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Messages - neuromancer

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1
Yatta Yatta Yatta / Missing in Action
« on: February 25, 2006, 09:45:56 am »
http://www.digisal.com/jl//index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=184&Itemid=30
Quote


Incase anyone has missed me let me fill you in on where and what I have been doing for the past few weeks.  Sometime in October I got an itch to buy a Harley Davidson V-Rod. After about a week or so of looking at them, I was sitting on the toilet and it dawned on me that I was being an idiot. I should be looking into buy a home, not a 16 thousand dollar bicycle. A girl I work with happens to be married to a realtor so we started talking and the search was on.

I was being pretty picky I guess but I was only looking for a two bedroom, or more, two bath, two car garage home on a quiet street. Out of the handful of homes that I saw two really stood out but one had the backyard aga. . .

WOW! Congratulations Sal. Owning a home is a milestone in the "American Dream". It always comes with certain pitfalls (as in when something breaks you pay instead of the landlord) but there is nothing sweater than hanging in your very own crib.

David

2
Yatta Yatta Yatta / Re: The Tail of the Dragon, Deal's Gap
« on: January 19, 2006, 07:48:15 pm »
Not as much of a thrill but here is a "burnout" video from the same site.

http://homepage.mac.com/terry_m/iMovieTheater5.html

David

3
Yatta Yatta Yatta / The Tail of the Dragon, Deal's Gap
« on: January 19, 2006, 07:25:59 pm »
I know we have some bikes in the crowd here so thought I'd post this up. I had never heard of Deal's Gap or The Tail of the Dragon but from what I have heard since, it is infamous especially amongst bikers.

http://www.tailofthedragon.com/

The link I wanted to post up is the next one. Be warned you will need broadband and Quicktime. If you have speakers get them on and crank it. The sound track is not that great but a little over halfway through you hear a guy blow by and at the end of the flic you hear our rider whine the f*ker down and up when he gets short changed by a couple of slow riders. Slow is relative since by the end of the clip the camera drops enough to see the speed-o. Check out the parseing speed when he grabs the parse.

http://homepage.mac.com/terry_m/iMovieTheater6.html

I thought this was cool.

David

4
Yatta Yatta Yatta / Re: Live from Burger King
« on: January 03, 2006, 03:11:07 pm »
Now that is pretty friggin slick if you ask me. I love the tech on this one. Outstanding!

David

5
Computing / Re: Posting from IBM ThinkPad X41
« on: December 21, 2005, 11:31:15 am »
The pens come with a tie down. You can see one on the top photos of the Fujitsu. The other units are loaners so the pen ties are not present.

As it turns out the docs were turned on by the IBM X41. They have been using a couple of Fujitsu T4010's like the first unit I snapped photos of. Their major complaint is the weight with the dual batt configuration. The IBM X41 is thinner, lighter and much easier in the hand. They all hate the red "nipple" track ball thing but feel that they can over come that. Looks like we are buying a couple 3-4 to play with more in depth. The next step is to figure out if we can hook the fingerprint readers into a "Biometric Server" set-up so that all authenication can be achieve through active directory. We can store authentication locally on the machines but we want roaming profiles and the ability to log into any and all units through a centralized server.

One thing that is slick is the ability to manage the wireless connection with IBM software vs. allowing Windows (which just gets way wonky sometimes). With IBM management we can set up profiles for specific connections. If you are in a certain node location we can change the default printer to reflect one that is nearest to you etc. Run scripts the whole kit and cabbodle. Way cool stuff I have never played with before.

David

6
Computing / Re: Posting from IBM ThinkPad X41
« on: December 20, 2005, 05:01:08 pm »
Short and sweat.

Parseive Digitizer is a system that is embedded between the outer surface and the LCD. The writing surface for parseive systems is usually more pliable. Examples would be PocketPC's and Palm's. Any pen or object can create a response, even a finger nail.

Active Digitizer is embedded beneath the LCD. Most tablets are active digitizer. The surface that you interact with is firmer (close to hard like glarse). Only a magnetized pen works with these systems. A pen from a Palm or PocketPC would not work. This creates the ability to enable the "hover" API's since you can hover a proper pen over an active digitizer and the curser will jump to that point. I found out that early generation active digitizer pens contained batts. Present technology creates the magitization from within the digitizer. The pen acts as a "reflector" to that field. With this you can add a switch to the pen to toggle right clicking functionality at the pen level and options are available to configure other toggle responses. A much more robust environment because the "hover" API's are utilized.

David

7
Computing / Re: Posting from IBM ThinkPad X41
« on: December 19, 2005, 08:59:06 pm »
The house guest made it home tonight with me and he brought a friend.


The one on the left is the IBM ThinkPad X41 and his friend on the right is the Fujitsu T1510D. I placed a pack of smokes in front so you can get some perspective. That's a 12.1 active digitizer screen on the IBM and a 8.9 parseive digitizer screen on the Fujitsu. Here's a shot of them in tablet mode.


The parseive screen is not what I want in a tablet but they can't get active digitizer in that size yet. Notice on the smaller Fujitsu they ditched the track pad and went with the nipple to save space.

