Perhaps I'm just a bad geek, but I've found Lord of the Rings a little challenging to finish, though it's been a while since I've tried. I find that people who read it when they were younger (or had it read to them young) have a reverence for it I just don't quite share, but I feel a little like I'm missing out.
A few years back my girlfriend had C. Diff, pretty badly. At the time, fecal transplants were still new / in testing (or, at least, the doctors hadn't even mentioned it, but we had read about them online). She happened to be browsing journals and found an article that mentioned Saccharomyces boulardii as a possible treatment. A few weeks after starting a pretty healthy regimen, her symptoms cleared up and have been gone ever since. In that respect, a probiotic was effective as a cure.
It truly is the sort of thing that one should seek medical attention for, I agree. However, at the time she had no insurance and the oral vancomycin that had been prescribed to her was going to be $1,500 per prescription fill, and as you said, it probably wouldn't have helped too much -- C. diff creates spores that tend to outlive most treatments, lending to its 'difficile' name. It was a scary time, but she got very, very lucky.
We've been off-handedly following news articles about treatments like this one, and this pill is an excellent advancement of treatments. Here's hoping no-one else had to go through what she did.
If you ask me, the Netgear WNR3500Lv2 is the "true" successor to the WRT54GL:
Pros:
- Cheap! -- around $40 - Is supported by Shibby's Tomato port -- no problems with uptime; frequent updates in the face of Heartbleed, etc.
- 4 Gigabit Ports in addition to the WAN port
- N support
- USB support for a NAS, but I've never used that functionality
Cons:
- Only 300 mBit N support
- Only 2.4 GHz
- Internal antenna only
- Flimsy base, heh. Mine broke, but the router still stands up.
Netgear seemed to be pretty open to the idea of supporting open source firmwares through their My Open Router website and forums....But Netgear was also caught with a backdoor in their firmware, like a lot of other vendors, but I would hope that replacing the stock firmware with Tomato would help with that. (Although since I'm using someone else's build instead of doing it myself who knows!)
I've really loved this router, though.
I wish it were newer (AC support I guess?), had a 5 GHz radio and/or supported faster N speeds... but 300 Mbit is enough for anything I'm doing.
Totally agreed. My friends and I still play UT2k4 on a weekly basis. With the Heaven of Relics mutator and some of the great Community Bonus Pack maps, it's still fun, ten years on. As it came out March 16, 2004, happy Tenth Anniversary UT2k4!
As I said above, this is someone I trust at his word. If he had dropped it, he would have owned up to it. He buys enough phones from HTC that he is happy to give them the business. You don't have to believe the story, but I do.
You guys don't have to believe it, but he's someone I trust and who wouldn't make up the story to me. I've known him long enough that I believe what he says.
I had a user whose laptop was replaced by Dell under warranty, except that they sent him back a 17" monstrosity rather than the 13" machine he had at the time. They wouldn't budget on giving him something smaller. After filing a small claims court case, they reimbursed him for the price of his original laptop and I think told him to keep the new one, too. He was happy after that.
Another friend had a HTC One phone whose screen popped and shattered while he was browsing twitter. HTC refused the replacement despite being a month old, claiming he dropped it. After filing a Better Business Bureau complaint, they replaced it under warranty.
Either way, something like that will get someone's eye and hopefully the original poster will be happy. The bigger problem is that this is a thing Dell will break a warranty over, which is ridiculous.
I have a deal with a friend who is geographically disparate from me: He knows the password to an encrypted flash drive that I have in mhy possession. In the event that amnesia (or god forbid something worse) should befall me, he knows to come and retrieve this drive. We generally chat on the phone once a week or so, so he would know pretty quickly if there were a problem that required this. On the drive is a list of passwords and associated data to reclaim most of my digital life, and to let others know what's going on.
Every year or so I pull the drive out and update it with changes and ensure that it's still functional. So far it feels like a pretty good plan. If I wanted to step it up a little more, I would put this in a safe deposit box in a bank. I still ponder doing that, but really I'm not so important for it to truly matter, haha.
It's a real thing. We have a couple of I think either Techtronix or Agilent scopes that run Windows 2000 or XP. A few years back someone plugged one of the 2k scopes into our network, at which point it became a movie server, hosting "Mr. Deeds". It is no longer allowed to be plugged into the network.
