Accessing the Dell 2707WFP LCD monitor service menu

Dell 2707WFP service menu

  1. Turn off your mon­i­tor, then turn it on by simul­ta­ne­ously press­ing the three but­tons cir­cled in blue above (Menu, Plus, Power).
  2. To access the ser­vice menu, press the but­ton cir­cled in yel­low above (minus).

Exit the ser­vice menu as you nor­mally would. To return to nor­mal user mode use the soft-power but­ton to turn the mon­i­tor off and back on again.

This should also work great with 2404WFP, 2405WFP, 2406WFP, 2407WFP, 2704WFP, 2705WFP, and 2706WFP where those pan­els exist (maybe not some years). My guess is the 3008WFP will also use the same com­bi­na­tion — I don’t know about ear­lier years as they had fairly dif­fer­ent dis­play pro­cess­ing hardware.

Outlook 2007 sucks

Bor­ing post sub­ject, I know. But check this out:

Outlook is preparing the requested view

Took around a full minute for the folder to load, on an Athlon 64 3200+ clocked at 2.4GHz with 2GB of fairly quick memory.

Since when do apps alert in the tray about load­ing a view? If Out­look didn’t expend resources on a generally-useless tray icon (really, it doesn’t even change when you have new mail wait­ing), maybe it wouldn’t take so bloody long to do anything.

I’ve got a dual core 4200+ on the way, but really doubt it’ll make any dif­fer­ence when the fault is largely soft­ware that sucks. Not say­ing that it’s just Out­look at fault… I’m inclined to place a fair degree of blame on the well-known-to-be-sucky Win­dows Desk­top Search. But it just inte­grates best… why does Microsoft have to pro­duce prod­ucts that suck?!

Speak­ing of which, my iPaq is work­ing again with a brand new extended bat­tery. Apart from the slow proces­sor, it’s doing great… but I’m going to test-drive a Palm Z72 for a few days and see if it does any bet­ter. Basi­cally, I don’t really need the GSM/GPRS func­tion­al­ity on the iPaq because it’s faster for me to con­nect via my Sony Eric­s­son via Blue­tooth (as there’s no HSDPA on the iPaq). I’ll imme­di­ately miss the wire­less, but have sur­vived sev­eral months with­out it, and SDiO wifi cards are a pos­si­bil­ity for the palm… I doubt they’re par­tic­u­larly com­mon, though. Have been con­sid­er­ing a Black­berry, but they’re pretty restricted in a whole heap of ways that PDAs aren’t. For exam­ple, ever tried get­ting an SSH client on a Black­berry? I haven’t. But have my doubts it could be done!

Any­way. Don’t use Out­look 2007 unless you have to.  It has nice multi-calendar/iCal sup­port, but that’s about all it has going for it. Still no inbuilt SMS/MMS sup­port, the ren­derer is a regres­sion in the truest sense of the term (doesn’t even sup­port back­ground images — IE7 comes out, which is an awe­some browser, and they decide it would be a good idea to force Word 2007 to be the ren­derer. Bril­liant.), thor­oughly mediocre RSS/feed-reading capa­bil­i­ties, and, to top it all off, it’s crap-slow (com­pared to ear­lier versions).

If it offers group­ware advan­tages I don’t know of them (but doubt it could, it’s always been fairly com­pre­hen­sive on that front), and chances are they won’t be par­tic­u­larly enabled until Server 2008 is released. Am guess­ing here, but not with­out some reasoning.

Avoid.

p.s. Yes, I’m prob­a­bly over­due for a Win­dows rein­stall.  Unfor­tu­nately a fairly major project cropped up just as I’d sched­uled one, and I still haven’t got around to it. Will prob­a­bly hunt down the right prod­uct key when the new CPU gets here early next week: that’s a large part of the prob­lem, Microsoft appar­ently expect that home users either buy pre­built sys­tems with stu­pid crapware-filled restore disks, or are hard­core tech using pirates/MSDN users (same thing… the users rarely paid for the MSDN subs, mostly its their work­place). I have 5 XP Pro licenses of dif­fer­ent vari­eties (not to men­tion pre­vi­ous ver­sions of Win­dows), and of those a bunch are the same prod­uct type (upgrade)… which makes license man­age­ment and com­pli­ance a bit of a challenge!

