Category: Geekdom

It’s Official: Comcast Joins BendBroadband and Caps ‘net Usage

During the BendBroadband cap mess, there were stories about Comcast mulling a 250GB cap (while BendBroadand was mulling a 50GB max cap, which they later raised to 100GB after public outcry). Well Comcast made it official last week by putting an official 250GB cap (on a related note, at least we’re higher than Time Warner).

Needless to say, the public is flipping out, asking many of the same kinds of questions we asked locally, and trying to figure out ways to break the limit (as well as track it properly). But the sad reality is that this is going to become more and more common, and even Qwest has the exact same policy, even if they’re not quite as obvious or open about it.

Has anybody gotten a large BendBroadband bill because of the caps they instituted locally?

An Open Letter To All Microsoft Office 2007 Users

All you folks with newer computer and IT departments that have more money that ours: Please save your Microsoft Office 2007 files in a format that the rest of the world can open easily. Not everybody can afford (or really feels the need) to spend the money on the upgrade, and can’t open the files you e-mail us. Yes, we can (and I do) install compatibility packs so we can read those*.docx and *.xlsx files, but would it just be easier for you and the clients you send files if you would just save it in the standard Word or Excel format? Or even as a PDF? I work at a real estate office where I get freaked out agents who can’t open up “a critically important document” that somebody has e-mailed them, forcing me to carry around that stupid compatibility pack on a USB key so I can avoid the nearly thirty-megabyte download. I also have vendors send around documentation to their clients that were all in *.docx format, and I know at least 75% of the folks who received the docs couldn’t open it as I just ended up converting it to PDF with CutePDF (after loading the document with the compatibility pack in Office 2003) and it worked fine. I shouldn’t be caused more work to deal with stupid crap like this.

OK, done ranting.

For the Geeks…

Geekdom link dump time…

OK, that’s enough for now…

Free Games If You Have a nVidia or ATI Video Card

I’m not much of a gamer, but I can never turn down freebies:

Through an exclusive deal with Nvidia, Valve is offering Portal: First Slice (demo) along with Half Life 2: Death Match, Lost Coast and Peggle Extreme. All you’ve got to do is install Steam on your system.

ATI also has a similar deal, but the nVidia deal comes with more games.

If you don’t know what kind of video card you have, there’s a really good chance it has a chipset from either ATI or nVidia if it’s an add-in card (meaning it’s not built into the motherboard). If you don’t know still, click here to install Steam, and then click on the nVidia link or the ATI link and see which one will let you install. If neither of them work, then go ahead and uninstall Steam if you don’t want it.

Microsoft Product Activation Can Kiss My Pastey-White Hiney

So last night I was at the office migrating servers between hardware. Nothing really exciting about it. One of the servers I was migrating was an older Citrix Metaframe 1.8 server. That migration was going from basically like-hardware to like-hardware. The only difference between the two machines was the larger RAID array, more RAM, and slightly different processor in the new machine. They were otherwise the same model of server, but I didn’t envision major problems, should they arise.

The clone took forwever, but it got done, I booted up the server, made sure the thin terminals could connect fine, and called it a night around 11:00PM last night. This morning at the crack of dawn, got a phone call that nobody could get into Outlook, Word, or any of the other Office XP programs running on the server. The error? Product activation due to significant hardware changes. I thought to myself “OK, easy fix, will just reactivate it.” I come to the office, attempted to reactivate on the terminals, and the activation window went away — never gave me a confirmation that it was activated. When I checked the product activation on the server itself, it told me it was activated, but it was spitting out errors on the client terminals. Tried repairing Office, still gave me fits.

I was spending too much time dealing with this when I had other places to be (as I split my time between a couple offices), so I said “Screw it.” A 30 second search found an Office XP activation crack (Anti-MSOPA.exe — google it) that cracked the mso.dll file, and errors went away. We’re a fully legal user of Office XP, have plenty of licenses, but I just didn’t want to deal with the activation crap that was causing us wasted time and potentially lost money. It’s sad I had to download hacker software to do it. While I still plan on finding out what was wrong, I didn’t want to waste company productivity to do it.

