I am trying out WordPress and importing all of my old blogs from LiveJournal, Blogger, MSN Spaces, etc. This should be interesting… ;)
Uncategorized
Utility bills, bank statements and credit cards have been transitioning to paperless for several years. Most utilities, credit providers and banks now have online access to your accounts to facilitate viewing statements and paying balances. This transition was helpful as I was able to make a spreadsheet and keep track of dates and amounts (and URLs), make a monthly check to verify everything was up-to-date and pay bills online via bank account/credit card (I am not a fan of auto-pay).
Many banks have also started offering the option of providing Bill Pay as a free service- making it even easier to pay all bills from one location. The options I have seen are adequate, but some can be difficult to setup (Have you seen how many PO boxes and zip codes most Credit Card companies have for payment centers?). Moreover, some recent web bases services provide a more comprehensive overview of finances and/or bills that allow for easier payments and some basic financial planning that the banks do not offer.
Mint is a free program that can ties into banks, credit providers and other financial institutions to provide a centralized source to view all of your finances- as well as create budgets and create graphs to see where your money goes. Mint does not have any tie-ins into utility, cellular or many other reoccurring bill providers. Mint aggregates all of you individual website logins into a singe page.
Manilla is another free service that fills in some of the missing parts of Mint. Manilla uses a similar aggregation to Mint, but it focuses on utility and phone bills in addition to banks and credit providers. The web site can present a month view calendar with upcoming bills and provide an automated login to the bill provider’s website. Manilla does not appear to facilitate the actual payment transaction, rather it is more of a monitoring and alerting system. One thing I like about Manilla is that it downloads PDF copies of the bills/statements and stores them in a ‘documents’ folder- and if you have ever tried to find the actual PDF copy of your bill on AT&T’s website, you will appreciate what this means. ;)
Additionally, both Mint and Manilla have Android and iOS apps.
I look forward to the day when there is a combined service that offers the analytics of Mint, the wide service range of Manilla and a true bill-pay system that can transfer funds between banks/credit cards/utility providers- perhaps even tracking income and taxes for the yearly federal and state filings. :)
There are a wide variety of eBooks that are publicly available on the web- unfortunately many of them have crap formatting (or misspellings, rantogetherwords or missing punctuation). Recently I discovered Sigil, a freeware EPUB editor.
It appears that an EPUB is a file container that can house xml documents, images and other items I have not explored (fonts, cascading style sheets, etc.).
Using Sigil and an EPUB that have a title cover, the cover.jpeg (note it is usually jpeg, not jpg) can be readily be replaced with an updated version.
Sigil allows table of contents to be generated from the header markup data (h1, h2, h3, etc.); this is very useful for removing extra blank pages and regenerating a full table of contents.
Further searching found I can insert images into any xml document. So- just for example- if I had a copy of one of the Wheel of Time books and I felt like adding in the chapter icons, I could download the icons, resize them to a consistent size that would fit on an eReader (100×100 or 100×200, depending on the original size) and then insert and verify the proper icons for each chapter.
After the formatting is completed and saved as an EPUB, I can re-open it in Calibe, verify the formatting looks good and convert it to a kindle format (MOBI or AZW) to read on my Kindle screen.
If you like to manage your eBook library and use it across multiple devices, download and install Calibre on your PC or Mac.
Calibre is an app that can search for missing metadata/book covers, convert between different non-DRM formats (MOBI, EPUP, AZW, etc,) and sync with a wide range of devices (Android, Kindle, iTunes to name a few popular ones).
The Android market has a wide spectrum of eBook/Comic readers that all have inherit features and limitations. One requirement I have for any eBooks reader is the ability to side-load media- that is the ability to add eBooks from another market/source outside of the associated eBook market (Amazon, Barnes & Noble, etc). Some apps allow this readily but some make this task difficult/impossible as they want to tie you into purchasing only from their market.
