Monthly Archive for February, 2007

Smart Homes Show

T3 Magazines "Smart Homes Show" is on at the N.E.C. in Birmingham from 22nd to 25th March.

As someone who’s home is a shrine to technology with industrial strength Wi-Fi coverage, 10megabit Broadband, 300GB networked PVR, both Satellite and Freeview Digital TV, multiple Telephone and CAT5e ports in every room of the house, Web enabled Motion-Detection CCTV, Gigabit Ethernet, DAB Radio receivers, a media server, waterproof speakers in the bathroom and a Robotic Guinea Pig (no, honestly…) – as you can imagine, I’m rubbing my geeky little hands at the thought of attending.

If you are attending and fancy meeting up for a cup of tea and a chat, drop me a note – it’d be nice to say hello!

P.S. Avoid the £8 entry fee by requesting free tickets to the Homebuilding & Renovating Show, which is attached to the Smart Home Show. Free tickets from http://www.homebuildingshow.co.uk/cgi-bin/htmlos.c… :-)

Bookmark Overload

I’m a serial bookmarker. That is to say anytime I see any web-site vaguely of interest, I bookmark it within Mozilla Firefox (or add it to favourites for you Internet Explorer folk) in a very organised folder structure, and file it away for future reference.

I also regularly work in many different locations using many different devices. I’ve a PDA/Mobile Phone, Laptop, Desktop PC, Server and yet another Desktop PC solely for playing games on and doing other non-work stuff. Whilst sat at any of these machines, it’s useful to be able to open up one of those thousands of bookmarks I’ve made before.

This always caused a problem, because if I was at the server and I wanted to look up a bookmark I’d made on the Desktop PC the day before – it wasn’t available. Likewise, if I found a site I wanted to bookmark, it’d be scribbled down on a peice of paper, or jotted into the mobile phone notes section, and hopefully make it’s way back to the bookmarks on my Desktop PC when I was next there and remembered to do so.

I’d also tried synchronising Firefox’s bookmark file itself between various PC’s. But I regularly ended up losing entries when I’d made new bookmarks at two different machines without syncing them first.

The closest I’d come to a solution was with the excellent del.icio.us web-site. Del.icio.us allows you to store and tag bookmarks and share them with others. It can integrate with your existing bookmarks within Firefox – but I wasn’t sold on this aspect of the site.

So when I came across Foxmarks – an extension for Firefox that said it made bookmark synchronising easy, I was intrigued.

In a nutshell – once installed Foxmarks sync’s your bookmarks to a central server, uploading any new entries you’ve made, and downloading any new entries it finds (that you could have made on another PC). It does this at startup and shutdown without any noticeable overheads, and at scheduled times in between. No new windows to navigate, no special methods – just continue to bookmark web-sites at whichever PC you are at, and they get sync’d to all the other machines on their next use without any intervention at all.

Foxmarks is freely available for Firefox 1.5 and above, for Windows, Linux and Mac. I highly recommend it!

My First Computer

PC Pro Magazine is celebrating it’s 150th issue this month. If you work in, or have any responsibility for I.T, and don’t read "PC Pro" – why not? It’s an invaluable source of information for newbie and experienced user alike.

As part of the 150th Celebrations, PC Pro has asked it’s contributors to reminise about their first PC. Anecdotes about Sinclair ZX80′s, earlier Apple Mac’s and even earlier beasts that barely pass for the modern equivalent of "computer" were presented. Which got me thinking to my first computer experiences.

My first computer was the Atari 600XL (pictured right).

Boasting a whopping 16KB (that’s KB, not MB) of memory, a Cartridge Slot for ROM based games, and a heavy integrated keyboard – when my 2nd hand 600XL appeared on Christmas day that year, the 9 year old mini-me was very excited!

Although no manuals were supplied, an Atari Cassette Deck was, and so through trial and error (and using cheap C60 "Data" Cassette’s purchased from Tandy’s to save information onto, it was mostly error…) I slowly picked up how to write in BASIC. I like to think that this first experience of "it’s only a computer, try stuff and see what works" set me up for later life as a reckless IT Consultant…

Plus of course there were the games. Although I was given access to the back catalogue of Atari classics (Joust – pictured left, Centipede and Star Raiders, amongst others) – it wasn’t long before I was introduced to the equivalents of PC Pro magazine for the day… "Atari User" and it’s less glossy but longer lasting rival "Page 6" Magazine. Within their pages I found out about games of the day like Gauntlet, games that required more than my puny 600XL’s 16k memory…

And so I learnt my first lesson about what would become a lifetimes computing necessity, namely "upgrading".

I moved from a 600XL to a 2nd hand Atari 800XL, boasting a huge 64KB of memory – enough to run Gauntlet. Then came a 5.25" Disk Drive, consigning the Cassette Deck to history. Then I lusted after 128KB memory, so a move to the Atari 130XE was required. Before long, the 16-bit Atari STFM was luring me away, and once I was onto the 16-bit platform, my first non-Atari Compuer, the Amiga A500, was purchased.

Being introduced to the Amiga’s grown-up UNIX like OS was the final chapter in my"Home Computer" learnings – I soon explored further and discovered something called the "IBM Compatible PC" (an 8086 Processor in this case) and the world of Networking using long lengths of BNC Cable became the new passion.

But I’ll never forget my humble beginnings on the Atari. In fact, how can I forget – as I sit typing this blog entry, I can see an Atari 65XE and an original Atari 400 staring at me from the shelves! That’s right, I now collect "retro" computers – so the GG has to put up with sharing our home with overflowing shelves full of ZX Spectrums, Commodore 64′s, VIC 20′s and all the other home computers I could never afford to play with when I was a youngster. :-)

Free booklet – 83 Ideas To Help You Achieve More

John from John Seeley & Co. has passed me a number of copies of his booklet “83 Ideas To Help You Achieve More”.

It’s a good short read, and worth referring back to from time to time when you need help getting motivated to “get on”.

If you’re interested in copy, get in touch and I’ll drop one out to you by snail mail on a first-come, first-served basis.

The Gadget Show

Here in the UK, The Gadget Show returned to television for it’s Sixth season last night on Five.

If you’ve never watched it before and you’re even the slightest bit geeky (that means the majority of blokes at least) then it’s worth setting the PVR for.

Apart from the lovely Suzi Perry being very easy on the eye for us chaps, Jason Bradbury is definitely a nerds nerd – the man just loves his technology. The weekly challenges are usually great fun too.

In summary, think BBC’s "Top Gear" show, only for gadgets, and you’re there.