One group just updated a crazy analyzer to a Pentium M with 1 GB of RAM. Cost: $40k. It's obscene.
Although the old Zeiss was super impressive, technologically it was old hat -- lots of burnt out bulbs, etc. And while I understand that it's not about the specs, here's something that maybe makes it a bit better: I work for some folk at CU that have some degree of involvement with Fiske. One of the professors said to me of the new display: "It can resolve 2 million individual points of light with incredible detail. You could go into a show using the new projector with binoculars and looking at the display would be similar in effect to looking at the actual night sky with binoculars."
I'll definitely miss the imposing nature of the old Zeiss, but the new projector should have some of the best star shows around. I'm really looking forward to seeing it. And probably Laser Pink Floyd and Laser Nine Inch Nails, too, heh.
I'd say follow the same rules as any archiving of media:
Pick one format and migrate all of your messages to that: In this case, I'd say mbox. Thunderbird and most other mail programs read it and you can get most of your mail into mbox format via IMAP/Thunderbird from whatever mail client can read your old ones. You can store your mbox files locally in Thunderbird and gain Thunderbird's searching (for instance) without the need for an actual back-end. I was able to read some mail stored in Netscape Mail because it was just mbox files and opening them in Thunderbird was a breeze.
Most importantly: Every 5-10 years, re-evaluate your storage choice. Is Thunderbird still around? Is mbox still pretty well regarded? If you find you need to migrate again, do it! If both are still active / supported, then hold onto 'em. The only way to perpetually maintain media access is to make sure your choices are still valid on a regular basis. This is true for any media: As the old formats go obsolete (cassette tape, VHS), you need to migrate that data to the next readily accessible format (CDs, DVDs; FLACs, MPEG(?)).
I think the biggest problem is that you have a mish-mash of stored files right now. You'll save yourself a headache in the future by tearing the band-aid off now and taking the time to get all of your mail into one format. Then, in the future, when you need to convert, it'll be many steps easier since you won't have to visit Slashdot and find out what to do about your mail again next time.:)
This is a fight I constantly have with CenturyLink here in Colorado. I want faster than 896kbps upstream, but they have zero capacity to offer that because the DSLAM in my area "is scheduled to be upgraded", which may not happen for "years". So I'm stuck with Comcast for now, which has been raising the price of my 16Mbit connection without offering any better service every few years...
Just typing about it makes me angry. Argh.
I have very little value in accessing my data on a website, but it's very convenient for me to have a folder synced between two disparate computers. It's like copying data to a flash drive to take it home from work except that you don't have to worry about accidentally putting the flash drive through the washing machine. It's just there by the time I get home.
As a Windows user, I had been using Windows Live Mesh to take care of this (as well as remote desktop). Microsoft is replacing Mesh with SkyDrive, though, which is limited by the amount of storage they give you. The replacement that I HAVE been using is Cubby, from LogMeIn. Visiting their website now, though, I find that what they are calling "DirectSync" is going to become a $7/mo paid feature. Seeing that, I am very excited about this development from the BitTorrent crew.
I love to collect old video games. How can I do that when the download services don't offer them anymore and/or have been turned off? What if the games have to authenticate against a server to install and that server or the company is long gone?
There's been a lot of speculation that the new consoles will start focusing on digital-only downloads. There are a lot of reasons that this is a ridiculous idea (25 GB download of a fully-packed blu-ray disc on American broadband? Sigh...), but most of all for me is for the future: What happens when that service goes away and my hardware dies and the games are gone?
I guess I feel like I should be properly/caught/ speeding, which leaves the opportunity to get away with it, if you will. If there are flawless machines everywhere, I can't speed anymore, haha.
I don't know how much information it actually uploads, nor have I seen any reports of what it does submit back. I also haven't looked, though. I think that Microsoft is probably not too bad about collecting user data when the user opts out these days; but I could be very, very wrong. If I were them, I would want to correct that perception, but they're also a huge giant corporation. Shrug.
In those cases, check out Avira, Avast!, AVG, Kaspersky, ClamAV, et cetera...
I'm a big fan of Microsoft Security Essentials. I know it's cool to dislike Microsoft products, but MSE does its job pretty well without being annoying.
