Mike Macgirvin
Diary and Other Rantings
Beyond Silicon Valley
   
Monday, May 12 2008, 04:47 pm
Oct 31, 2007
Rock-n-roll

5.6 quake 5 miles north-northeast of Alum Rock - (near San Jose, CA) and 7 miles east of Milpitas. From my maps, this looks like the bottom end of the Hayward Fault before it fragments into several smaller faults near the Evergreen area, though I won't rule out the Calaveras Fault which also passes nearby.

So far looks like friends and family are OK. Believe this is the largest quake to hit the bay area since at least the early 90's and perhaps since Loma Prieta (Oct. 89).

Comments:

Joe (Derek Joe Tennant)
November 1, 2007 04:45
[*TOP MEMBER*] Joe

I was present for Loma Prieta (1989) and the 3 7+ events in 24 hours, Humboldt County (1992). There haven't been any big shakers since then here in the Bay Area. I have long been aware that many folks have moved into the area since 1989, and comments on local news shows in the hours following last night's tremor bear out that feeling....lots of people saying "This was my first quake...."

Everyone talks about having food, water and cash on hand for 3 days, assuming that's how long it will take for help to arrive. Following my FEMA post-Katrina experience, I gotta disgree.....keep a week, at the very least. 


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Oct 31, 2007
Blast from the past

Just noticed a search hit landing on my website for 'crossroads BBS'. Wow. I'm impressed. That was about 25 years ago. Somebody obviously remembered and came looking and passed by all the links for a Crossroads BBS from Melbourne in the '90s so they must've known what they were looking for.

Howdy. 

We did have a fun little online community back then, although it was just ASCII text at 300/1200 baud. Joe remembers...

Hey computer! Who called today?

Read my mail, from Joe, since yesterday.  

Oh, and make me some coffee, wouldja' please?

Sometimes I wonder if we've moved forward at all... 

Comments:

mike (Mike Macgirvin)
October 31, 2007 13:07
mike

One of the BBS commands was 'game'.

Play the game.

I'm thinking of a number between 1 and 10. Can you guess what it is?

3?

Sorry, that wasn't it. Click. [Disconnects the online session.]

Don't think I ever told anybody, but there wasn't a correct answer...  


Joe (Derek Joe Tennant)
November 1, 2007 04:46
[*TOP MEMBER*] Joe
I miss Zoid....I would marvel at your creativity displayed in that ongoing drama/comedy

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Oct 31, 2007
But wait, there's more...

Seems I got locked out of the forum that was accusing me of all manner of illegal behavior for the way my websites (used to) use newsfeeds. I merely asked what I was doing that they felt was wrong, and how I might rectify it. 

If you've arrived here trying to find out what all the fuss is about, sorry, but I'm no longer able to respond directly to the accusations made.

But there's more. I'm going to use your esteemed Google Reader as an example, since this was used as a shining example of how to publish/republish newsfeeds in a non-infringing manner. 

It was claimed that many sites can get away with publishing newsfeeds because they only contain snippets, and not a complete copy of the original copyrighted work. Further that they do not republish this information to third parties.

It just ain't so. I went to Google Reader and plugged in a feed URL for one of my web properties. Up came my newsfeed. Now lets take a look... hmmm. I don't see snippets of my articles. I see the complete articles. The whole tomato. 

But wait, there's more. The argument is that Google just creates this list on the fly, so isn't storing and republishing protected work.  

Then how come I see a full copy of every article I've ever written since Google Reader came into existence? Everything. Tell me, I'd like to know. I'll tell you. It's because somebody else subscribed to my feed, and Google made a copy of every article that has ever been read on my site, and is republishing it to anybody who accesses that feed URL. My feed only contains 20 recent items. But everything is there, even articles which have been deleted from my website. 

The only way this could happen is if they make a (complete) copy of every article, and republish it on their website. No different than anything which I did, and in fact they publish a whole lot more than I ever did for a given feed. I only provided a snapshot of the current feed, and the ability to import one or two articles a day from a few select feeds.

So Google Reader has the ability, and is actively creating copies of every weblog for which it is provided a feed - providing an alternate to ever visiting the source website, and without regard to copyright issues; and republishing this to the world. Exactly what I was accused of doing.  

Google as you may or may not know is pretty much exempt from copyright restrictions under the fair use clause. They have argued successfully that they can copy pretty much anything that has ever been written. But I can't - because I'm not Google, and fair use apparently only applies to large U.S. corporations with lots of lawyers.

But since I've been locked out of the dialog, the idiots who have accused me of wrong doing will probably never see this.

As I told folks on that forum before I was locked out, if you really want to protect your writings, don't publish them, and certainly don't syndicate them. And if you don't want your entire site to be cloned, certainly don't syndicate full articles.

It's too late to bring back news on this site. I'm done with it. Heck, I'll just use Google Reader and save some disk space, not have to worry about foul language and XSS injections and all the other mess that comes with importing content from the wild.

