Getting Ready for the TV Season

September 11th, 2007

If you’re wondering when your favorite shows (and new highly anticipated shows) will be premiering, check out BrentEvans Geek Tonic’s list of upcoming TV premiere’s.



Mac Crash

September 9th, 2007

Last Monday night, I returned from a Labor Day vacation in Tahoe. Before I went to bed, I ran a full backup of my MacBook Pro using SuperDuper (I try to back up my Mac once a week in the event of a crash). When I woke up Tuesday morning, I tried to quit SuperDuper but it appeared frozen. I then tried to shut down the computer but the entire operating system appeared frozen (the mouse still moved but nothing would respond). So, I forced a power off by holding down the power button. When I powered the computer back on, all I got was a gray screen with a blinking folder icon with a question mark in the middle. My Mac was hosed!

After work on Tuesday, I took my MacBook Pro to the Genius Bar at the Apple store. The Genius took a look at it for about two minutes and then told me that the computer was no longer under warranty (it had been a year and two months since I bought it) and that the problem was most likely with the hard drive or the logic board. He said if it was a hard drive problem, it would be much cheaper to have it fixed by a local repair shop than send it Apple and referred me to a local Apple-certified repair shop. I took my lifeless Mac in the next morning and a few hours later, they had a new hard drive in it.

When I got home, I installed the operating system from the original install DVDs and then went to find my SuperDuper drive image on an external hard drive. At first, I was a little confused how to restore the image and it took me a little while to realize I had to boot into the OS installer and then open Disk Utility from there. However, when I opened Disk Utility from the install DVD, I wasn’t able to drag the drive image (the user interface requires you to drag the image, there’s no other way to select it). After searching around for a bit online (I luckily had my work laptop with me), I found out that there’s a bug in Disk Utility on some of the OS X Install DVDs. Luckily I know my way around the command line so I opened the terminal and used Apple’s asr to restore the drive image using the command asr restore -s -t –erase.

The restore took about an hour and a half and when it finished, I rebooted my Mac and the OS immediately loaded. I’ve been using the restored image for a week now and everything seems to have worked perfectly with the backup and restore except for some font caching issues which were easy to clean up using Yasu.

I’m just glad that the backup and restore process worked so flawlessly. Let this be a lesson to all of you. Back up your computer often!

Sphere: Related Content



Oh, to Be a Cat

August 1st, 2007

Ever wonder what your cat does all day when you’re not around? We’d all like to think that while we’re at work or out with friends, our pets sit and eagerly wait our return. Curiosity got the best of J. Perthold who decided to strap a camera to his cat so he could see what his cat was up to all day. On his site, he showcases the many adventures of Mr. Lee and provides insight into the world of the feline.

Link: Mr. Lee CatCam

Sphere: Related Content



When Giving Away a $1000 Grand Prize, Make Sure There Aren’t 30,000 Winners

July 23rd, 2007

Today’s story of how not to run a promotion comes to us from Advertising Age and chronicles a major mistake made in Roswell, New Mexico. A local car dealer there ran a promotion whereby customers received scratchers after coming into the dealership. One lucky customer (or so the dealer thought) would be the grand prize winner of $1,000. Instead, 30,000 winning tickets were printed, many of which made their way into the hands of lucky customers. This story would make a perfect lesson for students on why proofreading and attention to detail are so important.

Sphere: Related Content



Rubber Ducky, You’re the One…to Float 17,000 Miles

July 3rd, 2007

The United Kingdom’s Daily Mail brings us a story of 29,000 rubber ducks that were spilled from a cargo ship in 1992 and will soon be washing up on British shores. I agree with the comment left at the bottom of the article; this event really would make a great animated movie!

Sphere: Related Content



Roy Pearson’s Pants Are on Fire

June 25th, 2007

Roy Pearson, the man suing a cleaners for $54 million over lost pants, got his day in court today and shockingly lost (the case was tossed by the judge) and may now have to pay legal fees which unfortunately don’t amount to $54 million. According to ABC News, the hearing was brief yet emotional and “Pearson broke down in tears and had to take a break from his testimony because he became too emotional while questioning himself about his experience with the missing trousers.”

Is this guy for real? Pearson should sue himself for losing his dignity and the rest of us should sue him for waisting the court’s time with this insanely stupid lawsuit.

Sphere: Related Content



AT&T, More Like NSA?

June 13th, 2007

First AT&T wanted to spy on all our phone calls (or at least allow the NSA to). Now it looks like they want to spy on our Internet traffic (this time without any involvement from the NSA). According to the LA Times,

AT&T Inc. has joined Hollywood studios and recording companies in trying to keep pirated films, music and other content off its network — the first major carrier of Internet traffic to do so.

