Setting my favorite computer free

September 24th, 2008 | 9:54 pm cdt

Macintosh SE/30 A/UX

Ever since I can remember I’ve always had a fascination with the form-factor of the old Macintosh SE/30 computers. Perfectly concise in their construction, although they did weigh a ton.

Macintosh SE/30 A/UX

These things were powerhouses in their day. They ran the original programs that started the digital printing and publishing revolution. People published books on these machines with precise typographical accuracy. Looking back at 16mhz and 4MB of RAM, that sounds impossible.

So I started buying these machines up on eBay trying to put together a functioning machine. They have a terrible tendency to continuously restart themselves or start-up with a black and white zebra pattern as they age. Some type of video component going bad.

At one point I had a well working SE/30 with A/UX installed. A/UX is Apple’s original iteration of Unix well before NeXTstep and OS X were even thought of. This version of Unix was true Unix with version 7 of Finder running on top.

Macintosh SE/30 A/UX

This was a lot of fun. SSH and Apache worked and worked well.

Eventually this machine started to age and become unusable.

And now it ends up back on eBay where hopefully someone else will be able to take pieces from it and create another working machine at least long enough to squeeze a little bit more fun out of it.

Macintosh SE/30 Screenshot

Macintosh SE/30 Screenshot

Macintosh SE/30 Screenshot

Macintosh SE/30 Screenshot


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2 months using AT&T & the iPhone

September 23rd, 2008 | 10:52 pm cdt

I wanted to post some basic impressions regarding my first two months of my 24 month iPhone/AT&T contract.

The bottom line being, it’s pretty much not worth the cost and AT&T could give a damn about their customers.

AT&T
Compared to Sprint, AT&T reception is terrible at my house. Even though I’m in ‘Good’ coverage on the map, I’m lucky to get 1 bar. Sometimes I have no service. I have to go outside to make important phone calls.

Sucky AT&T coverage

AT&T prorates your first bill and charges you for the upcoming month of service you haven’t yet used. Two weeks into using my new carrier I received a bill for $143. Charges included two weeks of service, a $36 activation fee (total BS), ~$10 of state taxes and about $18 of federal taxes, plus the fee for the next month of service that I haven’t yet used. I’m on the $70/mo. plan.

I know technically and legally they can do it, but what a way to stick it right into your new customer’s ass right from the start. When I cancel my contract in 22 months, will I get money back for the month I’ve already paid ahead? I’ll be surprised.

So, AT&T gets zero points for service, both product-wise and customer-wise.

Apple
It’s pretty amazing that this device can do what it does, but I won’t go into all that because you can read that elsewhere. With that said, I’ve never had a cellphone that can’t keep time, but this one sure can’t. I don’t know if it’s an Apple issue or an AT&T issue, but this thing is off. And I mean randomly off. 46 minutes, 8 hours and 13 minutes… you name it. Random.

The G1
With the release of Google’s G1 on the T-Mobile network today, I’m disappointed in myself for giving AT&T my money.

The T-Mobile folks got up at the unveiling today and went on and on about opening up this platform. The whole thing is Open Source. That’s really something special.

Apple puts out excellent software and hardware, and there are excellent apps available through their system, but there’s still a good amount of freedom missing in that system.

Another thing that impressed me was when the T-Mobile rep said they would offer existing customers a benefit. (I don’t remember the exact benefit, maybe an earlier release.) But that shows that they’re at least actively thinking of their customers in a way that isn’t just a moneygrab.

I think Android will turn out to be an excellent platform. I’m not big on the HTC phone, but more devices will come.

I hope in 22 months I’ll be able to either move my iPhone over to the T-Mobile network, and if I’m lucky, have the option to put Android on my iPhone as well.


Filed under Wired
1 Comment

Canon LiDIE 600F Scanner Samples

September 18th, 2008 | 11:19 am cdt

I’ve been playing with our new scanner at work and wanted to post a couple sample scans. These scans are at 1200 DPI. The magazine cover scan really gets into the half-tone detail of the print process while the paper and pen scan shows great detail.

The scanner comes with a negative scanner adapter that I hope to test out tomorrow.

Print Magazine Cover

Canon 600F magazine scan detail

Canon 600F paper and pen scan detail

Click on the images above for large details. (Huge PNGs ~6.8MB)


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Nikon D700 Photos

September 3rd, 2008 | 1:20 pm cdt

I recently got to play with a Nikon D700. The light sensitivity with this camera is amazing. You can get well into 3200 ISO without hardly a hint of graininess.

ISO aside, the large screen and menu system is apt. With the megapixel count, the detail this camera captures is amazing. Here are some detail samples below. You can see the full size photos on my Flickr page.

Nikon D700 detail

Nikon D700 detail

Nikon D700 detail

Nikon D700 detail


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Comcast’s Bandwidth Caps are pretty much unavoidable

August 29th, 2008 | 11:09 pm cdt

Let’s say Comcast’s bandwidth cap is equivalent to the property owner of a mall charging you for an hour’s worth of shopping access. You could shop at any store you choose (net-neutrality) but once that time limit is up (250GB data cap), you’re going to have to pay extra for more access.

Are either one of them entitled to charge you that way? Sure. Does it seem right? Not so much. But why not?

The property owner doesn’t have to charge you access to the mall because they’re getting rent from the stores. Unfortunately, Comcast isn’t getting rent from websites. So it seems they should be able to charge users access to those sites however they please.

No one wants bandwidth caps, but there doesn’t seem to be a compelling reason why Comcast can’t do it, or shouldn’t do it. Comcast owns the road and can certainly set up as many toll booths as they please.

And that saddens me.


Filed under Wired
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All Burned and Melted

August 28th, 2008 | 8:57 am cdt

Melted MacBook Pro Power Supply

The picture pretty much explains it all. Unfortunately, I didn’t see it happen, so I don’t know how close it was to burning the place down. I noticed my battery indicator said “Not Charging,” looked down and promptly unplugged the thing.


Filed under General
2 Comments

Photo Contest

August 19th, 2008 | 11:29 am cdt

We’re putting on a photo contest at TapeOnline that I want to encourage everyone to enter! The photos with the most votes can win a Wii, among other prizes. Vote tallies are low at the moment, so now would be the time to enter!

TapeOnline Photo Contest


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Projects

Candor Gallery
Candor Gallery
Candor Gallery is an OS X Widget and Google Gadget that displays user submitted art.
Tennessee Traffic Cams
Tennessee Traffic Cams
Tennessee Traffic Cams is a widget that displays traffic camera feeds from across the state of Tennessee.
PenceBook
PenceBook
PenceBook is a web based application for keeping your expenses and mileage logs organized.
Language Design Group
Language Design Group
Language Design Group is a translation agency for all your foreign language needs.
Portfolio
Portfolio
My personal portfolio
Cheese Cam
Cheese Cam
Cheese Cam is really quite pointless.
Older Projects
Crissy's Roommate
PenceBook
Crissy's Roommate was a daily cartoon strip produced for the Daily Beacon from 200-2002.
Hess Hall Webcam
Hess Hall Webcam
The Hess Hall Webcam captured the daily activities of Hess Hall.
Etc.
Browser Dream

The Ubuntu Counter Project - user number # 783