Linux
Why Verizon won’t be taking over Charter anytime soon
I have plenty of positive things to say about both companies even if Charter suffered through financial troubles and Verizon’s services is still quite expensive.
You would think that two companies of which one provides some pretty good Internet service and a fairly decent channel line up and another company known for its excellent phone service and outstanding wireless internet coverage would be interested in joining forces against their rivals at AT&T, right?
WRONG! Sadly, these two modest contenders are not at all happy with each other and the St. Louis area doesn’t really know it. Then of course there are the lawsuits between Charter and Verizon. (Note to self: Insert picture of two grown men sissy-fighting with each other in relationship to how these two companies are behaving.)
Charter is still a cable based internet service provider, whereas Verizon can not find a place in the St. Louis market to provide their FTTx (a.k.a. FiOS) service in the St. Louis area. So the duopoly between Charter and AT&T still exists in the St. Louis area in terms of High-Speed Internet service. (Unless of course, Google comes to bless us with whatever they plan on giving out. PLEASE COME HERE, GOOGLE!)
Meanwhile, Verizon, who beat the snot out of AT&T in both Consumer Reports and Zagats consumer ratings this winter, is still both a wireless carrier competing with AT&T, Sprint, and T-Mobile not only provides wireless phone service but wireless Internet as well.
One of the great things about Verizon is that I can use my Motorola Droid and tether it to my netbook using a program called PDANet.
Since it has been a while since I have blogged, I think I should explain some of the details of my netbook.
In February, I became involved with a group called a hackerspace. The local hackerspace group, Arch Reactor, had an open house meeting that I ‘m pretty happy that I went to and joined the group. (Hence no time for blogging as of late.) Most of the time we hang around and talk about making stuff (not necessarily hacking, but also art, electronics including Ardruino, woodworking, robotics, and a bit of gardening).
Since most of the guys bring their laptops or netbooks, I used some of my rainy-day funds to buy a refurbished HP Mini from someone on eBay. It was probably one one of the best purchases I made. The computer is in great condition (with exception for a little scratch on the bottom of the computer), there is an extra-long lasting Lithium-ion battery on it. And it still runs Windows XP.
So what if I don’t have Vista or 7 on this thing? Most of the time I am either on the Internet or using UNIX-like program with Cygwin as well as an arsenal of other free open-source software available for Windows. To which I’ve tossed out just about all the software that comes on this system. Norton Internet Security (TRIALWARE! Annoying as hell!), Microsoft Office (Trialware! Use OpenOffice.org instead!), Microsoft Works (Crap). I wish I could toss out Internet Explorer, especially since I am using Chrome. But I figured, the less Microsoft stuff I have to use, the less of a security threat I can be subject to. On top of that, XP is stable enough to do some fancy computer stuff like changing the startup animation, the login screen, and replacing the GUI interface.
Anyway, back to PDANet.
PDANet is probably the best $20 worth of software that you will ever spend if you are both the owner of a Motorola Droid or other Android enabled device and the owner of a Netbook with Windows or Mac on it.
Using your phone and your computer to tether with each other to have wireless Internet is downright awesome. I would have almost have been tempted to cancel my Charter subscription if only Verizon didn’t allow any other ports to be used for things like IRC chat, SSH, or even Usenet. (AT&T is the same way, so I can probably speculate and say that every other wireless provider also is not really all that keen at the moment to use any other port than the ones used for web browsing.)
Clearly, Verizon (and its rivals) have issues still with people using their network for doing things other than downloading stupid videos of cats playing the keyboard. But like any computer system that can be modified (even Windows and Android), there is a way around it.
Having a netbook is does not mean the retirement of my old Linux system that I built myself. In fact, it opens the door to allowing for me to better my computer skills and to attempt to make the two computers communicate with each other (of which despite their form factor have pretty much the same abilities and hardware standards for the most part).
My loyal Linux machine is in need for some hardware upgrades that due to the current economy, it was much cheaper to find a netbook to take care of some of the dirty work that the Linux machine could have. That and the netbook is about 20 decibels quieter than the Linux Machine. An issue that is on my todo list when I head out to Micro Center, when and if the Missouri state legislature (particularly Cynthia Davis and Jane Cunningham) pull the head out of their butts and realize that a socialized healthcare system is the reform this country needs to get people back to work. The same can be said about the Tea Party which is also threatening to kill Metro. (Vote YES on Proposition A on April 6th! I like riding the bus, but if adding a half-cent sales tax to cut the time I spend commuting to and from Downtown (which is an hour!) is wrong, then I definitely don’t want to be right!)
