- Kernel Panics & bittorrent client
- Dock Problems
- EyeTV issues
- keyboard/trackpad lock-ups
Wednesday, December 26, 2007
Leopard woes
Tuesday, December 25, 2007
Leopard Crashes: Kernel Panic
- Try disabling IPv6 in your Airport System PreferencesThere's also a good website that has kept tabs on which applications are not compatible with Leopard. This would have been nice to know before I upgraded.
- In Azureus preferences, expand Connection -> Advanced Networking Settings, and make sure “Prefer IPv6 addresses when both are avail” and “Enable experimental extension…” are UNTICKED.
Saturday, December 22, 2007
Friday, December 21, 2007
How Mac & PC can Share an iTunes Network Library
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Garmin GPSMAP 60CSx
I bought an auto kit and a 2GB MicroSD card to go along with my hand held. The auto kit is essential for in-the-car use. It wasn't cheap, but worth every penny so far. I loaded the MapSource software into my Bootcamp partition and every thing is working out great.
I had troubles uploading the maps to the 2GB card initially, but it worked the second time around. I was a little worried there since it took about 3 hours the first time.
I love how I can create new waypoints, etc. on my computer or the 60CSx and sync them later. It's much more flexible than just a built-in system. The integration with GoogleEarth is fantastic. I've used the system to find wilderness POI's using the satellite imagery.
Unfortunately, I can't search for POI's by name and location on the road. If its not within a couple of miles here in the city, I have to know the address or approximate location and then search from there. That can make a huge difference. Last night, we were looking for a Thai restaurant, Kung Fu and if I didn't know the street, I wouldn't have found it. Thankfully that's not much of a problem because you can usually get an address or a general location. Still, it would be nice to have that extended search option.
I wish I could get a larger 4GB card and load up a full complement of topo maps as well, but that also makes map management difficult since map types can't be layered. Perhaps having two 2GB cards with different map sets is the best way for now, but it would be great to have other options like loading two cards and specifying which card you want to use.
No regrets here. A larger screen and something a little more compact would be great, but I'm not expecting perfection.
Garmin for Mac?
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Terminal to copy files
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Bootcamp and Parallels updating session
I was also still running Bootcamp 1.2 Beta even though I have the 1.3 Beta. I had to change my computer's date to install the update and run the driver burner application. I'll update my Bootcamp partition later. I still like Bootcamp because it allocates all resources to Windows apps which is useful when I'm playing around with digital video, Flash or Captivate projects. And until recently, it was the only way to run iSight - which I use for my online conferencing for EVO.
I was surprised that there didn't seem to be an easy way to install the iSight drivers. The folks on the Parallels forum kept saying to install the Bootcamp drivers, but I didn't want to install all of them, just the ones for the webcam. I copied three files out of my Bootcamp 1.2 partition and was able to manually install the drivers. I've uploaded the drivers for everyone to use:
These drivers aren't based on the newest 1.3 Beta, but they worked just fine with Windows XP.
Sunday, December 02, 2007
Playing DivX on Scott's DVD player
I believe I'm going to have problems with a video I've found that features an odd audio codec "ms". I don't think it'll play on his DVD player.
The problem is that I can't play it through QT so I don't think I can convert it with a different audio codec.
UPDATE - Well, it seems that I can play this through his DVD player. In fact, the quality is awesome. Guess I had a different problem with it.
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
A Turbo.H264 Pain in Ass
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Update from Las Vegas
Basically, I'm in heaven right now. I can order/buy basically anything I could ever want now that I'm back in America.
Scott-folks have digital cable here at the house. I've been having a great time channel surfing here. It's easy to miss a lot of great shows. Plus, I felt bad that Dad didn't have the Golf Channel in Princeton. I initially thought of buying a TiVo or a Slingbox so that I could "send" him the channel directly. I ended up selecting an EyeTV 250 Plus for my Mac. I can watch and record shows on my Mac and then encode them for burning to DVD, etc. For H.264, I also bought the Elgato Turbo to speed up encoding. I've also been using the TitanTV listings to check out what's on even with out the EyeTV. I just hope that I can connect this thing up to one of the free outlets around the house.
