So, after managing to magically delete all of my posts, I’m left wondering what to use this site for.
So, after managing to magically delete all of my posts, I’m left wondering what to use this site for.
Finally giving into the four-year urge to buy a Mac after this month’s refresh, I’ve had no end of troubles. It seems like I happen to have a router from the one range that Macs don’t play well with.
Connecting to my networkJust would not work. For two hours. Two whole hours. I eventually traced it to the MAC filtering on my router. I’m not sure why Macs and MAC filtering can’t go together. Turning off MAC filtering (which I planned to do anyway, in favour of WPA security) sorted the problem out straight away. There are still days where the Mac takes a minute or so to connect, but considering the boot time of a Mac is about 10 seconds, compared to my old PC laptop’s 6 minutes, I’m willing to forgive.
Connecting to MSNTurns out Netgear DG934PN firmware 1.05.36 has a bug in it which conspires to not allow clients on the network to connect to MSN via anything but sucky, sucky HTTP. The official Windows client is robust enough for me to have never noticed. Adium was not. A painful downgrade experience to 1.05.35 fixed this.
Not without me checking my laptop thoroughly, trying three or four different clients, checking with my ISP…
What’s Left?Things left to do:
Predictably, it’s a Hello, World app. Look!
Not much, but a good first step to my first real app - iMExpensive.
I’m terrified preg-coms are coming in fashion. Juno was good fun though. Jennifer Garner was sort of creepy (actually, so was Bateman) and Michael Cera was flat and boring but Juno herself was extremely personable (and overly bratty only a few times). The plot was well-paced. There were a few good bits of dialogue in there too, despite Juno and Paulie having absolutely no onscreen chemistry. The soundtrack felt like it was trying a bit hard to be indie, though it remained gentle and unobtrusive.
Cute. Wait for it on DVD.
So I finally got got an iPhone to make the insides of my pocket more stylish. The good and the bad (trust me, there’s no ugly with this toy) after the jump.
Good: Easy ‘net use It’s so easy to browse the Internet on the phone. The touchscreen means that clicking round websites is much easier than if I had to use a nubby phone joystick. It’s good that data’s free because going round the web on the iPhone whenever I’ve got a spare minute’s actually become a bit of a habit. Everything else The style, the build quality, the functionality… Bad: No 3G Well this one was obvious. Websites are fast enough (especially with a lot of them iPhone-optimised), but you can always wish for faster. Basic SMS support I love delivery reports. The iPhone interface doesn’t easily support them. O2 doesn’t actually support them either unless I prepend my texts with an ugly string. It’s strange that such a new device doesn’t have a feature I saw implemented perfectly years ago on my SE T610. MMS is even worse - there’s no native MMS support and you have to mess about with Safari and passwords to view your messages. I suspect the reason for no MMS is because GPRS data is free so MMSs would cost nothing and O2 would lose 10p on every MMS sent as a replacement for an SMS. No MAPI (MailAPI) support Checking my work email over web is fine but inconvenient. Replying is even worse. Integration with the native mail client (or even a stand-alone Outlook clone) would be so much more convenient. Ingressed earphone jack socket:Not sure what sort of design oversight this was. The earphone socket is so far sunk into the chassis that most earphones I’ve tried don’t fit in. Shure’s produced a special extension for the iPhone (though not in so many words), but it still stings that I’d have to pay a bit more for a wire. Needing iTunes to sync Why do I need to keep a fully-featured music program on my work and home laptops to sync up my calendar? An Outlook plugin would make more sense. Inconsistent search results with Google Maps This really bugs me. Some results I find in Google Maps don’t appear in iPhone’s Map application. Aren’t they meant to be using the same data?The iPhone really has made it easy for me to keep in touch with my friends on the go and I’ve even organised a few social activities on it. It’s obvious that Apple’s made some decisions on how I should do things. While some of the activities I do on the phone do have extremely well thought-out workflows (such as booking a restaurant), anything off the beaten path requires memory juggling and messing about with websites (like… MMS?!) The majority of the problems I’ve experienced can be fixed with software. Opening up the iPhone will allow the sort of diversity that made the desktop PC so useful. All in all, I’m expecting my cons list to be be totally out of date as soon as the SDK is released.
I’ve not looked forward to many movies in the cinema for a while. The only thing that’s kept me going is the promise of Johnny Depp in Sweeny Todd. Honestly, there aren’t very many good actors out there and out of the few there are, Johnny Depp has got to be one of the best. If he starred in Lord of the Rings, it’d be the best trilogy ever. If he starred in Star Wars it’d be the best trilogy ever. If they hadn’t made the last two films of Pirates of the Caribbean, it’d be the best trilogy ever.
There’s no mistaking what Sweeny Todd is about. Opening credits show it all: Blood and romantic grotesquery. The movie starts off bloody and doesn’t go too far off track. The entire plot formula is simple, but you’ll watch it for the atmosphere. Burton’s rendering of Todd’s London is dirty and macabre and fun. The only thing that let it down for me was the singing. I have a low threshold for people belting out plot lines, and most of the movie is propelled by song lyrics. In fact, it seems like the trailers include pretty much all of spoken words (possibly the studio was worried a musical wouldn’t be so successful?) Still, some brilliant lines, like Todd’s repeated description of London. Brilliant acting too. Extremely Burtonesque, which is a good thing if you like his movies; an awful thing if you don’t.