A few readers that I find myself using on Android are:
This is currently my favorite as it allows browsing the SD card for eBooks (i.e. no need to import or put in a specific folder), it supports EPUB, MOBI, CHM and HTML eBook formats (plus others) as well as CBR & CBZ Comic Book formats.
The free version has advertisements. The $5 pro version removes the ads and adds PDF support, text-to-speech and other tweaks.
This is a no-frills eBook reader that supports EPUB and PDF files. It is fairly user friendly save for eBooks need to be imported into the Aldiko library into /sdcard/ebooks. The importing makes a copy of the original file and may end up with duplicates (i.e. in both /Books and /eBooks).
A premium version costs $2.99 and removes ads, adds the ability to add nodes and highlights and receives updates before the free version. Additional free and paid plugins allow for eBook sync via Dropbox.
This connects to Amazon’s market to download any books purchased from Amazon. Sadly, the Amazon app does not allow direct importing of 3rd party EPUB/MOBI files. It does creates a /sdcard/kindle folder where you can drop converted AZW/AZW2/AZW3(/MOBI?) format eBooks (converted by Calibre) that will also be added to your library.
Note: if you are on a PC and running Android v3 (ICS) or later, the /kindle folder is not presented over the MTP (Media Transfer Protocol) USB connection. Earlier versions of android support MSC (Mass Storage Controller) USB settings and will let you directly access the folder. If you are on ICS or later, you can use an Android file explorer such as Astro to move files from the /sdcard/Book folder to the /sdcard/kindle folder.
If you are using a Mac OS system, you will need the Android File Transfer utility to access an ICS or newer device.
The Nook reader is the Barnes & Noble storefront ebook solution. It also allows for reading of EPUB books added to the /sdcard/Nook folder.
Kobo reader ties into the Kobo store (go figure!) and allows for importing of EPUB books from the SD card. As of yet, I have not figured out exactly where it stores the books it imports…
This is the most useless of all the eBook readers. It is included by default on all newer tablets and it allows you to read any books purchased from the Google Play store. i.e. if you have an EPUB/MOBI/PDF that you want to access, you need to use another program.
There are a plethora of other readers but these are the ones that I have tried and sometimes still use. :)
Plans for my xMas weekend: Rebuild my desktop to remove the abomination that is Windows 8.
I have tried to live with Windows 8 for over a month- and it feels like attempting to work on a car while wearing kitchen mittens. I understand Microsoft is trying to unify their interfaces across the different platforms (phone, tablet, desktop) but there should be differences as they are designed for different tasks: phones are for communication tablets are for media consumption and desktops are for creating/composing/organizing. Tiles do not work well for the later use.
Windows 8 may be good for a new computer user, but has a ‘forget & relearn’ curve that doesn’t seem necessary for an interface that has been tweaked and revised for 12+ years. Throwing most of the interface basis away for a new flavor while not allowing for backwards usability is a bit fool-hardy. I also see this could likely cause a rift between corporate and home user OS versions (which Microsoft has been trying to unify since Windows 2000).
It feels like Microsoft is rushing to have everyone embrace their app store as they see Apple and Google making a decent profit. :(
BOSD crashes (mostly from iTunes) have been more frequent in the past month of testing Windows 8 than I remember having cumulatively in my entire Windows 7 experience- It feels more like it was in the days of Windows 2000 where things would BSOD for no obvious reason.
Something is different with SMB shares on Windows 8- or the Windows 8 firewall behaves differently than earlier versions. The network browser on a PCH-A110 cannot find a folder share on my Windows 8 PC. The same share is accessible to a PCH-C200 and all Mac/Windows PC systems (and the PCH-A110 can see access other SMB shares on the network).
The Windows 7/8 upgrade has the feel of the XP/Vista upgrade (note: I liked Vista- with the proper hardware) issues all over again; while not as steep as Vista, it still has a long way to go to be usable. Mayhaps they will work out the issues and tweak the interface when Windows 9 rolls out.