This whole thing got me thinking about how to hookup my Mac to Scott's HDTV. I think with a Mini-DVI to DVI adapter I can get the video out to the HDTV, but I'm not exactly sure how to handle the digital audio. I could make it a lot easier by going with an S-Video and RCA hook-up, but I'd probably be sacrificing a significant amount of signal quality.
SmartFlix
Monday, August 13, 2007
Future network setup
- PowerMac G4 w/ 10.3? - I dunno if I'll even be able to take this one back. Mom-folks have been using it for sometime now and they might be reluctant to letting it go, but I could persuade Dad to getting them a new iMac of their very own. Unfortunately I don't really remember what it's got under-the-hood. I'd like to incorporate it into a file server with a bunch of HD's in it. It'd be nice to get over a tetrabyte of storage finally.
- PowerBook G4 w/ 10.4 Server - I'll probably keep this one running as the main server until I can figure out what to do with the PowerMac G4. Eventually this might just function as a backup mail server.
- iMac w/ 10.4 & Windows XP - We haven't even bought this computer yet. It'll be Hyunjoo's main computer, running both OS's. We'll probably use it for watching videos directly and hopefully I'll be able to load up some cool games on it.
- MacBook w/ 10.4 & Windows XP - something that I'll probably use as my main computer and something to play movies for Movie Night.
- Compaq Armada M300 w/ Windows XP - I'll probably turn this in to a guest computer or an emailing station.
- Linksys - I'll keep this router to handle our Ethernet and wireless networking.
What to pack and what to bring?
Stuff to bring:
- Computer backpack
- MacBook, AC charger, audio and video cables
- i70, AC adapter, USB cable
- digital camera, extra battery, USB cable, AC charger
- iPod, Firewire cable, case, Belkin car adapter w/ Tape deck adapter
- Palm TX, USB cable, USB-AC adapter, 5V-USB cable
- Bose QuietComfort headphones, AAA batteries
- External Portable HD
- iPhoto Library
- Vault files
- video files
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Palm backup and security
How can I backup my TX to my external SD card and to a server via wireless?
NVBackup is designed for new Palms (Treo 650, TE2, T5, Tx, and Lifedrive are the models listed) and claims to use a different system for accessing the data. There is not a lot of information about this new method, but it claims that it should be more reliable on newer Palms than most other programs. Download at SourceForge.net.How can I secure the contents on my external SD card?
The program uses about 240k, and offers a nice selection of options, such as:Besides these option, the program features include:
- Various compression options
- Daily backup option
- Encryption
- Putting the program on the card
- Selectable time server
- The option to export or import a copy of the backup to or from an FTP server
- Backing data up directly from internal nonvolatile memory (which supposedly helps avoid crashes)
- Selective or complete restores
- Fast saves that only update files changed since the last backup
Complexity – IntermediateI bought some software called mEncrypt or something like that. It looks pretty good and now I'll have to see how it runs.
Time needed – ~20 minutes
The functionality of your Palm handheld can be extended by turning it into an authentication key on which encryption passwords and user profiles are stored. You will be able to use your Palm to protect access to your computer and use it instead of typing the passwords.
You will also enjoy the safety of having all your important documents on it – all protected by strong 256-bit AES encryption. You can easily do this by using a smart combination of Dekart and Softick software.
It will take you only a few minutes to learn how to make your Palm an all-in-one solution – a handheld, a security token and an encrypted disk. We hope this guide will help you increase the value of your Palm – by making it a secure and efficient solution for protecting your private data.
Friday, June 08, 2007
Using VLC for DVD Screen Captures
Control Panel - Display - Properties - Settings - Advanced - Troubleshooting and slide the Hardware Acceleration slider from Full to None.
And for Macs...
Thursday, June 07, 2007
Cool Coundown Timer
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Network update
I had a strange problem emerge this past weekend where my server couldn't connect to the web via Firefox. I couldn't even use Server Admin to connect to the server. I restarted a bunch of times and even precariously used changeip to try changing the IP address of the server, stupid in hind sight. I ended up changing the DNS servers to ones that were listed from my router and changed the server listing from Server Admin to its IP address. Whatever I did, it worked. I don't like the powerlessness of not knowing where to look for solutions. I don't know how to read the logs beyond a superficial level, so I don't really know where to go to fix the problems.