It's a bit of an inconvenience to those who had a desire to use this software as it was envisioned, to create personalized websites of personalized content compiled from their favorite sources around the globe. But nobody was really using any of that functionality anyway.  They were just letting me subscribe to interesting feeds and using it to see glimpses of the blogosphere that they wouldn't have seen otherwise. 

Oh well. I've got better things to do.  

Comments:

mike (Mike Macgirvin)
October 31, 2007 11:28
mike

For point of reference, here is the text of the so-called 'fair-use' exclusion, which is commonly used as a defense against infringement of copyrighted material. Note that this applies only to U.S. copyright law. Different countries may or may not have similar exclusions.

107. Limitations on exclusive rights: Fair use

Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright. In determining whether the use made of a work in any particular case is a fair use the factors to be considered shall include—
(1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;
(2) the nature of the copyrighted work;
(3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
(4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.
The fact that a work is unpublished shall not itself bar a finding of fair use if such finding is made upon consideration of all the above factors.

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Oct 29, 2007
Rough day

I really don't even want to talk about it, but you can see the remnants all over my website. Had some heated debate about intellectual property and specifically how it relates to RSS/Atom newsfeeds. Seems a large number of people think that it's really bad to show a newsfeed to a third party (goes by the term 'republish') - although I fail to see where one could possibly draw a line. A feed is a feed. So for the present time until I can figure out how to make everybody happy, I've disallowed the viewing of news items by non-members; and culled from the ranks of our esteemed collection of eclectic news sources any information provider with less than 1000 viewers/day.

This means to see news articles which didn't originate on this site you will have to login. It also means you can't share these news articles with non-members. And it also means you won't be seeing Junk Drawer, Frog and Goat, Fragments from Floyd, or any of your other favorite small blogs here anymore, unless you import them yourself for your own personal viewing. Please contact me if you have any troubles working out the feed settings. If I import them and allow you to read them it is considered republishing, and that's really bad.

I'm keeping the larger newsfeeds at the present time because these are primarily professionals who have no issue publishing or re-publishing their content assuming full attribution is provided.

The place to apply controls is in the feed itself and anybody who's been around the syndication space for a while knows that. Many novices don't understand that they control their own destiny and can include anything, everything, or nothing in their published syndication feed. If you include everything but object to how it is used by third parties, it's kinda' like taking your clothes off in the middle of the street and then complaining because somebody saw you naked.   

Be warned: things may change further as I figure out how to make everybody happy.
Comments:

Joe (Derek Joe Tennant)
October 30, 2007 05:27
[*TOP MEMBER*] Joe
I am very disappointed in this turn of events. After hearing this morning, on local radio, of yet another attempt to tax access to the internet and to add local sales tax to internet purchases, I then log onto my favorite site for quirky news only to find it's now been curtailed because some writers who have a very small audience have an inflated opinion of themselves and think they can profit from their rants and have limited access to their scribbling in order to what....collect ad revenue? Sell their opinions? It was fun (the free distribution of odd ideas) while it lasted, but hey, folks, yeah, you out there who suddenly think your crayon drawings are valuable in real cash terms, aren't really that much different and don't require that I pay to view them. And yes, this applies to my own crude attempts to ply this medium.

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Oct 28, 2007
Campaign season

The U.S. presidential campaign - boring.

The Australian Prime minister race? Yawn.

If you want an interesting election, looks like you have to go to Argentina.

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Oct 27, 2007
Daylight Savings

Tomorrow is Daylight Savings. Remember 'Spring forward, fall back'? That's right - tomorrow we move it forward, no matter how odd that may seem. It's October, but it's spring.

At least the Australian government hasn't been mucking with and tweaking DST as it did before the 2000 Olympics. The software engineers need time to code in the changes - I think that a lot of the world now has Sydney time right.

Well that would be anybody using the Olsen timezone databases. I know personally about thirty web services which just give you a choice of 'GMT+10' - and these are all going to be wrong tomorrow. On the bright side, I really don't care if they get it wrong. I'm not using any of them for anything globally time sensitive. It always makes my head hurt trying to figure out how many hours I'm going to be away from GMT with all the conversions and tweaks in effect. I suppose it'll probably be GMT+11. One hour forward. But wait, we'll then be one hour closer to Greenwhich, England as the earth spins. Not further from it. So maybe it's GMT+9. Silicon Valley will be... Uh, I give up. It's in negative GMT and the time is going back. So is it forward or backward? I'll have to figure it out on paper to work out the difference between LA (where this server is) and Sydney (close enough to where I am).  

But this will also give a good test of my own daylight savings and timezone functions (which use Olsen tables). The U.S. is going one hour back and we're going one hour forward. I might be poring over the code tomorrow if something gets askew.  

Comments:

Joe (Derek Joe Tennant)
October 28, 2007 04:08
[*TOP MEMBER*] Joe
Mike....already you've been away from the US too long! The new law has the time change thethird weekend in March and the first Sunday in November. So don't change anything tomorrow (today, since you're already Sunday while I write this Saturday morning in the states....)

mike (Mike Macgirvin)
October 28, 2007 08:22
mike

In fact the time changed here - I was just a bit premature on when it changes there. They used to try and change the whole world on the same day, but you're right. Last year's energy act messed up that part of it.