Droid Does Quite Well
Generally when I write my critiques, I have an unconventional way of writing them. I like to point out the faults and grevances first before pointing out the praise, features, and benefits. This way, when someone finishes reading the article they can think postively about the thing that I wrote about. This can work the opposite way if you list the postive first and the negative second.
I’ve had my Motorola Droid for nearly a week now. Though it is a good phone it is not without grevances.
First, there is the grevances with Verizon. The usage of mail in rebates is so last century. The fact that I have to pay an extra $100 to get that $100 back is BS. The concept of the rebate system seems to be on the idea that people are lazy and that they will not take the effort to photocopy a sales recept (easily done at the workplace, local library, Kinkos, or if you are lucky to have an open top printer/scanner). I certainly wasn’t going to go to Sam’s to pay $184 for a $199 phone that is worth paying an extra $8 for an insurance policy. It also would have been nice if Verizon would have created a printout of what the bill would look like. Though service will likely be near $100/month, there are a few things that can be done to reduce the cost of service. When I find out, I’ll be sure to write about it.
Next, their is the grevances with Motorola. I was suprised to here that the Droid was Motorola’s Hail Mary Pass in that hearing things like Motorola has been putting out some bad phones over the years. The Droid is a good phone….but Motorola wasn’t truthful in reporting the SAR rating of the phone. While Motorola told the FCC that it had an SAR rating of 0.89 W/kg (body) and 1.10 W/kg (head), the manual for the Droid has different values. Like 1.5 W/kg (body) and 1.49 W/kg (head). Of course, it is not like there is someone who keeps track of these things, right? On the other hand, I did disable the GPS on the phone, which probably explains why I don’t need to recharge the thing every four hours. GPS is a nice feature to work with mapping applications, but it can be a real battery drainer and privacy invader.
Which brings me to the final set of grevances that I have with Google. Google has played a big part in the Android Operating system development. It was kind of a let down that the applications I though Google had availble to use Google’s services weren’t there, or were so much better if used in the Internet browser than on the phone. Sure, you have Google Maps (which is good), Google Calendar (also good), and Gmail (which could use an upgrade), but Google does not have any applications for Tasks, Notes, or Docs. These applications are available for iPhone from Google, but Android users, no matter which phone you are using, will need to go to the Internet for that.
Seeing as how the Android operating system now brings Google applications to a mobile device, one can’t help but wonder if the guy at Google who decided to discontinue Google Notebook isn’t kicking himself right now. Notebook would have been a great app for Android, and the fact that it was discontinued is a foolish mistake. It would be like Microsoft removing Notepad because you have Word. Hopefully, someone will reinstate this service so that moble users can jot down notes.
The Android Market deserves both praise and criticism.
If anyone is not aware of the Anonymous hacker group, you should probably know that these guys mean business even in their quirky unorthodox ways. Anonymous is fickle. To either laud or jeer them would be hazardous to one’s online reputation. However, I find their motives of dealing soundboards in the Android Market (under the guise of “Onymous Heroes”) to be conspicuous. While it is great that the Android has many free appications to try out (although It would be nice to see a few more from Google and the Android group), the fact that one of the most stand-alone-complex group might not be so obvious to many users is a little concerning but at the same time a reminder that not everyone is creating programs in the Market (or App Store for that matter) with good intentions. That is, other groups (not like Anonymous) could have their own applications on the market to do some bad things. It is sort of like a reminder by them to say “hey watch your back” or taking advice from a theif on how to better safeguard your home from intrusion. On the other hand, the fact that no one is really keeping an eye on the Market to weed out programs that can be potential secuirty threats should make Android users wary of who the download their software from.
Reguardless, I do have plans on writing many reviews in the future about Android Apps. I would also like to develop some of them. I probably should put more effort into writing things in Java, to which that is what brings me to the upside of this review.
The Android operating system is Linux based, but many of the programs are written in Java. Perhaps I had alot of bad experiences with Java (as I don’t even use Java when browsing the Internet as the processes will keep on running), but the performance of Java on the Android is remarkable! Back when I had a Motorola RAZR, Java was unplesant. Palm couldn’t use Java work a dan on the Treo. But Android, has pretty much saved Java from being just another legacy language. Android doesn’t use the Java 2 SE or ME standards, which probably explains why Android programs are so fluid.
