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Archive for the ‘Rave’ Category

This is a beginning, not the end

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

So, being the Barenaked Ladies überfan I am, I had to blog something. Steven Page, lead singer and secondary guitarist with Barenaked Ladies, has parted company to go do some solo projects of his own.

Honestly, I can’t say I’m overly surprised. I always expected something like this to happen eventually. I could analyse the hell out of this, or go all Chris Crocker over it, but I’m not going to be doing that in a rush.

Instead, I’d like to say I think it marks a new beginning. The band’s sound has always been a mish-mash of all the band-members’ own musical likes and dislikes, and that produced the unique sound they had. It meant they often drifted around between genres, and that made it great.

Steve reckoned he had a more folky background, so I’ll be intrigued to see what sort of direction they take in future. I’d noticed Kevin Hearn moving more to the front with songs, and Jim was submitting more which made for some great songs. Plus all the guys can sing, so they’ll definitely cope on that front. Be intrigueing to hear how (or even if) they handle ‘Steve’ songs.

As for Steve, he reckons he has a load of new projects up and coming. The Art & Time Ensemble work he did a while ago was pretty good, and I imagine a studio recording of something similar would be absolutely wonderful. The Vanity Project looks likely (to me) to turn into a ‘real’ band, and Steve says he has a second album on the way, so I look forward to that – the eponymous debut was a great album.

So it all looks promising to me. To quote a Kevin Hearn song – This is a beginning, not the end!

YouTube – T Mobile Advert 2009 Full Version HQ

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

YouTube – T Mobile Advert 2009 Full Version HQ.

Really is awesome!

Room to swing a lolcat

Friday, February 13th, 2009

newdisks

I bought some new hard disks and replaced all my originals. I went from a 500GB drive, two 300GB drives, and a 80GB I used for virtual machines and things. I now have two 500GB drives for boot and virtual machines, plus two terabyte drives for data. I’ve also defected to Western Digital after the Seagate debacle recently; I actually sent back a terabyte Seagate drive – unopened – because I didn’t trust it!

I have two 500GB Caviar Blue drives they are supposedly faster. I also have two Caviar Green drives for storage, as they are low power, and cooler running, but a bit slower. Well that’s fine, as they mainly stream data, so as long as it comes off quickly, it’s good enough.

I copied the data using – ironically enough – Seagate DiscWizard. Western Digital’s disk copying software doesn’t work if the SATA controllers are set to AHCI mode, which mine are. It just crashed and burned and decided it couldn’t see my CD drive. DiscWizard, however, saw all the discs, and copied everything over quite happily. It just has to see a Seagate drive, but doesn’t care which direction you go with the data. It’s based on Acronis TrueImage. It seems Ghost, formerly the darling of disk cloning, is now a weird attempt at backup. Then again, that’s just like most of Symantec’s software.

So far, things seem quicker, and I have a ton of space free now. We’ll see how it goes!

So long DSL

Friday, January 30th, 2009

After many years, I’ve finally done it. I’ve gone to Cable internet. And it’s great! (so far).

I’ve had ADSL for quite a while. When I first joined, which I think was around 2000/2001, the only option was BTOpenworld (or Openwoe as they were more often known), as the market hadn’t yet been opened up to competitors. At that time, you had to have an engineer install it for you, and there were a multitude of tests including the ‘woosh’ test, and line length tests. The whole thing was actually quite an ordeal, and your line HAD to meet strict specifications. All this for a 512Kb connection! You also had a modem provided (no routers) which was owned by BT, and you technically weren’t allowed to use anything else. When BTO started out, hardly anybody was using it, so it was amazingly fast and reliable.

Over time, that changed. More people piled into the service, and it got slower and slower. BT started allowing other ISPs to re-sell the service, and in such a way that you used their network, instead of BT’s, so the performance was often better. BTO became BT Yahoo, and the service declined sharply, although I was paying a lower price for being a good customer. In mid-2004, I moved to Zen. They were always getting a good press for their excellent service. A few months after moving to them, the restrictions on line types changed, and I was able to upgrade to 1Mb. Later, the option of ADSL max became available, which meant a much faster service (potentially) albeit with a download cap. I was soon able to get 3.5Mb, and all was well.

Then the ‘issues’ began. The line would drop out now and then, and not come back for extended periods. I tried all sorts of things, and Zen’s support were excellent. My line speed fell bit-by-bit I bought a new router, ADSL splitters, and tested all sorts of things, but nothing worked. The line would be fine for a while, then every few months throw a wobbler and fall over. Not a lot of use if you’re trying to use VPNs and other stateful apps like I do. BT tested the line countless times, and found nothing.