I’m told that Charlie Wilson’s War has the same writer as The West Wing, and would be ranked alongside a mediocre episode from that series. Knowing that may convince me to give the show a chance. The movie is a based-on-a-true-story (kind of like Fargo was…) retelling of how the first Afghan War was won in secret thanks to the efforts of one Texan senator (played by Tom Hanks). Hanks plays this role well in his typical heart-warming sad-sack style.
One negative is Julia Roberts, who looks a bit like a weird alien and is far too monodimensional. Possibly I’m a bit biased after watching Notting Hill on telly last weekend. The CIA man is an excellent character that gives life to otherwise-dull moments.
The movie manages to maintain a close and personal sense of conspiracy with the main characters trying to effect a change below the radar. I, personally, had some trouble understanding all the words due to the heavy texan drawl employed.
Doesn’t need to be watched on the big screen. Definitely don’t watch it in Odeon’s “premier” seats. One slip and you’ll end up with your knee half way into the back of someone else’s head.
(n.b. There’s a good comparison between the movie and real life located here.)
My LinkStation Pro NAS is great for holding all my files, and really has made a small portion of my life more convenient. The only fly in the ointment is transferring huge files to/from it over my wireless network can take ages. Copying 8 gig of data would, as a relevant example, take me the best part of the rest of my evening. Maybe the USB ports at the back can be put to good use?
The LinkStation can’t be connected to a PC via USB (as far as I can see). It can, however, connect to other USB harddiscs. It does this to expand storage, but also gives us the ability to transfer data via the USB port - which is so much quicker. To do this, we’ll need to connect to the NAS via Telnet (the web interface doesn’t support using USB thumb-drives as a transfer medium), detect and manually mount the USB drive.
First, to telnet in we’ll need to enable Telnet on the NAS:
java -jar acp_commander.jar -t <linkstation_ip>.root, with no password. Note this gives you complete access to the software innards of the NAS. You don’t want to do anything rash, like delete random files, in this mode.Now we need to find out where the USB thumb-drive is (obviously, your thumb-drive needs to be stuck into one of the ports at the back):
dmesg | grep -i "SCSI device". The output will look something like:# dmesg | grep -i “SCSI device”
SCSI device sdb: 16121856 512-byte hdwr sectors (8254 MB)
SCSI device sdb: 16121856 512-byte hdwr sectors (8254 MB)
We’re interested in the bit that says sdb. Yours may be different (possibly sda). This is the location of the USB drive in the dev directory.
Okay, to mount it:
/mnt/usbdrive to create our mount point.mount -t vfat /dev/sdb /mnt/usbdrive.The USB drive is now accessible from within Linux on the NAS. You can copy files to and from it using the standard Linux cp command.
Unmounting the USB drive can be done via umount /mnt/usbdrive.
(Thanks to this site, here, for all the info).
If you can’t get syntax highlighting to work in a new Ubuntu install, it’s probably because the standard Vim install in Ubuntu is from the vim-tiny package. This is a cut-down version of Vi that does very little but edit files. If you want full Vi (with syntax highlighting), you need to uninstall the vim-tiny package and install vim-runtime:
sudo apt-get update - may as well make sure we’re aware of the latest package updatessudo apt-get remove vim-tiny - we’re going to replace this package. You’ll be asked if you want to uninstall ubuntu-minimal. It’s safe to do this (explanation below).sudo apt-get install vim-runtime - this is quite a big package (20 meg or so).Now we have the latest version of Vim. The command :syntax on will turn on syntax highlighting. To have it on automatically for yourself, create the file ~/.vimrc and enter the text syntax on. You can also edit /etc/vim/vimrc (as root) and change the appropriate lines to make the settings global instead. You can also set whether the background is dark or light (which affects the colour scheme).
When uninstalling vim-tiny, you’re prompted about the removal of ubuntu-minimal. This is an umbrella package that has lots of dependencies to packages needed for a basic workable Ubuntu install. If you uninstall one of the packages, you’ll need to uninstall the umbrella package too. This doesn’t affect the other dependencies so it should be safe.
As an aside, it seems to work better over Putty too. Happy days!
Why would my local cinema wait until the busiest (probably) movie-watching day of the year — the Thursday after Christmas — to let their prebooked-ticket machines and their credit card machines break down? I hate missing the beginning of a movie more than I hate missing the end, and bits in the middle.
Still, assuming nothing Earth-shattering happens in the first few minutes, like a virus killing everyone on Earth, I Am Legend really is a solid movie that paced itself and ended well. Some good bits with Will Smith showing how lonely being the last man on the planet can be.
The vampires are really quite poor and not terrifying at all. A shame after the atmosphere of tension that is set up every time just before you see one. It’s best to treat them as no more than simple plot devices to drive the core of the movie.
Worth seeing in the cinema or on DVD.
As a side note, this is the first time in years I’ve watched a movie in a crowded cinema hall. A good reminder of how horrible it is. It must be a universal law that if you bring 200 people to one place, there’ll be at least one baby that can’t stop crying, five guys who can’t stop pointing out the obvious in loud voices and two who are incapable of figuring out how to silence their mobile phones.