I've used AVG in the past, but it has a history of deciding things like iTunes or Windows dlls are viruses and screwing things up, so I avoid it. I used Avira in the past as well, but I think it had ads suggesting I upgrade often.
In the end, I settled on MSE and have had a perfectly cromulent experience with it; no complaints.
Oh man, wifi syncing of data is the missing peace on my pre2. I don't use it for too much data these days, but it'd be nice.
As much as I love the Touchstone, I'm all for Standards. So hearing about this new "Qi" charging standard makes me happy. I just hope that it gains a lot of acceptance.
I've been using a Palm pre+ and pre2 for the last few years. It has a wireless charging coil integrated into the phone's back cover and a desktop 'puck' called the Touchstone that uses induction to charge the phone. The phone gets a little warm while charging, but has never been a problem.
Aside from the cool factor is the "clean" factor: My night stand where I keep the Touchstone is all the cleaner in that there's just this little black disk on it. The cable is easy to hide since it just plugs into the puck and can be routed elsewhere. All I have to do is set my phone on it and blammo, charging. In the morning I pick it up and go -- I'm never worrying about constant plugging into a jack, wearing either it or the cable out over time. It's simple and elegant. I don't think I would be as happy if I had to return to a cabled charge system again.
I'm not a fan of PowerMat, since it uses covers. I much prefer the "integrated-into-the-phone-case" solution. As such, I'm excited for the new Lumia phones.
I really like Linux Mint. The times that I've used it, I've found it pleasant and easy to use. I even like the greens. The one thing that I need from it, though, is a PXE installation. My Linux machine is an old laptop that can't boot off USB and whose CD-ROM doesn't work. So: PXE installs. I've been using Ubuntu on the machine for a while and it makes the machine functional, but I really am not a fan of Unity.
Mint is great, though; everyone should try it. You might even say it's... refreshing.
Perhaps I'm just a bad geek, but I've found Lord of the Rings a little challenging to finish, though it's been a while since I've tried. I find that people who read it when they were younger (or had it read to them young) have a reverence for it I just don't quite share, but I feel a little like I'm missing out.
A few years back my girlfriend had C. Diff, pretty badly. At the time, fecal transplants were still new / in testing (or, at least, the doctors hadn't even mentioned it, but we had read about them online). She happened to be browsing journals and found an article that mentioned Saccharomyces boulardii as a possible treatment. A few weeks after starting a pretty healthy regimen, her symptoms cleared up and have been gone ever since. In that respect, a probiotic was effective as a cure.
It truly is the sort of thing that one should seek medical attention for, I agree. However, at the time she had no insurance and the oral vancomycin that had been prescribed to her was going to be $1,500 per prescription fill, and as you said, it probably wouldn't have helped too much -- C. diff creates spores that tend to outlive most treatments, lending to its 'difficile' name. It was a scary time, but she got very, very lucky.
We've been off-handedly following news articles about treatments like this one, and this pill is an excellent advancement of treatments. Here's hoping no-one else had to go through what she did.
If you ask me, the Netgear WNR3500Lv2 is the "true" successor to the WRT54GL:
...But Netgear was also caught with a backdoor in their firmware, like a lot of other vendors, but I would hope that replacing the stock firmware with Tomato would help with that. (Although since I'm using someone else's build instead of doing it myself who knows!)
Pros:
- Cheap! -- around $40
- Is supported by Shibby's Tomato port -- no problems with uptime; frequent updates in the face of Heartbleed, etc.
- 4 Gigabit Ports in addition to the WAN port
- N support
- USB support for a NAS, but I've never used that functionality
Cons:
- Only 300 mBit N support
- Only 2.4 GHz
- Internal antenna only
- Flimsy base, heh. Mine broke, but the router still stands up.
Netgear seemed to be pretty open to the idea of supporting open source firmwares through their My Open Router website and forums.
I've really loved this router, though.
I wish it were newer (AC support I guess?), had a 5 GHz radio and/or supported faster N speeds... but 300 Mbit is enough for anything I'm doing.
Totally agreed. My friends and I still play UT2k4 on a weekly basis. With the Heaven of Relics mutator and some of the great Community Bonus Pack maps, it's still fun, ten years on. As it came out March 16, 2004, happy Tenth Anniversary UT2k4!
