Sunday, December 28, 2008

From Tim O'Reilly's Radar: Thoughts on "In Distrust of Movements"

I wanted to bring attention to this post on Tim O'Reilly's blog about a post on another blog that is a reprint of an essay by Wendell Berry.

Got all that?

In any event Tim's post will bring you down a really interesting rabbit hole relating to a huge basket of issues from food sustainability to the current state of the US economy.

I'm still digesting, and clicking on link after link.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

oblique: Dictionary.com Word of the Day

http://feeds.reference.com/click.phdo?i=1659755b284c5836c3e15694f72ee480


--
From the iPod of Simon Carr
Ineocom Technologies
http://www.Ineocom.com

Friday, December 26, 2008

My Book for my Time Machine


Western Digital My Book 640 GB

Spot the Western Digital My Book 640 GB, converted to be used with MacOS X


Just picked up this WD My Book 640 GB drive for use with Time Machine from Best Buy Canada, before I go all Reuserist in 2009. This is sorta my final call to buy new crap before my experiment kicks in. So a 640GB external for $109.99 is a pretty good deal[1].


This new drive does serve a vital purpose; acting as my Time Machine backup, replacing the 250GB drive that was starting to do the click of death, and the old drive was technically too small to actually back up the primary drive in my new iMac.. So all things considered I don't feel too bad about the purchase of this new awesome fast external. It also looks like a book. Pretty.


I ran into some challenges. If you just plug it in to your Mac, it's formatted as an MS-DOS filesystem. That's fine for compatibility because everything in the world can read that, but I'm trying to use it for exclusive Mac Time Machine backups. Opening up Disk Utility, I couldn't manage to remove the partition on the drive, which came up as the device "596.2 GB WD 6400AAV External Media", with the partition "My Book". After doing some digging I found the answer (macosxhints, always, awesome)..


Warning before you start: This procedure will wipe all the included files on this drive. Personally I had no use for them, but you may want to save them.


To clarify this URL, here's the visual;


Picture 5-1


Image 1:, rather than select the partition on the device, select the device. This will give you the "Partition" tab, between "Erase" and "RAID". Pick Volume Scheme: 1 Partition. Name your partition, pick "Mac OS Extended (Journaled)" if you are going to use it for Time Machine as I am, and then select "Options..."


Picture 6


Image 2: Inside options, pick "Apple Partition Map". By default it will have "Master Boot Record" selected, which is where Disk Utility runs into trouble.


Click ok inside Options, and then Apply, and vavoom, you're off. If you want to feel safe about the change you can always remove the partition again and re-create it. From there you just have to configure your Time Machine.


This drive is also advertised as 30% more energy efficient than standard systems. I can guarantee that's the case for the drive that it's replacing.



Points of Interest

  • Disk Utility
  • Time Machine propaganda
  • The sale at Best Buy Canada


    Footnotes
    [1] Oh, yes Internet, I know... if I scoured the dregs of online computer stores I'm sure I could find some better door-smasher deal. I'm not going to weep tears over $15 worth of savings that would cost me a virtual $30 of hassle (and shipping perhaps). /snark_mode OFF :)

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  • Tuesday, December 23, 2008

    SimCity for the iPhone

    Picture 4-3



    I'm a SimCity freak, and I have been since the Commodore 64 version hit in 1989, but I had no idea that EA had finally released a version for the iPhone. (thanks calebcherry).


    First impressions? Good! I was actually a little skeptical until my first city started building, and bam, my old SimCity addiction kicked in.


    The interface is not as clunky as one would expect considering the small screen size. The menus take advantage of the iPhone interface, and have iPhoneisms, so it jives nicely with the rest of the iPhone platform.


    The music still has that same SimCity, "I'm watching re-runs of Beyond 2000" feel, which I quite enjoy. I haven't heard any tracks I recognize from previous SimCity games yet but I wouldn't doubt that they're in there.


    Advisors aren't blocky sims, which I'll kind of miss. They're oddly "anime" looking as others have noted. I understand that choice though, why render 3D dudes to yell at you when a cartoon will do?


    From a complexity standpoint it sits smack in the middle of the original SimCity and SimCity 3000. In fact it shares a lot of traits with SimCity 3000, and early screens of the iPhone version were dead ringers for the SC3000 interface. The game is not anywhere near as complex as SimCity 4 (of course), but it still has a satisfying number of knobs to tweak.


    In summary, should you pick it up?

  • It's under $10.
  • It's got enough SimCity feel to satisfy.
  • I'd buy it even if I was just going to play it once waiting for a flight.
  • It won't replace SimCity 4, but you can play it while on the can, so, there's that...


    This will certainly be one of the apps that eats up my battery life. Coming soon to this blog: a post about "poor battery life" on the iPod Touch! In no way related to my 8-hour road-planning stints.