No worries. Everything seems to be working. It just means I'll have to go through all of this again when you folks change over. I won't bother calculating the delta right now, since it's in a temporary state. It's nice to know the delta before I make a phone call overseas. Nothing worse than 'Hello? Who is this? It's 3 in the morning!'


peonyden (Denis Wilson)
October 28, 2007 09:45
peonyden
Hi Mike Thanks for posting about Daylight Saving Changes. We have now changed, but on the Sunday morning, so you might have been early to all events on Saturday, if you changed on 27 October. But that's better than being completely out. It is one thing to be unaware. You end up 1 hour late on the first day of the change. I went the wrong way, once, (the "autumn" change) and put my clocks forward, at the end of the season. I was two hours early for everything, and thought I had missed a series of important events. but they had not yet happened. I was in a panic - unnecessarily. The little adage "Spring Forward, Fall Back" which you quoted is now permanently engraved in my brain as a result of the scare I had on that occasion. Denis

peonyden (Denis Wilson)
October 28, 2007 09:49
peonyden

Mike

Now that I am properly awake, I see that your comment: "that the time had changed here" was written on Sunday morning - sorry if I implied you were a day ahead.

That's the other problem with Daylight Saving changeover. Body awake, but brain not yet awake.

Denis 

 


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Oct 26, 2007
The Aussie Salute
John Howard was doing a stump speech last night, and I couldn't help but be amused. Every 10-15 seconds over the course of the fifteeen minute speech he performed the fabled 'Aussie Salute'. For those of you unfamiliar with this gesture it is a quick double wave of the hand across the face - once forward and then again backward. In other countries it is simply known as 'waving away the flies'. 
Comments:

mike (Mike Macgirvin)
October 26, 2007 12:00
mike

By the way - ignore the spelling. The correct pronunciation for the word 'Aussie' is 'ozzy'.

Which reminds me, Aussie (remember 'ozzy') blokes get highly offended if a bloody yank tells them that all their beer sucks. I've found this out the hard way. They say 'Well what about VB?' (Sucks.). 'Tooheys?' (Barf.) And I thought these blokes were beer lovers. 

 


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Oct 25, 2007
Size matters...

I found this chart that's been tucked away in a folder for a couple of years - and it seems to take on new significance what with the glut of spam promoting size enhancement products.

I have no reason to debate this research except to affirm that it correlates with my own findings. Oh, and for all my friends in metric countries, there are approximately 2.54 centimeters to the inch. You should be able to find a units converter and calculator on the menubar. 

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Oct 25, 2007
A Bit of Excitement
The fire brigade just rolled in. Seems somebody started a blaze in the building next door. I'd expect something like this in the Biology Lab or even the machine shop, but in the Math Department? Oh well. Hope it doesn't shut down any of our routers that are about twenty feet away from the smoke cloud.
Comments:

mike (Mike Macgirvin)
October 25, 2007 23:58
mike
Come to think of it, I believe we're into final exams this week. The fire may have been a classic ruse to get out of doing a test. That's something I'd expect from a math student who didn't spend enough time on linear equations.

October 26, 2007 04:43
Gail
Usually it's a pulled fire alarm or a bomb threat. Haven't had the pleasure of an actual fire during exams. Might be interesting. ;-)

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Oct 24, 2007
5 seconds ago (via Twitter)

Ya' know, I never had any great urge to use twitter. It all seems kind of pointless. Hey, I'm doing my laundry right now. 10 minutes ago, was at the grocery store.

Boring...

But I thought that it could be kind of fun if you got creative with it. Try plugging some of these into the twitter engine:

  • He tried to scream, but after his head was chopped off, it just went 'gurgle, gurgle'.
  • This is why you shouldn't buy Chinese detonators...
  • Luckily we got past airport security
  • Typing this on the paramedic's cell phone. Mine was destroyed in the crash.
  • 62 sleeping pills and a bottle of scotch. Oops.
See what I mean? Create your own twitters and have some fun. 
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Oct 22, 2007
Warning: No Lifeguard on Duty
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Oct 22, 2007
When Wizards like Warlocks

Come to find out that our favorite Hogwarts senior wizard - one Prof. Dumbledore; prefers genital contact with his own gender. How do you go about explaining this to a kid? Couldn't we have been spared this knowledge?

 

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Oct 21, 2007
Brewing Day

Sunday morning, and it's brewing day today. I'm starting to run out of my last batch of homebrew, and I'm not happy paying about $60 for a case of commercial beer (that I don't really care for). Anyway, I found another little brewing supply house in Albion Park; and I'm all set up to cook up a batch of my flagship brew  - Förnikatör. It's been a couple of years since I made a batch of the good stuff. 

