Windows language handling sucks

The lan­guage bar will ran­domly change lan­guages, and ran­domly dis­ap­pear, and because it’s han­dled at an application-specific level (admit­tedly a largely sen­si­ble deci­sion) this means restart­ing appli­ca­tions just to change the lan­guage. This pisses me off immensely. Almost to the point of “if Vista did it bet­ter I’d con­sider switch­ing”, and I don’t even have that much to do with lan­guages other than english.

I’ve not used this much on any­one else’s sys­tem, but haven’t done any­thing par­tic­u­larly crazy with it and it still sucks… soooo… I blame Win­dows. I’m almost cer­tain main­stream Linux dis­tros can han­dle this bet­ter, but know noth­ing about how OS X deals with it… shrug.

# by Josh on May 19th, 2007 Tags: , , ,
| 2 Comments »

Not a real operating system

I’ve been run­ning Microsoft’s Vir­tual PC with their IE6 image for the last cou­ple of days (it’s great — if you take your­self seri­ously as a web con­tent pro­ducer, it’s very much a must-have part of the toolkit) and it pulled some funny busi­ness on me today.

When they announced it a whole bunch of peo­ple were get­ting a lit­tle grumpy about how it didn’t work with Win­dows update — a few of the same were get­ting grumpy about how Microsoft didn’t release a ver­sion for Linux, but no fur­ther com­ment required on them… you’re all of an intel­li­gent enough bunch to realise afore­men­tioned peo­ple fall into the cat­e­gory of … well, you know.

Obvi­ously, it’s no big deal — the whole point of that image it is that it hasn’t (and won’t) update, allow­ing you to keep test­ing on older platforms.

But then, this after­noon, I go and shut down the image (I know, sus­pend­ing is faster, but I was try­ing some­thing dif­fer­ent) and all of a sud­den it goes and says it’s installing 7 updates before it shuts down. In usual XP fashion.

So what gives?

I found myself yelling at it “you’re not even a real oper­at­ing sys­tem! Don’t you get it? You’re going to be used and trashed in a cou­ple of months any­way! Why do you care if you’re virus and spy­ware rid­den by the end of it?” Pos­si­bly a strange response, but there we go.

Got me think­ing about (human) clones, actu­ally. Much mus­ing to be had there. Maybe I’m just strange…

Windows Media 11 volume levelling

Appears to work by drag­ging down every­thing a great deal. I pre­sume this is to pre­vent any­thing clip­ping (down is bet­ter than up, use sys­tem wave and mas­ter faders to make it loud again if you must) but don’t really under­stand how it gauged the best per­for­mance point: it lev­elled vol­ume way too quickly to have indexed lev­els in the entire library. Maybe it’s a pro­gres­sive thing, or maybe the data was kept even before the fea­ture was enabled (if, in fact, that is the way this is being performed).

I would be inter­ested to know, because regard­less as to how it works exactly, their lev­el­ling kind of sucks. I’ll admit I haven’t used a library pro­gramme to man­age my music for a while, but seem to recall things on Linux being that much more con­sis­tent. That was before I tot­tered off to CD land sev­eral months back (long story, involv­ing a miss­ing road case and a messy office… things still aren’t quite back to nor­mal, that’s one of my sum­mer projects), where you’re expected to flip the vol­ume con­trol back­wards and for­wards with alarm­ing reg­u­lar­ity. I don’t know if this prob­lem would be any less preva­lent if I didn’t have such a smat­tered col­lec­tion of tracks from dif­fer­ent gen­res… one would think that, in the same way all pop is mixed to sound iden­ti­cal, surely it would be mas­tered in a sim­i­larly stereo­typ­i­cal fash­ion. Or per­haps not.

# by Josh on November 9th, 2006 Tags: ,
| 4 Comments »

The Irony of Slowing Down

is that, whilst doing so, you were jay­walk­ing and con­se­quently unable to beat the oncom­ing bus. I decide to have a week off between jobs and go slow on uni for a day to recover from a near-cold and end up with con­junc­tivi­tis and a course of anti-biotics. I gen­er­ally avoid sig­nif­i­cant ill­ness so its nice to get this out of the way now, before sum­mer starts properly!