What I’d love MS to do is cre­ate a site-licensing prod­uct for SOHO users with flex­i­ble and trans­fer­able licens­ing at retail OEM pric­ing (that sounds dumb, but I mean still charg­ing what us mor­tals pay for OEM licenses, not the vol­ume prices that Dell, Lenovo, et al. get) — it’d be sim­ple, web admin­is­tered (not requir­ing a local server), and increas­ingly rel­e­vant in homes which are fea­tur­ing more and more computers.

whisper power consumption & emissions

Now, I’m not sold on this whole green­house thing just yet (The Great Global Warm­ing Swin­dle had at least as much sway over my opin­ion as that Pow­er­point pre­sen­ta­tion to which it was, per­haps, a coun­ter­point), but as a mat­ter of mere con­sump­tion (and intel­lec­tual curios­ity) I was keen to learn just how much power one of my com­put­ers, in par­tic­u­lar, was using annually.

This one sits in a cup­board, answers to the name of ‘whis­per’, reaches obscene tem­per­a­tures in sum­mer (yet does not crash), and, at its heart, fea­tures a low-power-consumption proces­sor and moth­er­board by VIA. It also has two hard dri­ves and a sin­gle 512MB (8-chip double-sided (16 total)) DDR-400 DIMM.

And that is all.

Most of the time, it’s rel­a­tively untaxed… it acts as file stor­age, a web server for mis­cel­la­neous stuff I want to share quickly, and a devel­op­ment box for more adven­tur­ous things. At one stage it was host­ing stream­ing media (and, very very briefly, a Counter-Strike server… it is hor­ri­bly under-specc’d for such duties). It’s also use­ful for SSH’ing into and bypass­ing prox­ies when you really need to get to some­thing (entirely legit­i­mate, mind), but increas­ingly less so as a cer­tain work­place of mine blocked SSH out access when we moved floors. No mat­ter — I’ve iden­ti­fied a HTTPS-SSH solu­tion to that par­tic­u­lar prob­lem, but haven’t been moti­vated to imple­ment it just yet!

So, here’s the run-down:

			Load	Idle
VIA EPIA PD10000	23W	15W
Generic 512MB		2W	1.5W
ST380011A		12W	8W
ST380011A		12W	8W
			49W	32.5W

Most of those have been rounded a lit­tle bit, but… let’s just say it only uses 49W at the most.

Then, there’s the 65%-efficiency-at-full-load (230W) power sup­ply to con­sider. We’re no-where near full load, but let’s just say it’s con­sis­tently effi­cient (or, in-efficient) regard­less of load. In prac­tice, it’d prob­a­bly be slightly bet­ter for lower loads due to reduced heat production.

So, our 49W sud­denly becomes (49x1.35) 66.15W

That’s 579.47kWh/year, which (appar­ently) equates to about 400KG of emis­sions. This, friends, is absolute worst-case sce­nario. More real­is­ti­cally, the sys­tem will be idle most of the time, using 384.3kWh/year, and pump­ing out around 260KG of carbon.

I’d be inter­ested to see how this would com­pare to a typ­i­cal lap­top computer.

For this par­tic­u­lar com­puter, there’s only a lit­tle that can be done to improve effi­ciency. The obvi­ous tar­get is the two hard dri­ves, which, com­bined, draw nearly as much power as the rest of the sys­tem! Con­sid­er­ing there’s not a dra­matic amount of stor­age presently in use, I could almost jus­tify replac­ing these with a solid-state device (in the form of an IDE-card reader bridge, because real SSD dri­ves remain pro­hib­i­tively expen­sive and dif­fi­cult to obtain in this coun­try) if the need were really there.

