Posted in: birthday , family & friends , tech , travel
June 23

iPhone pricing announced (Durf.org (Durf)) by Durf

So the iPhone 3G pricing has been announced by the SoftBank folks. The basic breakdown for the representative plan described on that page:

Handset price: ¥23,040 for 8GB, ¥34,560 for 16GB (paid in ¥960 or ¥1,440 monthly payments over the course of the two-year plan).

iPhone.pngService price: ¥7,280 a month (including the ¥980 White Plan, which includes free calls from 1 a.m. to 9 p.m. to other SoftBank numbers; the fixed-price [unmetered?] data plan for ¥5,985; and the S! Basic Pack, which costs ¥315 and isn’t really described on that page).

Not a horrible deal, all in all, considering what was being predicted for this thing. Still, if you do a lot of telephoning the charges will stack up quickly: SoftBank gives you a great deal on calls to other SoftBank users, but makes you fork over north of ¥20 per minute to all other mobile and fixed-line numbers. Email is free to and from all addresses (you get an @i.softbank.jp address with the thing, but of course you can use all your webmail as usual) and SMS doesn’t exist in this country.

Now to decide whether I really want to ditch the DoCoMo set and jump into the Apple end of the mobile phone pool . . .

Posted in: japan , tech
June 13

I’ve Come to Hate the Tech Industry (or: Technology as a Lifestyle vs. Technology as a Business) (Tiny Screenfuls (JoshB)) by Josh Bancroft

I’ve been trying to make time, at least once a week, to sit down and write something substantial. Something more than excited gadget/software lust, more than a collection of 140 character microposts. I’m really enjoying it. I’m learning a lot about myself, my goals, and my motivations. I try to go to a place where there’s no internet connectivity to minimize distractions - I’m easily led afield by my feed reader - and do some reading before I write (which always stirs up ideas). So far, so good.

Yesterday, I was in Mountain View, California, at Research@Intel Day. I was there to shoot video and otherwise cover interesting stuff for my group, Intel Software Network, and our developer community. Research@Intel Day is Intel’s annual public science fair, where the researchers and groups in CTG (the Corporate Technology Group) get to show off the stuff they’ve been working on to the press. Most of it is future freaky science fiction-type stuff - a biological microprocessor, dynamic physical rendering, etc. I’ll have some videos, photos, and blog posts up soon about what I saw there this year.

As I was on the plane at the San Jose airport, coming home to Portland, I reflected on the culture of Silicon Valley. It is the heart of the technology industry - hardware and software, startups and ancient tech companies like Intel, side by side. Their names are all over the buildings you pass on the freeways. You can’t swing a dead cat without hitting a technology company. Usually more than one. There’s Yahoo, next to EMC, next to McAfee, next to Sun, next to Intel. And oh, look - there’s Moffett Field, where the Google guys park their private 767.

The airports, hotels, restaurants, and roads are crammed full of people who obviously work in tech. Tan slacks, polo shirt with a company name or name of some conference they attended on the sleeve, maybe a sport jacket if they’re really important. Bluetooth headset stuck to the side of their head, BlackBerry in hand, or doing that weird walk-around-with-their-open-laptop-perched-on-their-forearm thing. There’s no mistaking them. They’re everywhere. Doing business. Talking about business. Exuding business.

You’d think I’d feel right at home there, among “my people”.

But I don’t. I feel like an alien every time I go there. A vague, uneasy feeling like I don’t really fit in. It’s not just an “Oregonian in California” thing, or because I actively thumb my nose at fashion, walking around in orange Crocs, cargo pants, and a faded black geeky t-shirt from Penny Arcade or O’Reilly or ThinkGeek. I’ve got my uniform just like they have theirs. So what’s the difference? What keeps me from feeling like the Valley is my homeland, and making plans to move there (besides the insane real estate prices)? I’d never really given it much thought before, but sitting in the airplane yesterday, waiting to take off (my eyes being involuntarily drawn to the laptop screen of the Boeing guy in front of me, who was broadcasting how important he was by looking at some obviously confidential spreadsheet long after the crew told us to turn off and stow our electronic devices), I had sort of an epiphany.

I’ve come to hate the technology industry.

Hate is probably too strong a word, and that statement doesn’t mean what you might think it means at first, so let me explain.

I love technology. I was born practically surrounded by it, and grew up as a citizen of that world. It was clear that I am 100% geek by about age 5 (and remember, this was before it was cool to be a geek!). Every job I’ve ever had has been in the technology industry. Web development, support, QA testing, community building, and teaching. It pays my bills, buys me gadgets, and I’m not really suited to do much else. So how can I say that I hate the technology industry?

It’s because I make a distinction between technology as a business, and technology as a lifestyle.

Silicon Valley, and it’s culture, is all about technology as a business - all about the money. And that is what I realized I hate. I don’t think it’s wrong for people to be in the technology business - in fact, I depend on them. I need them, like you do, to keep churning out the improvements, upgrades, and new stuff that makes our lives easier, more efficient, and more fun. And I’m not blind to the fact that this industry pays my paycheck, and always has. In fact, I absolutely love my job. Does that make me a hypocrite?

I don’t think so. And here’s why. I have no problem with the fact that the business-centric tech industry culture exists. It’s a good thing. I wish it huge success, and I’m willing to work to make that happen. It’s just not who I am, or where I’m going. People for whom technology is a business go home after work, and become who they really are. I am a geek 100% of the time. I couldn’t turn it off if I wanted to. And I don’t want to. ;-) I choose to find my culture, the things I care about deeply, and obsess over, and do in my free time, elsewhere. I would like to think of myself as “in the tech industry, but not of it”.

So what culture DO I feel like I belong to? The one where technology is a lifestyle, not just a business. The culture of geeks, and people who use technology in new and useful ways because they can, because they see it as a challenge. The culture of makers and hackers and people who read science fiction not just for entertainment and diversion, but for inspiration. The culture of people for whom reputation, and whuffie, and being recognized for contributing something useful or clever is its own reward, and not just a way to make more money. People who learn programming languages for fun, and for what can be learned through the experience. In my culture, technology can be a business, but it’s often SO much more than that.

I devour books by my favorite sci-fi authors - Cory Doctorow, Charlie Stross, Vernor Vinge, etc. - and I yearn for the easy, natural way that people use technology in their stories. Wearable computers, data-enhanced visual overlays, subvocal communication and silent messaging. Direct, fast, effortless connection to information and other people. I look forward to a time when the exponential growth in technology eliminates more and more of the mundane, cruel, painful, tedious problems that affect us as meat creatures. A post-scarcity economy when we’ve finally found way to get rid of poverty, and disease, and death. The natural extensions of our increasingly connected world.