David

8
Yatta Yatta Yatta / Debit Card
« on: December 18, 2005, 10:00:13 pm »
http://www.digisal.com/jl//index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=114&Itemid=30
Quote


Lost my debit card again! Earlier this month I left it behind at Chilis but this time around it was at Applebees. The first time I noticed right away that I didnt have it but  this time I didnt notice it was missing til Friday night. A good 12 hours later! I called them up but they didnt have it so they advised me to call Saturday morning. A little bit hungover but I called and they didnt have it. So I had to make it to the bank before they closed so I could have cash for the weekend. Sux paying cash. I feel like I am limited in my spending to much. I guess that is a good thing though.

What as funny was that I wasnt done being out spending money when I realized I did. . .

I just had one of my credit cards shut off by the bank because a retailer I used it at reported a data base compromise. This is the second time it has happened to me. The first was several years ago when BJ's reported that their data base had been compromised. Kind of a pain in the arse but I guess it is better to be safe than sorry. The only other time I had a card shut off was when I reported a debit made on my card from a German buckle manufacturer. I never ordered any German buckles and the company never answered their phone when the bank called to investigate. They bank refunded me the $10.95 and shut the card off.

David

9
Computing / Re: Posting from IBM ThinkPad X41
« on: December 18, 2005, 11:07:25 am »
One other thing I noticed when I ran the IBM X41 through it's paces on Friday is the radio reception is a lot better on the IBM vs. the Fujitsu. I can't pick up the "Board Room" node with the Fujitsu while sitting at my desk (down two floors and through a hell of a lot of concrete and steel, the server room is between me and the node). The IBM was able to "see" the node at one bar but was unable to connect. If I get up from my desk and walk to the door it picks up an IP and connects, something the Fujitsu can't do until I walk past the server room and enter the stairwell.

David

10
Computing / Re: Posting from IBM ThinkPad X41
« on: December 18, 2005, 10:54:43 am »
I did bring home the Fujitsu T4010. This box has become my right hand at work.


A convertable that turns into the tablet.


I love this machine! Dual batts if I pull the optical bay so I can get a strong 7-8 hours of usage. It's very handy and travels well. I take it to meetings and scribble most notes down on the screen or if I am on the phone and I have to make a quick notation I can just write it on the desktop. This unit does not have the finger print scan like the ones we are ordering up at the moment. The five buttons at the bottom right of the monitor are set to a parseword to prevent boot. HIPPA compliant for the mobile transport of health data.

David

11
Computing / Re: Posting from IBM ThinkPad X41
« on: December 18, 2005, 10:05:09 am »
Quote
Post up some pictures of that thiing. So it picked up all your handwriting then? or did you have to edit some?

The house guest was highjacked by the boss. He took it to a meeting at the end of the day and I wasn't sticking around for him to return. Oh well ...

It picked up the handwriting well. I am getting good at it anyway so I rarely have to do edits. After you use the hand writing for a while you get to know what you can and can not get away with. The battery life was a VERY sweet 5+ hours during my initial test.

David

12
Site News / Re: The New Site
« on: December 17, 2005, 12:15:03 pm »
I started pawing around with an install of Joomla on my local dev box. I got a question for you. What do you have the templates folder and the images within this directory chmod set to on your install? I may have isolated an issue with chmod of these files with the ability of Safari to actually "see/render" the template that is actively loading.

David

13
Computing / Posting from IBM ThinkPad X41
« on: December 16, 2005, 12:27:37 pm »
A convertable laptop. I have it in tablet mode using the pen and hand writing recognition.  I get it as a house guest this weekend to test the network stuff on the home network. So far I have to say I like this unit better than the Fujitsu Lifebook.

The weight is sweet and is very slim. The only thing I dislike about IBM laptops is they use the red nipple instead of a "track pad".  I'll post up other thouqhts as I use it more.

 David

14
Computing / PPC-6700 Pocket PC Phone
« on: December 15, 2005, 02:02:33 pm »
http://www.digisal.com/jl//index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=112&Itemid=31
Quote


In late October, Sprint released the PPC-6700 to thier Business account customers. I happen to be a Business acount customer and I debated for months about upgrading to this phone. In late November, I finally bit the bullet and bought it.

Right away you notice the difference in size between the two phones. Its awesome. It feels more like a phone and I dont feel like I am holding a brick to my head. Dont get me wrong, I was never embarrased to put it to my head when my Bluetooth headset died.

Of all the features that this phone has there is one that made me want to have this phone.. . .

Nice! Question though ... the SiriuCE? Could you not hear the streaming feed directly from their web site via your browser or does this not work with the Mobile 5 OS? I know next to nothing about the mobile platform other than it is a hot development area.

It is cool that you are near the major airport to get the EVDO. By comparison I don't even have a cell phone where I live because we have no towers LOL. They are slowly gaining ground and we are supposed to have a tower soon. If and when we do I will be looking to jump on the cell phone market.

That is one kick arse geek toy!

David

15
Site News / Re: The New Site
« on: December 14, 2005, 09:30:10 pm »
OPML feed! Sweet ... This setup has the best and the latest.

David

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