A lobster and a drive

Yesterday, I found some older pictures of my dad on one of my computers: they appeared to be still pictures taken (downloaded?) from a camcorder. Both of them showed him with that lobster: a smile or rather a grin on his face (earlier on xsamplex). Those were good times.

These pictures came from footage made by me on Dad’s camcorder. I remember saving portions of this footage on the (local) harddrive. Just yesterday, when hunting for those missing movies, I remembered I had them all removed while testing and playing with the P100 (earlier). I think I was under the impression I had them stored elsewhere, like on a third backup-harddrive.

I find some irony in that: I don’t remember backing-up the particular files, however, I do remember the day I deleted them. How utterly human.

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A closer look

SoStatisticsmeone was curious about the current (running) statistics of this domain, and particularly, this blog. I’ll let you do the math.

Some side comments: about the majority of traffic comes from search engines, as you could have told from the extra category I set up just to cover those specific (popular) keywords. There’s obviously (and this totally surprises me) interest for particular information about ‘pico-salax’ (imagine that), P100 SD3 review’, ‘The People are heroes lyrics’, ‘OdbcDataReader+example’ and others. These hits are consistently found in the logfiles (particularly the Pico-Salax one), which makes me highly doubtful about these search-engine optimization ‘techniques’ claims (this is not going to make everybody reading this happy). Primarily, it seems, that the web is about sharing useful information (and obviously media) and not for your paid-by-whoever info-advertisements. There was a time in the early 90s that the web was all about finding specific information too.

Maybe not all hope is lost.

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Strange as it does

There were a couple of items in the news that caught my eyes, that is not including the frigid temperatures over here:

Astronaut and the love triangle that went wrong: An astronaut (and a successful one at that), a lover and another one. How do you end up throwing a successful carreer away?

Microsoft to support OpenID: Bill Gates announced that Microsoft will support OpenID 2.0. However, I tend to be just as skeptic as Bruce Schneier who says that “Microsoft has a long history of ‘supporting and then co-opting’ open standards”. Embrace, extend and extinguish.

Steve Jobs’ thoughts on music has the blogosphere buzzing. The gist: Maybe we should get rid of DRM? Frankly the main clue is actually in the last paragraph where Jobs says that:

Much of the concern over DRM systems has arisen in European countries.

You may have heard that a lot of EU states are considering banning iTunes, following France’s example to ban iTunes completely. I wonder how much that is hurting Apple’s pockets.

And hey, and so once in a while small guys win in domain name disputes. Well, for now it seems.

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So, -snow

I just A tree, a town and snowpeeked out the window and saw that it was snowing alright again. It has been going on and off all day, actually. It appeared to be worse yesterday, basically because of the sudden drop of temperature in the afternoon, making the area around the house a skate rink. I wouldn’t be surprised if the same happens tonight.

Snowplowers of Nova Scotia, unite! For great justice!

Bonus links: Don’t stand there when a snowplow is on the road, “Snow Plow Science”.

02/07/2007: There’s a bug somewhere in WordPress that magically ‘deleted’ the photo shown above.

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Slashdot and then that

Today, I noticed that the much linked-to and (generally) well-liked ‘Slashdot Subculture’ Wikipedia page was deleted: the page now redirects to the more generic Slashdot page (as you can tell from clicking this link). I’m not the first person to notice: there’s an ample conversation going on about this on this older post at Digg. A complete breakdown of the Wikipedia deletion votes only seems to suggest that the page was deleted because it didn’t look ‘encyclopedian’ enough. The good thing is that the deleted page can still be seen over at archive.org (right here). It’s not that I think it’s a good article: however, it’s a pretty good breakdown of running jokes and typical ‘geek talk’ at everyone’s favourite public forum, Slashdot.

I went back through pages of Slashdot stories and ran into the following one: ‘Why does everybody hate Microsoft?’. This brought me to Chris Pirillo, who for only 1 million dollar (US) is willing to market Windows Vista. Didn’t Microsoft just hire Jon Udell for much less (much less, I believe) to do practically the same?

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Not another groundhog day

This is the future speaking: Shubenacadie Sam predicted that Spring will come early this year. Live from the Shubenacadie Wildlife Park. Oh wait, they don’t do frequent updates I guess. Their loss. Cuteness at the local newspaper’s website.

The premier of NS officially announced that Halifax is going to host the 2011 Winter Games, which means that the Central Nova bid (Truro and environs [Hub Nova]) did not make it. Subtle twist to the plot is that most likely Wentworth is going to host the specific skiing games: I think the winter sport town also played an important part of Hub Nova’s bid.

