Ouch.

3 Comments »

Let’s see.  What’s going on over here?

Caught part of the recent Golden Globes awards “press conference,” which was just kinda painful.  Mary Hart from Entertainment Tonight fame just couldn’t seem to figure out how to turn it off for a moment, which gave her segments this weird “The Office” tension.  You kept expecting her to do/say something desperately inappropriate, and then try to get a high-five from someone while saying “Am I right?  Huh?  People?  You were all thinking it, right?”

Caught CBC’s “jPod” tonight.  Very close to the book, plot-wise, but not very close to anything to do with the geek culture the book had.  What’s missing is the odd people who work at the company in question.  Through personal experience via professional placement, I happen to know the author knows the ex-president of the real “Neotronic Arts,” and the question that Arwen had was a valid one:

Do you think Coupland thought the company was like that,  or did the president think it was like that?

Yikes.  I probably don’t want to know.

What they don’t seem to have any of is the alarming humongousness of “Neotronic” Arts.  It doesn’t look like a University with low fuzzy walls instead of classrooms, fortified with games-that-don’t-yet-exist posters, and nerf-hurling railguns.  Not at all.  It looked like they took over the set of Good Rockin’ Tonight and Switchback combined* (see that flicker of tin? just me flashing my “old guy” badge), and put some big freakin’ LCD panels on ’em.  The acoustics in that place would be repugnant.  Nobody has headphones on, so you know it’s fake.  Actually, come to think of it, I didn’t see speakers, either, so they’ll never have a round of “My music has more bass than yours,” which is a near-daily tussle in our department.

They’re also missing the wonderful genius weirdo types.  The ones that wander the common areas, muttering to themselves, listening to $800 worth or portable audio equipment while wearing $8.00 worth of clothes.  You can’ write these people, or put them on TV.  No one would believe you.  People don’t like to think that the chainsmoking sketchy dude at the bus stop might have had something to do with a game like Playground.

There’s no Dodgeball League (I kid you not) in Neotronic Arts.  Of course, the book was done before Phase II of our Burnaby campus was completed, so I guess I can’t fault Doug on that one.

That, and playing “let’s hide the ringing cel phone someone left on their desk,” which is, I’m pretty sure, why cube walls are hollow.

Beyond here be the brayings of a techie…  Non-geeks might wanna take a pass on the rest of this post.

Click here to read more.. »

Posted on January 16th 2008 in Friends, Hardware, Software

Been a while, and there’s been lots goin’ on.

3 Comments »

So, uh hi.

Long time, no see, eh?

What have I been doing?  Let’s see.

Family:

  • We’re good, all things considered.  Xmas was stressy and rough, but only due to external circumstances (see Housing, below).  Considering what we were up against, I think Arwen and I did extremely well.  Nobody got hurt, and the kids once again have toys that keep them busy without making us insane.
  • My mom’s on the mend.  We went up to visit, and she’s doing much better.  Thanks to everyone who asked when they felt it was appropriate, and didn’t when they didn’t.
  • My wife developed a thing for socks before either of us knew what hit her.  One day, she showed me something, we both sat there for a minute, and then I said “Yeah, actually, that’s hot.”  Who knew?  $17 for a pair of socks can be a good deal, if they’re the RIGHT socks.


Work
:

  • I’ve been busy with work, which has been going really well, now that I’m finally getting the hang of not being an all-day techie, but instead getting used to the idea of putting together training and documentation FOR techies (and end-users).  There’s a high-impact, but (we hope) low workload project in the very near future, thanks in large part to all the hard work already being done by the guy that works next to me all day.  He knew this stuff was coming, so he did all the technical tough stuff, so now it’s just a question of all the stuff we didn’t expect, and rolling out what’s coming without freaking out our userbase.  The next week or two should be fun*, and a nice way to come back from our winter break.

Housing:

  • I’ve also been kept very busy with being a new board member at home, and trying to figure out how to bridge what I’ve been hearing and seeing vs. what can (and can’t) be changed/corrected.  We got something rather, shall we say, alarming *right* before Christmas, which really put a dent in our holiday time, but in the end, I think it was bombastic enough that it meant I went to bat and started swinging.  Is everything goodness and light now?  No.  Is it the end of the world?  Also no.  There’s hope now, at least, which is something I couldn’t say 8 days ago.  Or even two.

