Notebooks vs. desktops: What are we using at work and play?

Portable computing is currently all the rage and now notebooks are beginning to outsell desktops. On Saturday, I was reminded why. I had to move the Server computer just a few feet, but the wiring was unbelievable, just unbelievable.

Wiring: now where’s the spaghetti sauce?

In school I had to sort out the schools pcs properly, and the amount of wiring that I had to plug, unplug, untangle, retangle… was just incredible. Wires for power sockets (still not enough), wires for printer power units, wires for monitors, wires for boxes, telephone wires, USB wires… I hid everything down the back of a table so that I could get the job done. It is not tidy…

spark #2

So when I was asked what kinds of rig I use when it comes to PCs… I jumped at the chance.

Work vs. Home

At work, we run five pcs with differing configurations and requirements. The first is mine which is a Pentium IV Celeron running at 2.4GHZ with 768MB of Ram, two divd/cd drives, and firewire installed. It’s not a particularly powerful rig and I noticed with XP sp2 installed, there are times when it just chokes… but other than it’s been pretty stable. I ran Windows 98SE on it for a LONG time because I couldn’t be bothered to upgrade… but once I had the option to upgrade a bunch of other stuff on the PC, I jumped. The PC at home is very similar except a slightly bigger RAM (1GB) and a brand new Graphics Card (Invidia GS7600) for a little extra power. Hard Disks have been replaced on both units at least once for safety’s sake.

Chinese and Mobile?

There’s also a notebook that runs XP sp2 in Chinese from IBM, I think it’s 1.5MHz mobile platform. But with having only 256MB, it is seriously underpowered running Chinese XP. Chinese OSES usually need a lot extra RAM to benefit the most. I typically estimate DOUBLE! Other languages with difficult character sets are similar, I expect.

Secondhand or new?

There are two second hand machines at work as well with specs that approximate a PC about six years old including 1.7~2.0Ghz Pentium IV chips and similar hardware. One runs the printers and fax now, the other runs the photocopier. Eventually I will replace at least one of them. Purchasing a second hand system was quite beneficial as we needed a machine at that time, but we didn’t have the budget… it was the middle of our bad year. Though I generally don’t recommend buying second hand machines, it worked for me several times. They’re fine for the light tasks they need to perform.

The last machine was a surprise investment as we urgently needed a new machine… one of the oldest computers just started flaking out too often. Likely it was just the OS needing renewed but we couldn’t be bothered reinvesting extra time and money in a machine that was already 8 years old. When it came I was quite surprised how XP can be so snappy on a new machine… and the box was L I G H T…! Very much lighter than I had expected. Unfortunately I can’t remember the exact configuration at all! It wasn’t an expensive machine: XP SP2 in English, 3.0Ghz Intel Chip with 1GB, I think.

Software

About two years ago, we ran a very mixed batch of PCs with three systems running 98SE, one running XP, three running English and one running Chinese Windows. Eventually I got so fed up of the mess of systems, I started insisting on English versions of the software so I could maintain the rigs better. We’ve now switched 80% English on versions of XP SP1 and SP2. The Chinese Windows version runs SP2.

But standardizing went a few steps further: we had three versions of Office, one in English, two in Chinese; one Office 97, one Office 2000 and one Office 2003… so you can see it was quite a mess, really. We’ve done away with all versions of Microsoft Office, and now we are running only OpenOffice 2.3 in English on ALL stations. Other standard software has been installed: Firefox 2.0.13, Thunderbird 2.0.0, and a few more apps. There are a couple of tools we can’t find equivalents for in Ooo, but for the most part it works, it’s priced effectively, and licensing is no longer a REAL pain in the proverbial. At home, and on the CRUZER, I also run these three APPS most of the time.

Add-ons

Two USB phones for Skype, five media readers, a SIM card reader for banking, Altec Lansing and CREATIVE LABS speakers, V-Gear Cam, LaserPrinter HP1020 and HP 6300 Series Office Three-in-One with color printing, several cameras, one video-cam, two USB-based MP3 players (no iTunes here!), headphones, wireless networks at home and school, numerous flashcards, and that CRUZER to port data easily between home and office. Oh, and miles of wiring.