And what would cre­ate such a need? Well, part of the rea­son I wanted to find out was to see how many hours this thing could live off a fairly cheap UPS for. Turns out it’s prob­a­bly got at least an hour’s worth of life in it, which is mod­er­ately incred­i­ble com­pared to the typ­i­cal ten-minute-or-it’s-fsck-time expected para­chute expectancy!

The only prob­lem in adding a UPS is that they’re not the world’s most energy effi­cient devices them­selves, with an APC 500VA model chew­ing 24BTU (82.02W, since we’ve been work­ing in that thus far) per hour when “online”. BTU is a mea­sure of ther­mal energy dis­si­pa­tion, by the way, so prob­a­bly it’s also less-than-ideal for stick­ing in a cup­board in which the next-largest heat source is prob­a­bly the power sup­ply at a mea­gre 17.15W (assum­ing its inef­fi­ciency is purely ther­mal, which, of course, it won’t be — other non-thermal radi­a­tion must account for at least some of its loss).

So, there we go. A fairly use­less exer­cise that will become mar­gin­ally less use­less if ever there are rolling brownouts in Syd­ney and I need some­thing to be able to weather the power storm. The other great thing about UPS is they pro­vide fairly decent power con­di­tion­ing, too. Given you can pay about $50 for a decent 6-way surge pro­tected board, or only $140 for a 500VA (300W) APC UPS these days, it’s really not that bad a deal afterall.

Sources:

VIA EPIA-PD10000 power usage: http://www.via.com.tw/download/mainboards/3/4/OG_EPIA-PD_111804.pdf
Generic 512MB DDR-400 mem­ory power usage:
My mem­ory, from prior read­ing and specs of higher-quality mem­ory that actu­ally pub­lish such data.
Sea­gate ST380011A power usage:
http://www.seagate.com/support/disc/manuals/ata/cuda7200pm.pdf

SFX-230M2 switch­ing power sup­ply (used by a lot of big OEMs like Dell and HP, it turns out) spec­i­fi­ca­tions:
http://www.sirtec.com.tw/photot2/10205/210205R11.pdf

MacPro

It’s kinda nice and all, but seri­ously, so expen­sive. I’m sure the parts are all really high qual­ity, but that I can source pretty much all upgrade options offered for half the price or less — for exam­ple, adding a mea­gre two 512MB sticks costs an obscene $AU499, whilst even the most ridicu­lous gamer-marketed RAM (you know the stuff, it’s sup­pos­edly ‘tuned’ in pairs, etc.) can be had for $135 for two 512MB sticks (OCZ brand) — is rather telling about their hor­rific markup.

And yeah, I’m sure it’s all great qual­ity and mag­i­cally never crashes and all the rest of that mar­ket­ing crap. Good for you guys. I’m gonna wan­der back over the other side of the room here and install Win­dows on my equally-powerful sys­tem for, oh, about 40% of the cost. And don’t get me started on the absurd cost of your mon­i­tors. I can pick up an equiv­a­lent Dell 30″ for $600 less than your offer­ing… and if I’m con­tent with a mea­gre 23″ then I can get a 24″ Dell for $400 less! Even the 20″ screens are $500 apart. Seri­ously, it’s com­pletely unjus­ti­fi­able and no-one in their right mind should be pre­pared to spend that much more for a brand.

Sigh.

I need to open a buy-a-new-computer account and start putting money into it. Well not really… I just need a new hard­drive and var­i­ous soft­ware licenses I guess. I think I’d miss Ubuntu too much (maybe)… I don’t even know why, nearly every­thing I can do here I can do in Win­dows (haha — does any­one else notice the beau­ti­ful inver­sion of that argu­ment? I actu­ally think I’ve been run­ning Linux for too many years now to have posted about it in any currently-stored online blog entries! Crazy) except any­thing requir­ing a ter­mi­nal. That’s almost def­i­nitely my great­est frus­tra­tion, but no mat­ter. I need soft­ware that doesn’t run in Linux and is too inten­sive to work well in vir­tu­al­ized con­di­tions. Best option for me would be to get a whole sep­a­rate com­puter, but then… well, this thing can feel flaky after being on for two weeks. Win­dows I’d prob­a­bly get that every two days or so, but at least I’d think to reboot. Here, I just kill processes and at worst logout. Ker­nel patches are the only thing tak­ing this down, basically.