Be* were suddenly the new kids on the block, but also using the newer ADSL2 standard. I moved to them in February of 2008, and then had a slightly faster connection, and no download cap. It all went well for a while, and then the connection issues came back. I tried yet more to resolve it, but still no improvement. I found myself getting a maximum of around 2.5Mbs, so was going backwards in terms of speed. Not good.

Others had been telling me for ages how great Cable was, but I always maintained that the support was great with Zen or Be*, and the performance was good, so I didn’t want cable. I’d scoff at the caps, and stay put. A few weeks ago, after the latest connectivity issues with ADSL, I decided enough was enough, and signed up to Virgin’s 10Mbs service. I had it installed today, and it’s been wonderful! It downloads at the advertised speed, as opposed to an ‘up to’ speed. OK, the caps are a little annoying, and very easy to blast through, but it’s certainly liveable. All in all, it’s much fairer. It remains to be seen how customer service is as NTL/Telewest were awful way back when. I hear it’s improved, so that’s something.

So time will tell how it goes, but so far it’s very promising.

Counting, 1, 2, 3

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

Being so inclined to care about such trivialities as the number of times I’ve played a certain song, I recently had cause to reset the play counts on a few songs. The reason was that I had replaced some tracks in iTunes with higher-quality re-rips, and in doing so iTunes flattened the number of times I’d played those tracks. I use the play counts in a couple of playlists, so I find them useful. Plus I’m a bit of a stats geek, so there we go.

I looked for methods to reset the play counts, but couldn’t find anything. Within iTunes it’s possible to edit pretty much every aspect of a track, except for how many times you played it, and when that last as.

I dug around and found one method which involved hacking about with iTunes library file, which is a gargantuan XML file. I had a go at substituting the play count from one song to another, to see if it’d work, but iTunes decided it would rather helpfully remove it. A bit more digging and I found some Applescript scripts to do it, but they are of little use to me, being on Windows.

Then I found this site:

Windows iTunes Scripts Downloads- liquid parallax’s Blog.

A script to set the play count! I tried it, and it worked. What’s more, it stays after you close and re-open iTunes, and it increments quite happily.

It does raise the fact that iTunes obviously has some sort of API for manipulating it from Javascript (and other things no doubt). I’ll probably look into that more and see what can be done. Still, my play counts are back where they were, so I’m happy for now!

Duke even more Special

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

I went with a friend to see Duke Special last night at the Oxford Academy (now the O2 Academy, formerly the Carling Academy, formerly the Zodiac). I’ve seen him a few times now at the Academy/Zodiac, and each time has been different, and very entertaining.

Last night was no exception. He had two support acts – one a local guy, and other an up and coming act by the name of Dan Michaelson and the Coastguards. They weren’t too bad, and passed the time whilst we waited. After they’d finished, we waited for what seemed like an eternity. One of the roadies appeared with setlists, then about 15 minutes later picked them all up and replaced them with others, so I can’t help but feel the delay was possibly due to some last-minute changes.

Continue Reading…

A monster of a cable – and it’s only 15 quid!

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

If you go buy a TV from Comet or Currys (or any out of town retailer), they’ll swear blind you need to pony up upwards of £50 for a Monster HDMI lead, which is 99% oxygen free, and was hewn from the very depths of the poles of one of Jupiter’s moons, and that with anything less, you’ll not be able to see every hair and blemish on Harrison Ford’s face when you watch Bladerunner on Bluray.

Cobblers.

0255342_lWith analogue connections (i.e. SCART), the signal made its way through as a set of subtle waves. The subtlety of those waves could be destroyed if the cable was of a poor quality. It could lead to flat colours, a ‘halo’ effect around people, or shadows in the picture. People would pay ridiculous amounts of cables which did make a difference, albeit subtle. To most folk, it was so subtle that it really didn’t matter. The hard-core home-cinema type would tell you until they were blue in the face that it made a difference, but it mattered not one jot to everyone else. There was such thing as ‘cheap’ or ‘bad’ cables. I’ve had a few, and they were poorly made, and poorly shielded, so they did produce a pretty dire picture.

Along comes HDMI, and it uses a digital connection. It’s all pulses. On-off-on-off-on-off. The digital simplicity of ones and zeros. With HDMI, if the signal gets through, it gets through. It either does, or it doesn’t. What that means, is that the cable either works, or it doesn’t. If the cable is ‘bad’ you’ll know it – big blocks on the screen, or odd sparkly colours, because chunks of the picture information is missing. It’s very similar to how Freeview breaks up when a lorry rumbles past your house.

Basically, you need a ‘decent’ cable. One that makes a good connection at both ends, won’t slip out or wobble, and shields itself from any interference from other cables, like power leads or speaker wires. These stupidly expensive cables are just that – stupidly expensive. I found the cable pictured at the right for £14.99 in Wilkinsons. It’s 1.5 metres, and has gold-plated ends (so they won’t tarnish). I’ve got three of them now, and they work like a charm!