As I said above, this is someone I trust at his word. If he had dropped it, he would have owned up to it. He buys enough phones from HTC that he is happy to give them the business. You don't have to believe the story, but I do.
You guys don't have to believe it, but he's someone I trust and who wouldn't make up the story to me. I've known him long enough that I believe what he says.
I had a user whose laptop was replaced by Dell under warranty, except that they sent him back a 17" monstrosity rather than the 13" machine he had at the time. They wouldn't budget on giving him something smaller. After filing a small claims court case, they reimbursed him for the price of his original laptop and I think told him to keep the new one, too. He was happy after that.
Another friend had a HTC One phone whose screen popped and shattered while he was browsing twitter. HTC refused the replacement despite being a month old, claiming he dropped it. After filing a Better Business Bureau complaint, they replaced it under warranty.
Either way, something like that will get someone's eye and hopefully the original poster will be happy. The bigger problem is that this is a thing Dell will break a warranty over, which is ridiculous.
I have a deal with a friend who is geographically disparate from me: He knows the password to an encrypted flash drive that I have in mhy possession. In the event that amnesia (or god forbid something worse) should befall me, he knows to come and retrieve this drive. We generally chat on the phone once a week or so, so he would know pretty quickly if there were a problem that required this. On the drive is a list of passwords and associated data to reclaim most of my digital life, and to let others know what's going on.
Every year or so I pull the drive out and update it with changes and ensure that it's still functional. So far it feels like a pretty good plan. If I wanted to step it up a little more, I would put this in a safe deposit box in a bank. I still ponder doing that, but really I'm not so important for it to truly matter, haha.
It's a real thing. We have a couple of I think either Techtronix or Agilent scopes that run Windows 2000 or XP. A few years back someone plugged one of the 2k scopes into our network, at which point it became a movie server, hosting "Mr. Deeds". It is no longer allowed to be plugged into the network.
One group just updated a crazy analyzer to a Pentium M with 1 GB of RAM. Cost: $40k. It's obscene.
Reading through the imagur link, which is fantastic, tells me that the new projector does 20 million stars. Fritz, the old Zeiss, did 3,000.
Although the old Zeiss was super impressive, technologically it was old hat -- lots of burnt out bulbs, etc. And while I understand that it's not about the specs, here's something that maybe makes it a bit better: I work for some folk at CU that have some degree of involvement with Fiske. One of the professors said to me of the new display: "It can resolve 2 million individual points of light with incredible detail. You could go into a show using the new projector with binoculars and looking at the display would be similar in effect to looking at the actual night sky with binoculars."
I'll definitely miss the imposing nature of the old Zeiss, but the new projector should have some of the best star shows around. I'm really looking forward to seeing it. And probably Laser Pink Floyd and Laser Nine Inch Nails, too, heh.
I'd say follow the same rules as any archiving of media:
:)
Pick one format and migrate all of your messages to that: In this case, I'd say mbox. Thunderbird and most other mail programs read it and you can get most of your mail into mbox format via IMAP/Thunderbird from whatever mail client can read your old ones. You can store your mbox files locally in Thunderbird and gain Thunderbird's searching (for instance) without the need for an actual back-end. I was able to read some mail stored in Netscape Mail because it was just mbox files and opening them in Thunderbird was a breeze.
Most importantly: Every 5-10 years, re-evaluate your storage choice. Is Thunderbird still around? Is mbox still pretty well regarded? If you find you need to migrate again, do it! If both are still active / supported, then hold onto 'em. The only way to perpetually maintain media access is to make sure your choices are still valid on a regular basis. This is true for any media: As the old formats go obsolete (cassette tape, VHS), you need to migrate that data to the next readily accessible format (CDs, DVDs; FLACs, MPEG(?)).
I think the biggest problem is that you have a mish-mash of stored files right now. You'll save yourself a headache in the future by tearing the band-aid off now and taking the time to get all of your mail into one format. Then, in the future, when you need to convert, it'll be many steps easier since you won't have to visit Slashdot and find out what to do about your mail again next time.