    Points of interest


  • SimCity at Wikipedia
  • SimCity for iPhone

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    Monday, December 22, 2008

    iBook Nostalgia: (and The Top 8 Stevenote Moments)

    Via Guy Kawasaki's Twitter,

    The Top 8 Stevenote Moments. ..which is a cool article,

    But I want to take a moment to highlight the 1999 keynote where the Clamshell iBook is unveiled.



    Usually there is some (*snicker*) amount of hyperbole in these keynotes, but during this segment I can't help but mostly agree with Steve Jobs on what made the Clamshell iBook so exciting at the time. It really was an amazing portable for someone who did a lot of rough traveling and the specs aren't exaggerated as exciting. Michelle, the author of the article linked above, may disagree. But as a long, long time owner of a blue and white Clamshell (that matched my Perl Cookbook, oh lord I'm a geek) I can safely say that I wasn't let down.

    In fact I'd say the iBook and the Mac OS X Public Beta were two big helpers in my career path. It's possible one of the factors in my hire at Tucows was that I had the audacity to sport the "iPurse" at my interview.

    Early chatter about OS X drove me to experiment with FreeBSD from a Linux user's perspective, which increased my knowledge of both exponentially, and having the iBook itself let me do it anywhere... which, you know, when you're in your early 20's is important because you're never home.

    Time goes by of course and 9 years later you can't help but chuckle at the specs that were pretty hot upon release. I have an iPod Touch sitting on my desk that has a 400MHz Arm processor and 128MB of RAM, and it's smaller than a deck of cards.

    Current laptops and notebooks are obviously much "better" at the present moment, but none of them have inspired me as much as the first generation iBook had. The missing element is charisma.

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    Reuserism: My "new" Thinkpad 600E and my 2009 experiment

    122220081051

    About two months ago the hard-drive in my Powerbook finally died, after 3+ years of my constant abuse. It was a trooper. The post-recall battery has been dead for at least a year, so the hard-drive was the final straw.

    I haven't gotten a replacement hard-drive for it yet because I managed to near-flawlessly re-create my environment using Time Machine. Restoring to an Intel based iMac.

    So just in case you're wondering, you can take a Time Machine snapshot from a PowerPC Mac, and Time Machine will re-create it on an Intel Mac without much drama. The problems I did have were very trivial (some screen-savers didn't work anymore... but, er... now they do, somehow. Without any intervention from myself. MatrixGL for example). That's a major architecture jump, so I'm happy it went well and was really easy; +1 for Apple.

    This still left me without a portable computer. Rather than go the easy route and get a new hard-drive for my Powerbook, I decided to refurbish an IBM Thinkpad 600E I had sitting in the junk pile. It needed a battery, a charger, a hard-drive and some sort of networking device.

    This move was more about getting a portable that I didn't have to worry about as much, rather than trying to save money on refurbishing the Powerbook back to tip-top shape (which would cost about $200 or so). I was eyeballing a Netbook, but they are too small for me and they're still more than I wanted to spend for a laptop that I was going to bike around with on my back.

    I picked up a power cord off of eBay for $5, and a Netgear 802.11N card for $20. I was already in possession of a 30GB laptop drive that I had pulled out of my Clamshell iBook. The most expensive part was the battery, which was $50 from a local reseller.

    Once we were up and running, I installed Ubuntu 8.04 with encryption, and it works great.

    So my portable is $75, with a pretty smooth encrypted operating system; not bad. I can ride around the city with that and not worry that if I take a tumble I'm out $2500. And I can take it to the Reference Library or a coffee shop without sweating that it'll take a walk on me. Actually in that scenario I'd be more upset about losing my bag.

    The 2009 Experiment: Reuserism

    Inspired by how well this refurbishing went, I am going to try and not buy anything new in 2009. I won't create more waste. I'll save some money. I'll add some additional value to an item that's already made and is most likely perfectly usable. Reuserism rather than consumerism. So as an avid Reuser, I will keep the Re-user economy alive and kicking during this carefully crafted "economic downturn".

    Points of Interest

  • I used these instructions to disassemble my Powerbook. There are actually slight differences in my Powerbook compared to Stefan Horn's, seemingly. He posted this article in 2003, and my Powerbook was circa 2005, one of the last PowerPC books. Mostly screw placement. But it's about 80% accurate between the two models.
  • The Abide Sticker came from lebowskifest.com.. so that's one new thing. But it's not 2009 yet ;)

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  • woodgrainz macbook

    Just saw this on Flickr. As you may know I am a fan of laptop stickers, so I think this is awesome.

    woodgrainz macbook:

    pennycakes posted a photo:


    woodgrainz macbook



    before & after



    inside the lid



    Follow these to Flickr for more..

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    Sunday, December 21, 2008

    Blogging from the iPod touch... again!

    another test post? I'll delete it later (or not).

    Friday, April 11, 2008

    blogging from the ipod touch

    No ground breaking feats of technological might here. Just thought I'd try out blogging from my wife's ipod touch. God I wish they had iPhones available in Canada...

    Eww, I'm greasing it all up.