Monday, February 28, 2005

The Switch (pt 2)

After getting the laptop squared away I decided to take the plunge on my desktop computer. But first I'll tell what I finally decided on for the laptop (Celeron 433, 128mb, 12gb HD).

I ended loading Xandros on it, and that was simply because it was the only distro that handled my Microsoft
MN-520 and surprisingly my Linksys WUSB11, which is notorious for being a bear to setup in most distros. I was close to getting SUSE 9.1 on it but I couldn't get the display past 800x600. I'm more forgiving of linux being finicky on this circa 2000 laptop. All the distros I tried on it worked but failed to work with the WiFi card, they all recognized the 3com PCMCIA no problem... But being wired on a laptop kinda defeats the purpose, doesn't it?

Xandros 3.0 OCE (Open Circulation Edition) is a very solid and stable OS. It mirrors WinXP Pro very closely and is easy to navigate. Out of all the distros, Xandros has the best file manager of them all. It also comes out the box ready for work. It recognized my USB stick and I was able to stream MP3's easily. I wasn't able to play MP3's on some distros for whatever reason, the player would show the song was playing but no sound.

I would say I have the equivalent of a PIII 500 WinXP Pro laptop under Xandros 3 OCE. It's not the zippiest of all but I'm sure it's fairing alot better than it would if WinXP Pro was on it. The laptop is definitely useable now, it's perfect for surfing and wordprocessing.

Wednesday, February 23, 2005

Made the Switch!

Well I finally made the switch to a different OS, guess what it wasn't? MacOS! I'm going to let you guys in on a poorly kept secret. Linux is a very mature and solid OS, it is definitely ready for primetime. I recently came into possession of an old Dell laptop, its a Celeron 433/128mb RAM with a wimpy 12gb HD, bleech, right?

The plan was to get my kids off of my main machine and onto the laptop. I was going to install WinME on it and let them have at it. To make a long story short, I couldn't get WinME going on the laptop with any degree of success.

I work in the IT industry and of course we're all geeks, which I proudly consider myself to be. There's always a group of guys bandying about linux this and that. Don't get me wrong I've heard about linux before, I just never had a need to move away from Windows. When my computers performance would get slow enough to notice I would upgrade.

So now I'm in possession of this woefully underpowered notebook that I would like to get some use out of, os where do I turn? Linux! I hoped online and started checking out what they call "Live CDs", these are bootable distributions of Linux that you can try out without taking the plunge so to speak. I tried the following:

Live Distros
DSL (Damn Small Linux)
Slax (Based on Slackware I believe)
Knoppix (Gnome)

Full Distros
Vidalinux (Gentoo)
Susie (?)
Xandros (Debian)

That's it for now, I'll finish up tomorrow.

Tuesday, February 15, 2005

Got new earbuds for my iPod

I've been on the hunt for a while now for some new earbuds for my iPod. I like to fancy myself as having a discerning ear when it comes to music, while I'm no audophile I thought the earbuds included with the iPod held their own when compared to other's I've used.

Last year I purchased a pair of Philips HE592 earbuds, those lasted about 4 months before I went running back to my original iPod buds. Stay clear of those things, they are painful, seriously they could be used as torture devices, if paired with the Ashley Simpson Orangebowl performance.

Today I purchased my latest set, the Sony MDR-EX71SL, compared to the HE592's these are nirvana! They're actually scary, I can't hear a darn thing with them on. I'm going to have to weigh the benefits of exercising with these in. I may only workout with them not run, they block out sound that well. Of course they sound awesome, I can hear notes in my music that I never noticed before.

At $49 they are a bit on the steep side, but the sound and noise cancelling capabilities are excellent. It was between these and the official Apple in-ear which I could only locate at CompUSA. Has anyone used those?


Monday, February 14, 2005

Aaarghhh, DRM!

Here's a thought... Digital Rights Management, SUCKS!

My latest frustration with this tool used to protect intellectual property is with Microsoft Reader for Pocket PC.  As we all know, everything Windows becomes fudged up after sometime.  I totally wipe my WinXP Pro system twice a year along with my Pocket PC, it's just a fact of life if your platform is Windows.

Imagine my surprise after getting my Axim X30 up and running, that I found out I was out of activations for MS Reader!  I had to send an email to Big Brother for consideration of bestowing me with an activation so that I could use the books I purchased!  How gracious of them.