As stated earlier, the security flaws of the Android operating system is not with the operating sysetem itself, but with programs from some shady individuals selling their wares on the Market. However, there are gems among the junk. Where Palm Treo didn’t have the random number generation to develop a proper encryption key to run things like SSH and IRC (or battery life), the Android operating system does. Security is also one of the main goals of the Android operating system. If anything bad happens to the phone because of a program, Google will know about it. So basically, security is very good on the phone.
The Droid has a beautiful and sharp 16:9 screen. Despite the criticism by many critics about the camera, I think they seem to forget that the camera has two flashes on it. And why is everyone complaining about the 5 megapixel camera? Sure, you have to hold down the picture button to take a photo, but 5 megapixels is a sharp good of not great quality camera. (Perhaps my review of digital cameras is short sighted, then again, I don’t exactly have $700 at the moment to go out and buy the latest Nikon camera on the market. So in my opinion, 5 MP is good.)
Another thing the critics have been ripping on is the audio. Perhaps it is the foolish assumption that because a phone has a speakerphone on it that it can be used as a radio. Well…yes and no. Like just about all other smartphones, you will need to use headphones or an audio adaptor that plugs into your car stereo or home audio equipment. With a 3.5mm headphone jack, any set of headphones can be plugged into the Droid. The iPhone, much like my previous phone which was a Palm Treo, does not have a 3.5mm headphone jack. Instead, iPhone users need to use an adaptor, which in my previous experience of using audio adaptors for headphones, is an unplesant experience as it makes listening to music impossible afte a while. The Droid, like its competitor the Palm Pre, has a 3.5mm jack as opposed with the G1 that has no jack (USB audio only has one purpose: SKYPE!).
Droid does streaming audio much like the iPhone. If there is one Application I can recommend right now, it is imeem Moble. Streaming audio has evolved over the years. Just remember when you do streaming audido, do it where you can get WiFi. Otherwise, don’t forget to bring your music collection with you. (Remember: “unlimited” on the 3G network, no matter which telecom you use, means 5GB.)
So to call the iPhone better because “it has 100,000 apps” and that “it is more popular” is clearly a sign that the critics are not interested in what is new or what is better, just what is cool. Remember that next time when you try to listen to music on your iPhone but can’t because your headphones sound awful because you need to use an adaptor. Remember that when you can’t swap batteries, run multiple applications, take night shots with the camera, or make a phonecall without having to deal with the Jack-In-The-Box-speaker-quality sound.
The Droid Does but Android still needs development.
Wikis-b-gone
After being online for about 3 or 4 years, both wikis were taken down today! Neko and BushidoFacts are no more.
Neko had become an aggressive spam target. And BushidoFacts, which was abandoned a while back, was taken down as it could not be maintained.
However, I did not leave without making a backup of everything. Meaning all the spam IP addresses are currently taking up space on my harddrive in both Binary BLOB and Non-binary BLOB form. (Thank God for phpMyAdmin!)
The Non-binary blob versions of the files will actually give me a chance to exercise my Bash skills.
I could have compressed these archives into tar-balls, but given my interest in MySQL, I’ve though of transforming these archives into an opporutunity to develop tools to extract and back up my data. Dreamhost suggested turning it into an XML file, but every time I tried that (and yes I followed their instructions), I would get end out geting a short XML file stating that the parser encoutered an error.
So if you really want to back up your MediaWiki, you should download all the image files you uploaded and use phpMyAdmin to make an archive both in binary and nonbinary forms. I’m also going to safely assume that all the math and physics equations that were posted in the wikis had been stored in their LaTeX script format.
MediaWiki just wasn’t working out for me. Unlike Wikipedia where they had the templates for citation written, the ability to upload SVG files, new software that would create a reference list and make charts, all those features do not come standard with MediaWiki. At least not the version that Dreamhost offers with one click installs. Also separate is improved security features.
One of my pet peves with MediaWiki is that if a spam account is created, the IP address is not logged. So as I attempt to break down the 49.5 MB and 23.2 MB nonbinary files, I will be tossing out alot of data and hopefully the backups will still have any of my data that was removed when I had taken an interest in the wikis.