WPA TKIP
I don't know why I didn't do this earlier, but I changed my router from WEP encryption to 120 bit WPA TKIP encryption. I wasn't able to enter in my 503? bit passkey, so I had to choose a 20-digit key instead. I'll limit the MAC addresses next ensure that no one will be able to access my IP address.
FTP admin
I just tried to access my net2ftp admin page and was twarted by the login. I have no idea what the password is! I'll have to change that this evening.
eDrive
I installed a TechTools eDrive on my PowerBook so I don't have to rely on my newly created iPod "toolbox" for maintenance. I had troubles installing iDefrag though since I wasn't able to resolve permissions on the eDrive to allow the license key to be copied into the /Library/Application Support folder.
Buffalo 80GB Protogo Drive
Since I made an eDrive for my PowerBook, I thought I'd do the same for my MacBook. Well technically I can't make an eDrive since I have Bootcamp installed, but I have a Buffalo external USB 2.0 drive that wasn't doing anything, so it's now a portable Intel-only toolbox with lots of storage space on it (about 73 GB).
Freenet
I haven't had a chance to watch this video, but he said they discuss some of the fundamentals behind the recent build.
I doubt I'll try it out since I have little beyond financial documents that are worth encrypting or keeping secured. It forces one to deal with the concept of free speech. Along with the good comes the bad. I don't know how I feel about giving folks with dark intentions ways of maintaining their crafts. I suppose I have to support it to the limit that I would support the freedom of speech or any other freedoms granted to us through our Constitution and Bill of Rights.
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Scratch!
A free programming tool that allows anyone to create their own animated stories, video games and interactive artworks has been developed.
Primarily aimed at children, Scratch does not require prior knowledge of complex computer languages.
Instead, it uses a simple graphical interface that allows programs to be assembled like building blocks.
The digital toolkit, developed in the US at MIT's Media Lab, allows people to blend images, sound and video.
"Computer programming has been traditionally seen as something that is beyond most people - it's only for a special group with technical expertise and experience," said Professor Mitchel Resnick, one of the researchers at the Lifelong Kindergarten group at MIT.
"We have developed Scratch as a new type of programming language, which is much more accessible." (continues)
This would be a very cool tool for students here since they could make their own animated stories or presentations.
This weekend
- get a shopping cart installed on the server
- start photographing items to get rid of
- big heater
- small heater
- toyu tanks and pumps
- take fish to Homey Homer
- clean out fish tank
- Commerce.CGI - the first script I looked at; offers free scripts for basic installation and a one-time paid membership to access add-ons
- Shop-script - a pretty slick looking system that features three different tiers of functionality for quite a price increase; clear features description available
- AgoraCart.com - an open source option; also features paid membership upgrade but it's unclear what the features differences are
- photograph everything from a couple of different angles
- measurements
- price
- description
- date of availability
Thursday, May 17, 2007
Video for iPod - a surprising omission
A six minute FLV video will take about 36 minutes to convert to a H.264 640 x 480 video and download.
Wednesday, May 16, 2007
The Network
- MacBook
- Partition 1 - Intel OSX Tiger
- Partition 2 - Boot Camp - Windows XP
- PowerBook
- PPC OSX Tiger Server
- External 250 GB
- Personal Files
- Mac installers
- iTunes & iPhoto libraries
- Bittorrents
- Armada
- Windows XP
- External 65 GB
- Windows installers
- Cued videos
- Peripherals
- Canon i70 portable inkjet printer
- Epson flatbed scanner
- iPod FW 3G 40 GB - 2 partitions
- TechTools Protogo Universal profile
- TechTool
- DiskRescue II
- DiskStudio
- DiskWarrior
- iDefrag
- External 120 GB
- clone of 250 GB HD sans Bittorrent documents
- External 80 GB USB
- iTunes & iPhoto backup libraries
- essential documents backups
- LaCie RAID 1 external enclosure (wishlist)
- for secure storage of personal documents and media files; I'm tired about worrying whether my drives will fry in the heat, I'm only buying HD enclosures with built-in fans (and FireWire/USB connectivity) from now on
- UPS (wishlist)
- for the eventual PowerMac-fileserver
- PowerMac (TBA)
- eventual server with external 250 and 120 HD's installed
- upgrade with hardware RAID 1
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
Updating the iTunes library
- I went through and removed all the duplicates
- imported Hyunjoo's library
- began ripping the last of our CD's that we didn't already have in iTunes
- I'll have to next make a back-up of all our music, and other files for that matter, just in case something happens in transit from Japan
Just in case...
