Author Archive

Notes on Snow Leopard

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

I’ve been reading about Snow Leopard the last few days and everything seems quite similar to Leopard, very little has changed that you can see.  What follows are the few things I have noticed so far.

  1. File sizes, hard drive sizes, SD Card sizes…  Everything other than RAM itself is now defined in base 10 instead of base 2.  So where before 1 Kilobyte was 1,024 bytes, in Snow Leopard 1 Kilobyte is 1,000 bytes.  And this continues up the chain:

    • 1MB is 1,000,000 bytes (0.95MiB) instead of 1,048,576
    • 1GB is 1,000,000,000 bytes (0.93GiB) instead of 1,073,741,824
    • 1TB is 1,000,000,000,000 bytes (0.91TiB) instead of 1,099,511,627,776

    All of which means that now, when a hard drive says it’s “250GB”, it actually appears that way in the Finder and in Disk Utility, where before it used to be reported as ~232GB.

    It’s strange and unusual but I’ll get used to it.  The main thing to remember is that files other people give you will probably be “bigger” than they say, and files you give other people will probably be “smaller” than you say.

  2. Movie file icons now have a Play button in the middle (if you have “Show icon preview” ticked in the Finder’s “View Options”). You can watch things straight in the icon itself, though the glossy swoosh might distract you. Said icons can now be scaled up to 512x512px.

  3. When you rearrange icons using the “Arrange By” menu, they move into place with a smooth animation rather than instantly.

  4. When you rearrange a window’s icons, rather than the “Arrange By” option staying as it was, it now changes to “None” and the window no longer uses your default settings if it did before.

  5. The new Quicktime Player has far fewer options than version 7.  There are no “A/V Controls” anymore, so the image and sound can’t be adjusted, nor is there the “Movie Properties” window, which allowed for individual track modification.

    The controls appear in front of the video you want to watch, rather than below it, get in the way a lot and don’t fade away fast enough.

    The Chapters implementation is even more distracting; where before you could choose a chapter from a pull-down menu, you now have to enter a special mode, which pauses the video.

    Version 7 is included as an optional install on the Snow Leopard disc, is installed by default if you have QuickTime Pro already installed in Leopard, else you have to tick the box yourself.

And that’s about it.  My MacBook is a 32-bit machine, so I won’t get any 64-bit related speed-ups, and my graphics card is too weak for OpenCL or H.264 hardware acceleration.  It looks and feels just like Leopard, apart from the items mentioned above.

This Website’s Design

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

I’ve been slowly working away at the current content, tweaking it how I like, planning ways I want the site to work.

I’m not going to have a month-based archive as it appears now, am simply going to have the ten most recent entries appearing at the top of the front page and then the full archive listed below that, title and date only, which will be links to the full text.

There will be no “page” structure as such (/page/2, /page/3 etc.), no explicit “archive”, just one front page, the “about” page, and then the search results, which will list the title, date and first paragraph.

Comments were enabled by default but I don’t want other people writing on my website, so I removed the ability to add new ones.  I may also remove the current ones but need to work out how to merge any important information with the entries themselves.

And then finally, after all that, then I’ll look at the font face, colours and layout I want to use.

The visual theme will come last.

UPDATE, 21st February 2010: I would also replace the few videos I currently have hosted on YouTube with self-hosted SublimeVideo content.  And the possibility of a maximum-width optimised for a certain 768x1024px resolution, for obvious reasons

27th Birthday Pie

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

I had a quiet birthday this year;  Kitty came over bearing pie, we munched it up with the aid of my flatmate and then there was Carcassonne.  Here are some photos:

27th Birthday Pie Before

27th Birthday Pie Crust

27th Birthday Pie Spread

It was one delicious pie.

Mario Kart 999

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Similar to how I did a while ago, I recently played the DS version of Mario Kart rather a lot in order to find out a very important thing; can the score go higher than 999?