Moral of the story… some­thing like don’t waste your money on a shiny new Mac.

Carols prep

A photo of my messy living room

I just turned off every­thing hav­ing fin­ished playing/editing for the night, and took a step back to realise how much of a mess I’d cre­ated. There’s some excess gear (i.e. not for car­ols) in that shot above, but I’m still going to end up trans­port­ing more stuff than you can see there. Sigh. Good fun, though.

I might throw a web ver­sion up later (not quite at the stage where I can stream stuff live just yet — give it a few months ;-)), because there are only two car­ols on the pro­gramme under APRA/CCLI (the rest are public-domain)… so I might just cut out those two songs and pub­lish the rest. If I can be both­ered, and have time to setup cap­ture, and cap­ture works okay. Haven’t exactly got a DVC-PRO deck lying around, so I’ll be cap­tur­ing straight to a PC… the prob­lem is the PC with cap­ture gear I want to use for replay.

Inci­den­tally, whilst walk­ing the dog today, I stum­bled upon about 10 com­put­ers that had been dumped on the side of the road (not as sus as it sounds… the foot­path was raised from the road, so it looked like some­one had just had some fun chuck­ing them off the edge. Mostly old Pen­tiums and so on.) and wound up car­ry­ing two of them home (whilst try­ing to hold a dog) — my arms hurt. Why did I carry two of them home? I was curi­ous as to what was in them and wasn’t car­ry­ing a screw­driver on my keyring, because one looked like an ATX case (it wasn’t, just a slightly slimmer-than-usual-AT-case) and the other had Com­pos­ite, S-Video, and an ambiguously-named “CCD-IN” port (it’s a 9-pin DIN socket I think… can’t be both­ered get­ting up to check!) on a card on the back.

The moth­er­boards are pretty good for their vin­tage (ATX-supporting Socket 7, one with onboard hard­ware audio and graph­ics… no, it’s not a Dell or Gate­way or any of that pro­pri­etry crap.), but it still wasn’t worth car­ry­ing them. And there’s no way I can be both­ered car­ry­ing them back now!

Any­way this card with S-Video and Com­pos­ite sock­ets on it is actu­ally an old-ish cap­ture card, which might work with V4L and almost cer­tainly doesn’t work with post-Windows ’98/NT4.0 Microsoft sys­tems. Chances are it’d be crap qual­ity cap­ture any­way, and I’m unlikely to have time to setup/even try to setup it in any semi-working fash­ion before Sun­day afternoon!

(Aside: I really need to buy an el-cheapo $60 TV-tuner for another com­puter at some point.)

Okay, I’m off to bed. Got to wake up tomor­row, ren­der video, check UAI, panic/celebrate/think “I was anx­ious about that?”/get over it, do inven­tory here, then pack a van full of gear (oh and need to find boxes for my LCDs… should do that now actu­ally, bit wor­ried about them) and go and panic some more about how I have not enough cam­eras and not enough cables. Of course, if I have no cam­eras then the absence of cables ceases to be such a sen­si­tive issue. Just gotta pray lots about it… there’s not really much more I can do at this point.

Oh, and if my post­ing about this strikes any­one as being in a more con­cerned tone than with pre­vi­ous events, it’s because this lit­tle excur­sion into vision is some­thing new for me. I’ve encoun­tered all this stuff before, but never in the capac­ity that if some­thing screwed up dur­ing the event it’d be con­sid­ered my fault ;-) Well, you know, shots of the wrong ‘guest speaker’ at SACS speech night betrayed by an uncer­tain zoom out aside. Doo bee doo.

# by Josh on December 16th, 2005 Tags: , , , , , ,
| No Comments »