- Josh Highlands Blog - includes good pictures and procedures
- Command-Tab - good list of available drives
Micromat Protogo
I had problems with the profiles at first, but then realized that...
The Universal profile gets its system software from a disk image licensed to us by Apple that is usually used to make bootable DVDs. This disk image can create an installation of Mac OS X that is capable of booting both PowerPC and Intel-based models. This disk image does not contain a Finder, and nobody is authorized by Apple to add one. Therefore, there will not be a Universal Protogo profile with a Finder, unless Apple changes its bootable DVDs.I can't turn off my iPod right now and will have to reinitialize the iPod and begin again this evening, but at least I have a better idea of what I need to do after reading posts from Micromat's forum. First off, I'll have to look for something in the preferences that allows me to select an option to keep the iPod's music-playing functionality.
I'm interested in adding my own utilities as well like DiskWarrior and iDefrag but there might be some limitations
Keep in mind that the Universal profile has no Finder and Disk Warrior will not work with its system software. As long as you use a profile that is specific to the PowerPC or Intel platform, you should have no trouble using any third-party programs.I'll give it another go in any case.
Update - I've got the iPod up and running with Protogo, after I read the directions that I can only choose a profile with one partition if I want to maintain music playback capabilities. Amazing what stuff you can learn by reading warning dialogs. I set it up with additional utilities, but a couple of them need serial numbers to run. DiskRescue II and Serial Box doesn't run right now, but that will have to wait.
Firewire bridges are not built alike
Until last night my set up was:
PowerBook > external LaCie DVD > external Buffalo enclosure
This set up was fine when all I needed to do was hook up another HD, like my MacBook in Disk Mode, and all was good. But when I plugged my 3G iPod into the FW port, it wouldn't charge. Apparently it had something to do with the fact that the Buffalo drive only has one 6-pin connector. The other is a non-powered 4-pin port. The missing 2-pins in the chain breaks the power connection even when all of the drives in between are AC powered!
So I switched my 250HD from the Buffalo enclosure to my OWC enclosure, again, and am running it with the case cracked open to let it ventilate. I hope it doesn't over-heat in this configuration. What a pain in the ass!
How to make a triple-boot service drive
I work at a school in the morning, supporting about 200 computers, mostly mac. The coming of the intel means more work for me, because now I have to be able to support the intel platform in addition to the powerpc platform.
During the summer we create "base images" - default hard drive images that we can quickly deploy ("image") to workstations that are having problems. The users have their homes on the network so we can blow away their hard drive without too much disruption. (aside from installing scanner and special printer drivers anyway)
I can normally image any machine with a firewire port. (we are desperately trying to phase out the tray load imacs!) I can image TO any computer I need to via firewire, but this requires another machine such as my laptop or another mac. I can image from any machine to any machine but the requirement of another free machine is inconvenient.
I have been using a little 80gb 2.5" firewire drive for imaging so far. This drive not only has the base images on it, but it is a bootable 10.4 OS as well. So I can boot the machine to be imaged off my service drive, and image it, all with only the handheld drive and a firewire cable. (isight cables fit nicely in your pocket! Get one from your Apple store, they work fine for HDs, no data corruption as I had initially watched for)
Now enter Intel. My service drive won't boot off that. If I format it GUID and install intel tiger, then I can't boot any of the older machines. We have about 200 ppc macs right now and we just got in 14 macbooks and a pro, with more imacs to come I'm sure. So I need to find a way to make this drive boot both platforms. It's either that or get another drive, and I hate to lug any more gear around than I am already carrying.
After much googling and finding a surprising amount of untested and inaccurate information, I have completed my mission and thought I'd share the CORRECT how-to of making a dual (and in this case, triple) booting drive.
