Category: Geekdom

Running Google Analytics

Like Dave, I finally got an invite to Google Analytics, and it’s now tracking the traffic on this site, Sunray‘s (with some advance tracking there for when bookings are made) an Bend Blogs. I haven’t quite gotten used to how their back-end works, but the stats are certainly presented in a nice, easy to use, interface that will make non geeks like it (especially more so than AWStats, which track all the sites on this server). It has lots of pretty pictures, charts, graphs, and reports catered to the Webmaster and the executive type. So for a corporate environment, and to track folks browsing through a site, it’s going to work well (which is why I immediately put it on Sunray’s site). It also has nice Web interfaces for filtering, so I can very easily turn off counting of accesses for Sunray’s office, which has the page set as their home page.

But I’ll post sometime down the road when I get more traffic into it to see what kind of reporting it really can do.

Macs Can Now (Officially) Run Windows

There have been folks out there that have tried their butt off (and some have succeeded) in getting Windows XP to boot on the new Intel-based Macs. But now Apple’s going to make it far easier by providing step-by-step directions and software to do it.

Why You Shouldn’t Trust The Sales Droids At Best Buy

I was in our local Best Buy the other night. I can’t remember why, but I was in the hard drive aisle, just glancing at prices. An older woman came in, said she wanted to return her hard drive, as it’s given her nothing but trouble and her geek friend said that it was an incompatibility with her hard drive and her motherboard. The Best Buy “Geek Squad” sales droid said that “these are all standards parts and should work fine together.”

For the most part he’s right, until the lady mentioned she was trying to return a Maxtor hard drive. At this point, if the geek knew what he was doing, he would asked what processor she was running — AMD or Intel. Why is this important? Because it’s a very well known and very well documented problem with Maxtor hard drives and the nForce4 chipset that powers many newer AMD motherboards. But the “geek” had no idea about this, despite the fact that this problem has been out there for many many months and only recently has some fixes (many of which still don’t quite work, according to some forum threads).

But since the “geek” didn’t ask this question, the lady started walking out of the store feeling dejected. I walked and caught up to her, explained that the guy was full of crap, and brought her back into the store. I walked back into the store and I found a guy behind the counter that I went to high school with back in the day and who knew I was a die-hard geek. He was one of the “geek” managers. I explained to him the situation, the stories behind the data corruption, and while it was news to him too, he took care of the refund, probably because he was an old friend of mine.

So what’s the easiest way to solve Maxtor hard drive problems? Pick other companies for your hard drives. I’ve always had good luck with Western Digital hard drives, and I know Simone’s liking her system I built for her that has three of them. Just avoid Maxtor like the plague.

That, and don’t trust anybody at Best Buy.

Any PHP/MySQL Geeks Want To Make Some Money?

I’m accepting bids on either eLance or Script Lance on a project that I need a programmer for. You’re either welcome to bid on it over at either of those sites, or you can contact me directly at utterlyboring [at] gmail [dot] com if you want to do this privately or if you have any questions.

Perfect JavaScript Pop-Ups

I’m bookmarking this totally for my reference, as I was redoing some of the image pop-up code for the office site (it was having some problems with MSIE and Opera), but it might be handy to somebody else.

You Know What’s Sad?

Over the years, this site has had 8683 published comments. The thing that’s sad? The automatically incremented comment ID number in the database for this site is 22887. Which means I’ve had 14,204 spam, duplicate, or otherwise deleted comments (and I generally pretty much let anything get published, unless it’s spam or a duplicate). That means for every 1.6 spam comments, I get a regular comment.

Luckily, MovableType 3.2’s spam blocking settings sends the bulk majority of the comments either to the junk folder or sets them to unpublished status, so they’re not appearing on my site and they’re not sapping server resources on rebuilds, but it’s still annoying (and I can’t install mod_sec or other things like that, as they’ve caused some issues in the past and have slowed things down too much).

Update on 4/9: 8780 comments published, 26,630 total, so 17,850 spam (big attack last night — all dumped into the junk folder, as they were all that Mike Furir spam and I had that stuff blocked a long time ago during the first wave of attacks.

Worst Decisions In Video Game History

There are some wonderful memories on this list including Nintendo’s decision to dump the Playstation, the Hot Coffee mod, the enormous Xbox controller, and more.

Windows Vista Build 5342 Screenshots

I’m personally not big into all the big and bubbly stuff that it slowly appearing in Vista in more and more builds, but there are some cool looking features in this newest build. Thanks Greg for the link.

Dell Buys Alienware

Alienware, a computer maker who was one of the first folks who catered to the hardcore gamers and performance freaks and is now starting to spread to the business market, is getting bought by Dell, who is entrenched in the business market and are one of the last folks to build hard core gaming systems (though latest Quad SLI config is both companies offer a Quad SLI configuration now, though I’d probably take Alienware’s as I’m sure Dell uses proprietary parts on theirs and Alienware’s setup uses AMD processors, which perform better for the most part).

More from PC Mag and from Michael J. Miller.

You Knew It Had To Happen

They’ve pretty much found a way to create viruses for every other technology out there (Cell phones, PDAs, etc…) so it comes as no surprise to me that scientists have discovered a way to infect an RFID chip with a virus.