Audible for Android or iOS
- Audible Player on Android is listenable at 3x; in iOS- not-so-much (it should like crap on iOS)
- Audible Player on android shows a book as one item in the library with chapters; on iOS it breaks it down into downloaded parts, each with its own chapters and showing only playtime for the current chapter. Audible really needs to update their app on iOS to make it more consistent when moving between platforms.
- Ex: The Fires of Heaven – Wheel of Time Book 5
- on Android:
29 chapters; 36:27:37 total playing time - on iOS:
Part 1, 7 chapters, shows playtime per chapter.
Part 2, 8 chapters, shows playtime per chapter.
Part 3, 8 chapters, shows playtime per chapter.
Part 4, 8 chapters, shows playtime per chapter.
Part 5, 6 chapters, shows playtime per chapter. - Audible does sync listening locations- which is nice when switching between devices.
Akimbo Audiobook Player for Android
- Akimbo Audiobook Player for Android will play Apple Audiobook format (m4b), but cannot play at greater than 1x due to Apple licensing restraints. It can play back mp3 audiobooks at different speeds up to 4x (but this doesn’t always work- dependent on device, media. etc.).
MortPlayer Audiobooks for Android
- The MortPlayer Audiobooks is a great player with a nice interface, but does not have support for the Apple m4b format. I am also unable to find a way to change playback speed. The absence of these two features makes it useless for my needs.
Today I picked up a Wii U (standard version) and hooked it up to see what the latest gaming console from Nintendo has to offer. The Wii U has some neat features, but is not very ‘impressive’. The only noticeable improvements to the former system are the 1080p HDMI output and the touchscreen gamepad.
Setup:
The Wii U (in Wii mode) uses the same IR sensor bar as on the original Wii- so if you have a 3rd party wireless controller, it should work. The unit has a multi-AV port to allow use of the old Wii composite cable (but HDMI is much easier if you don’t have this cable already). The unit would almost be a direct pull-out-and-replace with the same cables save for the new power supply is 5A instead of 3.7a (and a different angle on the plug). It will also pair with a standard Wii controller for up to five players (one with the gamepad + four Wii controllers).
There was a system update that took 20-30m, but it was up and running after that.
Initially none of the pre-installed video clients (Netflix, Hulu Plus, Amazon video or YouTube) were working, but a Netflix update has been released that allows me to connect and stream. Updates for the other three are expected sometime in December.
Game Play
I popped in New Super Mario Wii U and started playing (after a short game update). The game is fun and plays well (albeit a bit difficult until I get used to the new gamepad layout), but I was disappointed to learn the Wii U Pro controller does NOT work with this game- only the gamepad or a standard Wii controller. In single player mode, the game is displayed on both TV and gamepad- so you can turn off TV and use it like a massive handheld console. :)
Popping a Wii disc into the console prompts to start a Wii game. The entire Wii console mode is 1080p, but the games show obvious indications that they were designed for a 480p system; Zelda – The Skyward Sword has a block grid that fades in/out as Link moves around.
As expected, only standard Wii controllers work while in Wii mode; the touch gamepad shuts down.
A ‘Wii U System’ channel is added to the Wii menu to allow returning to the Wii U system.
Storage
The Wii U will take a standard USB media stick for additional storage in any of the USB ports (two on rear, two in front); I inserted a generic 64GB USB drive and it prompted me to format and seemed happy.
The SD card slot appears to be only for Wii game emulation saves/games/points. The SD card slot will not recognize a 64GB SDXC card, but was able to use a 16GB SDHC. I used this card to transfer all of my Wii content over to my Wii U.
Wii Transfers
Transferring games/saves/Miis/points from the Wii is accomplished by downloading a ‘Wii U Transfer Tool’ channel on both the Wii and the Wii U from the Wii Market. Starting with the Wii U, you will prepare the card for transfer, insert it into the Wii where the data is transferred (progress is indicated with a bunch of Pikmin type characters transporting data through halls/subways and into a rocket) and finally back into the Wii U (where the rocket lands and the Pikmin characters transport the data down ramps/hallways/etc. and into the Wii U memory).