The Life Of A Late-Night Sysadmin: Staring At Progress Bars

When somebody asks what I do when I’m at the office after-hours, I generally tell them “I stare a progress bars.” Generally, if I’m at the office after hours, it’s because I need to install patches, do system maintenance, copy a bunch of data, clone a hard drive, or something that requires it to be done when nobody else is using the server. And any geek who has done any of that type of stuff knows that it’s a lot of progress bars.

Right now, I’m at the office performing a server migration from old hardware to slightly-less-old hardware. I have Clonezilla running on the one server that supports it (Clonezilla is having issues with it’s RAID controller (which is why I’ve opened this thread), and I have Ghost running on another server (I prefer Clonezilla as it makes much faster clones). So here I am, staring at progress bars. An hour to go on the Ghosting machine.

Meanwhile, I can sit here. Waiting.

While I’m waiting, I tend to go through my RSS feeds, and read interesting stuff like like where to find gas that doesn’t have Ethanol, the A11 football offense, the Wired FOUND archives (I miss that section of the magazine), a well-written librarian’s response to a complaint about “Uncle Bobby’s Wedding”, and the plastic coffee on a local news show. I’ll probably also kill some time playing multiplayer minesweeper, a fun little album memory game, Totem Destroyer, and Monster’s Den. I also found it interesting all the cameras that were rolling during the L.A. earthquake last week, including Judge Judy, Big Brother, KNBC, KABC, City Hall and Judge Penny.

Back to check on those progress bars …

Sprint vs. Verizon: Thoughts?

My Blackberry contract is due up for renewal here soon, and I’m considering transferring my number elsewhere. I’ve found myself using my phone for data use quite a bit more often than I originally thought, and wanted to get a phone that I could tether to my laptop for use on the road in a pinch (for when my employer decides they need something while I’m vacation). I also would like a Windows Mobile-based phone as software availability for the Blackberry isn’t nearly as plentiful, and usually costs more money for stuff I can get for free elsewhere.

I’ve narrowed it down to a couple of phones from Verizon and Sprint (the HTC Titan tops that list), but wanted to hear everybody’s experience with Verizon and Sprint locally. While I’ve heard great things about Verizon’s support and their network, I do like Sprint’s openness with their phones. Like with Sprint, the same phone has newer software and unlocked hardware (hardware GPS works with Sprint via an official update, while it requires an unsupported hack to get it to work on Verizon’s or US Cellular’s Titan. I’d rather not hack my phone if don’t have to. But I’ve heard really lousy things about Sprint’s support (but I don’t think I’ve dealt with support often in all my years of having a phone, really — I’d rather figure it out myself.) but their network is decent.

Any thoughts from the gallery?

(And you might notice that after yesterday’s discussion, all the links now open in new windows.)

Worried You’re Going To Go Over Your BendBroadband Bandwidth Usage?

July is the first month that BendBroadband is capping your Internet bandwidth at 100gb/month and will be billing for overages (read up on the whole mess that ensued after the announcement here). Since I don’t think the usage-based bills have been sent out quite yet, there hasn’t been any reaction quite yet (don’t think there will be much of one since they did raise their cap). But if you’re concerned about going over, and want to make sure you don’t, a local programmer has created a monitoring PHP script that will e-mail you your usage numbers whenever the script runs. You can read up on bbbUM here.

I really have an urge to make this a public service where people can submit their user/pass, it’d be encrypted and can then email them their usage on a daily basis, but I really don’t have that kind of free time on my hands.

For All The New Features in Vista…

…there were also quite a few things that were taken out. Most of it wasn’t need anyway, but it’s still interesting to see what Microsoft deems important and not.

More Random Links

A bunch of links that have been sitting here for a while (hmm…sounds like yesterday)…

I need to sleep. More tomorrow.