A round-up and some thoughts

6 01 2009

Well I think I finally found something I could write about – a general brain dump of the past few months and my useless opinions on them. Nothing spurs me on to do something useless better than the impending threat of collections in just over a week, and pretty much nothing done in preparation so far.

I started at Oxford this October as many of you know, and I have to say that the term, although only eight weeks long, has been incredibly intense. I was of course under no illusions that Oxford would be easy, but a essay being set during Fresher’s week set the tone for how the rest of the term was going to go. That being said, and while I do find myself working to the exclusion of almost everything else (except Spooks of course. iPlayer saves me again), I have really enjoyed the experience. As I am sure everyone says wherever they are in the world, be it Oxford or Bangor Tech, the people are great and the environment is fun. I never got the ‘Oh My God I am at Oxford’ revelation moment I expected, but I did find myself quietly grinning to myself at times. Although I have signed myself up for another four years of intense work and a life going at a pace that is constantly a little faster than I would like I am happy with it – experience tells me I will never pick the ‘easy’ path for myself, and so if I am going to be killing myself for these years I might as well be doing it in somewhere like Magdalen and Oxford.

During these few months the world has again changed. We saw Obama elected. Despite my cynicism around the elections about the timing of his family tragedies, I am very excited about the prospect of having someone who can string a coherent sentence together in the office of ‘the leader of the free world’ (said in suitably appaling American accent and mocking tone..). That title really does annoy me – it is self-appointed and arrogant. If the Americans were leading by any sort of example then maybe it would be justified, and maybe Obama will justify it, but time will tell. There are a few things which scare me about the US in general. The expansion of the borders to include everywhere within 100 miles of a border, thus allowing illegal stop and search in a large swathe of the US – the so called ‘constitution-free zone‘. The bringing home of marines to help operate at DUI checkpoints in California and elsewhere. Then there is Obama’s proposed citizen militia – many have drawn parrallels to Brown/Black shirts, and the dogs in animal farm. I just think of the finger-men from V for Vendetta. Time and time again it has been shown that if you give a man a badge, they assume authority and get drunk on it. You only have to look at the security people in airports who bark at you as God in their own domain to know that what little authority people think they have will make them feel superior and in the right.

No blog post of mine would be complete without the compulsory tech-related comments. The final Apple appearance at the Macworld show is this year, and the keynote tonight will be given by Phil Schiller. I am actually quite excited as I hope he won’t present it with the same smugness that Steve always did. Don’t get me wrong, the man is justified as being heralded as turning around Apple and making it what it is (I write this of course from my MacBook Pro), but the smugness and arrogance of the presentations sometimes made me feel a bit sick to my stomach at times. The question really is whether this heralds the end of Macworld as an event. Sad as it is, I feel that it does. I know that for me and some other Mac-centric friends Macworld is pretty much only about the keynote. We will follow it on twitter or engadget, and then forget about the other two or three days. I would love to see a show of hands in the Moscone theatre of who would have come to Macworld if there were no Apple keynote. My money would be on very few hands being raised.

As I write this, the final thing which springs to mind, mainly because it is a ‘breaking’ story, is that twitter was hacked. I wonder if it is coincidence that this has happened as the publicity of twitter has spiked recently. I saw a Daily Mail story lamenting how the celebrities share the minutiae of their days via tweets, and a few weeks back they were whining about Jonathan Ross having the gall to enjoy his suspension and to tell people about it. They had the stock indignant Tory MP saying that if he was enjoying himself so much then maybe it should be made permanent, yada yada, but the point is that twitter is being noticed. Barack Obama used it during his campaign, although since it has gone almost dead since the election, I reckon people’s hopes of tweets from the Oval Office along the lines of ‘Off to meet Vladimir. Oh Joy! *sarcasm*’ will not be happening. As twitter becomes more and more popular, not only will it be plagued with even more scaling issues like those we have become so used to with unacceptable downtime etc, but just like as the Mac platform gains Windows ground, they will become a bigger, juicier target for people wanting to have a bit of a laugh and gain some kudos with their friends. The recent twitter hack was achieved by gaining access to the twitter admin tools, as confirmed by @netik in a video interview with Leo Laporte. While I am very encouraged by their transparency on the issue, it is a pretty serious breach for something which is becoming so popular, used by many ‘big names’ as a platform.

Hopefully this toe-dipping back into blogging will spark me to write more stuff, but in the mean time, I hope all had a good Xmas and New Years, and that 2009 isn’t as much of a blackhole as it is looking like is it going to be.





