fine films
by volve on Oct.05, 2006, under movies
I just wanted to take a moment to commend some of the lesser known films that have slipped through the cracks lately.
Firstly, the finest film I have seen in quite some time. Do not mistake my brevity for a lack of opinion, this had some of the greatest acting, finest cinematography, and enlightening scenes I could hope for: The Listening
Secondly, a very amusing film from two actors I’ve watched on British TV for years, now finally making it to the big screen: Alien Autopsy
Penultimatly, one you may have heard of that enamored me to Simon Pegg so much, that it even made Mission Impossible 3 bearable: Shaun of the Dead
Finally, Skeet Ulrich has never been so hardcore hackery in the quite suspenful depiction of Kevin Mitnick: Takedown
I recommend you make the effort to locate and view any of these excellent films – I promise you wont be disappointed.
Some Snappy Applications
by volve on Jul.04, 2006, under ui, web
Here a couple of recent UI concepts I’ve been impressed with. Imagery and Timeline. Go play with them!
Media Recovery
by volve on Apr.22, 2006, under linux, media storage, software
The bane of having an awesome media server, regardless of whether it houses audio, video, photos or all-of-the-above is that you have to rely on physical devices somewhere to store the data…
Having recently had yet another hard drive decide to begin spewing bad sectors, I went on the hunt for recovery information for the overly complicated LVM2 system I was running. The immediate prospect of having to mirror the entire ~2TB filesystem before being able to run a repair made my head hurt. After acquiring a replacement disk for the 1 in poor health, I was tempted to try the standard Linux command ‘dd’ with some ignore errors and pad blocks options, but then I happend to stumble upon TestDisk which sounded extremely versatile and useful. However, what I was most impressed with was their extremely informative MediaWiki-based site and in particular, the Damaged Hard Disk area with references to two different versions of ‘dd rescue’ tools, in particular Antonio Diaz’s ddrescue utility. Essentially after you tell it the bad disk, and somewhere (file or other disk) to write the data, it’s fully automated. If you make sure to use the logfile feature, it can even resume and pick-up where it left off if your recovery process is interrupted for any reason.
If you’ve had hard disk/CD/DVD failures for whatever reason, I strongly suggest looking at the TestDisk page as it runs across >6 operating systems and supports >17 different filesystems derivations – oh and their site is very helpful. Have at it!
Suggested Linux Desktop UX/UI Improvements
by volve on Apr.01, 2006, under linux, ui
Peter Chabada posted a length, nitty-gritty list of 40+ possible improvements to Linux desktops (mainly Gnome). Worth a read for ideas: http://chabada.sk/better-desktop/
media server software rant update (mini review)
by volve on Feb.06, 2006, under articles, media storage, movies, software, ui
It appears that the sorry state of UIs in media server software doesn’t extend to the Mac platform. I’ve been surfing around reading a few obscure articles this week and although the software isn’t very mature, I’ve been quite impressed with several Mac projects. Namely: MediaCentral, CenterStage, iTheatre, and CoverFlow. The best part is that unlike some of the Windows appliations, these three for the Mac are free! (Try saying that ten times fast.)
Although MediaCentral is quite text-based for navigation, its presentation is definitely a lot sharper and more refined than any of the others. CenterStage is intersting and has a lot of potential, but better be careful not to ‘over utilize’ available space. It’s definitely the most mature of the projects. My main gripe is that if I’m browsing a bunch of movie covers (which BackStage – the CenterStage backend component sucsessfully downloaded for me), why do I need a text title underneath them? I don’t; it simply wastes space. Also the cover browsing section seems awfully small, but as I didn’t poke too deeply, one might be able to turn off the preview area to the right (that would be handy). iTheatre is at RC1 currently and has quite a few pieces of missing functionality, but could be nice although is heavily text-based like MediaCentral. CoverFlow is purely for browsing your music but it is such a simple, obvious UI that it merits mentioning. Hopefully its ideas can be intergrated into a more encompassing media browser.