Now, I’m not a Utopian. Or even really a Singulatarian. No matter how often I half-jokingly say I’ll be first in line as soon as they figure out how to do a direct brain-to-Internet connection, there are things outside the world of technology that I care about even more. My relationship with my wife and children. Being a good person and serving others. Right and wrong. You could take away all of my technology and it’s accompanying culture, and as long as I had those things, I would be fulfilled and happy. I recognize and am grateful for the luxury of having time, and money, and access to all of these technological artifacts that I talk so breathlessly about. I recognize that it’s all “extra”.

This was my epiphany - this distinction, in my mind, between technology as a business, and technology as a lifestyle. It helps me make sense of the conflicts and irritation I sometimes feel when I see practically the entire world around me start talking about “social media”, and “Web 2.0″. Things that were once the sole domain of geeks. For a long time now, listening to non-geeks expound upon these topics twisted my stomach - even though it was the stuff I love, and have been promoting and teaching and evangelizing, I felt resentment as more and more people around me (remember, I’m surrounded by the “industry”) started picking up these tools. Until now, I couldn’t put my finger on why, but I think I’ve figured it out. It’s when they’re rooted in the business culture, different from mine, and eyeballing things in my world that they want to use for their own ends, that my hackles go up.

Want to hear something strange? Now that I’ve figured that out, I don’t care any more. It doesn’t bother me, now that I understand my feelings about why it ever did. I can’t explain why, except perhaps to say that now I know better who I am, and how to reconcile the two cultures. Now, when I think of the marketing department (of any company, not just mine) trying to “leverage” some social tool, like Twitter or blogs or podcasting, instead of feeling defensive (”They’re marketers! They don’t really “get” it! They’re going to screw it all up!”), I see it for what it is. And I’m happy to try to help them do it right. To impart cluefulness to anyone willing to listen (those who AREN’T willing to listen still make me mad). Business is important, too, and they’re just trying to do the best they can at fitting in with this rapidly-changing world. That’s a GOOD thing, one that I’m willing to work towards.

Now, instead of wondering if I really am an arrogant hypocrite for getting defensive when marketing catches up to something that was heretofore the realm of geeks, I can accept it, because I understand why they’re doing it. The internet, as a whole, is better off for having been adopted by business. Sure, it has its annoyances: spam, intrusive ads, threats to privacy, etc. But there are ways to deal with them. Would we REALLY prefer to have stayed with a wholly non-commercial internet, a throwback to the days where there was no free webmail with gigabytes of storage, comprehensive lightning fast search engines, and almost-ubiquitous connectivity, because no one could figure out how to pay for it all? I, for one, welcome will tolerate and coexist with the internet’s new corporate overlords.

See? I told you that hate was too strong a word. :-)

Posted in: blog , business , hate , industry , lifestyle , scifi , tech , technology
June 5

DoCoMo talks about iPhone failure (Durf.org (Durf)) by Durf

TechRadar UK has a piece up with quotes from an NTT DoCoMo spokesman on yesterday’s news: DoCoMo failed to nab iPhone.

DoCoMo has admitted to TechRadar it tried and failed to strike a deal with Apple to sell the 3G iPhone in Japan. . . .

[Ichikoshi Shûichirô says] “Anyway, DoCoMo already sells touchscreen phones, such as the Prada phone and the SH906i, which came out yesterday.”

I saw one of those Prada phones in Yodobashi the other day. Not a bad looking thing, in its iPhonish way, but it markets for more than ninety freaking thousand yen. Yeah. Good luck with that.

Posted in: japan , tech
June 4

SoftBank iPhone: confirmed (Durf.org (Durf)) by Durf

I was just pointed to this SoftBank press release from today. I quote:

SOFTBANK MOBILE Corp. today announced it has signed an agreement with Apple® to bring the iPhone™ to Japan later this year.

(Seriously, that’s the entire press release; you don’t really have to go read it now.)

I’m happy to see the thing on its way to Japan at last. I’m thinking about making it my next cellphone—not for its great wifi action, since free wifi isn’t a common thing to find in this city in my experience, but because it’s the first phone ever that I can be sure will sync up nicely with my Mac computers.

What Japan Thinks has a good post up here on the iPhone and its prospects in this market. The piece is almost a year old but is worth looking at just the same.

Posted in: japan , tech
May 24

Been a very busy couple weeks (LtParis) by LTParis

I haven’t been able to post much of late thanks to a lack of time. The daily grind of work has been insane the last couple weeks thanks to us switching over to a new pipe (from 1.5MB to 4.5MB) to our CT office and switching over to a hosted VoIP solution with a company called Smoothstone. The transition went pretty smooth considering and as of Thursday night the majority of things had finally completed. Over the next couple months I will keep an eye on the system and give a real work view of what they offer.

Posted in: tech
April 8

Definition of: tech support (Eighty1 (Thallium)) by eighty1

1. Assisting a person (called a “user”) in dealing with technical issues to resolve a problem or situation efficiently.

2. Providing assistance in a technical aspect for a person who cannot fix the problem themselves.

3. Watching as a person (called an “idiot”) slowly jams a finger in their eye socket and then calls for help. Their description of the problem will range from terse to vague to completely inappropriate and they will more often than not blame one or more of the following for their predicament:

a. The IT department

b. Their “stupid computer”

c. You

d. The innernettes

e. A deity of their choice

f. All of the above

Additionally, any attempts to sanely resolve the user’s predicament is met with a lack of enthusiasm or outright hostility. Examples: “I’m too busy to do this right now” or “Do you even know what you’re doing?” When an alternative method of resolution is discovered (see “Removing the finger from your eye”) the user will then use another finger in an attempt to gouge the first one out. At this point, the IT person assigned to help the user will either say that the user needs to reboot or that the issue will be resolved in a future patch.

Posted in: idiots , miscellaneous , oh god my eyeball , tech , tech support
April 7

“Everything here closes at 10PM.” (Eighty1 (Thallium)) by eighty1

Steve, Damon and I went up to Irvine on Saturday for Mitch’s birthday; we met him and his family and had a good time. After dinner though, was a bit different… suffice to say that Irvine sucks ass. What a boring city. Everything looks the same and there’s no character. I had this long-winded post typed-up about how I prefer cities with character (or “soul” or whatever) but I deleted it in favor of something a bit more terse. So yeah, I don’t like Irvine all that much. Mitch is up there because he has a good job, and I can’t blame him for the lack of things to do on a Saturday night. It would have kicked ass if his friend Angie had had another party, but that would have been asking for a bit much. Eh. That party did kick ass though.

 n6019774_37259251_3415.jpg n6019774_37259433_2759.jpg n6019774_37259521_1752.jpg

I changed out the strap on my CW C4 Peregrine; the strap it came with is nice but the leather was starting to wear, even after only a month of use. So I ordered a new leather strap (brown, with white stitching) and a deployant clasp and swapped it out today. I’ll take a few pictures when I get home, I think. The strap is a darker brown than the original, more of a chocolate. It still looks really nice though and the deployant should keep the leather in good shape for a long time.

