Archive for the 'Technology' Category

Why I love Comcast

Thursday, May 20th, 2004

Let me tell you why I love Comcast, because I know you were all clamoring to know.

Sometime last night our cable TV went out completely. Nothing but static.

No fear. I called Comcast, and after some brief troubleshooting, I had an appointment with a technician for 9-11am the next morning. My guy showed up at just before 10am and my cable was back up and running less than an hour later.

The last time my DSL went out it took me two weeks to get it going again.

Shudder.

Why I love DSL

Thursday, May 20th, 2004

Let me tell you why I love having DSL as opposed to cable, since I know you were all clamoring to know.

Sometime last night our cable TV went out completely. Nothing but static.

No fear. I popped into my office and surfed the web for my news and entertainment.

If I was on cable internet, I’d be forced to read a book or something equally banal.

Shudder.

Damn Safari bookmarks, again!?

Saturday, May 1st, 2004

If you’re currently using Apple’s web browser, Safari, bookmark this page right now into a new bookmark folder called “Dumb”. Right now! Bookmark it now quick!

Gotcha! Again.

You can’t bookmark a page quickly into a new bookmark folder using Safari. It requires two distinct processes. One to first create the folder and then one to actually create the bookmark. There is no opportunity for the user to create a new folder while in the act of saving the bookmark.

This makes no sense.

It’s the little things, people.

Update: To Safari’s credit, you can choose “Add Bookmark Folder” after you access the Add Bookmark function and before you save the bookmark, but it’s still a separate process and just as clunky as not being able to.

Oh, the irony.

Wednesday, March 17th, 2004

If only Alanis Morissette had as good a grasp on irony as Wired.com.

Exhibit A

(If you don’t get it, that’s a video ad over there on the right. And the content ads displayed on the article page are either video or Flash ads as well.)

Safari bookmarks, you did me wrong.

Thursday, March 4th, 2004

I found out the hard way a big problem with the Safari bookmarks page, and it’s functionality in relation to the site you were visiting when you clicked over to your bookmarks.

I was buying something from a site and had gotten to the end of my transaction. I was about to print the this page as my receipt and inadvertently clicked the bookmarks icon in my Bookmarks bar. No problem, I just clicked it again thinking I could easily return to the page I was on.

It seems that Safari doesn’t cache this page - or thinks it must reload this page - so when the page was reloaded I was greeted with an error message from the site telling me that my transaction was complete and the page could not be loaded. This is because the page was the result of a form submission, not simply a static page.

I have not tested this on other pages to see if this happens all the time, but the fact that it happened once is enough testing for me. Safari should keep this page in memory, as if in an invisible tab, not reload the page from the site. This can’t be too hard to accomplish.

You’ve played this song over 1 billion times.

Thursday, March 4th, 2004

I plugged in my iPod yesterday and noticed that I had some rather strange play count statistics on some (812 of them) of the songs on it:

playcount.gif

I took care of this by simply resetting the play counts for the effected songs, but I’m still searching for the cause of the anomaly. Any help is appreciated.

I’m still jonesin’ for a new firmware update. Especially one that will do away with the pause between the end of one song and the beginning of another. I know that the iPod looks ahead to see what song is next and loads that into memory to decrease hard drive accesses, so I’m baffled as to why there is a pause. iTunes doesn’t exhibit this behavior.

Call the Better Business Bureau

Thursday, January 15th, 2004

At this late stage in the unsuccessful process of trying to get my new graphics card to work, I can hardly stand to relive the last couple days. Suffice it to say that this happened, and I’m not really pleased with Megamacs.com. No link given, because you’re better off just staying away from them altogether.

The story of a boy, rush hour traffic, and his new iTrip.

Friday, December 12th, 2003

After 5 months of delay, Brown delivered my 2nd generation iTrip today. I’m still not sure of exactly what problems Griffin Technology had in getting these out on time for the initially-announced mid-July ship date.

My first trial with what has to be a nominee for the cutest accessory for the iPod, if there were such an award, was at work. I looked for an open station via the freeware iTrip Station Finder software kindly offered by Griffin, and headed into my boss’ office, where the only digital-tuning radio in the office lives. It worked, but the audio was filled with static.