Facebook:

  • Yes, I’ve been booking many hours on there.  Not really *doing* anything, just having a lovely OCD time and hammering that refresh button to see what’s happening NOW with everyone I know.  I feel like those rats you hear about, who’ll push the “get food” bar constantly, even if there’s no food coming, simply because food comes sometimes when you push it.  Karlababble has asked for a Intervention from Facebook, but I think that’s just ’cause she wants to get into fisticuffs with the older guy who shows up on there once in a while.  On Intervention, that is, not Facebook.  Wait.  Dude.  What?

Music:

  • I’ve been listening to a fair amount of new stuff, thanks to a large number of excellent new/free music blogs, and streaming sites.
  • Damien Rice hit my radar late one night a few weeks back, and I was instantly transformed into a slackjawed slushpile of overwrought emotional goo.  I was sitting there feeling grief & loss for something that I had NOTHING to do with.  I wasn’t just sad because the songs hit me, I was sad because those song existed.  I’m not sure when the last time that happened was, but hooboy.  If it was a seasonal thing, it’s good I wasn’t in the Hallmark store at the time, ’cause I would’ve started bawling right there.
  • Johnny Vancouver and I did a podcast two MONTHS ago, and I haven’t had time to re-encode some of the songs that got squished by the process to post the whole show.  Soon, baby.  He and Warren have also been doing a Video Podcast that I’ll have to link to in the near future, so you can see that it’s not HIS fault we’re not doing shows, it’s all me.

Geekin‘:

  • So, Vista came out around this time last year, and I’ve been using it at work in all its 64-bit glory (and bleeding edge stupidity).  At home, I’ve been afraid to try to fix the Win2k3 server I’ve got running this site, (it’s currently completely unresponsive on the console, and Exchange 2003 isn’t talking to the outside world, but the webserver works, so I’m not touching anything), so we’re moving to 3rd party hosting in the very near future.
  • I’ve also been fooling around with more flavours of Linux than you can shake a memory stick at.  Ubuntu (and Kubuntu/Xubuntu) have all passed my “diddit goe?” test with flying colours under all sorts of weird hardware, and I’ve been happily using it as my “main machine” at home for doing everything I need to do in an evening.  The October (7.10) version just plain works, including wifi.
  • I’ve once again found new respect for Knoppix LiveCD, with it’s utterly awesome ability to ignore that a drive or partition are all screwed up, and just copy stuff anyway.  My friend at Vancouver Film School can attest to the power of Knoppix when it comes to restoring data from drives that have been declared “dead.”
  • Trinity Rescue Kit also made my day more than once this year.  It’s nice to be able to pull a “dead” machine from under a user’s desk, and have their data shared back to them via Windows (Samba) networking shares in under 5 minutes.
  • I tried messing with my iPod’s head, and installing RockBox, but eventually found it too annoying to USE, even though I like the idea.  I’ll stick with the portable and multi-platform Floola to get my music onto my ‘pod without having to use iTunes (or stay married to a single workstation for music, for that matter).
  • I also found out that old iPods can have their harddrives replaced using the odd little drives found in Toshiba R100 laptops.  Also, a new (and bigger) battery for an iPod can be purchased online for less than $35 (incl. shipping of the battery).
  • Digital Picture Frames purchased at ToysRUs for under $80 don’t necessarily suck.  Way less work and heartbreak than trying to build them myself out of Frankensteined Laptops.

New Year’s Eve:

  • This year was small, and time well-wasted playing Guitar Hero (I finally got over my stupid “but I’ll suck at it” stagefright to try it.  I don’t know what I thought was going to happen, but I’m told I’m doing pretty well for someone who picked up a plastic axe less than a week ago.  Totally Rick and Elissa’s fault if I even end up in front of the Movie-Theatre-sized screen at work, rocking out to Flock Of Seagulls’ “I Ran” in the next six months.
  • I have a slight headache NOW that is, I think, the hangover from going to bed last night at 3am, and getting up at Noon.  Possibly held at bay by taking the kids to the park in single-digit weather.

I’m not making any promises or resolutions this year, but I do *hope* to post a decent-length thing at least once a week.  No more two-month hiatus (hiati?) for me.

What else am I looking at lately?  Check here from time to time to see what I thought I’d want to look at later.

