My Corpse Pose Rocks! 4

Posted by JD 09/28/2012 at 23:00

I started something new this week and must say that
My Corpse Pose Rocks!

I thought that was funny before, but now it is hilarious!

I just need to improve on the other 25+ poses covered. ;) I can see that taking a lifetime. Something that looks so simple can be extremely hard.

BTW, my ooooms are good, but have some room for improvement too. It is unexpected that I do feel something internally when making that sound.

Solution for Slow Ubuntu in VirtualBox 21

Posted by JD 09/14/2012 at 17:00

Last night at an installFest, I helped someone with a Core i7, 6GB of RAM and 300GB free install Ubuntu 12.04 with Unity into a virtual machine. After the install, it was painfully slow. That is an understatement. Every character that I typed didn’t get displayed until about 30 seconds later. To the other person, it seemed that Ubuntu had locked up. He wanted to delete the Ubuntu install and leave. Clearly, something was broken. This was with 12.04.1 32-bit desktop inside the latest available VirtualBox on MS-Windows7 x64..

If I hadn’t seen this myself, I wouldn’t believe it either. Complete instructions follow to speed up VirtualBox for Ubuntu 12.04.1. It should work for prior versions and other Linux-based VMs too.

11/2013 Update

To GPT or MBR? 2

Posted by JD 09/09/2012 at 19:00

GPT or MBR? Which do you use for partitioning and why?

I haven’t decided yet. None of my HDDs are over 2TB, so GPT is not forced, but the limitations of MBR disk partitions is a real concern.

This article Make the most of large drives with GPT and Linux has me rethinking my plans to stay with MBR for new RAID1 drives. I have some external USB3 disks that may need to be changed too.

The real concern is an Ubuntu 10.04 Server might not support GPT well enough to be used. That machine has the RAID and external disks today. None of the drives involved will be used for boot, so that does remove THAT concern.

I could really use some help deciding. Thoughts? Suggestions?

Why Linux Desktops Are Losing And Android Is Winning 1

Posted by JD 08/30/2012 at 17:00

I was reading a blog article by a former Gnome developer, Miguel de Icaza, What Killed the Linux Desktop.

He nailed it perfectly.

  • Incompatible APIs between different distros
  • Even different distro releases from the same team are often incompatible
  • Lack of 100% binary compatibility for GUI programs across distros and releases

Until the main 3 distros decide to play nice and make a stable API for all layers available, with 100% binary compatibility for 5-10 years, there cannot be any traction for a Linux-based desktop.

Android is Linux, but it is Linux with a plan. That is why Android is winning more and more users, developers, corporate efforts.

Outrageous Shipping Charges 4

Posted by JD 08/28/2012 at 16:00

Found myself needing a specialty product for that XBMC computer recently. Spent a few days doing research, thinking about it, then finally ordered directly from the main US distributor after getting an email from their sales team explaining a particular add-on that was required.

The cost for the items was reasonable, perhaps even a good value, we shall see, but when the shipping charges were displayed, something was wrong. I’m used to free shipping for my online orders, so seeing a $70 shipping option seemed completely out of place. Here’s the exact shipping prices offered:

  • Next Day Air – $69.47
  • UPS 3 Day Select® – $24.20
  • UPS2Day – $31.24
  • UPSGR – $10.92
    Toggle a switch to see other shippers, USPS in this case:
  • USPS Priority (Domestic) – $9.62

UPS is sticking it to the little guys, unless this company has a $5 base handling charge. Priority (if it fits, it ships) seemed like the best answer and arrived quickly across the country.

Do people really pay $70 for next day shipping of tiny objects? I still have this idea of a FedEx envelope costing $12 for overnight shipping. Maybe the prices have increased? These items would easily fit into a padded FedEx envelope.

What do you typically pay to get something that fits in a padded envelope shipped?

How Long Do You Use Hard Drives? 12

Posted by JD 08/20/2012 at 15:00

This morning I was thinking about how long hard drives should be used. Seems that the disks spinning 24/7/365 in an array here were purchased in 2006, just under 6 yrs ago. The drives themselves have never caused any issues, though a loose SATA cable was problematic the first 12 months or so. Since then, that array has been working perfectly.