This action is one way and will remove all transferred data from the Wii. My entire transfer took about 10 minutes- and the animations are entertaining enough to make it not seem all that long. :)
Note that if you traded in your Wii already and were hoping to recover from the SD card/Club Nintendo account, you are screwed as all of your Wii content is still associated to the old console and cannot be recovered. I had a design for the Nintendo 3DS XL- and lost ALL of my game purchases; after three separate and disappointing conversations with Nintendo support, I ended up with a ‘sorry, we cannot help you’ answer. Nintendo has an ass-backwards way of license management.
Markets
The Wii U market appears to be separate from the Wii market; I have 500 points in the Wii market and $0.00 in the Wii U market. :(
In the Wii U market, downloadable are the same price (or more) as retail versions; $59.99 for Assassin’s Creed III, Epic Mickey 2 or Darksiders II. The irony in this model is the games are actually much less valuable in digital format as they cannot be traded with friends or sold. Hopefully Nintendo will not go the route of Sony and insist on selling games at full retail for the life of the system (Darksiders II is already $40 on the PS3/xBox 360).
I am very interested to see how the downloads for this system work if you exceed the 32GB of the internal storage and a couple of 64GB USB Drives; I recently had to upgrade my 160GB PS3 hard drive as it was not sufficient for my game downloads (in retrospect, I should have went larger than 320GB for this).
If the licensing for the Wii U is the same as the Wii, 3DS and DSi, I will NOT be purchasing any digital games from Nintendo; the licenses for those three devices are tied to the actual device- so if the device is lost/stolen/broken all of your content is also lost! As mentioned before, Nintendo licensing is pretty archaic and not very end user friendly.
Conclusions
All said, I am so far not very impressed with the Wii system software. It is nearly identical to the old Wii console save you can have two different views of the main actions- one of the screen and one on the gamepad. These can be flipped, but the same basic grid with apps is very reminiscent to the old Wii.
The touchscreen gamepad is pretty neat, but I see products like Microsoft xBox Glass offering similar functionality that can work on a variety of devices. The button layout is different (right analog is above the buttons, so he thumb must traverse downwards to hit a button) and the gamebad is fairly comfortable in the hands.
Single player games seem to be Ok; hopefully multi-player games are much more involving.
One big grievance for me is that leaving any application and returning to the home screen takes 30 seconds; i.e. you won’t be jumping around the menus and options making changes. The original Wii menu was MUCH more responsive than this (up to 7 seconds) and I am expectant of the the xBox 360 and PS3 with their near instant return to the dashboard. I hope that a soon-to-be-released Wii U update resolves this.
I feel like Nintnedo released the initial batch of Wii Us to continue their beta testing; some features are not yet available, the system seems sluggish and just doesn’t seem very interesting. Hopefully future updates will improve performance and add features- otherwise it does not feel like it is not really much of an upgrade from the regular Wii. :(
This weekend GoG has Dungeon Keeper, SimCity 2000, Populous, Ultima IV, Crusader No Remorse and Wing Commander titles from $2.39 each…
I think they use a DOSBox variant to make therm run on Windows, and some of them are also Mac compatible!
I just dropped $25 that I probably didn’t need to spend… :)
For those of you that aren’t aware, digital purchases made on a Nintendo DS, 3DS or Wii are tied to the serial number of the device on which they are purchased. If you lose/destroy/trade-in your old hardware your purchases are lost. Transferring physical media is Ok along with the game saves (that have been transferred to the SD card).
Nintendo requires that you must have a working device in-hand and do a transfer licenses to another system; if this cannot be done Nintendo support will inform you that you are fucked:
“I’m sorry to hear about your situation. I know this isn’t what you were hoping to hear, but transferring content from one Nintendo 3DS to another requires the use of both systems. Therefore, without access to the original system, it’s not possible to transfer your eShop account to a replacement unit. I apologize for any inconvenience this may cause and appreciate your understanding.”