The worst part was when I attempted to contact the adminstrators of some of the IP addresses that were in the North American Numbers Plan area (mostly US…and I think Canada once), they wanted me to provide some sort of log proving that it was their one of their computers. You would think that they would actually look at the computer that was doing it and say “Hey! That’s not suppost to be happening! I should fix that!” But that doesn’t happen.
On the other hand, now that I have removed the wikis, it will allow me more time to focus on this blog, extracting the data from the archive files I metioned, and to develop a Fedora Linux upgrade software system that does not require a GUI.
I’d like to explain more about what some of the softwat that is available does and see if some of the software that I have currently installed on my computer is really needed or if it is just taking up space on the harddrive.
Indeed, I have goals that must be fullfilled and a schedule that I must keep track of.
One final note: Tune in to this blog on Friday when I may be using the new Motorola Droid!
Motorola Droid: OH GOD! YES!
If you’ve been living under a rock the past couple of months, Verizon has been taking shots at AT&T.
Despite my past complaints about Verzions brash behavior with customers, they now have in their posession the next big thing. So much so, that tonight I saw a commercial for the the Motorola Droid.
Verizon and Motorola have it out for AT&T and Apple! Motorola has the upperhand with successes like the MOTORAZR, which most of my family still uses after all these years! They are selling their phones to just about every provider, and have recently got on board with distributing phones with the Android operating system.
November bodes well for Motorola, with the release of the Motorola Blur for T-Mobile and the Droid (a.k.a. Scholes) with Verizion. The difference between the Blur and the Droid is that Droid will have Android v2.0 and is speculated to be less locked up that the T-Moble Android phones–something that has irked Android developers.
However, the FCC is has not yet gotten with the program, as CNET’s Kent German is reporting that the GSM (old technology) version of the Droid has been approved by the FCC but not the CDMA (new techonology) version. This is expected to change in the near future.
One advantage this time is that the FCC has a tech-friendly FCC chairman especially since there are people so audacious and willing to stand up against “those evil Silicon Vally corporations that make millions because of net neutrality” (*cough*Comcast!*cough*AT&T*cough*). The NCTA commerical demonizing the tech companies was like having the oil industry telling you that the environmental activists are making billions of dollars of of protecting the environment from the oil industries envriornmental destruction. If saving the environment from the oil industry (especially since they do the most damage) is wrong, I don’t want to be right! (Save the Internet!)
Anyway, hopefully the Droid with its “netbook level of computing power” won’t put out as much radation as the T-Mobile/HTC Touch.
We now await November with open arms in the anticipation of triple threat Verizon/Motorola/Android iPhone killer.
Mobo battery is fine.
That error I was talking about earilier this month about the clock battery on the motherboard was probably nothing. I haven’t had that problem recently. More than likely, the computer’s hardware was trying to adjust to the new hardware that was installed. I wouldn’t be surprised to see it again in the near future when a new power supply unit is installed.
Everything seems to be software conflicts at this point. More than likely the guys who write the updates for the software drivers fell asleep at work and now are running behind the kernel software developers.
So as a quick reminder, it is probably not such a good idea to install any kernel updates untill the graphics card updates become available. Then again, this is stuff happening on my computer. Your milage may vary.
It’s no big deal. In fact, I really like getting new software upgrades every week or every other week.
I think there are about 89 updates this afternoon. Most of them KDE and Python. I’ve been using GNOME for quite some time as I could never get use to the new do-dads that KDE added–which Microsoft ripped off for Vista. (Serves them right.)
I mean, there is alot about KDE that has been around long before Vista was released…possibly before they became popular on Apple’s OSX too. But as dynamic as these things are in KDE–and as clunky as they are in Vista–they are too damn big! Icons are very large. Taskbars are obnoxious. Even though I have a 17″ screen, there is no need to suck up so much space.
And as brand news as my graphics card is and as much as I really would like to put the pedal to the metal, these thing take up way too many resources than they should. It’s like how even when I use a computer with Microsoft XP (which is still better than Vista), the first thing I do is go to the control panel and switch everything from that Fischer-Price looking GUI to the simple “Windows 98″ looking GUI.
One thing I hate about many GUIs is that they try to impose the GUI into other programs. You see this with buttons and scroll bars. It completely ruins your intent to have a dark-colored GUI interface when you customize it. Right now, GNOME has issues with the scroll bars. I set the scroll bars to be one style but every time I open a new program or start up the computer, it reverts it to the default ones.