* Not really, I’ll probably be muttering a swearing to myself by middle of next week.

Powered by ScribeFire.

Posted on January 1st 2008 in General, Music, People, Software

Tennis Player vs. Soccer Player? That’s *my* idea!

No Comments »

Nifty video from Nike Momentum (drum circles cause adrenaline, who knew?) via the often interesting and always well-written How Advertising Spoiled Me.

In the video, stars (it’s Nike, they can afford it – I’m surprised they don’t have them breakdancing), are squaring off, sorta, and you end up with tennis players slamming a ball at a soccer player, etc.

And I called it about a two years ago.

’cause I wanna see a game that places the sports against each other.  The game’ll need some serious play-balancing, and would be a pain in the butt to do physics for, but after watching this little video, I’m thinking it’s time to check my idea in, since it’s got at least the first wave of questions and “yeah, but”s answered.

So watch out, Nike Commercial People, you’re on notice.
{Speaking of being “On Notice,” the Stephen Colbert “On Notice” Generator is gone, sad.}

Powered by ScribeFire.

Posted on June 10th 2007 in General, Software

And we’re baaAAaack.

2 Comments »

So, after the main drive on our server decided to pack it in after only six years of:

  • running on a sad little Pentium III 733
  • Windows 2000 server (and IIS, ’cause they said it couldn’t be DONE)
  • not enough air flow
  • multiple power surges and outages
  • three different low-profile power supplies
  • a warm day combined with the door on the cabinet sealing shut

the drive made this horrific clicking noise when attempting to boot.

Now thanks to

  • some SERIOUS drive recovery karma (I think I’m around 95% on over 100 drives in my carreer: freaky, huh?)
  • Arwen‘s CompSci degree
  • blind faith to KEEP TRYING even after you’ve already consciously accepted that everything’s gone
  • backups I started on a daily/weekly/”otherdrivetarget” back in February

72hrs later, we’re back up. New hardware, new server OS, new everything. NEW.

Same ol’ data though, which is the new sweetness.

Arwen, Monkeypants, Pomodoro and I are all back.

So, “Temple” is in ruins, and “Blackhole” is here to stay, we hope.

Email/comment (if you can) if there’s any weirdness.

Oh, and Email’s not *quite* back up just yet, so Monkey and Pomo are not emailable at this domain for the next little bit.

Powered by ScribeFire.

Posted on June 8th 2007 in General, Hardware, Software

Wow, and I thought *I* could talk fast.

No Comments »

…and to think I was going to go to bed at 9pm tonight… HA!

So, for no particularly good reason, I’m sitting here at 12:13am, listening to the Kern County, California Law and Fire Radio Scanner (open that with Winamp, MediaPlayer, or iTunes, I’m assuming).

It’s sort of amazing, that there’s so much going on, and yet the dispatchers (all women, it seems) are capable of instantly matching the speed, tone, and urgency of their “folks in the field.” There’s a tonality shift that happens whenever there’s a new hailing on the line, and it’s like they’ll chorus together so they know who they’re talking to when there’s four or five interspersed conversations going on at once.

It’s like there’s this constant flow from Control of “I know you’re in danger, I know maybe you’re scared, but we’re all back here, and we’ll send more to you if you need it, okay? Just keep breathing, stay calm, and watch for the signs.” That’s a lot of data to cram into 2.5 seconds, and 40 syllables.

There’s also all sorts of weirdness (beeps, bleeps, and bloopie noises), and my techie brain instantly jumps in an starts counting pulses to see if I can tell if there were 7/10 codes (a phone number?) or some data stream going on. I’ve listened to enough analog data streams in my time to be able to discern a mod-

OKAY, that was just MORSE CODE, I’m pretty sure.

Oh, and if you have highspeed internet at home, and have one of those little network switches/hubs, (or even a router, probably), stick an AM radio on top of it some time and listen to the distortion that comes out of the network traffic you generate. I did this a few years back with a hub (not a switch) and it was sorta cool. If you like glitch.

Back to the radio…

…oh yeah, and there’s also all kinds of silliness that may or may not be random commentary from the peanut gallery. F’rinstance, there was a notice that went out to let everyone know that something was going to be announced to the entire shift, and after the codes were sent out (I’ve also got a page open with the codes so I can tell what SOME of this stuff is) letting everyone know there’d be a “real” announcement shortly… I heard someone say something to the effect of:

“Neepie heep kebooie – yip yip.”