After hearing of this practice with 3DS licensing, I inquired if this archaic licensing scheme was the same on the Wii system as I am planning on purchasing a Wii-U. Nintendo support responded:
“We are planning on a way to transfer Wii Shop Channel purchases to Wii U. However, this process will require access to both systems to perform the System Transfer. I have included all of the other information we have about the transfer process below:
. Wii U owners can wirelessly transfer content such as Miis, and WiiWare and Virtual Console games to their Wii U systems.
. Both systems will need to be connected to the Internet and the Wii U will need an SD card to facilitate the transfer.
. Transferred Wii content is accessible and can be played through Wii Mode, an application on the Wii U’s main menu.”
Not only will I need my Wii system to transfer my purchases (i.e. no systm trade-in possibility at GameStop) but Nintendo hasn’t yet worked out a final process for game transfers to occur- i.e. this may not be possible for some time after system launch!
Perhaps Nintendo thought it would be a grand idea to attach digital licenses to a peice of hardware -instead of looking at Microsoft/Sony/Apple/Android/Steam’s proven practices of using a user account. However, if this device is lost/stolen/damaged, then the consumer is shit-out-of-luck and they should understand that any/all of the games they once purchased on their old 3DS/DS/Wii should now be re-purchased.
Or perhaps Nintendo is trying to prevent trade-in/resale of used Nintendo systems; but it can a boon for the used system customer to log into the eShop and see if there is any ‘free’ games associated with their ‘new’ used purchase.
Nintendo is the new kid on the block for digital purchase and, obviously, they have a lot to learn; I will personally shy away from any digital purchases with Nintendo until they can bring their digital licensing into the 21st century.
…and don’t get me started on their clumsy and annoying ‘eShop’ process; they are even worse than Sony!
The Galaxy Nexus has been my primary phone for just over a year (it launched on Verizon in August, 2011); it is still a great phone but I find the Samsung Galaxy S III has some improvements over it’s ancestor. It was decided to test out the Galaxy S III to see if it merited an upgrade.
It appears that Sprint’s coverage in metro Atlanta can be very spotty- and Sprint’s 4G coverage is almost non-existant (save for a spot around Cumberland Mall in Marietta). Slightly better than GSM speeds were my primary experience on both Sprint’s 3G and 4G networks (tests ranged from 150Kbps to 500Kbps). Perhaps my home and office are both in realitively bad coverage zones for Sprint? The speeds were disappointing, so the Sprint Galaxy S III went back to the kiosk 6 days later.
T-Mobile also offers the Galaxy S III- and their 4G coverage in Atlanta seems much better. In about 90% of the places I have visited, I have had a decent 4G coverege- and speeds seem to stay in the 14Mbps range. After a few days, the number port request was submitted to T-Mobile and my Verizon account was cancelled.
All said and done, the Galaxy S III cost me about $350 ($150 to T-Mobile and $200 to Verizon for early cancellation) and I get a much cheaper plan and better data throughput (Verizon can be very slow at times as well)- and I still have a fairly decent Galaxy Nexus that I can resell for around $200 to $250 (with the extras I have purchased).
I should be able to get leave Verizon after a year with no real financial loss. :)
Why did I not just stay with Verizon? There are a few reasons.
- I was not eligible for an upgrade until August 2013; the Verizon Galaxy S III would cost me $600.
- If I was eligible for an upgrade, a subsidised phone would force me to abandon my unlimited data plan and pick one of the overpriced Verizon data tier plans.
- Verizon (and AT&T) plans are very expensive; about $140/month for unlimited everything; Sprint is $110 and T-Mobile is $90 for the similar offerings. (the T-Mobile rate includes a $20/month payment arangement for the full cost of the phone- the acutal unlimited 4G plan is $70)
- Verizon (and AT&T) no longer offer an ‘unlimited everything’ plan; $100 will buy me 2GB of ‘shared’ data with unlimited talk/text.
It is ironic that unlimited cellular minutes are rapidly becoming dirt cheap while the data plans are becomong more expensive- even though they are both across the same data network.
