Wed - December
1, 2004
FEED...ME....
NetNewsWire has completely spoiled me when it
comes to getting my news, Yahoo Groups postings, and even FedEx package tracking at a glance.
So I definitely agree with Jon
here, especially when it comes to the banking. (Ever been accidentally
overdrawn on your checking account because of a transaction you didn't know was
coming? I have. Not fun.) Darrin
proposes an interesting idea for TV listings via RSS.
Right now, I use Excite's TV
Favorites page to track my favorite shows, and it works pretty well.
But, of course, I have to go and check it
manually.What I'd actually prefer is a
program like the now-abandoned tvmenu, where I could select my favorite shows
and have the program automatically find instances of those shows (using
something like XMLTV), and alert me when they come on. Give me lots of
notification capabilites including the option to sync it as a calendar (with
alarms) to my iPod, let it control an eyeTV, Formac Studio TVR, or AlchemyTV card, wrap it all up in a simple and
intuitive interface, and you'd have one killer way to manage your TV viewing.
Are you listening, Delicious Monster folks? I would fork over $40
or more for something like this that worked well.
Posted at 08:40 AM Read More
<angelic music here>
My new
baby!A dual 1.8Ghz Power Mac G5, to
call my very own! I would compare it to the PowerBook G3, or that iMac that I've
been using since the PowerBook started to die on me, but really, there is no
comparison. Absolutely and totally blows it away.
The
specs:2 x 1.8Ghz G5
processors512MB
RAM160GB
HDSuperDriveATI
Radeon 9600XT graphics card (sweet for
gaming!)AirPort Extreme
(futureproofing)BluetoothGot
it from the Apple Store for Education for $2100 plus tax.
Rounded it out with a Samsung 17" flat CRT from Sam's Club for
$110.Only problem is I can tell
sometimes that, under certain conditions, it's starved for RAM. (Virtual PC,
mainly.) Well, that, and I'm going to owe my
Grandma for quite a while to pay back the loan.
:-)I've had The Monolith (as I have
dubbed it) crunching Folding@Home packets in it's off time. Really
cranks 'em out, and it's interesting to hear the fans speed up as the processors
crank into high gear.
Posted at 02:34 AM Read More
Nope, still not dead.
Hi, again, everybody! Didya miss me?
Yeah, I didn't think
so.
So, what's new in my happy little
world since I last shouted into the ether?
Well, I'm finishing up my 3rd semester of
MCC. Here's the class
rundown:
Financial
Accounting: Required for the business track
for my Computer Science major*. We have to do
everything by
hand. A ClueStick for you, Mrs. Leslie
Kruser: nobody is going to be doing their accounting by candlelight when the
power is out. We tend to do these things on computers now. I understand that we
have to know how it all works, but why not at least teach us the basics of a
computer accounting system? It's not like the class isn't held in a computer lab
with Quicken and Peachtree Accounting loaded on all of the machines.
</rant>
Computer
Science I: OK, strange story time. I started
off in this class, which was 12:00 - 2:20 on Mondays and Wednesdays. Save for
the Chinese teacher's accent, I was doing OK. Then, out of the blue, she
announces that she's leaving the class, because she's gotten a better job. (A
"real programming job", apparently.) The head of the department says that he's
found a new teacher for the class, but there's a timing conflict and the class
will have to be moved one hour later (1:00-3:20).
OK, fine,
but..... I have my Music Appreciation class
at 2:30.
Problem! So
with this new teacher who, I believe, isn't teaching us as well, I have to leave
an hour early to not miss the other class. A wonderful screw-job all
around. Then the head of the department says
that he's going to make sure the II class runs to make sure everyone who misses
out on this class gets to do the next
one. Right. Sorry, Bob, no
deal.
Music Appreciation:
Pretty cool, actually. I do have trouble
hearing the differences between some of the composers and periods, but I'll pass
it and get my remaining Fine Arts credit, which is what I took it
for.
College
Algebra: Easy. I usually do the homework in
class while she's talking.
Plus, in my
(now extended) lunch period, I like to hang out in MCC's "Belly of The Whale"
student lounge. (More on that in another post) Lots of cool people there. Maybe
you'll see some of their faces in one of my upcoming posts.
