Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Update on the general state of play

I've been thinking a little bit about how best to structure this blog so as to give me an opportunity to solicit some feedback, improve my writing and, with a bit of luck, provide some entertainment. With that in mind, and with thanks to Inferno_str1ke of Dearwandy.com forums for pointing pointing out what really should have been painfully obvious, Wednesday is now my official blog day. Bookmark it, write it in your diary, do whatever it takes, but be here of a Wednesday for the new post.

Also, I'm working up to a month with Linux series of posts, similar to what Anand Lap Shimpi wrote for his hardware site anandtech.com (part 1 and part 2 - the mobile experience, if you're interested) back in 2004. There were some noises over at anandtech about doing a similar experiment with Linux some time ago, and I was very much looking forward to it, but it unfortunately failed to materialise. The reasons behind this mysterious no-showing are a mystery to me (unless it slipped under my radar, which is possible) but their loss is my gain, so to speak, and I've decided to fill the gaping hole in cyberspace.

The basic structure, assuming no better suggestions are made, will be daily updates on how my trip down Linux lane is going, with the regular Wednesday blog being somewhat lengthier, and hopefully going a little bit more in-depth into what you can expect if you decide to follow me on my very first trek into the free OS wilderness.

The "A Month With Linux" series of blog posts will run the month of February, with several possible follow-ups already presenting themselves in my mind, pending feedback. I'll have some further details soon, but before then check back tomorrow for my next regular Wednesday posting tomorrow at midday tomorrow.

As always, constructive criticism greatly appreciated, or just thoughts on the blog in general. Or musings on life. Or just say hello. Whatever you fancy, really. Oh, and I've yet to settle on a Linux distro, so if you'd like to see how a first-time Linux user fairs with any one in particular let me know. 

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Apple and the war of words, hearts and minds

xkcd have said it. Stephen Fry has said. I'm sure some other people have said it. And yet, for reasons I've yet to fully understand, most geeks continue not to say it - it being that, in all honesty, most tech rivalries are more than a little silly.

Now you might say "Ah, but Diarmuid, isn't that the case in all walks of life? Aren't all rivalries a little silly and petty?". Well, the answer is a multi-faceted and most un-satisfactory yes but no.

Manchester United and Liverpool supporters have been known to get a little boisterous, and in a way this is very understandable. Both teams compete in the same competition and both wish to succeed at the expense of the others. For the fans, there is the excitement of going to watch their team on matchday, and sharing a little in the victories and losses. Do Apple fans really get the same satisfaction when the line up outside an Apple store for the latest toy?

And what of Microsoft supporters? They don't even get the pleasure of congregating in a line with like-minded folk (at least, I've never seen a line form to get a hold of the latest version of Windows or MS Office). So what is it with Apple people who simply don't get why people choose windows? Or (possibly even worse) Microsoft supporters who don't get why Apple users are thus?

What I don't get is the bitter war of words. xkcd had an excellent cartoon in the same vain about the Firefox v IE struggle - "sometimes I wake up and realise 'hey, it's just a browser'", or words to that effect.

So here's what I want you to take from this - sure Apple may have run a million miles from their 1984 "no evil" image (much like Google, but that's a whole other can...) but they still do things that no other company can do. They still produce beautiful kit that makes you go "oooh..." in a way that most PC manufacturers just can't manage. They also, in case you hadn't noticed, make one of the most desirable phones on the planet, whether you can look past its deficiencies or not.

And then there's the PC, which has so much compatibility and so many programmes available for it that I'm willing to bet nobody has even the faintest idea what the total number is. 

No matter which you like best, there's a reason to go with the other one. So why the war of words? Sometimes humanity worries me.



Google Analytics

Don't get used to daily updates - I'd rather a worthwhile post every week than a daily update. This is a special case though - Google analytics has been implemented and the initial findings aren't promising. Despite having attracted 23 unique visitors, the average time spent on the page is only 13 seconds!

So what are you waiting for? Spread the word, tell your friends! Work to do, clearly, work to do...

Friday, December 26, 2008

The home of the good life

The hunt for a good URL is a strange one. It has to be catchy - in spite of the ".blogspot" at the end. It has to be easy to spell. It has to say something about the blog. Most importantly of all, it has to make people go "ooohhh...".

Of course the URL I finally settled on ticks few, if any, of those boxes. Bearing that in mind, let's just move right along, shall we?

The subject of this inaugaral blog post is, fittingly, the place where I write my blog posts. I want to set the scene, allow you to learn a little (but only a little) about me before we set off on the wonderful adventure we'll undoubtedly take. So...