With disillusionment and low expectations, I, still excited, headed to my car to try the iTrip out on my way to a holiday party to which I was following a co-worker. This will come into play later.

While stuck in traffic, I got my first opportunity to scan for an open radio frequency. This, I have found, is the only way to find a reliable station. The aforementioned iTrip Station Finder is a joke. After a few times around the dial, surfing the alarmingly busy Washington, D.C. airwaves, I settled on 101.7. There were virtually no frequencies that weren’t picking up some noise from their neighbors.

I set the iTrip to broadcast over 101.7 via the somewhat clunky method devised by the Griffin engineers. The process involves choosing the frequency from an "iTrip Stations" playlist, playing a song of blips, bleeps, and whirs, pressing Play/Pause again, and waiting a few seconds for the iTrip to sort everything out.

This drawn out process becomes somewhat dangerous if it has to be performed on the road, which is where I use my iPod 80 percent of the time.

More annoying is that to test the station you have chosen, you must back out of this playlist, find a real song to play, and see how it sounds. If the frequency isn’t clean enough, your iTrip sounds like it’s playing via a radio station in another state, and you start the process all over. If you are in the middle of a song, and a previously clean frequency starts to go bad, you must stop the song and submit yourself to the laborious tuning process, then go back and find the song to which you were listening. Not money, as my co-workers would say.

Returning to our story…

As annoying as all that is, 101.7, after an initial couple of hiccups, turned out to work very well throughout my evening’s travels from Virginia, to Maryland, and into DC. There were occassional bits of static, but overall the sound was acceptable, and I quickly got used to the fairly rare occurrences of interference.

Still excited about the quality of my now-wireless audio solution, I wrang my co-worker in the car also stuck in traffic ahead of me (I told you he’d come up again.), and told him to tune his radio to 101.7.

"Oh, man! That is so cool!," wrang through the cell phone. His radio was now playing, with listenable clarity, the song my iPod/iTrip was broadcasting!

We tested the signal by moving farther apart, and to no surprise the quality went down. A big SUV got between us at one point, and even though my co-worker reported that he would still get the broadcast on and off as it bounced around the cars, the audio still came through. I wonder if the wall-to-wall traffic helped the signal or hurt the reception he was getting?

Basically, as long as we were in sight of each other, no more than 20 feet apart, he could hear my tunes. We immediately realized the multiple-car roadtrip possibilities of this, especially if combined with those ubiquitous walkie-talkies.

The true test of the usefulness of the iTrip and it’s process of finding a clear channel will come on my first long trip, where I will travel in and out of various radio markets. We’ll see how setting everything up on-the-fly goes.

The iTrip didn’t fully live up to my expectations of perfect FM signal sound, but I’ve only had it for a few hours, and I’m holding out hope. Until then, my new favorite radio station is definitely 101.7 WJTNT.

BitTrickle*

Friday, September 19th, 2003

I am currently on a BitTorrent swarm that has 182 complete seeds going and 33 other active downloads. My speeds should be blazing, right? Not exactly. They’re hovering in the 3k/sec range. BitTrickle, indeed.

Are all those “experimental” clients that allow people to set their upload speed to minimal amounts (without really affecting download speed much, I’ve tested it out) to blame? I hope not.

Update: I’m now hovering at around 12-20k/sec. A marked improvement. But certainly lower than what I would expect for such a popular swarm.

* No relation to Dick.

Canon Digital SLR for under $1000. *Drool.*

Friday, September 19th, 2003

Oh my. OH my! OH MY!! My beloved Canon has done it this time. They’ve announced the first digital single lens reflex camera that to retail for under a grand.

At $900 USD, the EOS 300D doesn’t offer the metal body of the EOS 10D, and it offers much few image control settings, but it does save you 600 smackeroos.

I love my tiny Powershot S230 too much to part with it, but I might just have to sell one of my old EOS film cameras to help finance this little guy. It’s almost too hard to resist! We’ll see what the Erickson Barnett Santa puts in my stocking this holiday season. I’ll just have to drool until then.