So this is week #2 off work, with a fair amount of uni also not-attended so far this week (I man­aged an impres­sive three hours yes­ter­day after­noon, and a lec­ture for the gram­mar eng­lish course on Tues­day evening, and man­aged to delib­er­ately avoid, sleep through, or decide against attend­ing the rest). I’ve a decent atten­dance record in most courses so far this semes­ter so I didn’t bother with certs for the first half of the week… but then I had to go see a doc this morn­ing about the eye and I’m sup­pos­edly on these meds for a week now. So, assum­ing they work in appro­pri­ate time, I’d still be rock­ing up to uni with a noto­ri­ously con­ta­gious thingy for the first half of next week… which means I might even end up miss­ing more class. Which is ridicu­lous. Any­way I’ve got a lull in assess­ment at least… I was try­ing to write a pres ear­lier this week between phlegm-filled breaths, and ended up giv­ing it unable to really speak… it’s about Renais­sance thought in early mod­ern Europe; unfor­tu­nately there was no oppor­tu­nity to work in any plague allusions ;-)

Speak­ing of early mod­ern Europe, there was the annual book­fest at Uni­ver­sity of Syd­ney from Sat­ur­day through to yes­ter­day (Wednes­day) which was so awe­some. I say speak­ing of early mod­ern Europe because I now have a col­lec­tion on the sub­ject (sans jour­nal arti­cles, etc., but there’s always Gale/ProQuest et al.) on par with that of Fisher library. The uni gets rid of low-circulation books, and also sells dona­tions from the box you’ve prob­a­bly walked past a thou­sand times and not really thought much about (if you’re a USyd stu­dent who at least pre­tends to study) on the way into Fisher on the left. Every­thing is dirt cheap… I went with Selo and we both by pure chance spent exactly $33, which net­ted us two A4 ream box sized piles of books. The first few days are prices as marked, but Tues­day it’s $10/A4 box, and on Wednes­day it’s down to $5! I really wanted to go and have a look at what was left but wasn’t quite up to it. Every­thing is put out on Sat­ur­day so the col­lec­tion would have seri­ously dimin­ished by Wednes­day, but given the sheer scope of it (it’s in the Great Hall of the Quad, and imag­ine if you will the entire floor space in there cov­ered about three lay­ers deep in books and you have an approx­i­mate start­ing num­ber) chances are there’d still be some gems for the uncovering!

Yeah… so $33 would nor­mally buy me five books, less if they’re aca­d­e­mic reference/not classics/M&B (kid­ding). Did seri­ously well.

In other news, I’ve spent my recov­ery time bat­tling with Wine to lit­tle avail. I tried installing it a few times (insert alco­hol related jokes here) and got increas­ingly no-where, or sort of did, but then ended up hit­ting a brick wall (passed out in a pool of my own vomit, so to speak). So I installed Steam and spent $9.95 (USD! Tim was wrong, or at least Selo quot­ing Tim was wrong… either way, my receipt says USD) on Counter-Strike (to which I have moral objec­tions, because the idea of spend­ing money — even $US10 — on a free mod is pre­pos­ter­ous) for the MCE com­puter which kicks butt (well, kicks butt once I fig­ured out how to check the blind­ingly obvi­ous “Widescreen” box).

Then I bought HL GotY pack on eBay that comes with four CDs or some­thing and will hope­fully install on Linux fan­ta­si­cally with­out Steam. Or, sort of with Steam but in a less-dependent-upon-it kind of way that makes every­thing run slightly hap­pier. Good frag­ging times ahead, hope­fully. Worst case I buy a decent wire­less key­board + mouse (yeah, one of those five-button things, I’m sold!) and use the MCE box instead… it’ll just mean higher fram­er­ates at the expense of hav­ing to walk down­stairs, and prob­a­bly a bet­ter gam­ing expe­ri­ence (can you say 5.1 and 32″ screen?) any­way. But it’s on Win­dows, and… insert ide­al­is­tic rant here. Sigh!