New MacBooks

27 09 2007

I saw some rumourings the other day on one of the 47 bazillion Mac rumour sites, that the next incarnation of Apple’s MacBook line will be available in Aluminium and Black finishes. In my opinion, this is the logical conclusion for Apple. Over the past few weeks and months, we have seen Apple slowly eliminating all of the majority-white finish products from their lines. First was the iMac which went to Aluminium and Black at the last refresh, then the new iPods came out, with the touch and phone being primarily black, and the classic going from the traditional white and black options, to the new Aluminium and Black options. Therefore if and when we see a new MacBook, I also expect to see this going over to the Aluminium finish. A sign of Apple shrugging off it’s ‘Apple Computer inc.’ past? Who knows. Maybe it is just that they like this finish more.

Regardless, as a user of a Aluminium-finish MacBook Pro, I am not sure how good an idea this is. I have found the the wireless range on this is terrible at times. It just won’t see networks which other laptops have no problem seeing. This is linked by some, and is a logical conclusion, to the all-metal casing interfering with the wireless signal. Whether this is the case or not we will have to see when the new MacBooks are released, but regardless of how nice that finish will look, they need to stop focussing on design over function, which seems to be a failing of Apple’s products at times.





LogMeIn Free

13 09 2007

Just a quick software recommendation today. When away from home, even if I am able to take my laptop with me, there is always something that I want to do that can only be done while sat at my desk, in front of my Desktop machine. This is where LogMeIn Free comes in. This is some software which you install on your machines, and then sign into the website. There you see a list of all the machines associated with your account, and tells you which ones are connected to the internet and are accessible.

In the free version what you can do is limited, but I have found that it does all I need – offers Remote Control of my machine, and allows me some basic Admin control. I can take control of my screen from any web browser in the world (even I found, those in censored China!) and so from there can use something like GMail to send myself a file or print a document to the local printer at home. The Admin offers the basics, allowing control of Windows security, such as password changing etc, but also offers a very useful range of system restart options, ranging from Normal to ‘Hard Reset’.

At home I am the de facto IT Support, and considering I am the only one who knows the passwords to nearly everything, it is likely to stay this way. If I am away on a trip and something goes horribly wrong, this allows a quick check and hopefully fix, instead of trying to visualise the screens the user is seeing, and guide them through the troubleshooting and fix process.

Overall a really useful app which I think is irreplaceable! See more and get it here





Printing Woes… – A follow-up

2 09 2007

A few days ago I posted about the lack of printing compatibility as advertised by Apple between OS X & Windows. This has not changed. I have however gotten printing working now between the Mac and Windows. I did this in a rather convoluted way, but it works… The solution was to use LPD Unix Printing. This has to be installed as a Windows Component in Vista, and then manually configured in OS X. I found that OS X did not like the hostname of the Vista machine, and so I have now resorted to disabling DHCP and manually assigning IPs to the machines on the LAN here (about 6 machines) so that I can use the printer attached to Vista. Once it is set up in Vista, the computer’s IP entered in OS X as the lpd:// address, and the printers share name as the Queue name, it suddenly begins working.

While it is not as easy or fast as I would have liked, it is an acceptable compromise. That said I still feel Apple should update their website, or at least include something easy to find in the Support section of their website with detailed instructions on how to do this. I only figured it out having visited about ten 3rd party sites, and using some good old-fashioned trial and error…





Printing Woes…

28 08 2007

Recently I bought a MacBook Pro. I decided that for long enough I had been very anti-Mac, and that it was time to get one of my own so that I could get used to it first hand etc. Admittedly I did only even consider this because the new Macs run on Intel architecture, and so I could install Windows XP or Vista onto it using Boot Camp (which I have since done, although OS X is definitely my main OS on here). I was looking forward to the challenge of learning a new OS, and figuring out all the little technical hitches along the way – and for the most part I succeeded. OS X was not as horribly alien or unusable as I had suspected.

However, around the same time I was getting my Mac, my Dad bought a new machine for his home office – a Compaq running Windows Vista. From this machine our only printer – an Epson AL-C1100 Colour Laser – is shared around the network using the standard Windows Printer Sharing. When I purchased my Mac, I did so with all the assurances I was given by the Apple website that OS X integrates flawlessly with Windows networks, and that I would be able to access all of the network resources as before. How wrong it was….

It appears that the compatibility with using the shared printers isn’t there between OS X & Vista, like it was with XP. Bear in mind that I bought this machine in June, and so Vista had been out long enough for Apple to update their software, or update their site to inform me that there would be problems. No matter what I try, including all the solutions online that claim to fix this I simply cannot get printing working from my MacBook Pro.

The two machines are on the same workgroup, and visible from one-another. I can share files between the two, and mount the Vista box’s Public folder through Samba. I therefore know that for this my user credentials are authenticating properly with Vista for File Sharing. However, when I try to access the printer through the Printer Setup Utility on the Mac, I get an authentication error ‘Unable to connect to server with the provided password and user name Error: 256′ The internet has yielded no results for this, and neither has the Apple Support site. When I get the time I will make use of my AppleCare and call a human being for assistance, although I expect I will be told it is a Windows error and they can’t help me…