Jan 042008
 

Warner Bros to back Blu-ray DVD format exclusively

Well, it’s looking more and more like the only people supporting HD-DVD over Blu-Ray are the guys that created it (Toshiba/Microsoft) and the guys they paid to support it for 18 months. Oh… and don’t forget that in the fine print of that payoff is the little note that Mr. Steven Spielberg’s films aren’t included in this binding agreement.

I made my prediction as to which format is going to succeed when I bought my Playstation 3. Looks like I may have chosen wisely.

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 Posted by at 11:47 pm
Jan 042008
 

So I had to make a call out to one of the customers on site. No big deal.

When I come out of the building, my car is sitting in a pond, surrounded by 5 inches of standing water. Now my feet are soaked.

Me not happy.

Oh, and as a funny aside, Wife and Boy called. Part of our backyard fence collapsed. Well, actually it was pulled up out of the cement base and pushed over. Fun, fun, fun!

I think we should get rain days the way parts of the country get snow days.

iTunes: Go Into the Water by Dëthkløk

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 Posted by at 7:21 pm
Jan 042008
 

I hate them. I don’t make them. If you want to make a change in your life, just make a decision and go with it. Not saying that it’s as easy as that, of course… but if you ‘fall off the wagon’ so to speak, just start over. Not like there’s anything special about the first of the year to make it more ‘official’ or anything.

I think that perhaps people like to do that because of the accountability. Because that is DEFINITELY something that makes major life changes more practical. The best way to accomplish something like that is to tell someone you trust about it, and ask them to keep you accountable. It works. And maybe that’s why so many people ascribe to the “New Year’s Resolution”… it has that built in sense of accountability, at least in a small way. People ask other people about their resolutions because it’s assumed that they’ve made one. And so you don’t have to get up the nerve to ask someone to help you.

I suppose if I were to have some sort of resolution (not because it’s the new year, mind you!), that it would be to blog more consistently. I would really like to keep my blog up to speed, for posterity if for nothing else. So here’s what I’m gonna do… I’m asking for those of you who actually bother to read this thing to keep me accountable. if I go for a week without posting a blog entry, nag me.

And if it really makes you happy, think of it as a New Year’s Resolution. 😛

iTunes: Alexander the Great by Iron Maiden

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 Posted by at 5:49 pm
Jan 042008
 

Traffic wasn’t THAT bad, took me about 50% longer to get home. But I was able to avoid much of the traffic through the creative use of surface streets, which is something that the commute to and from Apple didn’t really allow for all that much. There weren’t a whole lot of alternative routes to use on that commute.

Of course, having my iPhone to update me on where traffic is bad has been a lifesaver in this regard as well.

Anyway, I fully expect that the drive tomorrow’s gonna suck. Badly.

iTunes: Montsegur by Iron Maiden

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 Posted by at 7:58 am
Jan 042008
 

First of all, I got my new Crackberry at work today. Interesting, but I like my iPhone better.

Second of all, traffic’s really gonna suck today. I hate it when it rains, not because of the rain itself, but because of what it does to the morons on the road.

curwx_400x270.jpg

iTunes: Hole Hearted (Horn Mix) by Extreme

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 Posted by at 12:59 am
Jan 032008
 

Well, I haven’t fallen off the planet. Honest. Just been real busy with the death march and all, so I’ll try to catch up here with the “Recent Times in Review” post to end 2007…

Early-mid November: I finally just went for it and bought a Playstation 3. It rules mightily. And Blu-Ray is just gorgeous on “Big TV” (as Boy calls it).

November 25: Went to see Trans-Siberian Orchestra. It was AMAZING! The musicianship was unbelieveable, and the stage show was mind-bogglingly cool. If you get the chance to see this show, DO IT!

December 3: Started my new job at Nasa-Ames Research Center, at Moffett Field. I’m on the Tier 2 helpdesk team, which handles the Mac and PC support once you get past the ‘complete bonehead fix’ level. It’s actually been fun so far. The people are nice, I get to work with Macs *and* PC’s and don’t have to hide my pure loathing of the latter, and I’m sort of the resident expert when it comes to the Mac platform. It’s nice to actually be using the technology in the real world that I spent all that time testing.

December 6-9: Choir musical theater at church. It went well, no mass food poisoning this year.

