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Posts from September, 2005

Blaming my tools Redux

Sep 11

After a fruitless search for a suitable desk replacement that I could afford, the result was… nothing. I’m stuck with the desk I have. This leaves me with two main choices.

1. Leave everything as it is, and continue to blame the desk for my lack of creative output.
2. Re-arrange the desk as best I can, relocate the monitor off the plinth to directly in front of me, and see how it goes.

So, far it appears to be working well.
I also discovered another solution to my lack of creative output.

Housework.

Yes, really. I spent all day yesterday cleaning the house. In the process I came up with multiple ideas for the direction of Geek Salad. Part of the problem I’ve been struggling with as pertains to the strip is the fact that I’d kind of lost direction, and didn’t want to just become a gag strip.

So there you go.

Eating my words

Sep 04

I blogged last night about the dearth of blogging tools for OSX.

When I first got a LiveJournal (yes, I have one of those too), I cycled through the available offline editors until settling upon SeMagic. When I got Eddie, I stumbled across a LiveJournal widget that did everything I wanted.

While I googled for all the different phrases I could come up with that involved OSX, blog, editor, I couldn’t locate anything that did what I wanted.

This morning, I came across a link to Dashboard Widgets. Lo and behold, under the Post and Upload section there was a widget for WordPress.

Still a little underpowered (no editing, misbehaves after posting, no pinging?) but functional.

Another step towards the dark side.

PC + Mac = Hassles

Sep 03

While I’m cleaning out my closet, might as well come clean with this little factoid. I’m a small-S switcher.

I couldn’t bring myself to throw away thousands of dollars worth of investment in my PC platform to become a Switcher. I guess that makes me a switcher.

My inability to commit to the House of Jobs stems from several issues.

Firstly, there was the fear of the unknown. I’d played with a friend’s Macs (yes, plural) a few times, but what if I didn’t like it? What if I couldn’t cope? What about gaming? What if I couldn’t get all the tools I needed? (In order… I do, I can, OSX is not really a gaming environment, and I’ll get to that a bit later).

Secondly, as mentioned, there was my existing investment in my PC platform. I think I must be one of the few people in the world who actually owns all the software on his PC. That includes over 60 games and the Adobe, Macromedia and Microsoft Office suites. Not pointing the finger, just that in my past self-employed life I didn’t want to run the risk of losing everything over a dodgy copy of Office (of course, there’s a whole school of thought that even a legitimate copy of Office is “dodgy”, but I digress).

So I took the easy way out. I bought a Mac mini. Quite honestly, I wanted one from the moment I saw them. I couldn’t justify the cost (even that small cost), particularly configured with the options I wanted (more RAM, Wi-Fi, larger hard drive, maybe Bluetooth), well, that kicked the pricetag into iMac territory.

Then the HOJ released the 2005 series of the Mac mini. Suddenly the price was much closer to “reasonable” for a machine that was specced almost exactly as I wanted. And I had money in the bank. AND I was being handed the OSX support jobs at work by a couple of the other tech support staffers, by virtue of the fact that I’d uncovered a curious Mac-only bug, and thus was handling most of our Macolyte userbase. That pretty much sealed my doom, and gave me the intellectual justification to spend nearly $1000 of our investment account on a computer that I really, really… wanted.

So it was, that one fateful night I bundled the family into the Rocket and traversed the city to Chadstone to purchase the Apple Store’s lone 1.42GHz, 512Mb, wireless, 60Gb, combo-drive equipped Mac mini. Unpacking it was a joyous affair, in that sad geeky kind of way (is it sad because non-geeks don’t “get” it, or because we geeks find such joy in unpacking new toys? Once again, I digress).

The Mac mini is often referred to by the acronym BYODKM (Bring Your Own Display, Keyboard, Mouse). There are a couple of issues with this, particularly if you’re not a switcher, but trying to play both sides at the same time.

No, that was not a double entendre.

The immediate solution was a relatively complex one. Fortunately, my LCD has both digital and analogue inputs. By connecting one input to each computer and using a convoluted set of button clicks, I could switch between inputs. The input solution was worse. I knocked off the USB keyboard and mouse from one of the other PCs in the house, and juggled them with my existing keyboard and mouse. This, at least, enabled me to actually use the Mac.

I then proceeded to start installing software. Setting up Eddie (as opposed to Zaphod, my PC) to check my personal email was pretty easy. Getting my head around files that mount themselves as disks was interesting. Moving my iPod to the Mac was disasterous (that deserves it’s own post). Physically switching back and forth between systems was painful.