Preferences are for notebooks? Sometimes…

Notebook computers coupled with a flash drive to port applications and data back and forth really do possess a lot of advantages over desktops:

  • 1. you only need wires for the power unit and 1 socket, cutting socket use by at least 1/3rd.
  • 2. most notebooks are wireless anyway so that negates a network cable or two!
  • 3. running two notebooks off one power extension is very viable, but running one desktop off one extension is sometimes difficult.
  • 4. notebooks have batteries making powercuts less of a problem AND you don’t have to buy a powersurge protector.
  • 5. the amount of desk space you can save is incredible… no large keyboards, monitors, boxes, speakers… all one nice little bundle.

And when you have to use a desktop or carry data, a simple flash drive means you don’t need to carry that portable as much anyway making it less likely to be dropped or stolen!

Problems: Repairs

The biggest issue we’ve faced with our notebook is the sheer inconvenience of getting it repaired, though being an IBM it didn’t breakdown often. But if it does, it HAS to be sent back to the factory. The last time cost a pretty penny: NT$4000 to replace a keyboard. It included transportation and cleaning but that was scary. The desktops can be hauled (by me) across the street, and can be fixed by my favorite repair store quite quickly, especially if it’s a basic item like a CD drive or whatnot. Typically they turnaround my PC in 48 hours. And they are considerably cheaper.

What do you prefer: notebooks or desktops? New or secondhand? Let us know.

April Fools: Technorati, Safari, SRG, and Analytics – all borked

t’s Tuesday, and I’m writing this after a rainy and slightly boring weekend in Taipei. Worse, with the continual seesaws of the temperature here, I’m thinking that I’ve got a cold coming on, so I’m going to take some medicine and go off to bed a little early.

In Recent Posts

In recent posts, Sunday was a little quiet on the blog as I spent the rainy day upgrading to WordPress 2.5 which I’m using now for the first time , and enjoying it. On Saturday we went to the local Carrefour store in Tamsui for some shopping: Are retailers driving you ‘Potty’? and discovered that the store isn’t pricing items properly. For people suffering from less cash these days, I wrote about how a game I played helped educate me a great deal –Cash Low? Play CashFlow 101and learn why. Then I looked at how people in Taiwan used to borrow and lend money: a fascinating insight into how money circulates in societies without formal access to banking. The story is entitled: What’s a ‘hui’? How you can borrow and lend money in China, it also cites some discussions that others have had about ‘huis’. And in Tuesday’s News, I speculated about adopting WordPress 2.5 but now I find that I’m using it and loving it.

Crash Your Safari Browser!

Just discovered how easy it is to crash Safari 3.1, the latest browser from Apple. Mmm. Try this yourself.

Load up the browser. Wait until the homepage loads. Enter the letters in the following sequence: g m a i l (dot) g o o g l e (dot) c o m. Hit enter and …

flaky apple software

And I thought only Microsoft could manage that! I repeated this three times, and it worked each time! Try it! I’m not the first person to discover this, sadly. Enjoy.

On the theme of borked things, I can add at least four more today.

Analytics: 0 visitors!

borked analytics

According to this report in Analytics, I had 0 visitors on this day but somehow they recorded 75 visits. Wonder how that can be. I had noticed this a few days ago, and I have no idea what’s going on.

Technorati: Flaky again

Technorati is better known for its flakiness than either of the other two on today’s list. It completely missed two of my major posts the past five days, and just left me with two quotations… Geez. Are retailers driving you ‘Potty’? and Cash Low? Play CashFlow 101and learn why.

flaky technorati

SRG Archives

I also wanted to update the options in my theme for this plugin. But that is borked too! Look. When you check the options you can hit the ‘update’ button thus:

srg archives bug

But all I get after upgrading to WP2.5 is a blank screen with these words…

r u sure

Well, first, duh! If I wasn’t sure, I wouldn’t do it now would I? It’s hardly a big change to warrant such a request. And second… where is the answer box? Double-duh!

John Chow causes Browser Crashes

Last, you can visit John Chow’s recent post and find out why you have to crash out of your browser in his April Fool’s Day Prank. Unfortunately, he pissed off quite a number of people who lost their work because they clicked on through. Mmm. Is John’s blog finally going off the rails? Well, judge for yourself.

april fool

Be warned! If you are working on anything important before you visit the site in his URL bar, you MUST close the work and save it. Or vice versa. Guaranteed you will have to crash out of your browser to regain control. This could be a spiteful way to get back at someone! 👿

I’m sure that I can spend another hundred or thousand hours looking for bugs, and finding them. But these really are ones that have been bothering me the last few days! Oh, I didn’t mention ‘hosting’, did I? … Mmm.