I’m not kidding. It was pretty clear, and that’s what it sounded like.

There’s even the odd cop who’s voice, tempo, and tone all say “I’m too old for this shit.”

Oh, and it’s true: You really can hear people smile on the radio.

Someone keeps talking about “Ginger Snap” calling (to other units/groups). As if it was a person. I’m looking through the codes, and G-Unit (oh, HEY!) is the Gang Enforcement people.

Posted on February 10th 2007 in General, Hardware, People, Software

BC Place Deflated Today – Here’s The Clips (broadband only)

1 Comment »

Pretty awesome. Here’s the playlist from YouTube of the videos as posted by my buddy SkonenBlades while he was at work (a Yaletown gaming company that rhymes with Stocksrar). Don’t know if his video’s all over TV yet, but he emailed it to our YahooGroups list just after 3pm.

Check it out.

Posted on January 5th 2007 in Places, Software

Sharpening the blades, geeking out, and the Force.

4 Comments »

Hello everyone.

Another long rambly thing from me. Feel free to skip. I won’t be hurt. Heck, *I* probably won’t read this thing again after tonight.

This week has been a good one, even though the (sudden. actual.) snow here in Raincouver has been messing with my commute. I’ve been playing with the “real” version of Vista (downloaded legitimately, via the Microsoft Developers Network), and now that I know a few of the keyboard shortcuts, I’m starting to feel like it’s not ALL bad. Of course, there’s still a lot of “I could do that before, using free utilities” feelings, but for the most part, I’m somewhat amazed at how many devices and things work just fine, with drivers installing on the first plug. Perhaps the term “Plug and Pray” will revert to what it was supposed to be “Plug and Play.”

F’rinstance, I plugged a PCMCIA Adaptec Firewire card into this laptop in order to attach my Western Digital external drive *AND* my Maxtor external at the same time. Hear that, world? I’ve currently got 750GB of drive space attached to this little laptop here. When you start thinking of available drive space in terms of “Three Quarters of a Terabyte,” you start to get a little wobbly remembering that first PC I had with the whopping 110MB of space. These days I carry ten times that in my pocket in the form of a USB drive.

…and don’t get me started on the Commodore 64 my mom bought us back in the day, when she splurged the extra $400 (or was it $600?) for the 5.25″ floppy drive (as opposed to the current-gen standard of the TAPE DRIVE) that was single sided, single density. That’s 180K, if I recall correctly.

Yeah, so, I’ve been more of a techie this week, and less of a manager, which is good. What’s funny is that feeling of getting back to where I’m comfortable in my imaginary stealth chopper. I’m better at figuring out how to deal with some of the more… Office Political… parts of my job. The problems and people I have to deal with that are “less tech / more talk” are easier to work with/around if I’ve had my daily dose of geekery, first (or know that I can geek out later in the day).

Something comes back to me while I transfer the 232GB of Shitoshi’s recovered drive image, and download the squippy-lookin’ build of Linux that looks like it could probably be the Vista/OSX-For-Linux-Users (Kororaa). This was said to me while I was sheepishly talking about some of the software (some data-recovery and forensics applications) I’d acquired via, let’s say “unconventional” means, and what I was learning to do with said software (and I’m paraphrasing):

“As a samurai, you must keep your blades sharp and practice your craft, in the event that you may be called upon to ‘Save The Day,’ so that you may have no fear in your heart as you descend into battle.” (The Electric Gumshoe put it better, but I’ve forgotten it now).

and I think about that idea of sharpening my blades, and it makes me think of something I call the Intruder Complex, which is that feeling one has in a job where they don’t feel totally comfortable, and they’re not really sure what they’re doing just yet. The feeling is that any moment now your boss/co-workers/girlfriend/child will figure out that you don’t know what you’re doing, and blow you out of the water right there and then. y I remember quite well the sensation that Cam (my first boss in my first techie job, where I learned my way around 386 PCs, Windows 3.1, and Novell servers) was going to haul off and punch me in the face because I had screwed something up on An Important Machine. It would never have happened, of course, ’cause Cam was probably feeling not much different than I was – he was a techie who started a company on the top floor of his father-in-law’s machining shop, and mostly he assembled computers and servers for small companies of about 10-20 users. I was his second employee, ever.