I needed a KVM. Reviews of various KVMs really didn’t help that much. In the end, I bought a boxed one from a Dick Smith in frustration. Dick Smith Superstores have a fourteen day, no questions asked return policy. Exactly fourteen days later I returned the KVM. It was either that or repeatedly apply a large heavy object to the KVM. It was awful. At first, I thought I could live with it’s little ideosyncracies. Like switching back to the PC and refusing to switch back if the Mac turned the screen saver on. Then it started timing out the mouse and keyboard on the PC. I’d switch between PCs and the mouse and keyboard would cease to work. Sometimes they would start to work a few minutes later, sometimes it required unplugging all the USB cables from the back of the KVM (being USB powered) to reset it.

The next-to-final straw was provided when my previously anti-Apple father arrived to take the family out to dinner for my son’s birthday. He was hoping to have a look, and play, with this little Mac that was actually a BSD-Unix box, but found me in the study with my hands buried deeply inside the guts of my computer desk trying vainly to reconfigure some out-of-sight USB cables to try and reset the KVM, and muttering death threats because it appeared that both the Mac and the PC had locked up, with unsaved work on both, due to the KVM’s recalcitrance. The final straw was the fact that none of the “extra” keys on my “multimedia” keyboard were being recognised by either computer when connected via the KVM.

A week after switching back to multiple keyboards and monitor fiddling, I walked into OfficeWorks and walked out with their only KVM, and a half price Microsoft Elite Keyboard and Mouse set.

The KVM works perfectly. There’s something deliciously wrong about plugging a Microsoft wireless keyboard and mouse into a Mac.

Really, that only leaves the lack of tools for the Mac. I posted this from w.bloggar on Zaphod. In spite of the fact that I prefer using Eddie for most day-to-day tasks, and having lots of cool little widgets at my fingertips, do you think I can find a good blogging tool for OSX?

Ah well. We switchers can’t be choosers.

A poor workman blames his tools.

Sep 03

I have something to say.

I hate my desk. There. I’ve said it. Let the healing begin.

We have this great big computer desk. Wheels, cupboard, adjustable shelves, file drawer, CD rack, monitor plinth, slide-out keyboard drawer.. Cost us over $500.00, six years ago. I hate it.

I chose it, which is what makes it worse. See, when we got it, it seemed like a great idea. All sorts of storage nooks, nice and solid.

We ran into problems early on though. It’s got a nook for the PC, but extremely poor access for the cables to get to the PC. The plinth was a great design for the 19″ CRT I had. I just replaced it with a 19″ LCD. It just doesn’t look right. If I sit it close to the front of the (angled!) plinth, it looks strange, if I line it up correctly, everything is just… wrong.

You can’t sit in front of it straight on, because of the design of the desk. The foot-cubbyhole-thing is centred. The plinth is at the left-hand side of the desk. Just nothing lines up right. I’m too far from the monitor to do detailed work in Illustrator. Yes, that’s right. I’m actually blaming the desk for the lack of updates to my comic strip.

I’ve tried putting the keyboard and mouse on the top surface of the desk, as the keyboard drawer always feels like it’s about to snap off. Unfortunately, there’s a ridge around the edge of the desk. Adding insult to injury, the top of the desk is too high to work at, even without the ridge.

The nooks? The design of the plinth pretty much makes the space underneath too deep to be useful. Sure, it fits my Mac mini, KVM, USB hub and network switch underneath, but they’re all too far back underneath to be easily accessible. The cupboard is a bit too small to be useful for anything except storing junk. The CD rack is mostly left unused because of the sheer number of CDs I have, and the number of those that aren’t in your traditional CD jewel case (I bought a set of shelves. Ironically, pretty much the same problem with them). The adjustable shelves are too small to store anything useful (also replaced with a set of bookshelves). The file drawer? It’s got this weird half-inch gap at the front of the file runners which means that the files at the front fall off the runners.

I’ve been trying to find a new desk to replace it, but I have a limited budget (particularly given that I spend part of it on a new keyboard, mouse and KVM). I need to hire a trailer and try and find an ex-government warehouse somewhere here in Melbourne.

It’s like bad desk feng shui or something. I have a serious amount of trouble getting anything useful done at this desk.

Or maybe I’m just blaming my tools.

Late shift.

Sep 01

I’ve pulled three out of five late shifts this week. 11:30am - 8:00pm. Admittedly, I chose to do it, for reasons that I won’t go into here.

I’ve found that it’s kicked my butt all around the town in terms of my routine. Part of the problem is that two of my normal shifts were in there as well, so it was Late, Late, Early, Late, Early.

I really need a weekend at this point. Unfortunately, I’m going into the weekend off a Friday that contains a rental inspection (first one I’ve been through in ten years), a dental visit (not just a checkup) and an early shift.

Roll on Saturday.