Posted in: news & such , tech
April 2

Death and Taxes (and upgrades) (Eighty1 (Thallium)) by eighty1

I’ve had my current gaming rig for over two years now and it has served me very well in that time. Just about every game I’ve thrown at it has run quite well and the original pair of 7800GTs did their job admirably. I recently upgraded to a single 8800GT and that gave the old girl quite a bit of an extension, but the AMD 4400+ processor and DDR-3200 RAM subsystem are really starting to show their age. So I’ve decided that if I get a decent tax refund, a good chunk of that will go towards building a new beast. The best part about it is I only need a motherboard, processor and RAM; I’m going to keep the 8800GT, case, PSU and Raptor 150 (ditching my old 36GB Raptor during the upgrade) so the entire upgrade won’t technically cost too much. I am willing to spend up to $1000 though, but unless I get something like a Core 2 Extreme, I don’t foresee the price being that high. If the damned thing is even available, I’ll get the E8500; however, by the time I decide to upgrade the Q8500 might be around (and that would be just damned awesome: a 45nm quad-core successor to the Q6600!). I don’t think I’ll go to DDR3, mostly for price and latency concerns.

Speaking of taxes… I’m going to see Geri today. Mitch got a decent refund and I hope I get something back; I’m a little bit fetishistic about taxes. There’s something akin to gambling when you start running the numbers to see if you win (yay refund) or lose (boo payments). Of course, the spectre of an audit is always lurking but I don’t do anything illegal. Hopefully I get a decent sum back so I can at least buy some more pants and shirts. My favorite jeans have a hole in the left knee that just keeps getting bigger. If I’m not careful, I will inadvertantly end-up with Daisy Dukes, and that would be frightening.

Posted in: intel , money , news & such , oh god my eyes , ram , taxes , tech , upgrade
March 26

Angry, petty, and minor rant blown out of proportion (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

Okay, about 8 years ago, I got this nifty thing that was uncommon back then, but rather common now. I got a USB enclosure for IDE hard drives. I got it off of some Hong Kong tech distributor for like $30. You could take any IDE 3/5" hard drive, stick it in, and use it like a USB drive. This was handy when copying disks, backing up stuff that was more than a CD could carry (this was before DVD writers were cheap, and a 16mb USB stick was "large"). And it worked great.

It had 4 parts: the box you put the hard drive into, a USB cord, an AC adapter, and some fanny pack to contain it all (which it didn't, it was always too small for the AC adapter). It had Japanese writing, so I never knew the company. For many years, I used it at AOL for personal as well as business use.

Until the USB cord went missing in 2002. It was a proprietary USB cord (actually, that's not true anymore, but it wasn't sold in the US back then) , so that made this setup useless. Figuring it was stolen, I took the rest of the setup home, bummed. When I left the wardialing department in 2004, a coworker "found" the cord, and said, "I think this is yours... not sure how it got in my office." Not sure how it got there, either. But yay! Now I could use it again. But in 2 years, where did I put the rest of the stuff?

When I left AOL in 2005, I found the hard drive enclosure, but not the AC adapter. Then, later, I found the AC adaptor, but then the USB cord, which I stuck in the enclosure, was missing. Then I found the USB cord, but the enclosure was missing. Figuring it would show up someday, I put the cord in the fanny pack.

I found the AC adapter and the enclosure (with a wardialing hard drive still in it, heh) last year, but then the fanny pack with the USB cable went missing. Then I found the fanny pack when I moved to my new den, but the USB cable wasn't in it anymore. Then I found a USB cable that would work just as well (from my camera), stuck it in the enclosure, but now the AC adapter is missing.

WHY THE HELL DOES THIS KEEP HAPPENING??? WHY CAN'T THEY ALL STAY IN ONE PLACE???

Yes, I KNOW I can get a new USB enclosure with all the stuff I need for a measly $30, but it's the principle of the thing; I don't want to pay for something I already have!!!

Grrr...... Posted in: .computers , hard drive , rant , tech , usb
March 12

Freeware for the Sys Admin (LtParis) by LTParis

A few months ago I gave a tryout to a free inventory management tool called Spiceworks. I had always been hesitant trying out freeware but it was worth a look at and since then I haven’t looked back. While it is not perfect (I still wish it had AD integration) you can’t beat it for the price, especially in today’s dwindling IT budgets.

Well I just stumbled upon another tool (thanks 4sysops) called Spotlight on Windows. This looks like a dream tool to manage your system’s health, monitor Event Logs, etc. I hope this is as good as Spiceworks!

Posted in: tech
March 5

ESX “on a chip” almost here (LtParis) by LTParis

As I am planning out my 2009 data-center implementation at my job I learned that Dell and HP are going to be releasing their servers with VMWare ESX 3i “embedded” in early April for Dell and March 31, 2008 for HP. For those considering virtualized environments and are considering diskless servers, this might be the way to go!

Posted in: tech
February 4

Please oh please… (Put together quickly (Haligan)) by michaelb

Watching the example of the newspaper at the beginning of the presentation below, “Foldable Interactive Displays” by Johnny Chung Lee. I really want a small, flexible laptop that uses a display like shown with the keyboard / multitouch interface from the iPhone. Small and have enough to handle a web browsing, email client, a feed reader, word processor and wireless. Perfect for writing out ideas, surfing while in bed, on the couch and would make for a more durable notebook.

via Ask E.T.: Residing in spaceland: Johnny Chung Lee’s imaginative work

Posted in: tech
January 24

How I Ended Up in Computerland: Part 4 - What's a GUI? (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

There was this very odd event that happened in my childhood. I find it hard to place the date, but it had to have been after 1984 or in late 1984.

My mother tried all the time to get my father and I liking one another. She'd make my father take me to his work sometimes. I am not sure what my father's title was, but it was usually some office job where he was important enough to get a corner office. I recall employees were nervous around him, and would often whisper around me like, "That's Dr. Larson's son," as if they weren't sure how to act around me. I was always dead bored since my father rarely paid attention to me, so I'd amuse myself in a book, or wandering the kitchen to drink as much hot cocoa as I wanted. I have been told by many my father was a "beltway bandit," a term given to a lot of defense contractors in the area. My father was working for a company called ARACOR, which now seems to make cargo scanning equipment. I have no idea what they did back then, maybe around the same thing. I think my father was a manager or something. He may have told me at one time, but since I had no experience of office hierarchy at the time, it probably went in one ear and other the other.