Well, actually I'm doing the poor man's version today - with extract instead of a full mash. Just like I did in my early twenties before I discovered the fine art of mashing. The extract version runs about $15/case. I'll cook up the full on version maybe next time around. Turns out the road services here won't deliver a 25kg (~ 50 lb) sack of malt - and nobody around here will sell one. So it looks like I'll have to get a sack split in half and sent in from Sydney in two separate shipments. That runs up the cost a little bit, but it works out to about $8/case. However that still works out as a good value; especially for Förnikatör - the absolute best beer on earth. 

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Oct 20, 2007
Don't Read This Title
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Oct 19, 2007
Dodi and Diana

 

Dodi bought $19,000 ring for Diana

 

...cheap bastard

 

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Oct 19, 2007
Paperback Writer

I spend a non-trivial amount of time keeping up with the latest and greatest in web development. In particular, I often find myself on websites where somebody is discussing Web2.0, social networking, etc. - and I often make comments. Many of these folks are downright hostile about me adding my viewpoint to the discussion, especially if it doesn't match their own viewpoint. (And don't dare write anything negative about Google.)  

Which made me look a bit closer. And most of these so-called web-2.0 'experts' are writing about the latest web technologies on a blogger or wordpress single-user weblog; otherwise known as a soapbox. Their formidable experience in social technology is limited to obtaining a facebook or myspace account. Few if any of them have ever actually written code.

So as always, when evaluating the opinions of experts, consider the source and determine the level of real expertise. There are a lot of so-called experts out there these days. Installing a WP blog and obtaining a MySpace account are not in themselves qualifications about anything more than an ability to install a software package and register for free accounts.

[As for my own qualifications, I don't claim to be an expert at anything.] 

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Oct 18, 2007
The Student Lounge

Somebody broke a water pipe in our building, so I trudged across campus for a cup of coffee this morning. Ended up at the student lounge. Now the lounge has a cafeteria, and a large stage (with an impressive sound system) where all manner of folks get up and play music.

I got in line next to the espresso machine, which oddly wasn't staffed - even though it's still morning. It was a rather long line though. What are all these people buying? Scones?

Nope. Beer. They've got beer taps with about fifteen handles. All pumping wildly at 11AM. This is something you don't see in the states. People buying shots of tequila and schooners of beer before afternoon exams - and all apparently sanctioned by the university.

Interesting. I made a note of this; however it is unlikely I'll be spending a lot of time over there in the early mornings as the students are doing. If only because I didn't really care for the beer selection... 

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Oct 18, 2007
Fire Season

The fire season is off to a roaring start. There's currently a big blaze in the bush just a few kilometers away. Can't actually see it because the wind is blowing the other way, but there's a bit of a smell of burning eucalyptus in the air - along with the steady thunder of helicopters as they head south to fill their water buckets.

It's interesting to track though, because the bushland extends all the way to the university - with only a few houses in between, and these are under heavy foliage.  

But all of this is just a distraction as the main event is trying to shut down a hack attack on one of the school websites I'm responsible for.

Summer is here.  

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Oct 15, 2007
And they're off...

And I thought American politics was amusing. Australia does things a bit different, and with even more transparency and hilarity. Seems that there isn't a fixed day for when elections are held. The sitting prime minister gets to pick the day within some range. The range was starting to run out, and Mr. Howard has been promising for weeks that he's going to set an election 'soon'. Yesterday was the day he called it. For November 24 - or about five weeks from now. Contrast this to the U.S. where they're fighting over an election that's a year away.

So although we know the opposition is Kevin Rudd - a guy who looks a lot like John Denver, and have known it for some time, the campaign has only just begun - and in five weeks it will be over.

Now John Howard has been taking a beating in the polls, mostly for not standing up to and disagreeing with 'the idiot'. So day one of the campaign starts off with a (drum roll please....) tax cut. If you can't beat 'em in the polls, and don't have a credible strategy, bribe the voters. You may laugh, but this tactic has been working for thousands of years.

I can hardly wait for day two. This promises to be quite an interesting election.

Comments:

Joe (Derek Joe Tennant)
October 16, 2007 12:19
[*TOP MEMBER*] Joe
and how's your wrist? I broke mine decades ago, it was not fun. It's a good thing I was (and still am) ambidexterous. I actually broke it two days before the only real snowfall in Silicon Valley in the last fifty years....the biggest drag of the the whole broken wrist experience was not being able to throw snowballs at folks that had stopped their cars (like me) on the freeway to play in the snow at 8 am that day (the snow only stuck for 20 minutes).

mike (Mike Macgirvin)
October 16, 2007 13:30
mike

There's still some question of whether it's bone or nerve (e.g. RSD). It is unlike any RSD I've had before and more like a minor fracture (which I've also had before).

Left hand, Gail :-(

As long as I keep from twisting it, putting weight on it, etc. - it doesn't bother me so I'm just playing wait and see right now. Within reason I can still type, play guitar, and hold a beer without pain. So life goes on, but I'm 90% convinced at this point that it's not just a pinched nerve. 


October 18, 2007 00:39
Gail

Well, as long as you can still hold onto a pint, you'll be okay. ;-) I'd rather have the fractured wrist as opposed to RSD any day. Hope it gets better soon.