Snappy HTPC Case
by volve on Feb.02, 2006, under server cases
Another HTPC case. Yeah, I know, *yawn* but this one actually looks pretty damn sweet. Not only is it shiny brushed silvery goodness, but it has all the ugly drives/buttons/connectors hidden by a whoppingly large touchscreen. I’m still thinking that if it looks this good but can handle that many harddrives, do you relaly want something running so loud and hot in your living room? I guess it could still look good in the media rack…
Origen AS
RDP over SSH
by volve on Jan.19, 2006, under articles, linux, software
I’d been having some annoyances with RDP (Remote Desktop) over SSH. The primary source of annoyance stemmed from the Win2k/XP client not allowing you to connect to your local IP regardless of port, forwarded or otherwise. Luckily, it isn’t actually clever enough to know that the 127.0.0.2 address is also tied to the loopback device (one of Microsoft’s little liberties that turns out to actually be handy – who knew?!). So, here’s a solution that’ll save you time struggling and cash from buying an application such as WiSSH that is entirely unnecessary.
Database Schemata Design Quickie
by volve on Jan.05, 2006, under ui, web
In an awesome twist of “bobby just sent me a link when I asked about schema design“-fate, WWW SQL Designer has to be the coolest “random web app from some random guy” in quite a while! Go forth and create!
rant regarding media servers
by volve on Jan.03, 2006, under linux, media storage, software, ui
I was originally commenting on an article on Engadget but felt like expanding it a bit here.
Ok, what everyone has to remember is that the User Interface of whatever is presenting you with your >1,000 DVD library has to not just be good, but has to be GREAT. The only GREAT interface I’ve found is from Kaleidascape but sadly that’s only inside their $20k media server (nuts!). In looking at the Niveus and Escient screenshots, they look like rejected 80s MTV visuals… Don’t even get me started on MythTV, Meedio, DVD Lobby or the like; goodness.
Although not leaps and bounds better, I am very happy with Xbox running Xbox Media Center. I have my 2TB library ripped to my file-server and the Xbox Media Center software is by far the most friendly and elegant for access. However, even this isn’t a match to the Kaleidascape UIs. Frankly, I’ve given-up and settled for writing my own interface in Flex. Not sure when it’ll be released, but it’ll definitely be free when it’s done.
Just wanted to add my thoughts to this debate in the hopes of tempering all these new product announcements lately and remind people that a >1,000 DVD library is really pretty useless when you can only see ~9-12 covers on screen at a time… Oh and the Sony XL-1 Digital Living System does look quite impressive, but is still bound by the Microsoft MCE2005 limitations. Sony did have some UI screenshots of a different media server but I can’t seem to locate them right now – more on that later.
Firefox session extension
by volve on Nov.17, 2005, under software, web
As it caused me some effort to actually locate, I wish to share with you this awesome Firefox Extension entitled SessionSaver. The below description does not do the usefulness justice. The version at the link below works with Firefox version 1.0.x and 1.5. Recently the Mozilla team have implemented automatic session restoring upon a Firefox crash (maybe even simply a quit) for the 2.0 version, which is excellent. I’ve always loved Opera’s ability to remeber everything a user was doing when the browser was closed – definitely a step in the right direction.
Download SessionSaver from: adblock.ethereal.net
[Description from the Addons.Mozilla.org page]:
“SessionSaver restores your browser -exactly- as you left it, every startup, every time. Not even a crash will phase it. Windows, tabs, even things you were typing — they’re all saved. Use the menu to add + remove sessions; right, shift, or middle-clicking will delete. “Simple mode” for peace of mind, or “Expert mode” for advanced flexibility. Just Click. Install. Rad.
Added TextSaver: everything you type, saved (even in frames). Added RemoteSync: session-syncing between browsers (syncs Adblock, too). Added intelligent postData-restore. Added various patches + bugfixes, per discussion in the official support thread.”