Posted at 02:24 AM Read More
Sat
- September 4, 2004
Mine's bigger!!
Jon's got his iStick,
and as soon as FedEx gets it here, I'll have mine.512MB,
USB2 for $57 ($54 now) with free shipping from NewEgg.com.(Yes,
I'm gloating. Why do you ask?)
Posted at 09:25 PM Read More
Of wind and wireless
T-Mobile offers free hurricane WiFi in Florida
again (Engadget)That's
great, it's really cool of them to do
that.You know, assuming any of the buildings
containing hotspots are still standing after this is all
over.I'm picturing geeks climbing out
of the rubble and huddling around the ruins of their nearby Starbucks or Borders
for internet access.
Posted at 09:04 PM Read More
Way to go...
If you need to know how to torpedo your own
political career, just ask Alan
Keyes.Geez. Like somehow
it's not bad enough that he's going to get skunked by Barack Obama come election
day, he has to get on Dick Cheney's bad side, too.
Posted at 08:52 PM Read More
Still here!
OK, so I took most of the summer off of blogging.
I was enjoying resting and
doing--nothing.In school this semester
I'm taking:Financial Accounting- ZzzzzZzzzz,
Computer Science I- Really interesting and
actually sort of fun, but understanding through the teacher's accent (Japanese)
is a challenge.Music Appreciation- Okay. The
teacher's pretty cool.College Algebra-
Okay. More understanding difficulty (Indian), but the material is all stuff I've
been through before. More tedious than
anything.I'm getting the idea that the
school is getting desperate for teachers and is looking more and more
overseas.I'm actually working and
earning money! I'm teaching Joan Mann (Milt's wife) how to use her PowerBook for
the 'net and for writing, as well as teaching Barb Foreman from Macadamia
MUG how to use OS X. $10/hour is not a bad deal, even if you're only
doing it twice a week. Almost all of it is being saved for my new G5. Not too
long now, I hope!We're still on track
to move within the next few months. We've been bouncing from prospective house
to prospective house, either because we've rejected our last or we've found a
new one that's better. The house we're looking at right now is listing for
$367,000, but we think we can negotiate it down to around $350,000. It would be
well worth it even at $367k, however. Our
house is still on the market, and we've had a few nibbles, but nothing big yet.
We're not in a huge hurry, though, so we're not going to be dropping the price
for a while.
Posted at 08:40 PM Read More
Sun - July 11, 2004
Uhhhhhhh...
Posted at 03:50 PM Read More
Sun - June 27, 2004
Yet more gadgetlust
If these specs are for real, and it's going to come
bundled with The Missing Sync v4 (like the rumors say), then
I may just have to start carrying a Palm again.
Posted at 01:56 AM Read More
Mon - June 7, 2004
In the AirPort Express lane
Apple's
AirPort
Express looks like an awesome little 802.11g Swiss Army knife for any
traveling Mac user (or PC user, for that matter). I'd love to have one just to
have a pocketable wireless access point for traveling. I hadn't expected that
they would kill off the modemless AirPort Extreme Base Station, but it makes
sense given the feature sets that they would.
AirTunes- now that's just really damn cool. It's
a simple way to go toe-to-toe with all of these digital audio boxes without a
lot of added complexity and interface design. I could definitely see this
technology popping up in other devices in the future- wireless speaker systems,
stereo receivers, etc. Maybe TiVo will code it into their Home Media
Option so it'll finally be able to play iTunes Music
Store files. I had not expected that the AirPort Express would have an
optical digital audio output, especially in this clever dual-purpose jack. I
suppose it's a boon to the audiophile types who drooled over Apple Lossless
Encoding, but to those of us without The Golden Ears™, the analog jack
should do fine.I could definitely find
a use for this in my network. When provided a wireless network connection from
an existing wireless access point, you get a remote Ethernet jack perfect for
that game console, old computer, or other device that doesn't do wireless, a USB
printer port perfect for liberating a USB printer from tyrannical control by one
particular computer, and of course an audio jack to stream music to a stereo,
speaker set, or any other audio device with a spare input jack. I'd put one of
these on my desk to give me a spare Ethernet jack, to share an additional USB
printer, and to stream music into my stereo. Could put another one down behind
our big screen TV to stream music out the TV's speakers. Of course, if we end up
moving to a house that lacks Ethernet jacks (Horrors!!), we'd need a pair of
these to get the iMacs connected to the network again.