Haven't broken any bones in the upper body, with the exception of one knuckle, only fractured an ankle, shinbone, and broken a femur.


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Oct 15, 2007
Disable Linux screen blanking

I'm a bit tired of searching the web for this every time I install a new Linux box; which is every few weeks these days - but apparently not often enough to get it stuck in my brain. 

To disable the annoying 10 minute Linux automatic screen blanking, use:

/usr/sbin/setterm -blank 0

Stick it in /etc/rc.local on Debian, or in /etc/init.d/rc.local if that doesn't exist.

 

Comments:

mike (Mike Macgirvin)
November 10, 2007 08:38
mike
Actually in Debian 4.x, all of this stuff has been moved and generalized. Instead of rc.local, you should be able to edit the settings directly in /etc/console-tools/config - which should be read/processed by /etc/init.d/console-screen.sh during startup.

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Oct 14, 2007
Axes: Bold as Love
 
Took this composite. Clockwise from left:
 
Martin SPD-16TR
Martin Acoustic Bass
Phoenix VG-180
Gibson Flying V
Minarik Goddess SE
Epiphone EB bass
Schecter Scorpion Elite
Ibanez RocketRoller II
Turser Warlord
Epiphone Biscuit (resophonic)
Epiphone Les Paul (lefty-righty)
Turser ES (lefty-righty) 
! (That's the name, I built this in 1997)
Minarik Inferno Xtreme 
 
Visitors to Sonica (my former music store) might recognize a few of these.  Especially the oil painting of the girl with the violin, which hung in the center of the shoppe for a couple of years.  
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Oct 14, 2007
ouch

Think I might have a fractured wrist.

 

Comments:

October 15, 2007 01:03
Gail
Ouch is right -hopefully not the left one though. Lefties have it hard enough in this righty world

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Oct 13, 2007
Global Warming

After a couple of beers I was contemplating this whole global warming thing and potential business opportunities. What are we going to need a few years from now?

Around here, most folks have a big water storage tank next to the house. I'd be getting these manufacturers ramped up for export. In the states, a few enviro-conscious folks have water barrels to catch rain. But I'm talking tanks - as in thousands of liters, up to millions of liters. We've got 'em. Just have to start shipping them out of the country.

Other product trends to invest in: hip waders, paddleboats. 

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Oct 13, 2007
goodbye /dev/fd0

I've got both a 5.25 and 3.5 floppy drive on my Linux box at home. I bought the 5.25 drive in the mid-80s as part of my first 'clone kit' (cheap IBM-style PC built completely from components made in Asia). Today I finally unplugged it, even though it still works just fine. I can't even recall the last time I actually used it. I believe I made a Linux emergency boot disk back in 2002, but that was on the 3.5 drive.

I tossed all my old 5.25 disks prior to moving overseas. After much more than ten years in non-controlled temp/humidity environments, there wasn't any 'critical data' left to speak of. Ditto for the 3.5's.

So I've got no disks left to read, and 720kbytes is pathetic and slow storage in 2007.  If you need a copy of something, just flash it to a USB stick.

It certainly wasn't my first floppy drive (that distinction would go to an old 8 inch CP/M drive which I never used because it was obsolete before I ever finished writing the assembly language driver code); - but it's the longest surviving piece of computer hardware I've got at the moment.  Seems a shame to let it go, however what's the point of keeping it running?

This data too shall pass. 

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Oct 12, 2007
Juli@ sound card and Vista

If you're looking for a decent mid-range sound card and don't want to spend a fortune, the ESI Juli@ is pretty respectable. I really like the fact that it's about the cheapest card that'll provide balanced line. You do this by flipping the card around. Unbalanced connectors on one side, balanced on the other. It's a pretty neat concept.

Anyway, if you're trying to install one of these suckers on Vista, forget the installation CD. You can just throw it in the trash if you want. Even though the latest driver is for XP/2005, just go to the website and grab the latest. The driver on the install disk is a piece of crap and you'll be wondering why you bought such a sucky card. Can't even get the basic speaker test sounds to come out without about 300% signal distortion, dropouts, odd harmonics, etc. In short, the sound you get is almost totally unrecognizable.

The website driver makes it actually work.

Oh, and to use with Sonar, don't use the WDM channel. Just go with ASIO. 

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Oct 11, 2007
Let There be Noize

The sound studio is just about back in full operation - for the first time in several years.

 

 

I've been doing all the tests and configurations, and only have a few more cables and a bit more PC configuration until it's ready for use. It fell into a state of entropy about 2002 what with combining two households and trying to run a music store. Half the equipment ended up at the store, and I never quite had a dedicated PC to spare since. I've been able to use all the tools for making music in the ensuing years, but the ability to store it conveniently has been lacking.

A lot has happened since the days of Maxwell Silverthorn. My music has evolved considerably, and my life has been through some pretty radical changes.

It's time for a new CD.

