the four words that make IT people everywhere cringe… April 21, 2008
Posted by KSC in personal, tech.Tags: computers, mac, windows
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“I’m switching to Mac.”
Let me explain. I ain’t dumb when it comes to computers. Until recently, I would have classified myself as an “enthusiast,” because I prefer to build/upgrade my own systems. No, not from the customization menu at dell.com. From parts. That I order online. And then assemble myself.
I know my way around a Windows box. But y’know what? Lately, they’re more trouble than they’re worth. I’ve had to reinstall XP twice in the past year — a multi-day affair, given my work schedule, and usually coinciding with some upgrade or another that I perform on my system. I refuse to switch to Vista, and although Microsoft has pushed back their stop date for sales of XP a couple of times, I don’t want to take the risk that sales of XP stop before a usable build of Vista ships.
“Now Lawyer 2.0,” you might ask, “isn’t it true that you use your computing hardware for high-performance, resource-intensive multimedia applications that have a tendency to be finicky and unreliable in the first place?” (i.e., games). Yup, I do. But compared to my non-gamer wife, I’ve had it relatively easy. Granted, her HP laptop is creaking along now at 5 years old — a virtual eternity in laptop years — but she’s had lots of problems with it.
- First, there was the dueling anti-virus problem. Norton and AVG each think the other one is a virus, and when they’re installed on the same computer, they fight! Granted, this was partially my fault. I should have checked a little more carefully for antivirus software, but I took my wife’s word that she didn’t have any installed. Unfortunately, the only way to fix the problem (and this was the conclusion our FORENSIC COMPUTER SCIENTIST friend came to) was to delete BOTH anti-virus packages and leave the computer undefended. Apparently, Norton left some stuff in the registry on uninstall that even our friend (did I mention he’s a FORENSIC COMPUTER SCIENTIST?) couldn’t figure out how to clean up. While we were trying to figure out a way to back up her data so we could reinstall windows (the only way to get antivirus software on there)…
- The Sasser worm crashed her machine…about two full years AFTER it hit initially. That was a fun reinstall; the only way I could do it and preserve any of her data was by booting from a knoppix CD, transferring her important files to her iPod, and then formatting her hard drive for the reinstall.
- She has never been able to properly rip audio CDs to .mp3 for her iPod. For some reason, whenever we try to rip music on her machine, the tracks skip or exhibit other errors. Could be a drive problem.
- At least one of her (three) USB ports has stopped working, inexplicably.
- Speaking of her iPod, it took me about three installs to get iTunes working right. Wouldn’t recognize her iPod and sync up. Can’t fathom why.
- Her computer refuses to adopt a modern wireless encryption protocol; neither WEP nor WPA works properly. So, we rely on MAC address filtering to “secure” our wireless network.
- …and finally, there’s an electrical problem (we think) with her power connection. To be fair, she’s used her laptop heavily for five years now. Before we sent it to our buddy for repairs, she couldn’t move the laptop from its position for fear of disturbing the power cord and breaking the connection. If this can’t be fixed, she’ll need a new computer.
In the grand scheme of things, these are all minor annoyances (except for the virus outbreak), right? But my wife only really uses her computer for email, Internet, music, light usage of productivity apps, and some minor photo processing. And all of these problems make it harder for her to use the darn thing for what it’s intended for! She’s always juggling USB ports, I have to rip her CDs to .mp3 for her, for the past couple of months the power cord issue has prevented her from moving the laptop so much as an inch. Running an unsecured network is risky. The less stable her system is, the less she’ll rely on it as a media repository.
But the last straw came a couple of weeks ago. My wife is using a loaner laptop, and due to our move, I just set my desktop up a couple of days ago. So, when we were looking to print something out before taking a road trip, I had to connect the loaner to our printer.
And plug ‘n play decided — inexplicably — not to work. The computer saw that there was an HP OfficeJet 7200 series printer attached, but refused to speak to it. OK, I thought, maybe I need to install the drivers after all. I installed the drivers, and it still didn’t work. Gah! I thought that Windows ‘95 solved this problem, like, over 10 years ago! I wasn’t expecting the full functionality I’d get from installing HP’s drivers, but I was expecting it to at least be able to print!