Here is what things looked like after 99 races:

Mario Kart 990

And after the 100th:

Mario Kart 999

The numbers ticked up but then capped, no possibility of ever reaching 1000.  Oh well.

Cyclic

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Courtesy of The Brothers Brick.

Heat

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

When I was younger I hated the summer; it was too hot, I’d sweat profusely and feel uncomfortable the whole entire time.

This summer right now, I’ve been walking an hour a day for the last eight months, half an hour to work and half an hour back. And that’s maybe not much, there could be some more, but I’m now enjoying the heat.

I bake and sweat, feel my brain sizzling, but in the nicest possible way.

For the first time in years I’m no longer pasty; the sun stretches me tight.

Comic Book Library

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

The comic books are still here.

Doctor Horrible Lyrics

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

Here are the lyrics, as best as I can work them out, for the final song in Act I of Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog:

~

P: Thank you Hammer Man, I don’t think I can
P: Explain how important it was that you stopped the van
D: CRUNCH
P: I would be splattered, I’d be crushed under debris
D: CRUNCH
P: Thank you sir for saving me

H: Don’t worry about it, a man’s gotta do what a

H: Man’s gotta do
P: You came from above

D: Are you kidding?
H: (It) seems destiny

H: Holds for me saving you
D: What heist were you watching?
P: I wonder what you’re captain of

D: Stop looking at her like that
H: When you’re the best

H: You can’t rest, what’s the use?
D: Did you notice that he threw you in the garbage?
P: My heart is beating like a drum

H: There’s ass needs kicking, some ticking bomb to defuse
D: I stopped the van

D: The remote control was in my hand
P: (I) must be in shock

H: So the doom that’s looming
P: Assuming I’m not

H: Is you loving me to death
P: Loving you to death

D: Whatever…

H: So please give me a sec to catch my breath
P: So please give me a sec to catch my breath

D: Balls

~

With thanks to Its_Only_Cody, ftloosenfanzfree and kindakrazy on the IMDb message board.

PS – Go watch this thing, it is pretty good.

PPS – A better source of lyrics for future acts will probably be this thread at whedonesque.org.

Xbox 360 Forbidden Characters , + ? /

Saturday, June 28th, 2008

For the last year or so I’ve been using Connect360 to stream video from my MacBook, whenever I wanted to watch it on the big screen via either Mike or Kitty’s Xbox 360s.

However, I keep all my films and TV shows on a 500GB external hard drive, that has both FireWire and USB 2.0 ports:

465.8GB...

It seemed silly to always have to plug that into my MacBook, and then plug my MacBook into the mains and so on… Why not just plug the hard drive directly into the Xbox 360?

Luckily, though I originally formatted it with a GUID Partition Table (all the better for Intel Macs, only not really…), a year or so ago I copied all its contents elsewhere and reformatted it with an Apple Partition Map. My reasoning being that if I ever wanted to boot my old iBook, GUID would not be my friend.

However, surely a HFS+ formatted drive would not work with an Xbox 360, I thought to myself, only FAT32 or NTFS. Nay! FAT32, sure, but instead of NTFS, Microsoft decided to support HFS+ instead. All part of that happy iPod halo effect; when I went to a presentation in 2005, Jonathan Hayes was excited to show how the Xbox 360 could read the contents of an iPod plugged into one of its USB ports and allow you to listen to the music.

Because I used my iPod shuffle to test it, for some reason I had in the back of my mind that it would be fine with FAT32 but not HFS+… But it would have been pretty odd to go to the effort of writing the software to crawl an iPod’s contents and then limit that to only iPods for Windows…

So, anyway, the Xbox 360 can read HFS+ drives (so long as they have an Apple Partition Map, not GUID) and it can even play back pretty much any video files you choose to throw at it (the only ones that did not appear were 10 really old MPGs, and the few ASF, RealMedia and MKV files I have too).

