Observations Along the Road

Roadkill Along the Information Superhighway

I’ll Take Techology for the Loss, Alex

Written By: cahwyguy - Tue Feb 12, 2013 @ 11:39 am PDT

userpic=verizonWhile eating my lunch, I received an Email from URJ about the new issue of Reform Judaism magazine. An electronic issue, where they note that “(1) the magazine is now available as a digital edition for computer, iPad, and smartphones, and (2) all RJ magazine stories are indexed by topic at reformjudaismmag.org. For example, if you click on Strengthening Synagogues, you’ll see subject offerings from “Finding Funding & Cost Savings” to “Management” to “Membership” to “Worship.” From there you can easily access all the articles we’ve published on those subjects 24/7.”

I thought about this as I munched my salad. I decided it was time to climb on my lunch-box and say something.

I’ve written before how I don’t believe the Internet is a wholly positive force. I’ve opined that the Internet has magnified the voices of the crazies and the fringes — one can see this by reading the comments on almost any news article on the web. This magnification has served to increase the hyper-partisanship in politics and society, with people essentially talking to (as Rush Limbaugh would put it) “dittoheads”, and only reading the online news sources slanted the way they think. This is not a good thing.

I’ve also written before about how I think the Internet has hurt communal institutions. More and more organizations are “saving money” by moving from printed newsletters and fliers to email blasts. Now email is great and good, but shouldn’t be the primary mechanism. Email is ephemeral — I doubt anyone prints an emailed organizational newsletter and puts it on their coffee table, or prints an emailed flier to put on the refrigerator. We read it… and promptly forget about it. As any organization, and they will bemoan the fact that attendance at their events has gone done. They blame it on the apathy of society, but I’d love to see if there is a correlation between the drop in attendance/participation and a move to emailed announcements. If you want participation, not only do you email, but you send out paper flyers and you have a call-tree to personally invite people to your activities.

So that brings me to Reform Judaism Magazine. People seem to love online papers and magazines (and trust me, I do, as evidenced by how many papers I skim these days, and how few magazines I read). However, that is an elitist notion. Yes, you, the person reading this, are in an elite class. We forget that much of the world doesn’t have access to the Internet, or the high speed Internet. Some have access, but are unable to use it due to disability or age. By moving to digital sources only, we are disenfranchising such people from participation. So not only are we producing ephemeral product, we’re cutting off a chunk of society from reading it.

I’ll admit I’m a compusaur. I’ve worked on IBM’s big metal. I was on the Arpanet in the late 1970s (on SF-LOVERS and at MIT-AI). The Internet is an extension of who I am. Yet I’ll keep screaming — it is not all for the good.

And now I’ll climb off my lunch-box (before the cheap plastic collapses — I think I ate too much), and go back to work…

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Toshiba A665 Touch Bar/Media Control Bar Problems

Written By: cahwyguy - Fri Jan 04, 2013 @ 5:22 pm PDT

userpic=toshibaBack in early 2011, I wrote about problems I was having with my Toshiba A665-S8086 laptop. Specifically, I was having a problem where the touch bar would start randomly lighting, volume would go up and down, etc. I ended up back then solving the problem by having the unit repaired, which was supposedly a motherboard replacement.

Last night, it did it again. This time, I believe the problem was related to static. Doing some research between tasks, I’ve identified a number of solutions from the Toshiba support forums that make it clear this isn’t a motherboard problem — it is some form of confusion. So I decided to post this for my reference in case it happens again.

Solution #1: Full Reset (Ref: 139486)

With the battery and AC adapter removed, close the Power switch for half-a-minute.

Re-attach those, press the Power button to turn the computer on, and then immediately press the F2 key while the Toshiba logo is displayed. Press F9 to restore the BIOS default settings, press F10, and then select Yes (Exit Saving Changes). The computer will restart. (Additional references: 246082, 287373, 129321)

Solution #2: Reinstall TVAP (Ref: 326054)

Uninstall your TVAP (Toshiba Value Added Package) using Control Panel, Programs and Features. Restart computer. Download and reinstall TVAP found HERE.  Restart computer. (Additional references: 83067)

Solution #3: Update BIOS (Ref: Fixya)

The Toshiba Service Station shows two updates available, 2.20 and 2.30. v2.30 is optional; it supposedly fixes a problem where the system will auto wake when RTC wake is disabled. v2.20 is a recommended update that supposedly addresses the problem where the 12-cell battery won’t charge after an over-discharge.  Neither appear to address the touch bar. The installation instructions are:

  1. Save all work in progress and close open applications.
  2. Click Download, then click Install from the Toshiba Service Station.
  3. Click Yes to confirm restarting after the installation completes.
  4. Click Yes/Continue if a User Account Control Window is displayed.
  5. After the update completes, the computer will automatically restart..
  6. While the “Toshiba” LOGO is displayed, press the F2 function key to start BIOS Setup.
  7. Check the version of BIOS and press the F9 function key then Enter to load setup defaults.
  8. Press the F10 function key then Enter to save settings and exit. The computer will automatically reboot.

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Revisiting Backup Software

Written By: cahwyguy - Sun Jul 22, 2012 @ 3:51 pm PDT

If you recall, a while ago I asked a bunch of questions regarding Windows Backup Software. Since then, Windows Backup has stopped working (most likely, a disk cluster size problem — it doesn’t like 3TB drives), and I’ve gotten annoyed at the limitations of Paragon Free Backup and Recovery 2010. Right now, I”m seriously thinking about the Easeus To-Do Backup Workstation product. I’ve read through the manual, and it looks quite reasonable.  But, of course, finding good opinions is hard. I’ve found a few reviews (here, here, here, but there are some bad ones here). So — my question to you, dear reader, is…. Does anyone out there in Internet-lant have experiences with the Easeus backup products? If so, would you recommend them?