So, I’ve been trying to convince my wife that her next laptop should be a Macbook Pro. She’s an amateur photographer, and she eventually wants to pick up a dSLR, so the dedicated video adapter will be useful. It’s pricey, but given how much she uses her computer, it’s worth it. I’ll upgrade later; I can still get quite a bit of useful life out of this iteration of my PC.
Maybe I’m not as good with computers as I think I am. Maybe I know just enough about them to be dangerous, but not enough to effectively administer my own systems given my usage. And I know all about the reality-distortion field; I don’t expect a Mac to run perfectly. I just expect it to run better enough than what we have now that it will save enough time to justify the higher cost. I’m also really digging what I see/read about the iLife application suite, and I’m even tempted to give iWork a go.
Lest anyone think I’m some sort of anti-Microsoft troll: please. I’m sure I’ll wind up with a Windows XP partition on whatever new Mac I purchase. I use Windows XP enthusiastically at work, where our installations are administered by a team of dedicated IT professionals backed by a firm-wide, national IT department. Unfortunately, I don’t have that luxury at home.
sore April 7, 2008
Posted by KSC in personal.Tags: home improvement, home office
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I’m getting old and decrepit.
After the conference call on Saturday, I spent most of the weekend painting the room that will be my office, with my wife’s help. It’s a spiffy shade of dark green. My project this week is to get my bookcases built and start unpacking. After that: desk purchase. My last one wouldn’t have made our recent move, so I’m stuck setting up my computer on a card table for now.
But man, am I ever sore. Took me twice as long to get moving this morning than it usually does.
too early April 5, 2008
Posted by KSC in work/life.Tags: morning
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Nothing quite like waiting for a 9:00 AM Saturday conference call to start…
You know you’re in Boston when… April 4, 2008
Posted by KSC in personal, work/life.Tags: dunkin' donuts, medical, weight
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…your doctor prescribes Dunkin’ Donuts.
For those of you who don’t know me, Lawyer 2.0 is a little bit roly-poly. “Festively plump,” as Cartman would say. OK, I admit it, I’m fat. Not “one porterhouse away from God” fat, but certainly I’ve been heading in that direction. It would seem that year after year of sitting at a desk and poring over cases/documents/memos/etc. has not been kind to my physique. Neither has my complete lack of physical activity or my overwhelming preference for cheeseburgers over salad. As I am fond of saying “I won’t even run for a cheeseburger — and I love cheeseburgers.”
Anyhow, some tests came back with some results that aren’t great and my doctor is suggesting I lose weight. After discussing my eating habits, she thinks that part of the problem is that I typically skip breakfast and then overeat at lunch and dinner. I also tend to eat dinner late (because I tend to work late, naturally).
Her suggestion: sausage and egg on an English muffin from Dunkie’s in the morning. Snacks with protein in them between meals. Cutting out sugary sodas and extraneous carbs (like chips with my sandwich at lunch). And, of course, portion control.
I’ll probably need to do something more extreme if I want to lose serious weight, but I think this is a good start for now.
alt.lawyer.sue.sue.sue April 2, 2008
Posted by KSC in blog, net.life.Tags: 1996, college-me, intro, USENET
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When I was a freshman in college, I dropped my intro-level poli-sci class in favor of a year-long, research-driven freshman seminar dealing with the intersection of the Internet and modern life. This was back in 1996. While everyone else was doing their projects on hacker culture, I decided to take a look at the role the Internet was playing in the contemporary resurgence in neopagan religions like Wicca. And that led me to USENET.
I was hooked. Compared to my flirtations with BBSes in high school, USENET — and the Internet in general — was a brave new world of information and communication. Shame about the signal-to-noise ratio, though, even back then.
I’m a young lawyer in Boston. I currently work at the Boston office of a prominent national law firm. And I grew up during the height of the information explosion. I’m old enough to remember puttering around on our family’s Commodore 64 computer, but young enough that this new-fangled “Web 2.0″ thing doesn’t scare me. I’m constantly on the lookout for new ways to integrate the digital world into my practice — and my life. My wife blogs more than I do.
This is my story.