VelociPeek

Eric’s weblog on tech

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

VelociPeek.com LLC

Song of The Day: What’d I Say - Artist: Ray Charles

This will be brief today, but more will come soon. I have founded a company, VelociPeek.com LLC, out of a desire to research and solve various challenging problems related to Web 2.0, web services, and reliable infrastructure. Many of those challenges I experienced directly while working at AOL; however, those same challenges are not unique to AOL within the industry.

If you’re here, then you obviously know where the blog went :). Thanks for reading and for any conspicuous and/or inconspicuous support.

Tags: ,

Thursday, February 22nd, 2007

Windows Vista Addiction: Media Center

Song of The Day: Here It Goes Again - Artist: OK Go

The last couple of blog entries I dinged Microsoft for a horrendous–at least for me–upgrade from Windows XP Home SP2 to Windows Vista Home Premium Edition. However, this time I’ll focus some energy on the more compelling aspects of Vista.

So what could divert my attention and angst from many hours of upgrade headaches? Well, in a nutshell it’s related to Windows Vista Media Center.

Media Center has been completely overhauled. From these screenshots one can see some of the differences between XP and Vista. The lastest UI in Vista is easy-to-use and Apple-esk flashy.

Furthermore, there was no angst in setting up Vista’s Media Center to work after the initial pain of the upgrade! There was one issue related to media extending, but I’ll sideline that for the moment. Within minutes I was able to browse and view pictures, videos, and TV listings. I thought the interface was pretty good. I know some will point to Front Row, and more copycatting, but I think one has to give Microsoft some credit for being in the media extending game for a while. However, I believe that increased competition has helped advance things. :)

So let’s discuss media extending a little more. I blogged recently about my Christmas gift, eh-hem, family gift, of an Xbox 360. Well, Media Center comes bundled on the console and with a home network that one can extend media a Media Center-enabled PC to the Xbox 360. What does this mean? Well, any stored digital assets on the PC (video, pictures, and tv programs) can be shared and viewed from the couch and TV. As I alluded earlier, I only ran into one snag when I reinstalled Vista and tried to set up the Xbox 360 media extender for a second time. I eventually reverted back to an earlier Vista “known good” configuration and somehow it automagically fixed itself. I’m not sure what fixed it; it’s voodoo; beware.

So why is this media extending stuff cool? Well, it makes video-on-demand (VOD), although faux somewhat, from multiple websites possible. This facet along with the ability to view HD movies from Windows Live Marketplace on the Xbox 360 is VERY nice in my opinion. I honestly have little reason to use Netflix or Blockbuster, and I in fact have not since having the set-up.

For example, I recently rented movies from Movielink and watched them with my Xbox 360. However, I did have to wait approximately an hour for the download before watching them, thus my faux VOD moniker. Some who have cable may poo-hoo this, since VOD is available, but for those like me that have DirecTV and no VOD yet, this is a nice option. However, I would imagine that the personal aspects of a viewable and sharable digital library would still be appealing to anyone.

Although this is all pretty slick, it is still fairly cutting-edge and not all sites work with Vista. For example, I could not use CinemaNow or AOL Video. Even Movielink indicates no support for Vista on its website (i.e., the last I checked), but I was still able to get it working. Caveat Emptor.

In all I think Microsoft made some good strides here. Moreover, with media tools like Movie Maker one can easily create and share videos with one’s entertainment system. I recall the early days of iMovie and various spurious crashes, but I did not experience any of this when creating standard and high definition movies with my installation of Vista. Of course all this wonderful technology requires a Media Center enabled PC with Vista Home Premium and the Xbox 360 - approximately $1500 out of pocket if starting anew, assuming some type of home network to make it possible. However, I think this would be about the same cost using an Apple configuration and the Apple TV.

I still give Apple the lead on ease-of-use and ease-of-setup to do the aforementioned, but for those that want choice, there is some using Media Center, etc. Just expect some initial headaches.

Tags: , , ,

Thursday, February 1st, 2007

Windows Vista Nightmare - Part 2

Song of The Day: Bugs - Artist: Pearl Jam

As I mentioned in my last post about installing Windows Vista, it wasn’t the best of times. Granted, there are articles warning of such problems, but after so many years, one would think that Microsoft could have been more prepared on the driver front given my system’s premium ready specs (i.e., a custom PC but newer, compatible components).

In summary here are the issues I encountered:

  • Both an older and newer DVD drive could not read the UDF install disc. When I put the disc into the drive, it displayed a README in the drive window. The README read:

    This disc contains a “UDF” file system and requires an operating system that supports the ISO-13346 “UDF” file system specification.

    If you receive this message you will likely have to download the disc image via another computer and DVD drive.

  • My upgrade aborted without any good indication of why. I had to perform a clean install. Lesson: be sure to backup your data like I did, fortunately, before performing the install.
  • My Creative’s Sound Blaster X-Fi Platinum card stopped working. I had to revert back to my Abit IC7-G motherboard Realtek AC’97 Audio controller. I’m pretty sure this is becaues of Creative’s beta Vista driver. I hope an update is available soon.
  • I alluded to this already, but my Linksys LNE100TX didn’t work because there were no Vista drivers available. I bought a cheap ($20) Dynex PCI Adapter 10/100 Fast Ethernet card. I just couldn’t wait for the driver and Internet connectivity, but it still sucked to have to buy it :).

So my last post had the original list of components. Here is the list that Vista accepted:

LIST OF COMPONENTS (that eventually worked)

CPU - Intel Pentium 4 3GHz
Motherboard - Abit IC7-G
RAID Controller - HighPoint Tech SATA RocketRAID 1640 (Had to download Vista driver before starting; Windows Vista Upgrade Advisor caught it)
Disk - Two SATA Maxtor ~220G drives RAID striped
Ethernet - Dynex PCI Adapter 10/100 (Vista choked on the Linksys LNE100TX, no driver available)
RAM - 1Gig (2×512M) Corsair 184-Pin DDR SDRAM DDR 400
DVD - HP DVD-Writer DVD 100i (NOT before upgrade, but after the upgrade it did; remember README UDF problem?)
Video Card - ATI Radeon X850XT
Sound Card - Abit IC7-G motherboard Realtek AC’97 Audio controller (Creative drivers didn’t work for my Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Platinum)
OS - Windows XP Home SP2 w/ all critical updates from Windows Update

So what was the total time spent upgrading? If you exclud the original trip to CompUSA to buy Vista, but include the Support call and extra runs to get peripherals, the upgrade was a total of 7 hours. This was from start to finish–everything mostly working! As far as peripherals, I spent $20 for the ethernet card. If you include the DVD drive, that I may return, then you’re talking $110. I guess that’s not too bad considering I was okay on the graphics card, CPU, drive, etc.

So in the end I’m really bitching more about the time spent upgrading due to the lack of supported drivers than anything else. My Vista performance score ended up being respectable with a 4.2 (i.e., anything between 4-5 is premium ready).

Now that I’ve been using Vista for a few days, I’ll say why I seem to be getting more and more addicted to Vista in my next post! :)

Hint: Windows Vista Media Center, Vista media apps, and the Xbox 360.

Tags: ,

|