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Finding a New HTML Editor

Written By: cahwyguy - Sat Jan 21, 2012 @ 5:33 am PDT

For many many many years now, I’ve maintained my websites using SoftQuad’s HoTMetaL Pro 6. This was a very good and very powerful HTML editor that, alas, has been abandoned over the years (SoftQuad was sold to Corel, who sold the product to BlastRadius, who abandoned HoTMetaL in favor of XMetaL). What did I like about HoTMetaL Pro? A number of different things:

  • A tags-on view that was a mix between WYSIWYG and being able to edit tags. In a sense, it was like “Reveal Codes” in WordPerfect, where you could edit the content of tag.
  • Easy to use editing of tables in existing HTML files.
  • It was easy to highlight text and surround it with a tag.
  • It was easy to select all text surrounded by a tag.
  • It was easy to insert and manipulate comments.
  • It was easy to validate links and manage a website.

CSS support was rudimentary, but this was a 1990s era tool. Alas, it is no longer supported, and I’d like to have something more stable on Windows 7… as well as something that knows more modern HTML techniques and such. Thus, I’ve been on the hunt for a new HTML editor. So far, I’m not pleased with what I’ve seen. In general, I’m not focused on free software, although Dreamweaver CS5, at $399, is out of my price range.

So what have I looked at?

(more…)

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HTML Editors

Written By: cahwyguy - Thu Jan 19, 2012 @ 7:44 am PDT

A quick morning question for the Internet Brain Trust: What HTML editors do you recommend for Windows? I’m currently using Softquad HotMetal Pro, which is essentially an abandoned and dead product. I’d like to find a replacement that gives me the ability to have similar views (editing raw HTML, a combo tags/WYSIWYG mode, and a WYSIWYG mode) but understands modern concepts a lot better. I took a look at the CoffeeCup HTML editor, but although it claims to be WYSIWYG, I couldn’t find an editing mode. So while I go do some research on my own, I’m also open to any suggestions you may have…

Music: McKinney’s Cotton Pickers (McKinney’s Cotton Pickers): Whereever There’s a Will, Baby

 

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Technology_Death_Trifecta++ == 3

Written By: cahwyguy - Thu Oct 13, 2011 @ 5:06 am PDT

Just learned that Dennis Ritchie, one of the co-creators of both Unix and C, has died. Arguably, this is someone who had more influence than Steve Jobs; without his work, we wouldn’t have had all the Apple products (many of which are Unix based or written in C), or even the Microsoft products (which I recall are written in C as well).

That should make it three, coming after the death of Steve Jobs and Gene Schultz.

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Windows 7 Expertise Required

Written By: cahwyguy - Tue Aug 16, 2011 @ 7:05 am PDT

As a reminder, I have a Toshiba A665-S6086 laptop, purchased back in November 2010. It is running the Windows 7 Home Premium (64 bit) OS. Windows backup has been working fine, backing up to an external 1.5TB Western Digital USB drive… until this Sunday, when Backup failed with the error:

The system cannot find the file specified. (0×80070002)

I’ve looked at the Windows 7 knowledge base article: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/979281. Scenario 1 or 2 as described in that article don’t seem to apply, as no file is mentioned. I’m not sure Scenario 3 applies either: That’s the error message, but the computer does not freeze.

Only three things have changed since the last successful Windows 7 backup:

  1. Last week’s Patch Tuesday installed the latest set of Windows 7 patches

  2. I installed a different PS/2 keyboard (but have since switched back to the old one… and backups are still failing).
  3. I used a new jump-stick drive for a few hours. Said drive loaded a USB driver, but did not install any software via autorun.

Any ideas on what I should look into to get backup running again?

Here’s some further background. The full event data from the event log is:

EventData
The system cannot find the file specified. (0×80070002)
02000780E30500003F0900005B090000420ED1665C2BEE174B64529CB14610EA71000000

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Where Do They Come Up With These?

Written By: cahwyguy - Fri Apr 22, 2011 @ 11:31 am PDT

According to CNN, Hunch, a site that makes recommendations based on detailed user preference, discovered there is some truth about the difference between Mac and PC users. Their findings?

  • Mac users tend to be younger, more liberal, more fashion-conscious and more likely to live in cities than people who prefer PCs.

  • Mac users can be seen, depending on your perspective, as bolder and more creative — or elitist and more pretentious.
  • 67% of Mac users have a college or advanced degree, as opposed to 54% of PC users.
  • Mac loyalists are 80% more likely than PC users to be vegetarians, and, unlike PC fans, would rather ride a Vespa scooter than a Harley.
  • PC users’ tastes trend towards casual clothes, tunafish sandwiches, white wine, Hollywood movies, USA Today and Pepsi. Mac users prefer designer or vintage duds, hummus, red wine, indie films, The New York Times and San Pellegrino Limonata.
  • Mac users also are more likely to describe themselves as computer-savvy and “early adopters.” PC users tend to describe themselves as better at math and less likely to throw frequent parties.

The only Apple product I use regularly is my iPod. I’ll let those who know me decide where I fit on this scale.

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