Archive for the 'Computers & Technology' Category

Living with PulseAudio via PulseAudio Device Chooser

« 6 January 2010 | 10:30 | Computers & Technology, Hardware, Linux, Open Source, Software, Usability | No Comments »

Telecommuting is a pretty sweet gig with a good number of benefits. To name a few, while I’m working I can:

Toss some laundry in the machine
Start my lunch and work while it cooks
Sign for packages when they are delivered

And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. However, to make telecommuting possible, there are some technologies [...]



Ubuntu 64-bit, Firefox and Flash

« 23 April 2009 | 16:17 | Computers & Technology, Linux, Software | No Comments »

OK, so you have this sweet new computer (much like myself) running 64-bit Ubuntu like a champ. Except for one thing; Flash elements on webpages in keep flaking out. That is, from time to time, instead of seeing the Flash content, you see a grey box that doesn’t do anything. It just sits there, mocking [...]



How NOT to Sell MP3s

« 16 March 2009 | 1:43 | Computers & Technology, Linux, Software, Usability | 4 Comments »

I recently came across the band 3 on last.fm and absolutely love them. I managed to find all of their albums via torrents, but I thought I would actually buy their stuff since they aren’t on an RIAA label. Their website didn’t help at all and CDBaby didn’t have any of their stuff. I was [...]



My Sweet New Laptop

« 11 March 2009 | 20:41 | Computers & Technology, Hardware, Linux, Open Source | No Comments »

I’ve been considering picking up a new laptop for a while now. My old laptop, an ageing Dell Inspiron 8500, had treated me well for a few years, but I really wanted to change to a more portable machine. The Dell weighed in at around 8 lbs., had a battery that lasted about half an [...]



Remote Backups with Amazon’s S3

« 9 February 2009 | 20:40 | Computers & Technology, Linux, Open Source, Software | 2 Comments »

Recently, my SATA controller on my RAID box failed, silently corrupting my entire array. Fun stuff, I assure you. Luckily, I had backed up the array about a month before the failure and was keeping a nightly rsync running. I had a few things that weren’t included in the rsync backup, but I didn’t really [...]



Multiple Drive Failures in RAID-5

« 29 January 2009 | 13:14 | Computers & Technology, Hardware, Linux | No Comments »

I have a server set up with a RAID-5 array that I use to back up pretty much all of the data I have. Sure I have a bunch of things burned to DVD, but at only 4.3GB a pop, that can very quickly add up to a number of DVDs, and in fact already [...]



Building a Better CAPTCHA

« 3 January 2009 | 0:46 | Computers & Technology, Software, Usability, Web Development | No Comments »

CAPTCHAs can be good for stopping SPAM, but the last thing most of them are are usable. Don’t take my word for it, it’s a fact. One of the coolest ideas I ever saw was a HotOrNot mashup where you had to pick the three best looking ladies to prove you are a human. It [...]



Media Playback in Ubuntu

« 23 August 2008 | 13:32 | Computers & Technology, Linux, Open Source, Software | No Comments »

So, I had some Real Media (rm) videos that I wanted to view in Linux. But, like so many other sane people out there, I didn’t want anything to do with the official Real Player for Linux. I’ve never been a fan of Real and I’ve always thought their software was a bloated mess. Plus, [...]



A History of Coding and Computers

« 2 August 2008 | 16:49 | Computers & Technology, Software, Web Development | No Comments »

Apparently one of the people Aaron works with called him out on his programming and computer use history and he posted his response on his blog. In that blog, he took the liberty of calling out a few of his friends, myself included. I put off responding because my computer crapped out on me again. [...]



Skirting ISP Torrent Filtering Reset Requests

« 7 June 2008 | 9:24 | Computers & Technology, Linux, Software | No Comments »

Many ISPs these days employ traffic shaping to make their networks run smoother. In the most basic sense, they give priority to more critical traffic, like VoIP for instance, and slow down less important traffic, like HTTP and Torrents. Lately, many ISPs have been doing their best to slap down any peer-to-peer (p2p) traffic, especially [...]