There was just one problem; a whole bunch of videos were not showing up in the Xbox 360′s interface and I couldn’t work out why. Some were ones I had just added to the drive, so maybe there was a cache that wasn’t being updated? But wait, a whole bunch of old videos that I knew were on there weren’t showing up either…

In the end, I had a brain wave; the videos that weren’t showing up were the ones I had named with “, The” at the end… For example, in all my anally retentive glory, I name video files like so:

Sarah Silverman Program, The – 106 – Batteries

That they all might appear in alphabetical order, in both the Finder and when streamed to the Xbox 360 in the past. And all such files would obviously be in a folder named “Sarah Silverman Program, The”…

So, does the Xbox 360 just want to punish me for my foolish ways? Nope, it just can’t handle any of the following four characters in the name of a file or folder:

,

+

?

/

Using any of those will simply make the file or folder invisible to the Xbox 360, and that’s the end of it. I had used commas in the aforementioned “, The” technique, but plusses, question marks and forward slashes? I guess I like my episode titles to be grammatically correct…

Anyway, so, right, I removed the +s, ?s and /s from the filenames but how would I get around the “, The” issue? Happily the Xbox 360 is totally fine with parentheses, and so I simply renamed things like so:

Sarah Silverman Program (The) – 106 – Batteries

And all is well. Yay.

One final comment; this is one of the most niche, specialist situations, ever, I realise. Most people’s drives are probably FAT32, most people probably don’t rename their video files in such a way as to include any of the above characters and most people probably aren’t even plugging hard drives directly into Xbox 360s, are likely streaming instead. Anyway.

Clock Radio

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Back when I was tiny, I had an alarm clock next to my bed that had glowing red numbers and a radio built in too. Then, for many years, I did not.

Now it kind of almost returns!

Clock Radio Front

Its official name is “Net LED clock radio” and it was bought from Habitat at half price just after Christmas. The main body is white plastic with a faceplate in brushed aluminium. The numbers and indicator lights are a very bright blue and the back has all the usual buttons.

Clock Radio Back

Holding Alarm and Sleep together results in the seconds display appearing, so I get to relive those exciting moments of 3 minutes and 33 seconds becoming 3:33am and so somehow sticking forever… Or at least 26 more seconds anyway. 2 minutes, 22 seconds into 2:22am is even better… 37 seconds! Not to mention the almost-as-satisfying, yet where-did-the-left-most-digit-come from? 22:22 and 11:11.

That the time is displayed in 24 hours was unexpected however; my earlier one had an AM/PM indicator in the same region as the Alarm LED… 24 hours is less ambiguous I suppose.

Clock Radio Close Up

As for the materials, they are very similar to the current Apple Keyboard and continue the mostly inadvertent trend of mine to buy electronic devices in white shells; iBook, eMac & MacBook, Nintendo GameCube & DS, Eee PC… With the current trend towards aluminium however, I suppose this will end soon; my monitor, USB hub and 500GB external hard drive are all silver-painted-plastic.

Modifications that would make the Net better would be a tighter door on the battery compartment as sometimes the four AA batteries pop out due to the slightest jostling. A switch to dim the LEDs would be appreciated as at night my entire bedroom glows blue. This doesn’t bother me as I don’t notice it with my eyes closed, but it does mean Kitty will not allow it in the bedroom when I move back in with her. Finally, though the batteries maintain the time and even allow the radio to operate when the power adaptor is not plugged in, I’d prefer it if they also powered the LED clock itself.

Thinking forward, when the FM and AM radio signals are finally switched off, I plan on either opening it up and fitting an MP3 player of some kind, or possibly simply using a USB FM transmitter to stream content from a computer. Also, I’d like to change the blue LEDs for white ones, or at the very least red ones, as blue is for some reason much harder to see than those two.

And that’s that.

[NOTE - I forgot to say originally, but I would not have this clock if Elton had not been super-powerful, going to several branches of Habitat and calling all around on my behalf until he eventually managed to find one of the few remaining in stock. In return, I totally helped him proof-read his review of Indiana Jones 4. Hoo-hah.]