As much as I prefer using GNOME GTK-based applications over KDE’s Qtk-based applications there are still many features that KDE still has that are irresistable.
Speech recognition, athough ideal for acceabiltiy features, looks very promising on KDE. I wanted to give orca a spin using GNOME, but nothing seemed to work. I really would like some help configuring sound input featurs so that I can still enjoy listening to music and record sounds for my own music and voice. KDE’s simon looks capable of doing that, though I’d like to see how it would handle speech-to-text.
STT/TTS (speech-to-text/text-to-speech) technology should be implemented on small cellular devices, especially since not everyone has tiny hands to type on those tiny keyboards (which are good) or on screen keyboads (which are mediocre).

"But I have these tiny hands."
Then there are people like myself who have square thumbs, which makes it very difficult for me to use the on-screen keyboards unless I use a stylus (an accessory that does not come with any of the new cell phones it seems).
I really want to embrace some new technology. (Preferibly anything that has NOT been endorsed by U2.) But it helps to have a good interface when you use it.
Finally, an article about Technology!
I haven’t been able to talk about technology in so long.
I love my computer. It’s the closes thing I have to having a car at the moment. During the latter part of 2006 and earily part of 2007, I spent a little bit of money each month collecting parts to build my own computer. Sort of like a gear head saves up money to build their own hot rod…or like that Johnny Cash song “One Piece at a Time”. Helping me out with the inital construction of this do-it-yourself project was a copy of Building a PC for Dummies.
Since 2007, I’ve been using this computer. But like any machine, parts eventually breakdown, need to be replaced, upgraded, or repaired.
So at the beginning of this year, I decided to make a Wish/Todo List of things that ought to be upgraded, fixed, or replaced, mostly in the order of the things that needed the most attention. I wasn’t looking to make a street machine out of an economy car (especially since I don’t have the budget to do that), I just had a gut feeling that in order for me to protect my investment, I should do whatever I can to make it last as long as it could. Especially since my computer is the nicest and the most important thing that I own.
The hardest part about maintaining my computer is finding a computer store. There is no CompUSA or Circuit City anymore. The lack of small computer shops also doesn’t help, especially with Big Box Stores like Best Buy dominating the market.
It also doesn’t help that Google search indicates there are about 64 nail salons within a five mile radius of the nearest intersection near my home and only about 7 places to get your computer repaired, of which only 3 have a selection of parts that you can browse around and look at. Throughout the St. Louis area, there are probably about 25 places where you can get your computer serviced, most of them Best Buys. The rest of them are for companies that maintain corporate business machines. Of course, where you can find a computer shop of any kind, more than like there are probably about 20 places to get your nails done within a quarter mile of each of those locations. So much for women with ambitions. (Fathers: Get your daughters involved with Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math! The world needs more geeky women especially if you have to go across town to get your computer fixed but theirs a nail salon on every street corner.)
Anyway, the first thing I wanted to do was replace the things that were not working anymore. Since Ebay was where I picked up many of the parts, I though I would go there.
The first part to break down was the DVD-RW. Prior to its breakdown, I mainly used that to play CDs and DVDs. Originally it was an internal drive with a custom external case which was removed to be installed internally. There was no SATA port on it, it still used the bulky IDE ribbon. Of course, since I’ve been doing quite a bit of maintenance on my computer the past couple of days, I am seriously considering making a backup of the files on my harddrive which is getting full.
But something must have happened over the past couple of years. As many of my recent eBay purchases have been duds. I’d expect this kind of behavior on Craigslist. Though I picked up a replacement on eBay for my DVD-RW, accessories were not included. Of course, no one bothers to write “Fragile” on the softbag (rather than a flat-rate cardboard box) that items come in. Yeah, I know I’m not buying parts on Amazon, but seriously. Who ever keeps packaging these items has never met my family who for some reason has a tendency to toss unmarked fragile items.
Anyway, I ended out having to pay another $20 at Best Buy for an SATA ribbon so I could connect the device to the motherboard. (Yeah, $20! It’s not even made out of gold. Speaking of which, I need to find that website I heard on the radio that has HDMI cables for cheap since the ones at the shops are intentionally overpriced!)
As much as I am glad to have replaced this part, eventually, I’d like to save up for a Blu-Ray device. But Linux has yet to crack Blu-Ray completely.