The San Antonio-based company started working last week with studios and record companies to develop anti-piracy technology that would target the most frequent offenders, said James W. Cicconi, an AT&T senior vice president.

This sounds really scary. The only conceivable way to implement this would be to inspect all packets going through their network. As an AT&T DSL subscriber, I certainly don’t want AT&T looking at the content of all my traffic.

A couple months ago, PBS’ Frontline had a great episode called “Spying on the Home Front” which covered AT&T’s wiretapping of United States citizens’ phones. You can watch the episode online for free on the Frontline Web site.

Sphere: Related Content



Safari on Windows? I Feel Dirty.

June 11th, 2007

Safari Running on WindowsAt Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference today, Steve Jobs announced a version of Safari (Apple’s Web browser) for Windows XP and Vista. I immediately went to Apple’s site which initially looked a little odd, downloaded it, and installed it on my PC to try it out. The result? I feel dirty. It just feels wrong installing Apple software on a Windows machine. I’ll give it some time before I form a real opinion but hopefully this will show Windows users what they’re missing by not using a Mac.

Sphere: Related Content



Firefox is a Memory Hog?

June 10th, 2007

I’ve noticed that the longer I leave Firefox running on my Mac, the more memory it seems to take up even if I’m not using it and the pages I’m viewing are static (no AJAX or other updating elements). I decided to do a little test and see how much memory it was taking up with three pages open that I’ve had open for hours, then restart with the “When Firefox starts: Show my windows and tabs from last time” option selected in the preferences (which will basically reload all the tabs that were open when I restart the browser). The results are below:

Before: Firefox Memory Usage Before Restart

After:
Firefox Memory Usage After Restart

The restart basically reduced “real memory” usage by 306.5 MB and “virtual memory” by 1.2 GB!

Poking around the Web, there are a lot of reports of memory leaks in Firefox but what causes them and if they even exist is contested. I’ve decided to follow some advice at simplehelp.net and set Firefox’s browser.cache.memory.capacity setting to 18432. I’ll let you all know what happens :).

Sphere: Related Content



Google Map’s Street View: A Total Miss

June 10th, 2007

When Google debuted their newest addition to Google Maps two weeks ago, there was much excitement in the air. The new “Street View” allows users to virtually explore the streets of cities like San Francisco and New York and offers 360 degree panoramas that appear as though the user is standing in the street. At first the buzz centered on how Google accomplished this feat. Like a lot of things that Google has recently done, this has been done before (although Google’s interface is arguably the best implementation of it). In the first quarter of 2006, Microsoft launched their Preview version of Local Live.com which allows users to “drive” through streets as if they’re in a car. A French Web site has offered similar functionality for what one person told me has been 5 years. And then of course there’s Amazon’s A9 which offered street views of businesses (more on that in a minute).

Almost immediately after Street View launched, blogs and Web sites popped up chronicling humorous images that Google’s Street View captured. In fact, to date, the only things I’ve been hearing or seeing about Street View are funny images or things like Steve Jobs’ house and car. To date, I haven’t seen an example of why Google Maps’ Street View is actually useful or a viable product other than the cool factor.

Amazon’s A9 service showed how a street view could be combined with online yellow pages in a manner that made business sense. When searching for a business in A9’s yellow pages, the search engine would display the business information as well as pictures of the business (so if you were looking for a small business in a strip mall, you could know what to look out for while you’re driving). Google Maps completely misses the mark on this. For example, search for “bank” in San Francisco, Ca. The result shows me the typical push-pin result view. To get to Street View, you have to push the Street View button which then loses the push-pin you were on. You then have to either drag the icon of the person or double click near the business you want to view (if you remember where it was) and then drag the camera around until you find what you’re looking for. A much more useful version of this would be to 1) display the storefront when in the business push-pin view and 2) be able to go into Street View directly from the push-pin. This is what Amazon’s A9 did and worked very well. Once functionality like that is build, one can “walk” down the street and Google can tell users what other businesses are on that block (and of course advertise to the end user based on that).

In its current implementation, Street View is almost a separate site, sharing only the overhead map view with Google Maps. Until all the features are integrated into one seamless application, I see little use for it except to find people picking their noses or in front of strip clubs.

Speaking of photos of people picking their noses or in front of strip clubs on Google, Privacy International, a “watchdog on surveillance and privacy invasions by governments and corporations” found Google last out of 20+ companies when it comes to privacy protection.

Sphere: Related Content