Getting the Galaxy Nexus ready for resale has been pretty easy thanks to the One Click back to Stock application from the XDA forums; 15 minutes later my phone is back to the stock Android 4.0.4 with a re-locked bootloader.
My Galaxy S III is now running an early release of Jelly Bean and rooted. My old number was ported over today and all is well in gadget land! :)
Also interesting to note is that you can have an AT&T iPhone unlocked via eBay for $15-$20; T-Mobile is revamping thier network to support LTE and same HSPA+ frequencies as AT&T (namely 1900Mhz), which should allow them to offer 3G/4G connectivity with an unlocked AT&T iPhone 3/3GS/4/4S/5!
Amazon Prime and Audible are among my two favorite items; The new Kindle Fire HD event introduced the idea of WhisperSync for their Audible audio book content with a matching Kindle eBook from Amazon.
Today I received an email re-affirming this interesting product: WhisperSync for Voice-ready read-along will work on my current Kindle Touch. Sounds cool; let me check it out:
It appears that in addition to the audible version I have already purchased for $23.39 I must also purchase the Kindle eBook version for an additional $16.99. i.e. To use this new feature, I must purchase two different formats of the same book; That makes the entire WhisperSync sound a bit unappealing.
I am sure this would be very beneficial for Amazon, book publishers and authors- but it makes a book that costs $11.60 in paperback run a total of almost $40 for a read-along option. Not very appealing for the customer.
Interesting idea Amazon, but no thanks. :(
I have been a fan of the DirecTV app for iPad for some time; it allows me to setup a list of channels I frequent (TLC, Cartoon Network, HGTV, Science Chanel, etc) and it will present a list of shows that are currently playing on those channels. I can then tap a show for more info or have my DirecTV receiver tune to that channel. This saves countless time scrolling through the 100s of channels or tuning to each of my eight favorites on the receiver to find the same information.
The jailbreak for iPad 2 running iOS 5.0.1 was recently released, so I immediately tried it out. The jailbreak works great- but the DirecTV app now states it will not work on a jailbroken device:
While I can perhaps see DirecTV adopting this stance as they must protect the video content that can be steamed to the iPad, I don’t understand their actual reason for streaming to the iPad- I must be on the same wireless network as the DirecTV receiver- i.e. I will be at home where there is a much larger screen than 10.1” attached to my DirecTV box. DirecTV should abandon its failed attempt at offering streaming video and allow the app to work as what it works best for- an interactive remote control program.
On the positive side, here are ways of bypassing the jailbreak restriction: In Cydia, add the resource ‘http://n00neimp0rtant.dyndns.org/repo/’ as a source repository. The repo info will download and you can find and install the xCon anti-jailbreak app. After an automatic springboard restart the DirecTV app will be able to launch again.
I posted a few days ago about some uber-cheap closeout game deals at Target. Black Friday came and several other places have sals started selling games at near-crazy prices; make sure to check out:
Steam’s Autumn Sale – Deals change daily at 1PM EST.
I picked up Portal 2 for $10.79 (sale has expired), the Oddworld Box for $3.74 (expired), Orcs Must Die for $3.74 (expired) and Two Worlds 2 for $13.74 (yep- also expired). Check back after lunch to se if there are any deals you can’t pass up… :)
Amazon’s Black Friday Sale – Deals on all kinds of games and accessories for the three day weekend:
So far, I found Duke Nuke’m Forever for $6.79 and The Witcher 2: Assassin of Kings Digital Premium edition for $16.00; these deals are still rolling as I write this… :)
I love the Nexus One but I found a sweet deal on a T-Mobile G2x on eBay that I couldn’t pass up. It came in today and has Froyo (v2.2.2) installed on it. Information on the web indicates that a Gingerbread (v2.3) version of the G2x is due for re-launch, so the over-the-air (OTA) update should be headed out soon.