Comments:

October 11, 2007 09:14
Gail
Cool! Would it be possible to get one?

mike (Mike Macgirvin)
October 11, 2007 10:11
mike

The technology has improved a bit, so I expect that I can do a little better than one song a month (which is what it took in the past). But we're still talking a bit of time before I've got something worthy of publication.

However, I'll also be able to dribble the work out on my website before an entire set of 10-12 is complete. I'll let you know. 


peonyden (Denis Wilson)
October 11, 2007 11:41
peonyden

Hi Mike,

Do you like to play in public, or with others? We have a little bunch of people who play a bit of rock 'n roll, or some softer stuff, at the CTC on Thursday nights. If you want to check it out, email me (in advance) and I will make sure I will be there. You can come and listen, if you want to "test the waters" first. Some nights are better than others - it depends on who turns up.

 Denis


mike (Mike Macgirvin)
October 12, 2007 09:47
mike

Denis - I've been toying with playing in public again and have been meaning to check out the CTC happening. I just frequently run into other obligations on Thursday night and haven't gotten to it yet.

I found out how much they were paying the musicians at the pub, and how bad most of them are - and said, gee, I could do that. Maybe get a little extra beer money and let the folks listen to something that actually resembles music. Not that they're all bad, but it's really hit and miss.

Seems the trend these days for the pub 'rockers' (and I use the term loosely) is to avoid the hassles of a band and just play guitar and sing to a karaoke CD. I wanna' puke every time I hear yet another person at the  pub doing the obligatory karaoke version of  'Sweet Home Alabama'. They get good money to do it and it's quite a lucrative hustle.

I can certainly do that, but I'm also capable of actually entertaining folks without any backing tracks.

I pretty much avoid the band myself. Been there, done that. Found out years ago that you could buy the equipment reasonably cheap and replace them all. No more drunk drummer, bass player missing practice because he slept with the vocalist and got in a fight with her, etc. As a friend once said, being in a band is like being married to five people (that don't get along).

And the last few years, I've worked on some pretty intricate/complex guitar stuff. Bass, rhythm, melody - all at once. I no longer even need the equipment to keep a beat going and get people dancing. 


October 12, 2007 22:45
Gail

I'll take dribs and drabs until the finished product is available! I've certainly enjoyed the previous work.

Ah yes, the pub scene and karaoke (ew). Could be why I stay away from them now. Hard to find a decent pub in the US anyway. ;-)


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Oct 10, 2007
Trouble on the road

A car was pulled off to the side of the pass this morning. Not in a picnic area - but in a generally inconvenient place to stop. I knew right away he was in trouble.

Little did I know... As I got closer I could see two gentlemen peering into the boot (that's a 'trunk' for my American friends) and they did not look very happy.

I've mentioned on other occasions that the MacQuarie Pass is at least as good a roller coaster ride as Disneyland's Matterhorn.  

So I edged by them, looking to see if I could ascertain what difficulty they were in. Just as I drew near, one man lifts up a flat of eggs from inside the boot (trunk). And it's dripping with sticky yucky goo. Took a turn too fast and the groceries rolled around in the boot (trunk), and the eggs got smooshed. I can only imagine the mess these two blokes (dudes) were looking at in the boot (trunk). Glad it wasn't me.

Comments:

peonyden (Denis Wilson)
October 11, 2007 11:36
peonyden

They say you have to smash eggs to make an omelette. He must have had something heavy in the "boot" to make it crash hard enough for him to have heard it go over, while driving. Either that or he had the eggs up on top of something else, and they slid off and crashed. Yucky, yucky.

Good fun posting, Mike. 


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Oct 05, 2007
Localized news

There are occasions when having IP location checking is a good thing. For instance Google notices that I'm in Australia (by mapping my IP address), and gives me the option to search for something in 'Australia only', or 'Search the web'.

I've noticed more and more software that is location aware. For instance a lot of the large electronic manufacturers do this to quickly point you to products for your local supply voltage and also to direct you to the nearest retailer that stocks their products. Software download sites often use it to choose 'mirrors' of the software that you can download without your data packets traversing multiple continents and oceans. 

Technically, it's not hard. I've done it myself. You just need to link to a Geo <-> IP database.

Sometime in the last 48 hours, it looks as if CNN became location aware. This is enough to make me protest. I'm presented with a new header bar that gives me Sydney weather info, so I know what's going on.  What I fear, is that I'll no longer be able to get U.S. news - which is my only reason for visiting CNN. Not that CNN is the best distributor of information. But it's the principal of the thing. Now that I know that they know where I am in the world, I cannot shake the feeling that I'll never know if the news page that I'm presented with represents actual US news, or some localized version of the news that was molded and massaged to suit the political and social leanings of the local population. You know why they do this of course. China. Now they can honor the Chinese government requests to subdue information that is ultimately going to China. So I feel like a Chinese dissident. In order to get American news - from America; I'm going to have to connect anonymously via a proxy server somewhere in the continental U.S. 

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Oct 04, 2007
Aussie Power (Digitech)

This is yet another informational post to save somebody a lot of headaches. It's about trying to convert a Digitech guitar effects board to work on native (220-240V 50hz) power.