December 13-16: Live Drive-thru Nativity. We had all sorts of transmitter issues this year, mostly to do with the antennas, I think. We have plans to replace them for next year, hopefully that will help. Although, considering how smoothly things went the last few year I suppose we were overdue for calamity.

December 16: Van Halen live at San Jose Arena (aka HP Pavilion, one of the dumbest names for an arena ever. I mean, really… who names a sports complex after a crappy home computer? At least pick one that doesn’t suck.)

December 23-27: We went to Sparks to spend Christmas with my grandpa and aunt. It was coooooooooooold (highs in the low 20’s) but they didn’t actually get any snow until after we left. 🙁 Boy will have to wait until February to play in the snow, I guess.

December 31 – January 1: Kept New Year’s relatively low key… played some cards at my place with Ryan, Sean and Daniel… then hopped on the laptop for a little Galaxies lurking. Wife was over at Tami’s place with the girls, scrapbooking and doing the whole girltalk thing.

That’s pretty much it for now, I think.

Currently playing in iTunes: Blackbird by Alter Bridge

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 Posted by at 12:56 am
Nov 212007
 

Anonymous wrote the following in response to a completely unrelated Mac post…

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/11/20/leopard_reintroduces_security_vuln/

As I am new to Macs and stumbled across your site while Googling about, I wonder if you can clarify the above link. It is my understanding that Macs are immune to all viruses. That’s what is stated in the advertising and by my friends who are Mac users. Are they all liars? If so, I will remain using my PC and try Linux instead.

Assuming that this is in fact an honest question and not just a troll

No, they are not liars. There is no such thing as a 100% secure platform. However, to equate the occasional vulnerability in Mac OS X (which generally gets taken care of pretty quickly) with the horrid track record of Windows (over 400,000 known viruses) is like comparing a dripping faucet with a torrential downpour.

Unix-based operating systems (such as Mac OS X) and Unix-like OS’es such as Linux are orders of magnitude less susceptible to malware, spyware and viruses due to the way they’re written. Windows was designed with security as an afterthought, and as such it has massive holes (RPC, ActiveX, VBScript, etc) that are comparatively easy to exploit. And despite the massive changes Microsoft has made in each successive release, much of that legacy code is still present, because to remove it would cause such massive amounts of incompatibility that people may as well switch platforms. It would remove one of Microsoft’s big hooks: “If you switch you’ll have to buy all new software.” Of course, they broke a load of stuff in Vista anyway, and it *still* sucks.

Some people generally attribute the deluge of Windows security hacks purely to the fact that it has a larger user base. While this *is* true that Windows has a much much larger piece of the pie, and that almost certainly has a bearing on the issue specifically as it relates to paid hackers who create botnets and the like, it doesn’t change that the basic designs of the operating systems have a lot to do with it.

It is just a lot harder to find ways to hack a Mac. Even though it’s not as financially rewarding to do so (botnets, etc), there are so many vocal and somewhat smarmy advocates of the Mac for precisely this reason (and yes, I include myself in that category) that you just *know* some hackers out there would love to stick it to them. And yet there still hasn’t been an actual viable Mac OS X virus released in the wild. It will probably happen at some point, but to insist that it’s simply due to lack of effort is stupid. Based on the relative market share, you’d expect that if Mac OS X is no more secure than Windows, there should be somewhere in the neighborhood of 10,000-40,000 known virus and exploits (being conservative). And there aren’t.

So, Mr. Anonymous, to answer your question: Macs are immune to Windows viruses. Unless you’re running Windows on your Intel-based Mac. 🙂 And there are currently no known Mac OS X viruses out there. There’s the occasional exploit that pops up, and those are patched by Apple pretty faithfully when they come up. Occasionally something might get reopened as code is changed (even the best code is only as perfect as the flawed human being who writes it, no matter how good they are), but Apple generally does a pretty good job in this area.

You could do a lot worse than migrating from Windows to just about *anything* else (FreeBSD, Linux, Mac OS X, Solaris, etc) but Mac OS X is really the only usable ‘Desktop’ operating system for normal human beings who want to actually get work done rather than futz around recompiling their kernal just because they can.

The bottom line is that no system is infallible. Not even the Mac. 🙂

However, Windows is the most porous, hackable, fragile desktop operating system you could use.

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 Posted by at 2:53 pm