Does technology make our life easier or not? Sometimes I wonder. What do you think?

When thing’s don’t work… shake things up!

On Thursday and on Friday, I expressed a lot of frustration at an impasse I reached in my bloggings. When caught between a rock and a hard place, it engendered in me the notion that InvestorBlogger dot com has to change. The time is coming.

I’ve been quite frustrated with a number of the service providers I use to support InvestorBlogger dot com currently. But when the shit really hits the fan, there is only one solution.

It’s time to shake things up…

Payperpost: I’d been with Payperpost since the early days in 2006, and started blogging with them regularly. But each iteration of their service progressively made it harder and harder for me to earn ANY money at all. There was segregation, then there were PR requirements, then there was regionalization, then RR, then Technorati, then Alexa… Each and every time I rose to the challenge by blogging a little bit harder, it got a little bit harder just to meet their requirements. So on Thursday, I quit Payperpost by simply breaking their TOS: I used a simple way – I started using nofollows on all my posts. I don’t know that it will be the right decision, but I think it’s time to move on, at least for me.

Dreamhost: I’ve been with Dreamhost since my first domain registration in 2004. With InvestorBlogger it’s already over 3 years. But in the past 12 months, I’ve experienced outages for this blog at the MOST inconvenient times. Today, my blog carnival was FEATURED on Blog Carnival TODAY! I don’t know if I’ll get the chance again any time soon. Coincidentally, I managed to buy an EntreCard slot on John Cow’s website. Both of these sites are top websites with tons of daily visitors, and with prominent placement, I was sure to attract a lot of visitors.

Clipboard01

But about 10 hours ago, I logged on to the message boards to find this UGLY message:

Due to continued space and power constraints in our primary data center, we will be moving all central DreamHost functions as well as the “spunky” cluster to one of our newer data centers. This move will begin Friday, March 21st, at 9PM PDT, and is expected to last up to 12 hours, until Saturday, March 22nd, 9AM PDT.

I was not advised of this message prior to the time, so I had no option to alter the contact. Who knows how many visitors tried to click through to a dead link? After the billing screwup in January where I received threatening notes that my websites would be shut down, and previous outages that were unexplained and interrupted traffic for hours, I’m at the end of my tether with Dreamhost, too, esp. as the websites are still down, and it’s been over 11 hours. This is a huge opportunity squandered.

So it’s time to change. In my heart, I can no longer recommend Dreamhost for anything but the smallest and most insignificant websites of all. It’s great for hobbyists, but if you are at all serious about hosting, you cannot rely on their service even with the VPS plans, and quite frankly, the unmetered everything is not worth the hassle when you can’t use it.

I’m looking at four different hosts: BlueHost, MediaTemple, BlueFur, and ASO, though I will keep Dreamhost for other things.

InvestorBlogger

Well, it’s time: here’s my plan for the blog.

Sub-domains

I’m going to be splitting up the blog into four (or five) sub-blogs each hosted on a relevant subdomain. Initially, I will set up two sub-blogs (for blogging, making money), then add the others. Initially all posts will remain at the current locations; but eventually, I will have to go through all of the posts, one-by-one and hive them off into their separate domains.

Traffic

InvestorBlogger’s main domain will slowly morph into a reblog of the subdomains. This will help to sharpen the focus on each of the themes, while retaining the overall feel of the blog. It should also help to keep the audience while bringing in more focused traffic on each of the subdomains. It may also help solve the PR issues, the nofollow issues by allowing different subblogs to co-exist with different requirements.

Writing

This is going to be the real challenge. My writing started off much like other bloggers, short and sweet posts, with not much real meat to the content. Occasionally, though, I would pump out different stuff. Now, though, it’s getting much more difficult to write just short posts. I am finding that I want to write more and in much more depth, about each of the issues.

Money

I’ve really appreciated having advertisers and hosters with me, though I may wish to reconsider some of my advertising methods such as paid posts, large banners, etc. I wonder if they are really that effective or if in fact they detract from the blog itself. I’ll be looking at changing the advertising as traffic builds.

Plans are set: things are moving

I’m now researching alternate hosts, and would appreciate some guidance from my trusted readers! Tell me what hosting you used, how reliable is it, etc? I’d love to hear.