Item number two on the honeydo list was a memory upgrade. About the time I had wanted to do this, Circuit City was going out of business of which the local Ciruit City had the memory that I was interested in was also closing up. So by the time I completed this task, I ended out having to buy the new memory for less on CompUSA.com. Still, having one less place to spend my Saturday afternoons completely sucks.
Third item was installed last night. I knew the day would come that the graphics card would need to be replaced. I put it off for as long as I could, especially since the past few months the bills have sucked out any opporitunity to make a computer repair possible.
If the economists are wondering why consumers aren’t at the shops buying things, they apparently haven’t been paying attention to the bill collectors like the folks at AT&T who have been sucking people dry in order to take the government stimulus money that was suppost to be used for going out and spending things. I mean, whose not going to notice a stedily increase on their phone bill by as much as 18 cents in one month on top of the overpriced service they already have? At any rate, the recession has been a major contributor to the posponing of a couple of items on my list.
But as much as I have tried to put off any repairs, eventually there comes a time when the computer itself has had enough. Thus, yesterday the GPU had konked out.
I wasn’t at all surprised. Things were starting to become terrible. Anything using Flash would lock up be it Videos on YouTube, Games on Newground, or music on Blip.fm. Even using small low-memory tasks such as the text editor would not respond to typing words on a keyboard immediate. Eventually, the computer started to restart and the screen would freeze. After about two years of using this component daily, which had a regular temperature of about 70° C (so hot, I took one of the pannels off the case just to have cool air on the outside keep the rest of the computer from being damaged) the device finally died. Ironically, the same day, on of the fans near it had also burt out. But this fan was not as important. It seemed to be better at turning the computer into a dust magnet.
I am no stranger to burnt out graphics cards. Though I’ve never play alot of high graphics games (though I wish I could), a bad graphics card on the second laptop that I owned warented its need to be sent to San Jose for repair. It was the fact that my computer got to go places and I didn’t that was part of the inspiration for me to build my own computer. It has also inspired me to question computer repair in general.
This morning for example, I have discovered that the battery on my motherboard that keep the internal clock running has died. (Damn the luck!)
Why is it that the message that indicates the battery is dead looks like this:
Warning! Now System is in Safe Mode.
Please re-setting CPU Frequency in the CMOS setup
F1 : to continue DEL : Bios Setup
I’ve visited three websites that have confirmed that this warning is a sign that the clock battery is dead, though on one of them, one guy decided to overcomplicate things and blame it on an overclocked graphics card. (Which is unlikely since I’ve only had it for about 24 hours now.)
No one seems to be able to to explain in plain English this concept of overclocking. I have no interest in overclocking. Overclocking can be expensive, dangerous, and cause damage to the rest of your computer. As much as hardcore gamers are interested in overclocking their hardware, everyone else who just want to use their computer and enjoy doing things–including gaming–is not interested in burning computer rubber.

Tim "The Toolman" Taylor: Patron saint of the overclockers. "More Power!"
Since my primary interest in a new graphics card was to get things working again, and since serendipitously I had been browsing graphics cards on eBay a few days before this incident, it was my good fortune that I was able to find an ideal graphics card on sale at Best Buy. The best part about it is that the temperature on the new graphics card has not exceeded 47° C.
Crisis averted, so far. I just need to replace the old clock battery and thing will be peachy keen.
There is so much about my computer that I don’t know that is not mentioned in that little booklet on how to hook up the motherboard. There is no troubleshooting section. There is no FAQ. The only anwsers that are available are online…of which if you don’t have a computer available how are you suppost to get those answers.
There needs to be a big book of things about your computer and the mainstread book industry, the niche book industry, and the guys who run technology websites don’t bother to metion.
Sure their are a dozen books right now that will tell you things like how to get Twitter to work on your iPhone, but for everyone else like myself who could care less and can actually know which part is breaking down and making that burning toast smell inside your computer there is no book. There are message board, but in the rare case that you have a rare problem that you know the cause is that you didn’t overclock anything and that the solution is NEVER let the guys at Geek Squad (more like Theif Squad) look at it and decide to send it to their one-size-fits-all repair center that fixes everything else but that particular problem.