Being impatient as I am, I also found information on the XDA Developers forum that the LG Update Tool will allow for a manual update to Gingerbread. The entire update process took 8m 38s in the application, and then the phone took about 5 minutes to reboot (stuck at the ‘T-Mobile G2x with Google for 4 of those minutes) and now I am at v2.3.3.
The LG updater alerted that it might erase all applications and phone settings during the update, but everything from v2.2.2 appears to have transitioned to 2.3.3.
The G2x is a T-Mobile 4G device and I am seeing download speeds of about 6Mbps when using the phone a mobile hotspot. Upload speeds are bout 1Mbps.
Samsung needs to have some pretty impressive stuff with the Galaxy S2 to make me consider an upgrade now… :)
ThinkGeek sent out an advert for ‘One Random Shirt of Surprising Awesomeness’ for $5.99 – $6.99 ea (men’s XXL are $6.99- everything else is $5.99). I placed an order on Thursday for five shirts and today I received my package, consisting of:
- One blue World of Warcraft ‘Gnomeregan’ crest t-shirt (Ok)
- One black World of Warcraft Cataclysm shirt (Cool!)
- One black Mortal Kombat Fatality shirt (Ok)
- One beige “I’m On a Worm’ shirt (guessing a Dune reference- but WTF?)
and… and… (wait for it)
- One gray MineCraft shirt (Awesome!)
Ironic part is that I was looking for almost the exact same MineCraft shirt design- but I couldn’t find anything like this!
I ordered another 5 shirts- total with standard shipping is $40.84- so $8.17/ea. for some pretty cool shirts!
Looks like I have my summer/fall wardrobe shopping pretty much done! :o)
I cannot remember how long it has been since I had a SciFi book that is so enthralling that it made me want to skip work/school to be able to finish it; Pandora’s Star by Peter F. Hamilton is such a work. This book is immediately followed by Judas Unchained to compete the Commonweath Saga and later followed by The Void trilogy which is comprised of The Dreaming Void, The Temporal Void and The Evolutionary Void. Together these books construct a plausible future that promise growth and evolution for the humanity through technology and discovery.
Pandora’s star is set in 2380 at a time where the human race has discovered wormhole technology and uses it to colonize other worlds and transmit data streams at faster than light speed. Humanity has also discovered near immortality with their (stem-cell research derived) ability to rejuvenate bodies to prevent death due to old age and by recording human memories to crystalline devices embedded in the skull –so the unexpectantly deceased can be re-lifed into a newly cloned body with all memories intact (or edited).
Most of the populace in the 24th century also have organic circuitry tattoos (OCTattos) that serve to interface directly from the human nervous system to control external machines/electronics. This technology also allows direct connectivity to the Unisphere (the galactic Internet) and options for additional physical enhancements such as enhanced strength, augmented vision, scanning devices, etc.
Artificial intelligence has been created by copying human memory patterns and people tired up rejuvenation can upload their memories to the AI when they are ready for final death. The largest of these is the Sentient Intelligence (SI) and it occupies its own planet and lesser Restricted Intelligences (RI) supplement everyday use systems.
The book opens with a little of background on the multiple characters that appear through the series and then focus on a pair of stars that have disappeared- supposedly enclosed by Dyson spheres. There are numerous sub-plots and threads that seem to be completely unrelated but eventually everything comes together in the end of Judas Unchained. If you watched the Battlestar Galactica spin-off series Caprica, you might know the complexity and entertainment value that the multiple threads create- and the ultimate feeling of satisfaction when they all come together.
Not to give any of the plot away- but it is a very good read; aliens, spiritual journeys, detectives, terrorists, starships- it is all in there. All of the characters are uniquely human and the technological statu quo for the future seems like an expected evolution from current trends.
The Void trilogy is set 1,200 years after the end of Judas Unchained. It references many of the events and characters from the prior two books -and I do not know how this new series would read without the fore knowledge from the others. I have just started reading The Dreaming Void so I cannot comment much on this series. So far it seems to follow the pattern of the earlier series- and is very entertaining.