In this case the model is a Digitech RP-12, which isn't made anymore, however this applies to most of the large pedal boards that Digitech has made in the last ten years. The actual power supply is a separate component that likewise isn't made anymore. They do offer a replacement (the PSS3), with an adapter (PS4BC) to fit the non-standard DIN power socket on the pedal board. These run about $110 AUD. Yikes. It's really a $20 power supply, and there's plenty of profit selling them for $20. I refuse to pay over a hundred. It's a freaking hobby transformer, fercrysakes.

It turns out there are reasons they charge so much. Nothing else seems to work. The ratings as specified are 9VAC, 2.1A. Simple enough. I can do this - yes? 

Not quite. The commercial 9VAC wall-warts usually stop at 1 amp. A couple of months ago I tried to get around this by purchasing an adequate transformer and building a box for it. After much effort, I finally plugged it in and tried it. HUM and BUZZ. Loud and nasty. Not something you want for studio recording. I scratched my head a while and went back to using the original (110V/60hz mains) unit through a step-down transformer. No hum. So clearly it's not the 50hz that's causing me grief. I brought the original supply into work and put it on an oscilloscope to see what was special about the Digitech branded supply. Couldn't find anything obvious, except that it was a cheap transformer with a lot of inductance artifacts and the waveform was skewed a bit - pointy instead of pure sinusoidal. 

So I took one of my 9VAC 1A wall-warts (that I have several of to power other equipment) and tried it briefly - maybe there was something wrong with my wiring. The 1 amp unit likewise gave me nasty HUM and BUZZ. I didn't leave it plugged in long enough to cook it.

There's no ground and no shielding in the Digitech supply, but I even tried grounding and shielding the lines to reduce the hum - no luck. I tried phase reversing both the primary and secondary (one at a time) in case it was phase sensitive. Nope. There's something obviously different about the Digitech supply.

Hmmm. Back to the drawing board. OK, looks like I just have to use the original 110V supply through a step-down transformer. It's the only thing that makes it work. I gave up on the project and that got me by for the last month or two.

Then last weekend, I turned everything on and the pedal board was dead. Defunct. After some probing it looks like the Digitech transformer just decided it was time to die. Open primary. This gave me an excuse to open the hermetically sealed enclosure to find out what was magic about the Digitech unit. 

Absolutely nothing. It's got a transformer and a fuse. Period. (And the fuse was still good.) OK. So I pulled out my homebrew transformer again. It's only a transformer. What's wrong here? Why is my solution so darned noisy? Why is a generic 9VAC supply so noisy? How do I get rid of the noise?

I tried to order a new 110V supply from the states (to save $50), but nobody will sell me one (even with the huge profit they get). They are forbidden from sending new Digitech products overseas. Even if it's a just a wall-wart that I need to make my old pedal work.  

So getting desperate, I tried a 9VDC supply. The logic boards work and the display lights up, but there's no audio signal at all. So obviously the audio circuitry requires AC. That's weird and I can't imagine what the engineers were smoking when they made that decision, but it doesn't matter - that's just the way it is.  

So I started trying different voltage taps on my homebrew transformer box. I went down to 3V. Nothing worked anymore. Not enough voltage to drive the logic boards. 6V, logic boards work, but the noise is back. 8.5V, noise. 9V, noise. 9.5V, noise. But now it's getting dangerous. Too much voltage can cook something. However, I've got nothing to lose. Right now it's all just an expensive paper weight. The absolute worst that could happen is that I'd be forced to buy a new pedal board, which wouldn't be horrible but the good ones run about $1000 here. Yeah, a new PodXT Live would be ok, as would a GNX4. But maybe, just maybe - my old board just needs a little bit more umph than they claim it does.  

So anyway I cringed (as one normally does when doing something that could end up being a thousand dollar mistake) and tapped into 10.5V. Bingo. Everything works, no noise, no hum. I breathed a sigh of relief. I finally found the issue. They lied. It doesn't take 9VAC, 2.1A. It requires something above 9.5, and probably about 10V for everything to work properly.

So that's the bottom line. If you need a replacement Digitech power unit, ignore the 9V rating. It won't work worth a darn. Get 10.5V (to be sure, since I don't have a variac handy to figure out exactly where it starts working). 

 

Comments:

xiromez (Alex von Muralt)
December 12, 2007 01:07
xiromez

Hi Mike,

Thanks, your rant was most useful. I bought a Digitech VX-400 off e-bay. Long story short, I got a 2400mA 10VAC power suppler from Wagner/WES  in Australia (http://www.wescomponents.com/) for like $20, I didn't even have to change the connector, the supplied one worked perfectly. Sound thru the pedal is crisp and clear.

Technical: 

Prior to all this, I tested the US supply using a variac down to 115V. I looked at the AC supply on an oscilloscope, it was 10VAC, not 9VAC (as you suspected), also almost square wave in shape. With this in mind I bought the WES PSU with confidence. Anyway, the WES supply above worked a treat and the wave shape was expectedly sinusoidal.