What got me was that my father never worked with computers as I had been told. The only computer he had was an old LED HP calculator with RPN, or "reverse Polish notation." RPN was and probably still is the common way to enter data into a scientific calculator. Instead of "1 + 1 =" to get 2, you'd put "1 [enter] 1 +" and "2" would show up. I still have one that I got for Algebra II/Trig, an HP 11c. But I was BUMMED my father didn't work with the computers I saw on TVs and ads. Sleek brown and beige units with built-in tables, or maybe they were white and sky blue terminals on small round stands. In the background would be some huge fridge-sized mainframe with spinning tape wheels. Nope, my father was at a large desk in a room with a hotel-style AC unit. I'd look out of the window, wishing I was somewhere else.

One day, his boss at ARACOR said, "Come down and meet me at my mansion in Sunnyvale!" I think Sunnyvale was right next to Silicon Valley. "Brig your whole family!" My mother declined. "Take little Gregory," she said. And so started a rather awkward trip to California, where I got sick, my ears torn apart by bad plane pressure, and I was alone most of the time. I can't separate this trip from another California trip up to San Fransisco, but in this trip I remember two things:

- I slept through an Earthquake (a mild, "wiggle things on your dresser" kind)
- I got to meet the owner of ARACOR (whom, thanks to the Internet, I have found here), Bob Armistead

Bob's house was quite large. It was huge, had a lot of windows, and faced something down in the valley below; might have been Silicon Valley, who knows. He had a gigantic pool with a connecting hot tub, and his own artificial waterfall. But this whole sideline builds up to a point. I was to bond with his kids, who I think were 2 or 3 boys. They were close to my age, but we were complete opposites in personality. His kids were tanned, shirtless nymphs who ran around barefoot like a herd of buffalo. Whereas I was a pale, chubby, and shy kid from the east coast who had no athletic ability. They didn't so much make fun of me as stare me down, perceived me as no threat, and then ignored me. I think they even left to go to a friend's house.

I wandered around this mansion while Bob tried very hard to schmooze my father. I am not sure why. Maybe it was "I never see you, ya big lug! Move out to the west coast! We can be buddies!" My father was polite, but had a poker face and I knew that whatever Bob was selling, my father had no intent to buy. My father never had "buddies" or even a friend growing up. He was a lone wolf, and after a while, people reciprocated this attitude, and then my father would leave whatever company he was in for a better position in another. My father only stayed at a company for a few years. I think 5 was the longest he stayed at growing up.

As I wandered around this cheerful complex, I came to a room where there was a HUGE wooden desk that might have been six feet wide and made out of a very knobbly wood grain; perhaps a tigerwood or something. Elegant and dominating. On top of this desk was a strange little beige monolith, dwarfed by the vast space around it. What could it be?

It was the first time I had seen a Macintosh. It was probably one of the first 128ks or something. This little box had a strange thing attached to it I had also never seen before: some smaller box the size of a pack if cigarettes. I hadn't been in this room for more than a few minutes when Bob came in and saw me looking at this weird device.

"You seen one yet?" he asked. He turned it on. It chimed.

Now here's the thing that got me hooked right away: the sound chip. Up until now, all computer sounds were reduced "beep" and "boop" or maybe some robo-synthesizer like the Atari 400/800s. There were no realistic sounds, although some people tried with the Ataris by making lots of little clicks in sequence that might have sounded like the real sound... once you were told what it was trying to sound like... and even then, "speech" sounded like it was some guy with emphysema and an artificial voice box vibrator. But the Mac had crisp, realistic sounds. There was a "plonk," a "drip," and a "choo choo." He then launched a game, and I think it was Castlevania or something, but the bats and rats had real squeaks, the door slams sounds like real doors, and the music was like real instruments playing. And while it was black and white only, the graphics were crisp and detailed.

"You like this, huh?" Bob said. "I got this for my kids but..." and I recall the flash of disappointment in his voice so clearly. "My sons never touch it. Do you like computers?" I told him I did. For a few minutes, we connected. I had this feeling like I was the geek, computer oriented kid he was looking for all his life. We connected instantly. But then he left me to the Mac, which I played the rest of the evening until I was invited to the pool for food and swimming.

The next day, Bob invited me down to their office headquarters. Up until now, I had been staying in a hotel room during the day, which was so utterly boring. My dad would leave early, and come back around 6. I wasn't allowed to watch TV (although, I did anyway) and I finished all the books I brought two days into the trip. I wandered around some part of downtown LA, but it wasn't an interesting part because the hotel was next to an industrial park. There was only one strip mall, and all it held in interest was a bakery and a 7-11. Bob said I could see the computers at their office, and wouldn't that be cool? Yeah!

Except... they were mainframes. Now, truthfully, I was set up at a terminal that had the UNIX games of the day, which were adventure, ASCII space invaders, some kind of cannon vs hill game, and so on. Most were in ASCII and text, but they did have some that were made of small dots. Boy, did I get bored quickly, though. I also was dying of thirst, and there was this travel mug right next to me. I ended up stealing sips of water from it, wondering if I would get caught stealing somone's water. There wasn't much left, and thankfully, some girl who worked there finally said, "Do you want me to fill that with some fresh water or something?" Thank you, lady, whoever you were. That was around lunchtime. Bored bored bored.

Then something alarming happened. Keep in mind that up until now, everyone I had seen in this building was in a suit. Even the women were dressed very early 1980s professional. I wasn't allowed to come without a shirt, slacks, and tie. But then suddenly, this guy who seemed like the stereotype of a Woodstock hippie came in. Long hair, unkempt beard, and sandals from which jutted thin, knobbly toes. I forgot what he wore, it was green whatever it was, but it wasn't professional business attire. He fooled with some stuff, ignored my presence, and then left.

Did this guy break in? Was there an unlocked door near the computer room, and this stoned Deadhead reject wander in from his dumpster diving? My mind raced. Obviously, he didn't belong. But who could I tell? A hour went by while I was alone. Finally, a woman showed up. Being polite, waited until she came to my area, but she didn't and then left. Then the hippie came back! Should I stop him? Even though he was wearing glasses, he was easily over six feet tall, and I felt scrawny 5' 2" me wouldn't stand a chance. Maybe the drugs would make him go CRAZY! Yeah, hippies were scary; we didn't have many in McLean since the 1970s.