There haven’t been too many books in English or in the United States that tell you these things. You read stories bout how some guy in China killed himself because he lost an Apple iPhone prototype while in Africa they are taking in the electronic waste. It’s as if our only purpose in this part of the cycle is to take consume the items made in China only to “recycle” them into the trash to Africa. Nothing to learn, nothing to save. Just consume it.
One of my intentions for this website, and the revamping of this blog, was to explain technology in plain english. Explain how things work, what those BIOS warnings were talking about without trying to blame the user for something the really never did. I mean, you are a smart person. You found this blog. So you must be doing something right. Why not tell your friends?
I just hope that by writing more about technology it will lead to bigger things, like writing books…perhaps the book about computers.
It’s so easy for people to be controlled and to stay in this bubble of not needing to know thing that they should know or knowing just a little bit not to be taken advantaged of.
There should be more books on how things actually work inside your computer. It shouldn’t have to take a college education to learn what things are and how to use them.
When things go bad, do what is right!
The Honest Hackers from Brown
In what has got to be either bold or bastardly, a couple of boys from Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island hacked Neko, the wiki from the old website, last weekend.
From what I have gathered, I was not the only victum
I too was spammed by Brown University more info:
http://digg.com/d1oTQZ
Its a very interesting concept, I have left the spammed page up. It is an experiment to replace bitorrent. Using dead Wiki’s is ineffective IMO, they should use pastebins.
Dead? I’ve been trying to get people’s attention to help develop this wiki for years! Now it has turned into my place to jot scientific musings and IP addresses belonging to spammers.

Neko: I'm not dead yet!
They boys who have identified themselves as Andy Pavlo and Ning Shi (or as the dean will soon be calling them “on double academic secret probation”) are part of a project called the Graffiti Network at the Department of Computer Science at Brown University (currently dead, here’s a Google Cache), are working on a project to distribute files through peer-to-peer networks by dropping off chunks of an Ubuntu distribution at random websites.
UBUNTU?! Not on this website, boys! This site rolls with Fedora!
On a page they created called “Effectiveness”, the boys uploaded part of their package (now deleted), then came back and apologized.
NOTICE: This page was created by a program as part of the Graffiti Network research project at Brown University. We have removed the data, but are unable to remove this page. We apologize for any inconveniences that our actions may have caused. For more information, please visit http://graffiti.cs.brown.edu/info/
Appology accepted, boys. But do not let me catch you doing it again.
Finally Flash!
In what will definitely be the beginning of a beautiful relationship, I have FINALLY created a Flash.
If you know Flash very well, you are probably thinking “yeah, so”. To me this is a great achievement. A step forward that is long overdue.
Ideally, I wanted to create Flash from source code, much like a computer program. My skills with a Waccom aren’t exactly great.
However, thanks to Ntt, I created my first Flash ON LINUX using Adobe Flex.
Flex does require Java, which was quite clear when writing the “Hello, World” ActionScript, which the code looks alot like writing a Java application. Thus, it appears my skills using Java are still needed, though Java has been replaced on may websites by the dynamic ablities of Flash over the past decade.
Though technically licensed as commercial software (under a Mozilla Public License), Flex is a welcome piece of software considering just about every Open Source effort to create flash has been abandoned or failed to begin with. Eventually, someone will get it right.
Until then, Flex has opened many new opporitunities for development.
The Free Software List is Back!
Created in 2006, I decided to make a list of free, open source software. Originally, it was a list of software that could be stored on a thumbdrive or accessed using an SSH connection. But some of the software became a little more complex and setting would be forgotten or left on computers that didn’t belong to the user. (Something I did not want to happen.)
Personally, the best software is the software that relies on a command line interface rather than a graphical user interface. Their appearances may seem more primative, but their utility more than makes up for it.
The list of free software (not to be confused with freeware) provided by the Free Software Foundation is a large directory of software projects, some of which has been abandoned.
A misconception of free software is that it is gratis (without cost). The “free” in free software implies liberty or freedom. Though it is free to download, if you frequenty use the software, why not chip it and help develop the software or donate a couple of bucks.
The list that I developed is more concise. Rather than browsing through a long directory, especially if you are new to the Free Software movement, this list provides links to software that you will more that likely enjoy or find quite useful.
The list is still being rewritten, but it will include a list of software development tools. The popular language in many open source projects right now is Python, an object-oriented scripting lanugage.
Because the list doesn’t look as good as it did in 2006 using the Darklight WordPress theme, I am thinking of switching themes again.
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