I hope other users find this info useful. 

 Alex

p.s. local shop with some Digitech gear claimed that Digitech Aus were unable to supply me with a genuine PSU (to discourage ebayers). So if you tried to get genuine and couldn't, this should sort you without having to modify any of your original equipment.


mike (Mike Macgirvin)
December 12, 2007 09:57
mike

Thanks for the update Alex - judging from the number of people who view this page, a lot of folks have struggled with getting their Digitech gear working here. Sounds like the Wagner supply is a winner. I notice that it's got a 2.5mm pin plug, so those of us with the older DIN (similar to a MIDI cable) power connector will still need to hack up the cable.

If I were doing it over again, I'd open the board up and solder in a standard connector and run it out the back. Those DIN plugs have a way of popping out when somebody steps on 'em - even though they've got a clamp to hold it. If you're playing live and somebody starts dancing in front of you, it's quite easy for this to happen. 

 


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Oct 03, 2007
Something about a flying V

There's something about a Flying V guitar. It's not for everybody. Even fifty years after its introduction, it retains a small following in the heavy metal set, but still is a rarity. That's because the guitar makes a statement. You can't just pick it up, unless you intend to play it with attitude.

I remember watching patrons of my music store getting uncomfortable as they got near one on the rack. In four years, I think a grand total of three people besides myself actually picked one up to play. Everybody else went for something more conventional. Myself? I've got three of the things.

That's all a long-winded way of saying that I kinda' like this picture. 

 

I think it's Grace Potter, 'cause she's one of the few girls (OK, the only one) I've seen that has the cajones to play a flying V in public.

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Oct 02, 2007
Horse Flu Update

The continuing spread of equine influenza (horse flu) has resulted in the government declaring a 'buffer zone' at Bowral - about 15 minutes from us. The quarantine region has spread to Hill Top, about 30 minutes away. They are vaccinating all the horses in the buffer zone. I call it a Maginot Line. The flu can and has already jumped such small buffer areas. This is a big deal, because although horse flu has already been around the globe, Australia was isolated from it until now. Infection rates among non-vaccinated horses (as they all are here) are roughly 100%. 

In related news, we finally got our horse out of the quarantine station, where he was sitting at the beginning (aka ground zero) of the outbreak.  Except we couldn't move him anywhere close to us since he's been exposed (although vaccinated in America). So we had to move him into a 'purple zone', or somewhere the flu is already raging. You can see the pictures of his arrival here.

Imagine trying to get somebody to put up a horse that was at ground zero during the outbreak. Amanda made a lot of calls - and finally found one that would take him. It's on the other side of Sydney, about 2 1/2 hours away. But at least he's finally 'free' of the government station. He moved there over the weekend, and now we just have to wait until it's safe to bring him home finally - which could be another six months.

The government is asking us to put up roughly $90/day for the month or more that he was quarantined, plus daily vet checks. We haven't got the final bill yet, but it could be astronomical. Since he's a 'pleasure horse' (aka 'pet') and not a thoroughbred race horse, we don't qualify for all the government assistance that they provide to 'the industry'. This is a bit unfair, since they already have write-offs, and concessions, and insurance against such things. And to top it off, our horse wasn't part of the problem. He was vaccinated (as all horses coming into the country are supposed to be) and didn't get the flu even after a month around other infected horses. We're just caught in the middle of this fiasco and may have to pay through the nose for it.  

Of course if the Maginot Line doesn't hold, we'll be sitting in a purple zone in the next few weeks and might be able to bring him home once the flu hits here - which it probably will.  

 

Comments:

peonyden (Denis Wilson)
October 2, 2007 12:05
peonyden

Hi Mike

I had not caught up with the exclusion zone around Bowral. I am not a "horsey person", but  I do have an agisted horse on my block, as a weed eater. 

You really have been caught up in a mess. Your comment that all imported horses are supposed to be immunised  is interesting. Eventually someone will be hung out to dry for this, but not until after the election.

You could try suing the Government for your expenses. But seeing as it is the Government charging you for the expenses of Quarantine, I don't like your chances. The whole incident is outrageous!

Did you hear the report of the "clean-up" procedures at the airport? They blow out the mobile "stables" in which the horses travel on airplanes with a leaf blower! Large items which do not blow away, they bag securely, and burn. Amazingly stupid.

Cheers

Denis 


mike (Mike Macgirvin)
October 2, 2007 12:43
mike

> Did you hear the report of the "clean-up" procedures at the airport?

That would be funny if it weren't so tragic. The latest thinking is that the flu is jumping containment lines because of the wind. So the leaf blowers are merely blowing the pathogens into the air to be carried away from the planes and into the general population.

They vaccinated 500 horses at Bowral over the weekend and declared the operation a success - indicating they are done. Right. There are thousands of horses in the Highlands.

The only thing keeping the flu away from the Highlands at the moment is the wind direction. 

 


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"Silent gratitude isn't very much use to anyone."
-- G. B. Stearn