This is a fight I constantly have with CenturyLink here in Colorado. I want faster than 896kbps upstream, but they have zero capacity to offer that because the DSLAM in my area "is scheduled to be upgraded", which may not happen for "years". So I'm stuck with Comcast for now, which has been raising the price of my 16Mbit connection without offering any better service every few years... Just typing about it makes me angry. Argh.
I have very little value in accessing my data on a website, but it's very convenient for me to have a folder synced between two disparate computers. It's like copying data to a flash drive to take it home from work except that you don't have to worry about accidentally putting the flash drive through the washing machine. It's just there by the time I get home.
As a Windows user, I had been using Windows Live Mesh to take care of this (as well as remote desktop). Microsoft is replacing Mesh with SkyDrive, though, which is limited by the amount of storage they give you. The replacement that I HAVE been using is Cubby, from LogMeIn. Visiting their website now, though, I find that what they are calling "DirectSync" is going to become a $7/mo paid feature. Seeing that, I am very excited about this development from the BitTorrent crew.
I love to collect old video games. How can I do that when the download services don't offer them anymore and/or have been turned off? What if the games have to authenticate against a server to install and that server or the company is long gone?
There's been a lot of speculation that the new consoles will start focusing on digital-only downloads. There are a lot of reasons that this is a ridiculous idea (25 GB download of a fully-packed blu-ray disc on American broadband? Sigh...), but most of all for me is for the future: What happens when that service goes away and my hardware dies and the games are gone?
I don't like where gaming is going.
There are a lot of tech people out there for not quite as many jobs. The market's saturated, so pay doesn't need to rise. That's my take...
I guess I feel like I should be properly /caught/ speeding, which leaves the opportunity to get away with it, if you will. If there are flawless machines everywhere, I can't speed anymore, haha.
You're right. Good point.
That was the first episode of Season 2, I think. A scary glimpse into the future at the time, but now it's becoming the normal state of things. :/
I don't know how much information it actually uploads, nor have I seen any reports of what it does submit back. I also haven't looked, though. I think that Microsoft is probably not too bad about collecting user data when the user opts out these days; but I could be very, very wrong. If I were them, I would want to correct that perception, but they're also a huge giant corporation. Shrug.
In those cases, check out Avira, Avast!, AVG, Kaspersky, ClamAV, et cetera...
I'm a big fan of Microsoft Security Essentials. I know it's cool to dislike Microsoft products, but MSE does its job pretty well without being annoying.
I've used AVG in the past, but it has a history of deciding things like iTunes or Windows dlls are viruses and screwing things up, so I avoid it. I used Avira in the past as well, but I think it had ads suggesting I upgrade often.
In the end, I settled on MSE and have had a perfectly cromulent experience with it; no complaints.
*hands himself the correct version of the word "piece"*
Oh man, wifi syncing of data is the missing peace on my pre2. I don't use it for too much data these days, but it'd be nice.
As much as I love the Touchstone, I'm all for Standards. So hearing about this new "Qi" charging standard makes me happy. I just hope that it gains a lot of acceptance.
I've been using a Palm pre+ and pre2 for the last few years. It has a wireless charging coil integrated into the phone's back cover and a desktop 'puck' called the Touchstone that uses induction to charge the phone. The phone gets a little warm while charging, but has never been a problem.
Aside from the cool factor is the "clean" factor: My night stand where I keep the Touchstone is all the cleaner in that there's just this little black disk on it. The cable is easy to hide since it just plugs into the puck and can be routed elsewhere. All I have to do is set my phone on it and blammo, charging. In the morning I pick it up and go -- I'm never worrying about constant plugging into a jack, wearing either it or the cable out over time. It's simple and elegant. I don't think I would be as happy if I had to return to a cabled charge system again.
I'm not a fan of PowerMat, since it uses covers. I much prefer the "integrated-into-the-phone-case" solution. As such, I'm excited for the new Lumia phones.
Windows 7 uses less resources than Vista, no?
I really like Linux Mint. The times that I've used it, I've found it pleasant and easy to use. I even like the greens. The one thing that I need from it, though, is a PXE installation. My Linux machine is an old laptop that can't boot off USB and whose CD-ROM doesn't work. So: PXE installs. I've been using Ubuntu on the machine for a while and it makes the machine functional, but I really am not a fan of Unity.
Mint is great, though; everyone should try it. You might even say it's... refreshing.