Unfortunately, I did not know that Misspent Youth was Hamilton’s initial foray into this universe- I will need to go back and read that one as well. My understanding is that this book lays groundwork with the development of the rejuvenation process and he discovery of memory crystals that can store phenomenal amounts of data- which are both widely used in the later books.
I am back in school- working for a BS in IT with a focus on security- but now I am in the science/math part and it is getting kind of boring.
I started listening to the iWoz book from Audible; now I want to get a Ham radio license and revisit my desire to understand more about electronics. I know the basic components and basic principals such as amperage, voltage, resistance, etc.- but I want to understand why a transistor acts as it does; anyone know any good training videos?
On another note, my second ignition key for my Honda has broken. This appears to be a fairly common issue with the 2003-2005 Honda models that had the security remote attached to the key blade.
The key is not a normal key; it is a high security ‘laser cut’ key with an embedded transponder that disables a system immobilizer when starting the car. A replacement key from the dealer costs about $160 as they must cut the key, program the remote and program the car to the new transponder.
For do-it-yourselfers, key blanks can be programmed to match the transponder of another key with a key programmer; otherwise you need a transponder programmer that connects in through the ODBII port.
Keyless entry programming is fairly simple enough– but both of my keys have working keyless entry electronics and transponders.
Alternatively, I found a ‘Fix My Key’ website that will cut a key from VIN# for $20 and I can install my remote electronics and transponder.
There has been a bit of discussion on the Internet about the iPhone retaining a history of GPS location information- unbeknown to the iPhone owner. It appears this action was fairly benign and the data never left the phone save for a backup to iTunes when the iPhone synchronizes.
Personally I would actually consider access to this information to be fairly useful for myself; I already use a GPS logger for GeoTagging my photos (not so much now as my HX5V/B camera has integrated GPS) ao having this data already logged on another device would negate the need for an additional device (and additional charger/batteries).
One resourceful person has released a MacOS application for plotting the data (synched with iTunes) over a map. There is also a Windows version available.
The data seems to go back a distance (2/15/11 was the earliest in my cache) but seems fairly inaccurate as well as when I zoom into the map, there are several places I have never been (perhaps within 20 miles, but not that far off the Interstate).
I am still having annoying issues with sleep/resume and my Asus P8P67 Pro system.
While digging through the BIOS settings to underclock my RAM speed (as suggested as one possible resolution) I cam across an ‘EPU Power Management’ option (beneath the RAM settings- of all places)- and disabled it.
I will not know until morning if this fixes my standby issues- but I will try to update my findings over the weekend.
Update: The EPU power setting had no effect; it may actually be having more issues than before.
On a hunch, I decided to look at the memory to see if it may be the problem. I was running 2x4GB and 2x2GB sticks for 12GB of RAM; I pulled the 4GB modules and replaced them with some older 2GB modules (so now at 4x2GB = 8GB). I reset the BIOS to ‘optimal’ settings and my PC appears to have stayed online for the night; I will need a few more days to confirm, but initially this looks promising; 9+ hours and no sleep issues!
Update #2: It looks like my RAM was the culprit!
I replaced the 4GB modules with 2GB modules and I have been almost a week without a sleep/shutdown issue. (I did have one lockup, but that was probably a normal Windows issue). I am nit sure if it is the 4GB module size or the RAM is defective, but I am currently running:
4x Corsair XMS3 2GB PC3-10600 1333MHz 9-9-9-24 (Kit of CMX8GX3M4A1333C9)
I replaced
2x Corsair XMS3 4GB PC3-10600 1333MHz 9-9-9-24 (Kit of CMX8GX3M2A1333C9)
I believe my memory was banked correctly; 4GB modules in slots 1 & 3 and 2GB modules in slots 2 & 4.
I am not sure if I want to try just the 4GB modules to see if the issue returns or if I should just be happy with it running as is. I was hoping to eventually go to 16GB and onto 32GB (when they get around to making non-registered 8GB DDR3 DIMMs)- so I am kind of at a loss for what I want to do…