So I learned my craft, and every time I *didn’t* screw things up, I felt a little better, and the better I got at troubleshooting (and/or recovering from my own mistakes so fast nobody noticed I didn’t know it the first time), the less and less I felt like I was going to be fired on the spot. That complex goes away after a while. But it sure comes back every time you get moved on to something new.

And then you move up and up in the ladder of technicians, across the line into guru or mad scientist land. You start pulling craziness from the magician’s hat, only it’s not always a cute little bunny you pulled out of that hat, like people might have expected you to. It’s this horrifying multi-legged gibbering *thing* that came from the deep blackness of the net, and it might eat every machine in a 50-foot radius if you don’t handle it properly. And nobody knows how to handle it properly, and everyone who knows enough about such things knows enough to be a little scared.

I guess that’s the thing: In order to be really good at your job, you’ve got to be crazy enough to handle the dangerous stuff, but strong enough to get yourself out of the bad stuff if the fur starts to fly. If you never do the dangerous/scary stuff, what you do won’t show up easily on the radar (your boss’, your partner’s, your co-worker’s, your kid’s, your own). Even if it’s not in a good light all the time, at least you’re being noticed. I’ve screwed things up before, and come clean most of the time. Fail faster, I’ve been saying over the last few months. If you’re not going to make it out of a technical/political brawl you got into, let the others around you know as soon as possible. If they’re really on your side, they’ll slam their back against yours and start fighting too.

Always have a backup piece. A good backup. It helps to have a bigger and scarier friend you can turn to if things get really out of control, too.

What I sometimes forget is that some of the techies I work with don’t like the scary stuff. It scares them. Scares them back to that horrible “I’m gonna get punched/fired” feeling. I want to be brave for them, but that doesn’t work. My only advice for them is “You have to enjoy the sensation of not knowing. This job is too difficult to do if it isn’t fun. Even if it’s kinda demented that you find the difficult stuff *fun.*”

So what the heck am I talking about again?

I’ll sum up, and since I’m not even making sense to *myself* any more, so I’ll do it in StarWars-ese:

1. Be brave. If it was easy, everyone would do it.
2. Keep your lightsaber nearby (and know how to use it, even with the blast shield down).
3. Find yourself an Old Ben Kenobi (from Episode Four, not One).
3a. and a Yoda (from Episode Five, not One).
3b. and the odd Han and Chewie, just in case.
4. Know what the Empire is building, just don’t mess with it until you know how.
5. Stay on target… STAY ON TARGET…
6. The Force might always be with you, but it won’t help if you’ve got it pointed the wrong way.

That’s all from me for tonight, ’cause my brain’s full of stuff that’s even hokier than that was.

Next post will probably be about my new super-reinforced-stitching button-fly jeans. (I kid you not).

and now, since this post is all about hired assassins and royal bodyguards (what? it wasn’t?), here’s a quote from the film GhostDog, in which a great big black man (Forrest Whittaker) becomes the most believable samurai an American film has ever produced:

There is something to be learned from a rainstorm. When meeting with a sudden shower, you try not to get wet and run quickly along the road. But doing such things as passing under the eaves of houses, you still get wet. When you are resolved from the beginning, you will not be perplexed, though you still get the same soaking. This understanding extends to everything.

Posted on December 1st 2006 in Friends, General, Hardware, People, Software

Way funny: headphones that HOLD your iPod (Nano)

2 Comments »

Okay, I would understand if someone made headphones that would hold an iPod Shuffle (especially the new and smaller Shuffle), but these are just plain… stupid.

The writeup is pretty funny on CrunchGear.

I’ll stick to my Logitech Bluetooth headphones, thanks even if they are prone to cracking.

Posted on November 28th 2006 in Software

Vista and Office Final

2 Comments »

Geekin’… sorry for folks who were reading me for the warm fuzzies.

So, I’m writing this from a machine that’s running the *REAL* honest-to-goodness Vista Ultimate. Downloaded from MSDN a mere two days ago. I’d played with some of the Betas and Release Candidates, and for the most part kept thinking “Yeah, it’s sorta pretty, but I don’t really NEED any of this stuff.” It’s mostly true, too, ’cause for the most part, I could make my XP machine look like Vista, and could add a sidebar with or without gadgets/widgets, and since Office 2007 runs just fine under XP (so far, except for the new “x” that appears on the end of document extensions – hope that means everything’s a nice recoverable XML format, ’cause that might make it worthwhile for once again having backward compatibility issues).

