November 2007 Archives

The Key to Reserva

I know this has nothing to do with technology or gadgets, but I'm a huge Hitchcock fan. Martin Scorsese pays tribute to the master of suspense.

Watch the film.

Wired has a nice article on how Comcast is screwing over their customers with hacker techniques. The more this story unfolds, the better is gets.

Say Hello to Crackstation

An intrepid hacker, Nick Breese, has spent six months working on a project called "Crackstation." He's increased the speed of cracking passwords using the Sony Playstation 3. I wonder if Sony will add this tidbit to the box. Read about it here.

01photo1.jpgLeave it to the Japanese to start the robot uprising and cook a mean omelet at the same time. Twendy-One is a five foot tall robot that is designed to be the size of an "average adult female." The main goals of the project are safety, dependability and dexterity. Everything a robot needs to bring about armageddon.

But here's the best description from the website:

The appearance is designed from the point of view of the human-friendliness.

Just look at that face. It's the last thing you'll ever see.

Twendyone.com

cnet.jpg"Don't give up on Vista." I'm not sure how long this ad will be running, but it's brilliant.

Check it out here.

The reason I switched to the Mac five years ago was for the Mac OS, not the hardware, so I was looking forward to the Leopard release. Now that I've used the new OS for several weeks, I can definitely say that it's the best Mac OS to date. However, there are some flaws that are driving me nuts!

Time Machine is genius. Backup made easy for the masses. I'll probably lose some geek cred when I admit that I didn't backup before on a regular basis. On occasion I'd burn my iTunes purchases to a DVD. There was a period where I dabbled with ChronoSync to create a weekly backup, but that never worked the way I wanted. Now I can plug in an external USB drive and forget about it. Genius I say, genius!

Mapping network drives has always driven me nuts on the Mac. On Windows you just map a drive, tell it to reconnect automatically and you're done. On a Mac you have to map it manually every time you login, or add the drive mapping to your login items. Even worse is losing your mapped drives after your Mac goes to sleep. There are some techie solutions available, but most of them involve mucking around with Terminal. No thanks.

All of these networking woes are behind us now with the launch of Leopard. Mapped drives appear in the left-hand column of the Finder. Log out, restart your mac, and those drives will still appear on the left. Click on one of the names and you are reconnected in less than a second. I'd offer up a "brilliant" or "genius," but this is the way network drives should have operated from the beginning. So instead I offer a hearty, "it's about time!"

Spotlight has finally graduated from a good idea to a good tool. No longer do you type in a keyword to wait 60 seconds while the list populates. It's fast, very fast. The order in which the list populates also makes more sense. Applications are the first item listed, always. That means you can type "iph" and before you can say, "I like cake," iPhoto is at the top of the list. A simple tap of the return key and iPhoto is loading. Once again, this is the way it should have been from the beginning, so it's a welcome change.

Installing Leopard is another story altogether. I chose the upgrade path instead of a complete reinstall of the OS, which was a bit of a mistake. My macbook didn't like the upgrade at all. The OS would load and run, but I couldn't shutdown or restart. As you can imagine, that got frustrating fast. A format and reinstall took care of those issues.

On my iMac, I ran into keychain madness. Loading Safari would prompt the keychain password box to appear. Loading Mail ... scratch that ... loading anything, and I mean anything, would cause a keychain password box to appear front and center. Using the Keychain Access utility I reset all of my passwords and solved the issue.

The upgrade process was frustrating at times, but could have been far worse. All in all, I'm extremely happy with Leopard and recommend the upgrade to anyone not using their Mac as a primary work computer. For those who rely on your Mac for a living, I suggest waiting a bit longer until the next major service update (10.5.2) to make sure all of the major bugs are ironed out.

It's been fun watching this story unfold. As a former Comcast customer, I was frustrated by Comcast's blocking of specific kinds of traffic. Bittorrent was pretty much useless, and the network speed was barely reliable enough for online gaming. A few months back I switched to Verizon's Fios service and have been extremely happy with the quality. To put it simply, everything works.

Now that net neutrality groups and the telcos are beating the investigation drum, Comcast's future is looking a little bleak.

Read the full story here.