Since buying an HD-ready TV about two years ago, I’ve slowly been replacing bits of my TV/Audio kit, as we gadgety-geeky types are often wont to do. In doing so, I’ve upgraded to Sky+ HD, and have upscaling DVD players and other fun things. As a consequence, all my kit is now connected via the HDMI. I used to have a spaghetti of SCART leads packed down the back of the TV. They were thick and bulky, and always drifting lose (a major issue with SCART).

Using HDMI cables has been good. I’ve actually got more HDMI devices than inputs on my TV, plus I need to send the signal in two directions to the TV and projector, so there’s a switch box in the mix too. All told, there’s about six HDMI leads in there now, including these Wilko cables. I’ve been using them quite happily for some time, and they give me perfectly good picture quality. The Sky+ HD box comes with an HDMI lead which is, to be honest, a bit cheap and nasty when you look at it, but even that works perfectly fine. As I say, a lead either works, or it doesn’t. My ‘best’ cable, is a Belkin lead I bought some time ago which was probably nearer £30, and that is no different to these newer, cheaper leads. Wilko actually sell cheaper leads still, and I think even they would work fine.

The Monster leads Comet and Currys push onto you are sold simply for the profit margins. The wholesale costs on them is closer to £10, but they sell them for about £50. They use it to recoup any losses they might have made price matching, and giving you a better deal.

That’s how they getcha!

Serial Communicator

Friday, November 28th, 2008

I had a vague need to audit the Cisco IP phones, so had a look for a tool to do it. And I found one, the rather appropriately named ‘Serial Grabber‘.

It basically walks your network subnets with your phones in, opening the little HTTP server on each phone (so you’ll need that enabled). It then basically screen-scrapes each one to gain info about what the phone is up to. You can then export the results for your own uses.

It looks good, and it’s a freebie. Apparently the developers parted ways from each other and the code was released as a freebie. Rare you find something related to ‘free’ and ‘Cisco’.

Download Link

"Bringing order to chaos" or "Keep it stupid, simple"

Saturday, October 11th, 2008

At work, I admit I’m probably not the most organised of people. Truth be told, I’m not overly organised, well, anywhere really. If I had things to do, I’d just remember. I’m one of these annoyingly conscientious people (annoying for me) in that I will remember to do things, and they’ll eat at me if I don’t.

I used to only have a few things to do, so they were easy to remember. As I found myself gradually becoming responsible for more and more things, I was having trouble remembering things. I was already organising my diary using Outlook, so it seemed like a good idea to use it for todos and the like. I also bought a Palm TX PDA to organise things more.

Just lately things have been getting busier, and the number of things I’ve had to do has been growing. Not only that, but many of these things are dependent on each-other, and other things happening first. The more I had to think about, the worse it was getting. I’d find myself waking up at 3am thinking about stuff I had to do. I was constantly chewing over things in my mind when I was at home, and quite frankly it was driving me mad.

So I decided to put more of this information into Outlook and notebooks, but it still wasn’t working. It was all so unstructured and messy. It was also long-winded to do these things, and manage the stuff supposedly managing me! It wasn’t working. Then I had a great idea.

I got myself a spiral bound notepad. It’s little, it’s low tech, and it’s simple. Now all I do is if I have something to do, I write it on the list. Doesn’t matter what it is, even if it’s something simple, it goes on the list. When it’s done, I cross it off. When the page fills up (takes a day or two), I re-write a fresh page with the leftover stuff. The more urgent items go to the top, and I fill it up again.

The amazing thing is, this simple method actually works! I’ve been amazed how little I end up thinking about these things. The little notepad sits on my desk all the time, so when I get back to the office I glance down it and see what needs doing. They’re all little one-liners which reference an email, or a voicemail, or something else. It’s enough to point me back to where I need to be and get on with it. The great thing is that I no longer seem to end up obsessing over doing things when I’m not at work.

As a result, my PDA has largely gone ignored lately. I haven’t synced or charged it in ages. I’ve started taking a laptop with me into meetings running OneNote, which in itself is a wonderful, wonderful tool.

Amazing how powerful a small stack of paper worth pennies can be.

Singing in perfect harmony

Saturday, September 20th, 2008

41BjvapjIlL._SL500_AA280_ I’d been looking for a good universal remote, and I’d not found many I liked the look of, until I found the Logitech Harmony 785. It’s very powerful, and able to control all my devices, even my no-name HDMI switcher box. It amazed me how comprehensive the remote database is, as it worked with pretty much everything straight off the bat. I had to learn the commands for the HDMI switch, but that was pretty easy to do.

Continue Reading…