David Suzuki was in town and I wouldn’t be surprised if his visit to the local school attracted lots of traffic and lots of buzz. A tiny fragment of this news can (once again) be found at the CBCs.

And don’t miss the endless re-runs of ‘Groundhog day’. I bet it will be on too many channels1, 2.

1 Actually, I might be wrong today. Good god. That movie should be forbidden stuff.
2 Since it has been years ago I watched this movie, I should consider renting it one of these days.

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The Tech-huh?

Left over stuff from the weekend:

The Neuros OSD, which claims to be the first Open Source Linux Embedded Media Center for US$ 229.00 or something. It’s the buzz around now since it’s Linux-based and (evidently) a growing community of hackers developing software for it: from FTP servers to XMMS2 streaming servers.

The other thing I noticed was the Debian Windows boot loader/Installer: it’s brilliant, although I have my doubts about it. When I have time, I’ll do a test run.

Windows Vista officially goes on sale today, but as you guessed it, don’t expect line-ups. What is really new to it? Even the beta-testers (the Windows fans as other would call them) don’t have me convinced. Better user-experience and productivity? They promised that since Windows 95, if you remember. And if Vista does break-even, what else can we expect in the future?1, 2, 3, 4 I bet that there are hundreds of discussions going on about that within Microsoft. Listen: if I’m not allowed to make a legitimate copy of a file and listen it elsewhere on my own property and on my own hardware, count me out of your ‘Digital Revolution’.

1 Michael Geist about Vista’s DRM and fine print.
2 Security researcher breaks Microsoft’s DRM.
3 Microsoft patents idea taken from professor
4 Microsoft withdrawing patent-application.

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The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion

IView on Imperial City from the mountains‘ve been hesitant writing about the game Oblivion (link goes to Wikipedia). The game was passed on to me by Alfons, who complained that (while amazing) the game concept didn’t really appeal to him: too long and dreary. It appears that after the first few hours of playing, I was hooked: Oblivion is literally, the ultimate open-ending RPG game you can play. Beside the main quest, there are hundreds of other quests you can follow and play. Actually, you don’t need to finish or follow the main quest: if you feel like strolling around, you can do so. This is basically what I’ve been doing too: strolling around in the game, going from city to city; so once in a while solving puzzles, advancing levels and ignoring the main quest. There’s too much to discover and too much to see.

But lets take a step back and look at the requirements: obviously you need hardware to get this game to run in high resolutions. Even my latest hardware has troubles running Oblivion in full screen mode, so in my case I still have to run the game in 800×600 mode. When installing the game, I was also surprised to find that (at this stage) only one patch was ever released for the game: While generally stable, the game has booted out a couple of times: from hard resets [blue screens] to lockups. Most of these problematic cases seem to point to the video. On the good side, the game does use ‘autosave’ extensively so after every crash, you magically begin at the point where the game crashed.

Game play is as simple as playing other First Person Shooter games, however, so once in a while, fighting (still) feels like a turn-based game. Take for example the fact that switching and selecting weapons still requires you to go to the a secondary screen: time stops briefly too. Combat can also be quite obnoxious when battling multiple attackers: this is mainly due to how the combat vs. experience system has been implemented. Basically, monsters “level” with you: so in many cases, you may want to clear out areas before actually levelling up.

Additionally, gameplay can be dreary when walking on the roads: I choose that above riding the horse (you can pick up that horse at the priory). Battling enemies and animals on a horse is literally impossible.

But yes, Oblivion is for sure a highlight in the gaming industry: it’s huge, it allows plenty of freedom and the scenery can be totally amazing (as you can tell from the picture above). On my game rating system (aka ‘Frustation level’), this game is definitely ‘Smooth sailing’. As in enjoyable if you like these kind of games.

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You asked: Sharp+Develop+ODBC+example

I had that question appear in my logs a couple of times, and I assume, these are (beginning) .Net developers who want to have examples of accessing database servers via ODBC in C#. If you thought this was going to be ‘plain and simple, drag and drop in Visual Studio’ (or SharpDevelop), you are partly wrong. As in everything in programming, you end up doing a lot of coding yourself because of certain limitations.