First off. GUID. No. Just don't. It won't work. I know, they all say that's how it has to be done to boot intel but they're wrong. Yes, the installer won't install to APS (Apple Partition Scheme) but that's how we have to do it anyway. The reason is that there is NO way to boot from a GUID partition on any but the very newest G4 and G5 macs. This is because only the newest machines with the latest firmware can read GUID. A GUID partitioned hard drive cannot boot from an older mac, end of story. In case you're thinking "can't we have both?", no you can't. The partition scheme is the way the partitions are described by the disk drive. Just as there is only one table of contents in a book, there is only one partition table on a hard drive. There is no way to hybridize the table so that it is legal in both GUID and APS, so you have to pick one or the other. Since we know that you cannot boot from a GUID drive on most of the PPC macs, that's out.
So APS it is. Reformat your service drive as apple partition scheme, this is the default. Plan carefully when you set up the partitions, as this is very difficult to change your mind on later. If you have a larger drive this is easier because you are not so tight on space. Here I set up an 80 thusly:
Service Classic - 1.5gb
Service PPC - 6.0 gb
Service Intel - 8.0 gb
Service Users - 6.0 gb
Service Data - 59 gb (the rest of the space)
Yes, classic is there. I intend to boot up the drive as 9 as well. Not because I need it, but because it may come in handy and 1.5gb is not a lot to waste. And because "triple boot" sounds cooler than "dual boot".
I set the size of the PPC, Intel, and Users partitions to have about 2 gb of space left on them when I was done. This is playing it a little cagey, but this is only an 80gb HD and I have about 35gb of base images to fit onto the remaining data volume so I can't squander my space.
First is classic. Drag and drop from an existing machine. Very easy. After you drop, you will want to check and see what you don't need, and delete it to save space. All you really need is System Folder and Applications (Mac OS 9). Though since this is its own partition you won't be adding to usable space elsewhere but I like to keep a clean drive. After you are through cleaning it up, and while still attached to the OS 9 containing mac, select the Classic volume as your startup, and then select back to your normal boot drive. This "blesses" the classic installation and will make it be able to appear in the boot-picker when you hold Alt at startup. This requires a machine that can boot OS 9. You can bless classic from a machine that cannot boot it, but it requires some terminal magic that I can't recall offhand. ("man bless")
Next is PPC. Just grab your tiger installer and go to town. Run updates. Create a user account that is somewhat generic, you'll see why in a bit. Pick a single word short name for simplicity sake. (see further down for suggestions) I'll assume it is blessed since you installed it and ran software updates. You can also use "ditto" in terminal or netrestore to clone from an existing installation. More importantly now, remove anything you don't need. Space is tighter here and OS X is less forgiving of low disk space than classic ever was. Try to have at least 1gb of free space, 2 is better.
OK now the fun one. As stated earlier you cannot run the intel installer. If you select this drive in the installer, it will say "you cannot install Mac OS on this volume. You cannot start up from this hard drive". it's lying! Unfortunately it's a pain to force the issue. So install it onto a GUID formatted volume, or find another one that's already installed. Now hack it down to a manageable size, try to get it to 5gb of used disk space. Then use Disk Utility and do a "new disk image from disk0sxx" and make a disk image of the intel drive. Save the image somewhere else of course. (maybe on the Data partition if you made one?) Then use disk utility to restore the disk image to the intel partition you made. Again you will need to select the intel volume as your startup once to "bless" it so it shows up in the boot picker. It's interesting that they will allow you to restore to it but not to install to it. It would be a good idea for you to use the short name that is the primary admin account on the installed intel drive above where you created the account for the PPC side. If these names are the same the next step is easier. Intel's binaries are about 30% larger than their PPC counterparts, so this tiger will take up more space than the PPC version, which is why I allocated 2gb more space for the Intel tiger partition.
OK almost done! You should now be able to boot the HD on all three volumes, on the appropriate macs of course. Test them all to make sure they are working fine. Make a folder on your Users volume, call it.. Users! Make sure permissions is enabled on this volume and both of the tiger volumes. Drag and drop your home folder into Users. No I have not lost my mind.
OK, open Netinfo Manager and authenticate. Now find Users, and find your user. Find Home folder. It might be:
/Users/JoeMac
Change it to
/Volumes/Users/Users/JoeMac (mine is more like "/Volumes/Service Users/Users/JoeMac")
"Users" is the name of the volume that you made the Users folder on. Include spaces, this is not terminal and spaces/symbols should NOT be escaped if you have them in the username or volume name. Type them as they are.