The whole workplace is much as you might imagine an aspiring techie's to be - all wires and books, some optical media, old thumb drives, discarded bits and bobs of all shapes and mostly fairly small size. Most importantly is what's at the centre of this menagerie of exotic technological relics - a Dell E6400 (specs to follow) and a 22" Acer screen whose model number, according the box in the corner, is P223W (we'll have a word some other time about the futility of remembering the model number of every piece of technology in your life).

The laptop is a Dell for two equally good reasons, both of which may well draw scorn in certain circles. Number one is that Dell make really nice laptops - the brother, who lives across the landing somewhere, has a Studio 15 which is also stylish, well made and well priced, and I've had several very satisfactory encounters with the XPS m1530 too. The second is that no other manufacturer makes it so easy to get exactly what you want. If you want to get a Toshiba specced exactly as you desire you have to trawl through all the different configurations on, say, komplett.ie. Similarly for just about any other name you care to throw out, with perhaps one or two exceptions (the original story of The Laptop Hunt will appear somewhere down the line, I feel). So anyway, it's a Dell, and you can just deal with that (as I too have had to - don't think I enjoy supprting the Empire).

On the whole, I can't really complain about it too much. True, every graphics driver I've tried has caused it to present a BSOD at startup four out of every five times, but that's a small price to pay for rock-solid reliability the rest of the time, and who shuts down their laptop anyway? Mine goes on standby but is rarely, if ever, actually switched off. A full review will probably follow, in the fullness of time, but for the Irish-speakers amongst you there should be a little something by yours truly about it in the next issue of nós* - the rest of you shouldn't panic, however, as I may very well have a little something about it right here before nós* hits the news stands in mid January. 

To give you something to get your spatial relations going, the laptop sits just to my left on the desk, with a few impossibly thick and heavy college textbooks directly behind, and the left-side speaker to their left. There's a rather nice photo of myself and some friends in a frame just in front of all that waiting to find a nice home on a wall somewhere, while, appropriately enough, there's an old 24x CD-Rom unit doing duty as a book-end on the right of that particular section of reading material, and then to the right of that is the centre-piece of the setup - the brand-new-for-Christmas'08 and aforementioned Acer 22" monitor.

As the newest addition to the lineup, it has so far avoided being tested too exhaustively. Some promised Christmas LAN partying may call it into service, but thus far it has had a charmed existence. It is connected to the laptop, unfortunately, by old-school VGA. While I make a habit of encouraging the adoption of open technologies like DisplayPort, its inclusion in the E6400 has left me without a digital path between source and screen. Needless to say, sorting this is towards the top of my never-ending list of tech-jobs. The decision-making process behind the monitor's choosing was rather less scientific than that which weeded out the laptop, but nevertheless it might warrant inclusion in a posting at some later date. Stay tuned.

To the right of the centre-piece are some more books, this time (slightly) less unwieldy in both physical girth and in content. The other speaker is to their right, in a vain attempt at achieving real stereo sound, while the source, an aging Philips micro system, sits on top. This is usually connected back to the audio-out on the laptop via the auxilliary input, but the cable for this mysteriously vanished recently. The US-style power adapter and a DVI cable sit on top of the books, while the defunct AM aerial for the micro system sits just behind the books alongside a rarely used mag-lite (the two cell D version). 

Out in front I have another newish addition, a Logitech V470 bluetoothe mouse upon which the jury is still out, while on my head sit a set Sennheiser HD202s headphones, upon which the jury has returned a very favourable verdict.

Above all this there are three uncomfortably-heavily laden shelves, which were recently reconstructed using slightly chunkier parts after their predeccesors collapsed. These are responsible for the safe holding an assortment of books, DVDs, folders, papers and general doodads. There's a box of those impossibly smooth Lindor balls up their too, awaiting my attention.

Finally, there are some shelves built into the desk, and they contain mountains of PC Zones, PC Formats, and a smattering of PC Pros, Personal Computer Worlds and other magazines like Stuff, T3, Hot Press, Digital Home and so on.

So their you have it. I've always been told that you can tell a lot about someone by where they call home, and this room and this desk are nothing if not home to me. If a man's home is his castle, after all, his desk is the keep, or perhaps even the top room in the keep. Certainly somewhere pretty important. And where to next for this little slice of heaven in a world gone mad? I'd love to add a third screen at some point. Maybe a desktop with obscene processing power, when the wallet allows. An external keyboard is sorely missed, and should soon be sourced.

And where next for this little corner of the net, in which we will endeavour to create a little bubble of sanity in a world gone totally loony? Well, I have some very important words to say about Apple - but not the ones you're expecting. Pencil in January 1st (just don't hate me if I'm a little tardy).