Intoxication

I just tried Wine again for the first time in about twelve months (last attempt was with eTax, use­less IE-dependent thing that it is, last year. After a bit of con­fig­ging it worked but couldn’t sub­mit because of that depen­dency… it saved a data file I could sub­mit with Win­dows, though) and am astounded.

After zero-config, installers work mag­i­cally, 3d engines func­tion, and every­thing is gen­er­ally incred­i­ble. I read this on someone’s blog ear­lier today: “with that I was able to install the lat­est Wine (0.9.18 at the time of this writ­ing). This comes with bet­ter sup­port for HL2 and WoW.” and con­se­quently was afraid the ver­sion in non-backports Ubuntu would be ancient, etcetera, and gen­er­ally useless.

No, the author is cor­rect in say­ing “bet­ter support” — there is intrin­si­cally fan­tas­tic sup­port for pretty much every­thing. It’s incred­i­ble. Now I’ve just got to get some time in which to play var­i­ous games. Linux, appar­ently, is no longer a bar­rier to entry, and Loki Games (R.I.P.) would face an ever-diminishing chal­lenge as com­pata­bil­ity lay­ers keep grow­ing in their sheer brilliance.

I’ve yet to try pro­duc­tiv­ity appli­ca­tions, but am con­tent with hav­ing ten­ta­tively embraced the gamer side of geek for one week­end. I’d love to give Dreamweaver a whirl, but am unlikely to be doing enough devel­op­ment work to jus­tify it for the next cou­ple of months. MS Office would be a pleas­ant addi­tion to the reper­toire, though OpenOf­fice is excel­lent for most appli­ca­tions. I’d never go back to using Word for prepar­ing real doc­u­ments, but per­haps for things requir­ing collaboration/versioning it’s the best choice. I’d prob­a­bly get MS Office for cre­at­ing Pow­er­point templates/editing other people’s work before I had any real need for it myself, so these things are still pretty unnec­es­sary. It’s just fan­tas­tic to think that it is, all of a sud­den, a possibility.

The irony of all this is that I’m wax­ing lyri­cal about closed-source apps when the actual intent of this post is to extoll the bril­liance of F/OSS’s progress. Purists would argue oth­er­wise… but they’re wrong :-)

# by Josh on September 10th, 2006 Tags: , , , ,
| 1 Comment »

Friday, today, in a few hours time,

will be a pro­duc­tive day. I will wake up before 8, be dressed + have eaten break­fast + func­tional by 9, start ingest­ing video from TACKLES sleep­over last Sat­ur­day (NOT on a Linux com­puter, because even Ubuntu doesn’t play nice with Firewire cards, it seems), call a friend I’ve been mean­ing to call for too long and gen­er­ally stop pro­cras­ti­nat­ing on that front whilst the video thingy is at work (I bought a Firewire cable so will hope­fully never again have to cap­ture from ana­logue sources where I don’t absolutely need to), and call another friend accord­ingly, based upon the out­come of the first, prod the Matthias site a lit­tle bit (blog good­ness for those who are keen on it!), hope­fully return a video cam­era if Adam is home (oth­er­wise leave voice­mail and deal with it all later, I sup­pose), return home, email check (com­pul­sively, as if there were any other way), eat lunch, go to work, work, get home, con­tem­plate deal­ing with cap­tured video and decide it’s too hard with­out iMovie/Premiere/something less painful/more pow­er­ful than Win­dows Movie Maker/less gargantuan/buggy/UI-designed-by-primates than Cinel­erra, email com­pul­sively some more, chase some lights, put off til week­end (when every­where will be closed any­way), stay at home for once, sleep (before midnight).

Notic­ing a down­wards Getting-Stuff-Done trend. Meh. Lec­ture is can­celled tomor­row so I’ve got more time to try and be pro­duc­tive in. Now I’ve just got to not wake up too late… not even the 372 will save me if it’s not a going-to-uni day (haven’t had one of those in a while now, nice!)

# by Josh on August 18th, 2006 Tags: , , ,
| 3 Comments »

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.