Now restart local netinfo domains with NetInfo Manager. Now logout, and log back in again. Go... Home. Your home and house icon should now be in the Users folder you made. Congrats, you just moved your home folder! Feel free to blow away the home on your tiger volume, you don't need it anymore and it's just eating up space.
Now on a mac of the other architecture, repeat the maneuver of moving the home folder. (no need to copy it, skip that step) This time when you log out and back in again, you will see the exact same home folder you had on the other platform. The two are now sharing the one home folder. Changes made on one architecture will occur for the other as well. PPC apps installed under the PPC boot will work fine (via rosetta) when you are booted Intel.
There. You now have a triple booting service drive with shared home folder. Note that if you create another account you will have to create it on the other side and move both of them as well - we did not change the default home location, only the location of that one user's home. If you are using the drive to image, this would be a good time to load up the Data partition with your base images and get NetRestore installed. (only once! works for both!) I have not tried netrestore on the Intel side but I expect it will work, though it may run slower. I haven't ran across an Intel-native netrestore yet.
You might want to adjust permissions etc on the folders at the root of the users folder you copied, since just being dragged they didn't maintain the special permissions of the files at the root of your users folder. If this is just your personal service drive though I doubt this matters much.
Followup note. When installing applications to the shared user folder, you would be advised to check them and see if they work ok on both architectures. Installers for applications like Stuffit Expander will check your machine architecture when you install, and will not install universal binaries. They will instead install the binary for the architecture that you are running on now. If that is PPC, then not so bad, it will work in rosetta. But if you are booted to Intel when running the installer, you may get an Intel-only binary that you cannot run when booted to PPC. You can use finder and get info on an application to see which architecture(s) it will run under.
Get info on AddressBook on my powerbook: "Application (PowerPC)"
Get info on AddressBook on my intel partition: "Application (Universal)"
Get info on Stuffit Expander: "Application (Intel)" (iirc)
The Intel ones are the only ones you really need to worry about for now I think. They will not work on PPC and should have a slash through their icon in the finder, same as the classic apps do on an intel machine.
Monday, May 14, 2007
Bootcamp, again
Parallels made the most sense for using Windows MS Office, MS Messenger, and various other Windows-only software packages. It ran relatively fast and was easy to boot. I was a full Parallels convert.
Previous to Parallels I was basically using Bootcamp to run a StarWars RPG. It was a great game, but after I finished it I didn't really have an interest in running through the whole story again. I don't often play games and when I play them I rarely "complete" them. I most often play RPG's and Gran Turismo.
So, I basically stopped using Bootcamp. I even went through the process of removing the Bootcamp partition. That was a pain in the ass of its own magnitude - for reasons I've forgotten. Of course once I ditched the partition, I realized that I wanted to run Bootcamp again.
This time I want to try and get RealFlight up and running. I don't have an RC controller yet, but perhaps if I buy a cheap 4-channel model I can practice before I get a real plane. I can sort of test the waters and see if it's something I wanna try out.
I still have to check whether the GMA950 video chipset in the MacBook can handle the graphics. I'm holding my breath.
Friday, May 11, 2007
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Private eyes, please!
Friday, April 13, 2007
Friday, April 06, 2007
Installing the color network printer
- create a printing port (Printers and Faxes > Files > Server Properties > Ports tab > Add Port... Standard TCP/IP port)
- install the printer via "install local printer attached to this computer"
- Have disk... navigate to the KTC Teachers folder on "shared" and look for the printer's file (L:\8. KTC Teachers\Software and Drivers\Color Printer Driver cx8800\english\Disk1)
- select the CX8800 profile
Sunday, March 25, 2007
Back to the US: Media controller?
Monday, March 12, 2007
MarsEdit
Sunday, March 11, 2007
ScreenRecycler
Monday, March 05, 2007
More hard drive woes
I bought a 250GB drive here in Japan, but have had my own set of problems with that Buffalo enclosure. It would run way too hot and the drive would shut down. It wasn't any good for backing up my files to since it would automatically unmount during intensive drive activity.