Later, Bob and my dad came by to see how I was doing. I mentioned the hippie, and Bob laughed. "Yeah, he's an employee here alright. Don't worry. He's really good at what he does, but I can't get him to dress professionally." Bob acted like this was an ongoing issue, but was tolerating the situation.

This, unbeknown to me, was my first example of an IT guru. They guy who knows all, shares none, and refuses to conform.

Bob and I seemed to click. My dad didn't care for him, though. My father hated friendly people, he always thought they were trying to sell him something. I never saw him again, and a few years later, my father quit ARACOR to work for Booz Allen & Hamilton.

But even now, I thought computers were for really smart people. And since I considered myself quite stupid, I had no comprehension that in about a dozen years, I would be so deep in the computer industry, I would be part of one of the most exciting times to be an IT person. Posted in: computer , computerhistory , tech

How I Ended Up in Computerland: Part 3 - Steve's House and my first computer (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

So then there was Steve. This poor guy, I think I tortured him a lot on Junior High. He lived a mile and half away, closer to our Intermediate school than I was in the opposite direction. I had to make quiet a trek to get to his house. I considered him a friend, but I am not sure how he considered me. I liked to torture him in science class by pinching off my veins in my hand and caused them to stand out. Somehow, and am not sure what transpired, I ended up at his house a lot. I liked his friends. There was Fred and Nicole (a guy), and we played D&D; a lot as well.

Steve had a lot of current video games. I mean, his house was the place to be if you wanted the latest and the greatest. He had a Commodore VIC20, then a C64, and finally a C128. I am not sure if he ever got an Amiga, but it wouldn't surprise me. he also had all the latest console games. For a spoiled kid, he didn't act it. Always humble, and laughed at my jokes. Truth be told, I liked him a lot, and not just because of his video games. Steve was the first kid who taught me that computers could do more than games and program coin flip averaging. You could draw or use them like a typewriter to write. Word processing completely changed my perception of how to write.

But we played games, too. We used to play a game called "Mail Order Monsters" which I still think is one of the greatest games of the time. Similar to the concept later used by Pokemon, you fought monsters you raised yourself. In addition, you could mod them with your prize money from fights. One of my opponents was Nicole, who found a way to work the system so he'd have a massively tricked out monster. He'd pit them against weak monsters over and over, until he was rich and his monsters were overly powerful and then I'd beat them with my scrappy determination. No, I am lying heavily; really, he'd flatten my monster, and use what was left to wipe his monster's ass. But that was okay, Nicole gave me my first computer (later, at my high school reunion, Fred said he gave it to Nicole).

A Timex/Sinclair. One of the original ZX80 machines. The only other computer (besides the Atari 400) that had a touchpad keyboard that I had ever seen. Makes typing a pain in the ass if you're a touch typist, but I never was, so I pressed hard on the flat keys to generate one of my first "advanced" programs: making a 3-D cube. It wasn't really 3-D, but you could enter in "10,15,20" and get a 2D drawing of a 3D cube that was 10 pixels wide, 15 pixels tall, and 20 pixels from front to back. The ZX80 had a "fast" mode, where it would suspend the screen because back then, the computing power was so low, that it took more processes to draw something on your TV screen than it did to compute it. So you'd do all your calculations in "fast" mode, and then switch to slow mode to draw it out.

Sadly, storing your programs was a bit of a challenge. Technically, you could store it to your cassette player, but the connections were so bad that often stuff got corrupted. Most of the time, I'd have to re-type it, and that became a pain. Later on, my friend Jason got it, and used it to add some memory or something to a luggable computer he had from his intern work at NASA.

When I was friends with Kate, she had an old TRS 80 that I used to make D&D; character sheets, but that was not so much programming as using a word processor, printing out the paper, and then her dad made photocopies at his work. Thanks, Dr. Tredwell! :)

But at this point, I had started a poisonous thought that sort of went like computers were for only two sets of people: gamers and strange beaded men who worked around mainframes. I was neither.

But that was about to change. Posted in: computer , computerhistory , tech

How I Ended Up in Computerland: Part 2 - Another Computer Camp, a different story (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

Well, two years later, computers were still about as relevant to my attentive life as UFOs. You hear about them, you see pictures of them, but you never actually see a real one. Around this time, a few rich kids started to get Apple II computers. Maybe a TRS 80. And for reasons that I can't quite figure out, I was sent to computer camp again.

Sadly, this was one of those many "what the heck?" moments with my parents. I wasn't allowed to have a computer at home, yet they were sending me to another round of computer camp. The intervening year of "Around the World in 30 Days" made a little more sense, since geography was a school requirement, but... okay. You want me out of the house. I got it.

This class was held at South Lakes High. That place still boasts the only place I got mugged, and the only time I got beaten up on a school bus. Normally, I got beat up right at the edge of school grounds, and sometimes far away from school, and even a few times IN school, but never on a bus. Bullies usually worked exclusively out of teacher's eyesight. This was one of two factors. First, I was a 6th-grade nerd going to a computer camp held at a school where remedial repeat summer courses were being taught. Very angry, non-scholastic, high school under-achievers shared my bus ride. What made it worse was that my bus ride started off with me being at a stop a mile away from my house (which I had to walk to) at 6am in the frickin' morning. As it made a spiral around the areas of Fairfax county, some of them still rather rural, it picked up kids in clumps of 3-5 for the next 2 hours. Even my commute now from Fairfax to Silver Spring is only 90 minutes. So now I was sharing a bus with very angry, non-scholastic, high school under-achievers that were sleep deprived and bored shitless. I generally sat right behind the bus driver, and even shared the seat where her infant child was in a car seat. The driver was very nice, but rather ineffective at controlling the kids in the back. The day I got beat up we had a substitute driver who, for reasons I cannot fathom, insisted we fill the seats from back to front. I got to sit in the back corner, where I was pounded mercilessly, had my lunch stolen, and the only retribution the driver gave was a loud, "Hey. HEY! Keep it quiet back there!" Summer school back then did not have a clinic, so one of my computer teachers had to take care of my various cuts and bruises. She must have thought my parents did this to me, because she kept asking a lot of questions about how they treated me, and sadly, I had never been questioned like this before, and told her the truth as I saw it.

Not smart. Social workers got involved because my parents were treating me pretty badly, and I didn't know that yet (well, I did, but I didn't know other adults gave a damn). In the end, this was actually a GOOD thing, and may have started seeds that saved my life in high school. But that's another topic.