The OS boot HDD was bought a few months before the disks for the array.

Holy CRAP! Almost 6 yrs old! I’m afraid, very afraid.

Building a New-to-Me System 10

Posted by JD 08/15/2012 at 23:01

The last few days, I’ve been building an AMD E350D-based system. This is a low-powered APU with on-board GPU for a mini-PC.

Had to get out the dremel to modify the case a little for improved cooling. Got the MB, PSU and all the connections together, hooked up a VGA cable, keyboard and mouse – then powered it on. Based on the PSU fan noise, it was a quad-Xeon server with 60+ HDDs spinning running 30 virtual machines with high-end gamers. Expected to see the BIOS screen.

I never did.

Sadly, it never got any quieter either. This PSU may be replaced with an 80+ Seasonic Flex-ATX PSU quickly. I think the entire system might need 100W peak.

RAM?

Ok, perhaps the RAM is shared for the GPU … fine. Reading the fine print – it uses DDR3 RAM, not the DDR2 I’d planned to reuse. This is a low power system.

Ordered from a nearby computer store, just need to drop by and pick it up later.

Hard Disk?

Now I just need to fine a spare HDD. I was pretty sure there was a spare 2.5" laptop drive around here. Really sure. I don’t have many of those so they are easy to keep track of. Hummmm. Can’t find a spare. Ok, next option.

3.5" HDD. There are lots of these around here. Most from the early IDE days (I might need it!) and a few are SATA. This system only supports SATA. Looking, looking, looking … all IDE. Lots of 300G IDE drives …. finally, I find 2 SATA drives … a 1TB and a 300GB stacked in the pile.

Ok, so I’m weird. I have perfectly good HDDs stacked in a pile, unused. The 300GB will be fine – this box will be running XBMC anyways, so anything over 20GB is too much. I did look up what 2.5" small SATA drives cost – 160G was the smallest and it was about $40 when a 320G was only $70. The laptop drives don’t get as hot or use as much power. I don’t trust SSD drives yet.

I’m really happy now to have looked up the case website for the istar model S21-20F2 or I’d never have figured out how to mount the HDDs into the case cover.

After removing the HDD from the mounting bracket and turning it around, the HDD was finally happily mounted to the top case cover. I should have realized there was no way I could do it correctly the first time. ;)

Another advantage for all that searching is finding a small case fan and zip-ties to position the excessive cabling from the PSU out of the way and help with cooling of that HDD. Good thing I kept that tiny fan all these years.

My Worst Technology Purchases 1

Posted by JD 08/07/2012 at 23:00

We’ve all felt screwed before. Today, I’m listing the computer/tech items that I felt unsatisfied buying after a little use. These items really go beyond unsatisfied and enter into the completely screwed over or forever hate category.

Streaming Olympics on NBC, NOT! 2

Posted by JD 08/04/2012 at 16:00

Watching Olympics on NBC

I’m addicted to Olympics. I admit it. As I watch them on my OTA setup, the fluffers, you know, the announcers between sports, are constantly saying to watch all the events Live by visiting nbcolympics.com. I’ve been there a few times and been disappointed.

Sorry, this becomes a rant.

DIY HDTV Antenna, Deployment and Results 11

Posted by JD 08/03/2012 at 21:00

2/2018 update – 90 channels!
Just rescanned this morning and the tuner webpage says there are 90 channels. WOW!

4/2015 update – 67 channels.

A few years ago, I dropped an expensive cable TV plan to get limited basic service. This is just the local channels, public access and a few shopping channels. No CNN, no basic cable channels, just the local broadcast ones – or at least close enough. The cable TV bill is $29/month for this, which sucks. In total about 25 stations come in, but 10 are shopping channels and 5 are wacko religious channels – you know, the channels you remove from the TV? Yep, those.

Below I’ll detail my antenna trials and more importantly what I think I’ve learned about antennas that none of the sites with the plans talk about.

In short, we were getting 19 channels, but now have 58 66 (Dec 2013 update).