My only question is what kind of
protection is there to keep unauthorized users from sending their own music to
your AirPort Express? Given that this will work with both PCs and Macs, uses
Rendezvous to announce its' presence, and seeing how most people don't protect
their wireless networks*, it might be fun to check for these when wardriving.
Give someone a musical interlude that they weren't expecting.
Oh,
and here is a great "how it works" article from the fine folks at
MacWorld. Bummer side is that you can't play to multiple outputs at once this
way, but there is also a really neat little tidbit: apparently the optical audio
out means that the AirPort Express can handle multichannel (5.1, 6.1, 7.1...)
audio if you can play it in iTunes. Which currently you can't (to my knowledge)
but who knows what the future
holds...*(The AirPort Setup Assistant
prompts for a WEP password on an AirPort Extreme Base Station by default, so
Apple might have this set up the same way.)
Posted at 10:47 PM Read More
Mon - May 3, 2004
More of "Our Fascination With The Idiotic"
If I believed in that kind of stuff, I'd think
this
guy was one of the four horsemen of the apocalypse. I really thought
Apple would have better taste than to carry him on the
iTMS.Of course, when I see him
singing, the only thing that comes to mind is this.
Posted at 01:25 AM Read More
Sat
- April 17, 2004
I'm phidgety with excitement already!
Some serious geek-cool going on
here.I
can only think of about a skazillion things I could do with a system like
that!Hey, Phidget folks (Pholks?)! All I
need is an API to hook into this stuff with AppleScript and you can put me down
for a Starter Kit #2, pronto!(Thanks
to Chairboy for his post over at /. that tipped
me off to this)
Posted at 12:08 AM Read More
Fri - March 26, 2004
Third floor, 80's retro technology...
Fourth floor, products with incredibly small market
potential.Y'know, it'd be
cooler if it worked off of a single USB connection- power, audio (both
directions) and transport control all on one cable.
(And no, this doesn't deserve the Cool
Tech category.)
Posted at 01:27 AM Read More
I AM A PHP GOD!
I've seen various spoofs of the terror alert level system that
pull from the DHS website to stay
updated.Naturally, I wanted my own.
But I couldn't find one that was easy to install/implement, or easy for me to
understand, for that matter. So after much PHP writing, re-writing, wailing,
gnashing of teeth, etc., I finally cobbled together a PHP script that works for
me. Here it is in
action, with my own graphics from Dragon
Tales*. So, now, in the
interest of giving something back, I release that script to the
world:
terror.php.zip
OK, so it's neither terribly efficient
nor fast, but it's simply constructed and it works! The customization should be
fairly easy for anyone with a basic knowledge of HTML.
If you want to distribute it, please link to
me to show where you got it from. Otherwise, it's open.
Credits:Thanks
to Phill
Kenoyer for posting his original PHP script that I swiped the XML parser
out of.Thanks to Oscar Hills
for the idea to use preg_match to determine what the status is
instead of stabbing in the dark with '=='.
Thanks to my bud Dan Pourhadi for
use of a hundred KB or so on his web server to run
this.Thanks to TheCodingMonkeys for SubEthaEdit, with it's rocking syntax
highlighting for PHP (and 15 other languages, too).
*(I was also thinking of doing one
with Pokemon...how does "alert level Pikachu" sound?)
Posted at 01:19 AM Read More
Tue - March 16, 2004
Did my civic duty
Yep! Voted in the Illinois primary today. My
first time voting- my mom was so proud! (I'm sure she would have been even
prouder if I had taken a Republican ballot, but still...) They definitely need a
voting booth or two that's about a foot and a half taller for us really tall
folks. :-)I lied about the voting for Kerry
thing. I voted for Dean, if only just to encourage him to run in the future,
since I really like him. Kerry's going to win, of course, so I'm going to vote
for him in November. Voted for Barack
Obama for Senate- I dunno, he just seemed like a neat guy.
Posted at 06:32 PM Read More
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Published On: Dec 01, 2004 08:53 AM
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