And, yes, I got mugged. I was beaten to a pulp by some students who jumped me and stuffed into a trash can in such a way I could not get out, so I stayed up-side down in the trash can for possibly 3 hours until a janitor found me and was very relieved I was not dead. He gave me a ride home, too.

This may not seem computer class related, but it was the environment I worked in that summer. South Lakes was fucking hard core. It was also a school that, at the time, had no walls but sliding partitions instead. It also had an electronic bell that went "Booooooop" instead of rang. Very "modern and progressive," like the town Reston that held it. We even had an official computer lab with a kill switch and everything.

We had three teachers, two student assistants from a local college, two classrooms, the lab, and another room that acted as a secondary lab that had... wait for it... ATARI 800 COMPUTERS!! SQUEEE!!! 8-bit graphics, sound, cartridges and everything. Even better, no the 8-bits had no CPM time restrictions, so you could be on them leisurely.

Nerdgasm.

But this camp was harder. We actually had to write several programs a week, and it was mostly over my head. I'd love to say "I found my calling" but I found the whole thing to be abstract and I was failing, and failing hard. I was one of two people my age (12), and everyone else was much older. The programs were "hard," especially because they now involved graphics. Some of the programs were, "Make an interactive restaurant menu that offers suggestions based on what the person has already ordered," and "Make a face with an eye that winks randomly." There were 52 tasks you had to complete, and I felt on my own and lost most of the time.

On top of this, the camp was filled with a lot of socially inept kids with temper problems. One of the student assistants was also temper-challenged. None of the kids took it out on me worth noting, but a few would throw themselves on the floor with absolute toddler rage when they didn't get their way from a teacher. The one exception was one student assistant who nearly beat the shit out of me for reasons I'll never understand.

I had a lab partner in the CRT/LPT room this one day. My partner was the other kid my age. He was okay, but other kids didn't like him because he smelled a little, didn't wear underwear but wore baggy shorts (peekaboo), and talked a lot about his balls and dick a lot. A lot. Real big with the penis jokes. While I just didn't think about him much except for the penis jokes, most of the other kids picked on him and teased him a lot. This one student assistant, whose name I have forgotten so we'll call him Dick, was what would later typify a nerd that jocks really hated. Dress shirt with checkerboard print, thick glasses, badly greased mid-parted hair, and polyester slacks. Oh, and an attitude like everyone around him was sooooo stupid!

This one day, while my partner tried to draw an ASCII cock and balls (with slash/pipe hair), Dick suddenly grabbed my arm so hard, I felt it was close to snapping.

"DID YOU TOUCH THIS??"

What? Touch what?

He grabbed my hand and slapped some box in the middle of the table with it; beating my hand and arm into the object like a ragdoll. "THIS THIS!! DID YOU TOUCH THIS??"

Um... no! I didn't even know what it was. All I can tell anyone, to this day, was it was a small box the size of a hardback book with some kind of jog dial and some black numbers on that dial on a white dial background. There were a lot of things plugged into it, but I can't recall anything else.

He twiddled the jog dial, and then whimpered in frustration, then quickly ran to the kill switch and hit it hard with the palm of his hand!

The entire room went dark. The lab was encased in glass panes, so we could see the hallway nights stayed on, but the classroom next to us went dark. Then the fire alarm went off. Dick screamed for everyone to get out. As we were filing out the door, one of the teachers ran in to see what the hell was going on. Dick screamed something incompressible which mostly came out his nose. Even the teacher went, "wait, what? YOU hit the kill switch? Or he did?" pointing to me.

I balked I didn't hit the kill switch, but the teacher shushed me. Dick calmed down long enough to scream I had adjusted whatever it was, but I couldn't hear anyone because the fire alarm was so loud. Dick grabbed my shirt and swung me towards him, but the teacher scream at him and forced him to let me go. But I was to stay there. Now the other teachers were in the room, along with some teachers from other classrooms. "It is a real fire? Did the computer lab catch fire? It was always hot in there..."

Long story short, they made me sit in the dark classroom while they sorted everything out. Finally, the lights came back on, and a teacher came in assured me that nothing was damaged or broken. She just wanted to know what I had touched. I told her I touched nothing, and she said she believed me. The place where Dick grabbed me and slapped my arm around was already turning colors, and she wanted to see it. She said it was just a bruise, and then I got an apology from her, and then an apology from another teacher (the guy who stopped Dick in the first place). They had sent Dick home, and said he had completely over-reacted to a relatively minor issue, they were sure I didn't touch anything, nothing was broken, and then they apologized some more.

Even though I probably failed everything that year? Between the social worker intervention and the incident with Dick, I got left alone. Dick did return to work, but he was never in the same room I was and I kind of got the impression he was told to stay far away from me.

Looking back on it, Dick represented some of the first issues I had with extreme "fannish" people. I head never seen a "grownup" act in such a childish manner. He couldn't have been more than 19 at the time, and his tantrums still rang in my ears with all the convention incidents I was to witness years later. There's a special kind of OCD-spawned violence that comes with some of the brightest of people. Intellectual giants yet social midgets.

And I also remember the kindness of adults. I had never had a teacher, let alone two, apologize to me before. One of their own had acted badly, and they admitted to it! These people made a deep impression on me I hope to always remember.

Anyways the issue with the social workers was dismissed by my mother somehow. Everything was fine. Stop calling. Luckily, while they may have stopped calling, my school file was not forgotten.

Then I went into Junior High, and my life went to hell faster that shit through a goose. Posted in: computer , computerhistory , tech

How I Ended Up in Computerland: Part 1 - Computer Camp (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

This is going to be part one of several parts to come.

I never really considered computers as a career when I was a kid. I wanted to be an paleontologist, veterinarian, architect, and astronomer from age 8 to 18 when reality set in that I was not destined for college. I had always considered that there were two kinds of computer users: those who used them for games, and those strange bearded me who wore suspenders you see in server rooms where computers are the size of refrigerators.

Back in the 1970s, this wasn't too far from the truth.

My father, an electrical engineer, was not fond of computers, although he worked with them. My mother told me this was why we were not allowed to have a computer in the house; my father didn't want to come home to them after a day of dealing with them. I am not sure if I believe this because my father never allowed us to have a VCR or a microwave oven. He may have been cheap.

In 1977, I got my first LED calculator. There of the first things I did with it were calculate what age I would be in the year 2000 (32), multiply past the screen (99999999 x 9999999 got a flashing "E"), and what happens when I divide by zero (also a flashing E). It was a large device for a small kid. It was about the size of a paperback book and almost as heavy when you put the 9v battery in it. I actually had this calculator until 1994, when my son broke it into tiny, tiny pieces.