First of all, Visual Studio 2005 (SharpDevelop might) by default does not have the (visual) ODBC controls installed in the ‘Toolbox’. You need to add them yourself (there should be 4 of them). After doing that, you’ll find out that using these ‘visual’ controls is not as ‘visual as that fancy commercial promised’. Worse, you read in the Framework documentation that:

While the OdbcDataReader is being used, the associated OdbcConnection is busy serving the OdbcDataReader, and no other operations can be performed on the OdbcConnection other than closing it

Or:

Due to the limitations of native ODBC drivers, only one DataTable is ever returned when you call FillSchema. This is true even when executing SQL batch statements from which multiple DataTable objects would be expected.

There’s generally two ways to get and retrieve data using the .Net 2.0 Framework: the first one is to use the earlier mentioned DataReader, the second one is the ‘in-memory cache’ DataSet/DataTable. Most of time, you’ll end up using a combination of both: when there’s lots of data involved you may want to skip the DataSet and go for the DataReader (wrap it in an object for example). If you want to keep data in memory and want to keep connections open (persistent), you may want to keep close attention to the first quote I mentioned above.

But the good stuff is right here (warning: untested code ahead! All disclaimers apply). If you’re not into programming, you may want to skip this:

Continue reading

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Raise the rafters

What do you mean by that?

There were troubles at Dreamhost, which you may have noticed yesterday: apparently the MySQL server went down. If the host’s MySQL goes down, xsamplex goes down the tube too.

We’ll be bunkering down the coming days: it’s supposed to be getting colder today, tomorrow and a couple of days in the week. Between -20 and -10, plus the necessary snow and wind to add to that.

I also found out that my laptop does not have a wave audio mixer. I’m not sure if it’s because of the driver or the hardware (audio) card itself. The earlier mentioned P100 does indeed have one (but then, it has a way better soundcard too, a Connexant [Intel] HDA). I can hear the homeric laughter. I mean, a DVD player that can’t play other region’s DVD because it’s baked into the hardware and no wave audio mixer (which is in my opinion is basic functionality of a soundcard). What else can we expect in the future?

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You asked: Toshiba laptop Vista upgrade

From the logfiles, the inevitable question about the (supposed to be free) Vista upgrade. That is if you bought your laptop before October 2006: Canadian Toshiba users (and there are apparently a lot of them1) interested in a ‘free’ Express update should probably go to this link. The follow-through link requires quite some information from you, from model number to computer id. The pages following that link will also ask you to send your kids, pets and the name of the colour of your underwear to a special Microsoft Windows Vista Express Upgrade address in Utah. OK, how about Nova Scotian tartan. That’s a colour, right?2

For some kind of reason, Toshiba’s ‘Ten reasons why you should upgrade’ make me laugh. But I will resist making a snark, since I’m obviously a content user of this particular brand (Although I agree that Vaios look better).

1 During my travels earlier, I saw a lot of Canadians walking around with Toshiba laptops, particularly around Heathrow (earlier at xsamplex).
2 Obviously it’s not: it’s a plaid but for convenience sake, lets pretend it is a colour, like say, closely resembling black.

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SOTU-STFU

Maybe NOAA's 2006 report on weather and temperatureit’s just me, but every time I see the abbreviation for the State Of The Union (SOTU), I keep reading STFU. What to say about the State of the Union?

Earlier (way earlier) on video chat with Alfons, Alfons brought up an image produced by NOAA, which shows the average temperatures in the US in 2006. ‘This is comical and also tragic’, he said before I opened the image in my favourite image editor. I think I laughed out loud, not being sure if this was real or not: if you’re background is science, that picture says a lot. But is it real? Indeed, it’s real. Better yet, they even have a high-resolution image of that one, if you just don’t believe in statistics. You can’t miss it.

Talking about science, my favourite CBC commentator is Bob Fournier, who appears on Information Morning every Wednesday around 8:15 am or something (I mentioned him before). This week he was discussing the Canadian research about that 1918 flu virus and the criticism of that research in the scientific community (news at IHT). Mr. Fournier also revealed his latest science quiz:

Why would you need air conditioning to cool down a plane that’s flying at 30 thousand feet?

Think ‘steamy windows’…

Posted in Scientifically, We-reflect-news | 1 Comment

You asked: a haiku on the metric system

An intriguing question from the apache logs: “a haiku on the metric system”. Why yes, we covered that many moons ago in this post as filed in the category of (you guessed it) ‘haiku’. (Wikipedia: what is an haiku, again?) But for the sake of completion, a brand new haiku on the metric system:

millimeters are
not centimeters, a cup
of coffee sounds great.

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