Archive Page 2

lastpass

10Jun09

lastpass 6-10-2009 4-48-44 PMI found this amazing utility called lastpass.  It is a browser-based password management utility that syncs across all your computers.

I’ve tried password managers in the past and have never been particularly enamored of them.  Either they didn’t work or seemed like giant security holes.

This one is different.  The architecture is solid and it works really, really well.  Unless you have password caching disabled in your browser, it is also a step forward in security.

Give it a try:  https://lastpass.com/


vistamac2

A quick follow-up to my previous post about buying a macbook pro primarily to run windows.  I’m happy to say that after a week of intense frustration at repeated crashes, I now have an extremely stable system.  Installation issues aside, this is unquestionably the best Windows laptop I’ve ever used:

  • The apple keyboard is great, even if it is missing a number of keys.  It feels nice.  It’s lighted.  It’s quiet.
  • The LED-backlit screen is amazing.  It’s as bright as a desktop monitor.   It is so bright, in fact, that I have to turn it down to avoid eyestrain.  Even sitting with my back to a window–as I am right now in a tea bar–it is easy to read at the middle brightness setting.
  • The battery life is amazing.
  • Going from sleep-to-wake by opening the lid is nearly instantaneous.

It is just a shame that Apple doesn’t do more to improve the Windows installation experience.


streetview 6-9-2009 5-21-08 PM

I think Google Street View is interesting, but I’ve never really found much practical use for it.  Not anymore.

I have a sewer pipe that has backed up…again.  It needs to be dug out and replaced.  Instead of paying a plumber a pile of money to do the digging, I’m planning to hire a day laborer.  But where to find this person?

Google Street View has the answer!


$30k lent to financial institutions for every man, woman and child in the United States, and we have this.

Many careers ought to be terminated over this madness.  We might as well start with this woman.


vistamac

My laptop was growing long in the tooth, so I decided to get a new one.

I wanted a 17″ display and a bright LED backlight that won’t grow dim over time.  That narrows the field pretty quickly.  I’ve had an imac running Windows Vista for almost a year with no problems at all, so I felt reasonably comfortable purchasing an Mac to run Windows.

Unfortunately the BootCamp drivers that Apple ships with the 17″ MacBook Pro are completely defective.  I was able to load Windows Vista 64 onto the machine without any trouble, but the machine started to crash soon after I loaded the Apple-supplied drivers.  At intervals of 1-5 hours, the screen would freeze and the system would become completely non-responsive.  The only way to recover was to power-cycle the laptop.

I tried updating all of my drivers using DriverAgent but nothing was working.  The friendly folks at Apple tech support said: call Microsoft.  Gee, thanks.  I understand that Apple isn’t in the business of supporting Windows, but come on…

After a few days of this, I boxed up my new MacBook and was ready to take it back to the Apple store for a refund.  I looked at it one last time and thought “I really want this to work.  I’m not going to be as happy with a Dell…“  So I took it back out of the box, re-installed OS X and Vista, and tried to fix what I thought was the most plausible cause of the problem.

The problem seems to be that theNVidia 9600GT M graphics processor tries to dynamically throttle itself based on changes in usage.  Apparently there is a hardware/driver issue that can trigger a failure when this happens.  Doing something relatively simple like scrolling though a blog with mixed media in Firefox can trigger this behavior.  Interestingly, there were few, if any, reports on the internet of crashing occurring during heavy 3D graphics usage (i.e. games).  This makes sense, though, because the heaving graphics utilization would not give the hardware an opportunity to throttle itself down.

So there is a simple solution.  Download a graphics card tuning utility called Rivatuner and force the graphics card into one of 3 modes: Standard 2D, Low Power 3D, or Performance 3D.  Voila: problem solved.

Here is a screenshot of the Rivatuner setting:

6-3-2009 1-07-29 AM


This is an interesting idea.


geithner

11May09

loopholes

31Mar09

This is a very good explanation of the potential loopholes with the latest Geithner plan.

Like the rest of the Fed lending programs, this looks like yet another way to circumvent Congressional approval.


great speech

31Mar09

This is very refreshing to hear.


spx-obama-3-3-2009-3-40-51-pm

I voted for Democrats for all positions but one in the November election: President of The United States of America.

While I suspect that things would have been just as bad if not worse if McCain had been elected, the chart above is pretty clear.

Obama could do a lot to move us out of this crisis.  Unfortunately his approach can be summarized thusly:

  • Continue with the same Fed/Treasury policies used by the Bush administration
  • Spend more
  • Raise taxes

What am I missing here?  How could this possibly work?