One day, my father brought home a huge sleeve of punch cards as part of some educational thing he was doing. I made huge card houses out of them. He wasn't too pleased.

My first experience with a keyboard and terminal was in the summer of 1979, I should think, during a summer school program. Fairfax County had gotten a new mainframe and terminal system in some of the more wealthier schools. An odd footnote is that one of the architects for this system ended up being my boss at AOL from 2001-2004. I spent the day at this "computer camp," where we learned some of the basics of LOGO, ALGOL (and a kin, SNOBOL), PASCAL, FORTRAN, and the newcomer, BASIC. Of course, everyone liked BASIC, but the interpreter for it was done by login, and we ran on some "CPM" (Computing By Minute) time restraints. I still remember the old DEC 80s we had.

That is, if you were lucky to get a CRT terminal.

In fact, we didn't have enough terminals to go around, so they rotated the class by groups of 8. And they usually had 6 CRT systems (keyboard and screen) and 2 Line Printing Terminals (LPTs for short), which looked like a huge typewriter with a huge continuous sheet of green and white banded paper. Your LPT session was typed out rather noisily and it shook. The "bell" (now a beep, or control + g ) was really a bell that went "diinnng" back then.

Either way you logged in was the same.

HELLO username [enter]

Then you put in your password. Ah, now here's the big one. At this age, I was blessed to have a teacher who was REALLY into making safe passwords. Even back then, before there were a lot of hackers, this teacher stressed how important it was to keep your password safe. His password was like two lines from the Bible, and took him almost 10-15 seconds to type at a fast typing speed. He suggested that our passwords be more than 8 letters and number, and less than 256, which was the buffer limit. I forgot mine, but you had to submit your password to him before he approved it. He even said the only reason he wants to know your password is the plethora of students who forgot theirs every class.

The penalty for staying logged in was he changed your password. This may seem harsh, but since the class plaid for login time as well as computing time, you could run the class thousands of dollars if you stayed logged in overnight. Supposedly.

That lesson stays with me to this day. Later on, I would run into people who would fuck up your login scripts if you stayed logged in, and I have to say this never happened to me. Even now, I lock my computer screen saver when I step away (sometimes cats walk on the keyboard).

Most of the class was lecture or deskwork only. You wrote programs on paper, filled out worksheets, and handed them in. The computer time was to test your work or theories, because there was simply not enough screens to go around for them to be in use for everything. And even then, we didn't do a lot of programming. I recall programming was more like the "Boss" of a video game: the end guy was hard. I think I wrote maybe a total of 4 programs, and they were all really basic ones like finding an average of 100 coin tosses, a Mad Libs like game, stuff like that.

The class also had several field trips. We went into large server rooms, saw how the Metro Rail operated, and visited other computer-related sites and activities. At the end of the class, I got a copy of "The Best of Creative Computing Volume 1," which I still have.

After that camp, though, we never spoke about computers for two more years. They still remained mysterious boxes run by grumbling bearded men in suspenders to me. Posted in: computer , computerhistory , tech
September 11

Now I want an iFung (Durf.org (Durf)) by Durf

Seen on the packaging for a fake iPhone, as reported by Bloomberg.com:

Waring. It will break the law without authorized by Apple Inc., if you use “iPhone” logo on any electronic pruducts.

Posted in: fun , tech
September 7

Stop staring at the chalk lines (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

Sometimes, in the tech world, while trying to explain someone I get a lot of follow up questions that make no sense. This usually tells me that not only did the person not understand what I said, but focused on something completely superfluous. I have started calling this “focusing on the chalk lines,” because this is what it sounds like in my head:

Me: I have drawn a picture of a of the problem on the blackboard to show you what it looks like.
Them: So, what’s that white stuff in your hand?
Me: That’s chalk. Let’s look at the problem I have--
Them: Is the problem the chalk?
Me: No. The problem is what I have written on the board.
Them: There are lines on the board. This is problem because you rub this “chalk” on the board, producing the lines. Stop doing that and the problem goes away.
Me: It’s just a representation of the problem. An example.
Them: So... the chalk isn’t a real problem?
Me: No. What I have written in the chalk is the--
Them: Let’s try and see if the problem goes away if you don’t use this “chalk.” Posted in: chalk , tech
August 8

iAt office, iWorking (Durf.org (Durf)) by Durf

On the menu for today: grabbing a copy of the iWork ‘08 trial version and putting it through its paces. This year’s flavor comes with Numbers, a spreadsheet application I don’t need, and a new version of Keynote, which I also don’t particularly need. Can you tell I’m not a businessperson here? But what it does have is a new version of Pages that claims the ability to deal with tracked changes from MS Word. And that would be very handy for a translator to have.

Posted in: tech
July 19

Buzzwords (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

I got this inquiry to my Dice.com account. I get them a lot, but this one was really funny to me for some reason. Maybe I snapped.

Wipro Technologies is a global services provider delivering technology-driven business solutions that meet the strategic objectives of our clients. Wipro has 38 'Centers of Excellence' that create solutions around specific needs of industries. Wipro delivers unmatched business value to customers through a combination of process excellence, quality frameworks and service delivery innovation.

Is that a generic and vague mission statement or what? Back when worked for Cargo Furniture, we paid some clown $70,000 (in 1994 money) to write us a mission statement that sounded almost exactly the same. If I saw that on a resume, I'd roll my eyes and go, "Puh-LEESE." Anything that vague trying to sound that impressive must be hiding some strong insecurities. Here's how I read this:

Wipro Technologies does stuff using technology and sells it to companies that want to buy it anywhere on Earth. Wipro has 38 names of places that does something for companies grouped by what they do. Wipro thinks what it has to offer is very nice compared to other stuff because we mix together what we do internally real good, put it in a pretty frame, and send you new things that you have probably already seen before, but they are still new to others as well.

I don't know what this "stuff" is. So I went to look it up. http://www.wipro.com first shows, on their logo, "Applying Thought!" Well, how awesome is that? This company is self-aware! Below that, they describe "Applied Innovation" with the enclosed parts of the letters filled with colors. A softly-animated flash slide show is above it. But what is this "Applied Innovation" (We do new things)?

At Wipro we have fine-tuned the science of viewing innovation though the lens of practicality to design unique solutions for end customers. Applied Innovation is the ability to infuse newer ideas and newer ways of doing things into all parts of the organization, and improve business outcomes, often without major disruptive change. It is a 360-degree business approach covering process, delivery, business and technology Innovations that help Wipro to work collaboratively with clients for cost take-outs, speed to market and new business opportunities. This approach is backed by a 25-year heritage in providing domain-intensive technology solutions and a solid delivery backbone with industry leading credentials and certifications such as CMMi Level 5 and BS15000.