I’m still wary of MS after the stunt they pulled with Word 97, which claimed to be able to save in Word 95 format, but didn’t… It would save in “RichText” format, which would lose all *sorts* of formatting and chewy goodness. They didn’t fix it until after people started noticing that the document didn’t appear to be the same when saving as previous verison (like Law Firms like to do). Whooopsh.

Outlook is still using the single-file PST/OST format for storage though, which will keep data recovery folks like myself in business for a while (sorry St. Aardvark, your Very Good Idea wasn’t incorporated into this version of Outlook).

But what does it all mean? What’s the point of a new OS, and a new Office? Is anyone actually going to USE the new feature sets in either of them? As a Desktop Engineer (there’s the brave young souls on Helpdesk doing triage, there’s the slightly slower moving, but more dangerous rocket-launcher-carrying Desktop folks, and then there’s the snipers in the unmarked helicopters like myself and my cubemate), there’s a lot of new stuff to learn and implement to allow the Development Teams do their thing, but not be able to completely hoop themselves or the network. We also (due to Sarbanes Oxley rules) have to have a process in place to make sure they’re not pirating stuff from other gaming companies or music houses.

So this new version? Complicates our lives at work. All of our lives. There’ll be the people who will bang their highly-skilled knuckles on their desks until we roll out the new OS, even though half of the applications and pipelines they rely on (and have, in some cases, built themselves) WON’T WORK on the new system. It’ll create more work for them, in the long run. At least pre service pack 1. The one good thing it does that I’ve seen so far that XP couldn’t do?

See more than 2.75GB of RAM. Now maybe you’re reading this on a machine with 128MB or something, but for developers of HiDef gaming “experiences,” or Accounting folks who’re working on spreadsheets for a multi-billion dollar company, the might RAM rules. Being able to put 6GB of ram in a machine and have the OS actually, y’know, USE it, is pretty cool.

…and yes, I know Macs could do that before the cavemen learned how to bang rocks together.

Posted on November 23rd 2006 in Hardware, Software

CanBlogAwards? Why was I nominated? Oh, ’cause I’m a tech blog (allegedly).

1 Comment »

Canadian Blog Awards

Put that under your mouse and click it.

It was recently pointed out to me that I’d been nominated for the Canadian Blog Awards in the category of Best Sci/Tech Blog. I asked aloud why this was the case, I was reminded of a few of the geekier things I’ve posted about in the last… while or so…

Let’s recap a little (ooh, ooh, a clip show!):

We’ve got programs that makes phones call other phones, taxidermied robotic owls, optical mice and turntables *do* mix, iPods minus the iTunes, awesome bluetooth iPod remote headphones that crack in half three weeks after you get ’em, elderteapots and yell-controlled blenders (both in one post, too!), sites you don’t click on, network drive mapping problems (my MOST popular post ever, sadly), video/audio fragmentation performances, wicked-looking games that never actually get launched ever, me writing about DNS and Active Directory the way some blogs write about food, Google putting yoni in my bible pocket, going on an absolute TEAR regarding LG’s marketing video made in 2001, commenting on Boogaloo Shrimp (from Breakin’ and Breakin2 – Electric Boogaloo) and then having HIM SHOW UP in the comments on my very own blog, hassling the guy who put Princess Leia in the GoldBikini (it’s okay, I work with him), finding secret messages regarding a certain digital audio format in my can of Edwards coffee, our cat smuggling LEDs in her ocular cavities, guys playing a cover of “Total Eclipse of the Heart” while ruining a number of kitchen appliances, fighting with a whole bunch of people online over who gets to spell what with fridge letters, insane robofish, the Rohypnol version of “Who’s On First?”, carrying a midget around as a cryptographic tool, and who could forget “Why a deep focus in my temporal lobe makes me hate Kirk Cameron in specific, and religious zealots in general.”

So, yeah… It’s been a long and weird trip these last three years…

Thanks to whomever nominated me, it’s nice to be reminded why I write any of this stuff down…

Posted on November 16th 2006 in General, Hardware, Music, People, Places, Software
Copyright © 2026 Gecko Bloggle