Yes I did get the activation, but why should I have to ask for permission to use my software?  It's an old argument, but like most things, it was irrelevant until it happened to me.  You know, that stuff only happens to other people.

Guys I tell you what, I am firmly in the camp of those who will crack any DRM'd software I now own.  I'm talking everything, Out of the Park Baseball 3, Front Office Football 2K, everything.  I have had to ask for permission to use those also after inadvertently rebuilding my system without unlicensing them.  Yes my fault, but I will no longer be held hostage to software I pay for.

What happens if Napster goes out of business and you're $180 dollars into them for music?  What happens if Digital River goes under and I need to license my games?  How about those users of Xcopy DVD?  How do they get serial numbers now?

DRM & Copy protection hurts the consumer and ultimately leads to more piracy.  Guess what happened when I was researching methods to remove the DRM from my .lit books?  I found thousands of copyrighted books ripe for downloading!  The whole Wheel of Time series there for the taking in multiple formats!

Making the Switch, or not...

I've been a computer user for quite sometime,  notice I said computer, not PC, Mac, Commodore, Texas Instruments or Amiga... All of which I owned at some point or another in my computing lifetime.  I've really never been married to one platform or another, I used the one that allowed me to do the things I needed to do.

I listen to a very good podcast called the MacCast, located at http://maccast.blogspot.com/ be sure and check it out.  One of the recent shows was about why users have switched from Windows based PC's to the Max OS, the title of the show is Switcher Special #1.  The show really got me thinking about my chosen platform and why I use it.

I've always wanted a Mac based computer, but two factors have always held me back, price and lack of software.  I will give it to the Mac, it is rock-solid, the thing is a pleasure to use and the experience is wonderful, but all that coolness comes at a price.  I waltzed into CompUSA today and browsed the Mac section to get a feel for what I would be getting into to "Switch".  I figure a comparable setup to what I have now:

Athlon XP 1700, 512mb
200gb HD GeForce 4 Ti4200 64mb
16x DVD +RW
FireWire Card

A comparable Mac would be the iMac G5, which weighs in at about $1900.  Now that is a beautiful computer, and my iPod would definitely love to dock with it.  But once I get past the ooohh, ahhhh factor what am I left with?

Besides my iPod, I also us a Dell Axim X30, yes there's software that I can buy to sync with the Mac, but it's free on WinXP.  I play PC games thank you very much, and I ain't switching until I can get Chronicles of Riddick, Warhammer 40k Dawn of War or Half Life 2 on it.

For me a computer is a tool, not a lifestyle.  I use the tool that's right for the job. Sure I can use a Black & Decker or Craftsman wrench to do a job, but wouldn't a generic wrench do the job just as well?  Until the games and utilities exist for MacOS I won't be switching anytime soon, I'll be content to admire Macs from afar.

Sunday, February 13, 2005

Income Tax

Well my refund was posted yesterday, woohoo! Time to go out and buy stuff I don't need, wrong. I never got into the habit of viewing my refund as some windfall, it really is my money that the gov't has been using interest free.

I've been thinking of splurging this one time and upgrading the my PC inards and building a box for the family to use, I really don't like having my main PC as a community computer. I've been eyeing an Athlon XP 3200 and MoBo. 64bit really sound cool, but is it worth the price premium? Looks like I'm headed to the usually stops, Anandtech, Tom's and HardOCP to do some research. I'm running an Athlon XP 1700 right now and it's serviceable, I just finally have enough parts laying around the house to build a decent PC for the kids.

Thursday, February 10, 2005

Good end of an SMS 2003 setup

I'm at tail end of an SMS 2003 setup I've been at for the last couple of weeks. And yes I am a Sys Admin. I was all excited to be upgrading to the latest greatest version of SMS, thinking it would make my life much easier, in some ways it did, other's it did not.

I'll spend some time talking about it later... I'm still trying to figure out where to go with the blog.

Intro

I'm new to the blogging seen and will just be throwing random thoughts out there about my career and various interests I have.

I'm all about video games, computer and PS2. I have way too many and not enough time to complete them. I'm currently in the middle of HL2 and Chronicles of Riddick. By the way if you don't own this game you shouldn't call yourself a gamer. COR was THE game of the year! Please check it out if you get a chance.