Ho-lee-shee-it! Look at all those high-falootin' words! They fine-tuned the actual science, not the practice, but the science of observing new ways of doing things. And how did they do this professor? "Though the lens of practicality." I wonder if Len Crafters can get you than in about an hour? Back when I was in remedial reading for my dyslexia in elementary school, Mrs. Reed, our teacher, used to explain you could break down sentence meaning by defining the core of the whole sentence. You'd remove participles, adjectives, and prepositional phrases. Like "As a child, I used to sail model boats down my the pond in Central Park," is really broken down to "I sailed" or "I sailed boats." I wanna do this with that huge sentence above.

We have. Innovation infuses and improves. It is. Approach is backed.

Note, these kinds of buzzword speaking terms never actually says or promises anything. Like my company is an Internet Service Provider for Businesses. We sell T1s, offer data centers, sell Voice over IP, host servers, host websites, and so on. It's right on our front page what we do and what we offer. But this site, which I believe is a series of outsourcing call centers, requires that you really dig around to find that out. Posted in: buzzords , tech , work
July 6

Free loot from the company (Durf.org (Durf)) by Durf

Seen in Cringely's latest piece:

"The fact that Apple sees the iPhone as a hugely important platform for the future can be seen in the company's decision to give a top-of-the-line iPhone to every Apple employee, even part-timers. This is frigging brilliant. EVERY Apple employee becomes an iPhone evangelist. EVERY Apple employee participates in ongoing stress testing and customer feedback. You can bet that every technical problem will be addressed quickly, simply because the entire company will be experiencing these problems."

That just sounds cool for some reason. I do get the same sort of treatment from my company, but since we do publishing all this means is that I get copies of all our magazines and books and so on. And since I already read everything in them during the translation and editing stages, that somehow isn't as exciting as a slick new phone.

Maybe I should go work for Nissan. Ask for an Infiniti or something.

Posted in: tech , work
July 1

Behind the scenes of Baltimore (Punkadyne Labs (Punkwalrus))

I spent much of today in Baltimore on a contract job.

I was working on a site that has voice and data installed, and I needed to again dig around an ancient (by US standards) building. I spent part of the day sitting cross-legged on a filthy floor, looking at modern blinky lights in a setting that didn't really seem like it was the place for such clean and refined equipment. Those of you who do telco work in cities have seen countless places like these (and [info]ironkite, I haven't forgotten you). I guess I get spoiled coming from AOL, where we did nothing on some site we didn't own. Everything all lined up and clean with adequate lighting, bundled wires, and conduit.

The place I was in I think dates back to the late 1800s. I have done work in this building before (it's on Calvert Street), but on the lower floor, where I had to snake network cable underneath a raised floor that wasn't raised because it was a computer room, it was a 1950's version of covering up the previous century's uglies: old cloth-covered electrical cable, some proprietary plug system, and the granite masonry remains of support walls from the previous office (which I was told was once a bank). The raised floor was carpet squares over slate. Each tile weighed like 30 pounds.

This time I was working the second floor which had just been redone. It was apparently a floor added at some point after the building was originally constructed, because the huge arched windows of the lower floor came up to knee height of the new offices. Kind of weird, like the opposite window arrangement of a basement. The "redone" part was also a little odd because while they did a fairly good job with the drywall and trim, the original ceiling was obvious meant to be in a much larger room because the decorative work on the stone support beams was very large and ornate (and covered with lots of a layers of paint, the most recent being white). I bet at one time it looked very nice, maybe a Louis the XIV style, or perhaps mahogany trimmed with gold leaf. Maybe it could have been marble; does paint stick to marble? Anyway, I felt like I was on a SUPER raised floor. Below me were some abandoned offices that were once used to film Head of State a few years ago. Their conference room is very nice: the knee-high window shows down Fayette Street and frames the famous Phoenix Shot Tower. But the glass conference room door is the kind of door one finds on street store fronts or mall entrances. But for the most part, the office parts looked nice and new.

The telco room, on the other hand, had a giant industrial fan that ground on gears that had probably been around in World War II. It filled the room, both in presence and sound. Also in the room was inexplicably a closed circuit TV on a file cabinet showing nine pans of all the entrances. I am not sure why a travel office needs closed circuit TV for the entire building, but perhaps everyone in the building has one for safety reasons. The walls were broken and filthy, and the uneven floor was spotted with almost a century of rust stains and paint spots.

I did my work, which involved fighting with an Kubuntu Linux distro that randomly changed network settings, a Netgear wireless SOHO router that cheerfully picked up all the other wireless routers and access points throughout the building (12 networks showed up, only 4 of them secured) and then refused to be configured because the default address was the same on all the other wireless routers, a Windows 2003 DHCP server (yuck), and a company called ATX who had had no real grasp on what IPs were assigned to anything... and their DNS was down, if they gave me the right IPs, which they didn't for their default gateway, and their default gateway was the same as the default Netgear router anyway. What a mess. But I got the VoIP and data to work, web was up, and my client was happy. Posted in: baltimore , tech , work
January 25

Wanted: Bluetooth headset (Put together quickly (Haligan)) by michaelb

After losing my last Bluetooth headset, I’m on the lookout for one to use with my notebook (i.e. Skype) and mobile phone. The thing is I don’t think anyone makes what I want. It shouldn’t be too hard, I just want one that can work with and be connected to two different devices (the PowerBook and Phone). To be able to switch between Skype and the mobile phone like you would switch lines on a normal phone would fit my needs perfectly.

If anyone knows of one please drop me a line.

And while I’m at it: to all Mobile phone carriers. When I call information for a number and choice to automatically ring the number, please have the number I asked for added to my call history. It is a pain when the line is busy to have to call information again if I didn’t write the number down.

Posted in: tech

Wanted: Bluetooth headset (Put together quickly (Haligan)) by michaelb

After losing my last Bluetooth headset, I’m on the lookout for one to use with my notebook (i.e. Skype) and mobile phone. The thing is I don’t think anyone makes what I want. It shouldn’t be too hard, I just want one that can work with and be connected to two different devices (the PowerBook and Phone). To be able to switch between Skype and the mobile phone like you would switch lines on a normal phone would fit my needs perfectly.

If anyone knows of one please drop me a line.

And while I’m at it: to all Mobile phone carriers. When I call information for a number and choice to automatically ring the number, please have the number I asked for added to my call history. It is a pain when the line is busy to have to call information again if I didn’t write the number down.

Posted in: tech