So, I've taken the OWC drive off line, cracked the Buffalo case and now the drive enclosure running naked, but more reliably. I've begun to consolidate the OWC drive and a portable 80GB USB drive to the Buffalo drive and should be able to use that for my file storage. I'm left without a backup solution for my critical files, but I've done that before. It's not ideal, but I can't spend the money on another drive or enclosure that will only run on 100V.
What I really need is a MacPro! Then I could throw in all my drives into one happy place. Until then, I'll reclaim my old G4 PowerMac and get that thing running with Tiger Server when I return to the states.
I could also buy an enclosure back in the states for less than $50 from newegg.com. I would need Firewire and USB connections along with an internal fan. I'd hate to have heating problems again.
Juggling harddrives again
I used to use it as network storage for all of our important files, so I move all that over to my Buffalo 250 HD. That drive had problems of it's own: over heating. It wasn't until I cracked the case open on that drive that it has begun to work reliably. It took me a while to figure that out as you can see.
Moral of the story... only buy enclosures with fan units on them.
Friday, March 02, 2007
Schwinn 2007 Campus Electric Bike
Most of the systems around here use sealed lead acid batteries and cost in excess of US$1000. We looked at a few bikes made in the US and they were pretty pricey too, especially including the shipping.
This Schwinn might not offer a better solution, but it still looks like a cool bike. Interesting new battery technology and drive train. I actually can't tell how the electronic drive train works. Most ebikes have an obvious connection linkage with the manual drive train, but there's nothing to see from the photos on Schwinn's website.
Saturday, February 24, 2007
Lame MacBook DVD drive
But, doing "other things"... that's another story. I was trying to make a perfectly legal backup of one of my DVD's, "NH", and I found that I couldn't rip it using MacTheRipper nor convert it using Handbreak. I can't give it another shot, because someone else is borrowing it right now, but I was just thinking that the drive might be too finiky to handle CSS decryption. I remember reading that it was impossible to remove the region encoding on the drives, hypothetically of course, as I had hypothetically done with my old PowerBook G4.
It seems that the PB has a much more flexible, albeit ancient, drive as I recall only having problems ripping one or two DVD's in the past.
Oh, well. I just have to remember to make my legal backups using my PB.
Thursday, February 22, 2007
iPod in the house
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Can't move blog to another account!
Monday, February 19, 2007
phpMyAdmin
The second problem I ran into was an authentication issue. The database user that I defined wasn't able to connect to mysql via the script. When I removed the password for the user in the script, phpMyAdmin worked well enough. I didn't like the idea of running the scripts without password verification, so I took it off line temporarily until I figure out what's going on.
It's always best if I jam on a problem for a while, then leave it and come back to it later. The fresh perspective always helps me to see a different solution. I almost get frustrated at the things I missed the previous attempts, but I'm usually just happy that I figured out the solution.
Friday, February 16, 2007
Upgraded Blogger
Thursday, February 15, 2007
PHP bulletin board
Expanding FTP options
I've been trying to make the process as easy as possible for any user I would authorize to use my service (i.e. my students). I think our network is behind a firewall that prevents us from using WS_FTP. I use FireFTP over FireFox all the time from my laptop here at work, so I know the service is working from here.
I've tried two PHP options: phpwebftp and mywebftp both of which haven't worked. phpwebftp wasn't too hard to get up and running. I had a problen when I configured the default language as "english", but once I removed that, it would start properly in the browser. Then I tried to configure the default to "binary" and was able to do that after searching both of their forums. Finally, I was stalled at "Directory emtpy..." or some hogwash. I can't get phpwebftp to properly display directories and their contents. mywebftp failed even earlier for me. I couldn't install the scripts. I ran the setup.php and things didn't install properly, so I'm not even going to bother.
I found another service, net2ftp and I hope that I can get that running this evening. I've been using their interface for class and we had some problems, but I don't think it was due to the FTP client software. I think my G4 laptop choked while transferring zipped archives over to it from school. Oh well. I'm keeping my fingers crossed!
Tuesday, February 13, 2007
Been gone, but busy...
- Converted my G4 laptop into a server running Mac OS X Server Tiger
- Installed two moodles - one running on Tiger client and the other on the new server
- Switched to Parallels for running Windows XP on my MacBook
- Changed the network entirely utilizing my new server's capabilities
- Wiped and reinstalled HJ's laptop with an English version of Windows XP instead of her original Windows 2000 Korean version