Tag Archive: Geek

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Geek Music

Spotify

Now I’ve been enjoying using the Spotify service recently for listening to music at work and sharing playlists between people. I don’t mind the odd advert as they’re usually pretty un-intrusive but I think they need to target their ads a little more.

This afternoon I was happily listening to Queens of the Stone Age when suddenly an ad popped up for Pink’s new album! Not sure it’s the right demographic. More work required.

Spotify

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Geek Photography

When Compact Flash cards go bad…

Had a few scary moments over the weekend. Managed to get some good shots (I thought from the small preview on the D70) but then I got the dreaded CHA error. I carried on shooting once clearing the error but knew that the card was probably going to do it again. I got back on Sunday and had remembered this link from Seb’s site. In the comments PhotoRescue was recommended. So, I downloaded it and gave it a go. Sure enough it recovered almost all of the images… so after paying the £25 for the software I had all my images back! Happy days. Must work out how to stop corrupting the card though.

Praying this works

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Geek Web

iPhone optimised

This site is now optimised for reading on an iPhone or PDA.

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Flickr Geek Photography

Flickr addiction

Well looks like I’m not the only one who has a problem…

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Geek

Back in Google

So I’ve learnt quite a bit about google and how the search results work and also how my web hosting works. Always good to learn new things, especially nerdy ones.

Anyway, the site is back as number one on google.co.uk.

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Geek

iPhone

Just ordered mine from O2. Going to be switching from Orange. Looks like I was lucky, ordered this morning and they’d sold out online this afternoon!

Should be here Sat morning hopefully.

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Apple Geek

Essential Mac Software

With a few friends switching to Macs I’ve been meaning to put together a list of ‘essential software’ together for a while and I guess this is as good a place as any. Not sure how I’ll group them. I may just list them all. I won’t include things that are installed by default on 10.5 just additional apps I’ve been using. There’s 10 applications here and I may well add to this list in the future.

1. MarsEdit
$30. Blog posting software from Red Sweater software. Allows you to type all your pointless musings from the comfort of your own Mac at home before uploading to your site. Also integrates with flickr. One of my favourite and most useful bits of software. Also the developer is very friendly and helpful. I’ve had questions answered with an hour on email. Mac only.

2. Handbrake
Open Source [free] but worth donating. DVD ripping software which turns your DVD’s in to nice 2-4gig sized Quicktime files for putting on your iPod, iPhone etc or playing in FrontRow or on your machine. I used to have a library of lots of films I had ripped. This was really good when I had the iMac as I would just watch films before going to bed. Comes in Mac, Windows and Linux versions.

3. Synergy
€5. A simple set of controls to control iTunes and display album art and song details when a track starts playing. Essential. Saves flicking between applications. Mac only.

4. GarageSale
€30. A great application that allows you to manage, design and upload applications offline and upload them to ebay without using the painful process on the site. It includes a series of excellent templates for use. Feels a bit like iPhoto in it’s layout and so useful. Also links with your photos and will host your images for you if required. Mac only.

5. GarageBuy
Free. From the same developers as GarageSale. Allows you to search ebay and save searches on ebay without actually visiting the site. You can also add watched items and even bid directly from within the application. Mac only.

6. iStat Menu
Free but worth donating. Gives you visual feedback about memory usage, hard drives, processor usage etc and completely customisable. Useful to see what process has brought your machine to a grind.

7. Mail.appetizer
Free but worth donating. Gives a preview of emails that come in to Mail in a semi transparent window. You can also delete messages or mark them as read without switching to Mail. Mac only.

8. Growl
Free. “A system wide notifications system”. A number of applications support this and send information to a transparent window. Hard to explain but very useful.

9. Transmit
$30. Simply the best FTP client for OS X. Mac only.

10. Time Machine
Ok, so it comes included with OS X 10.5 and I said I wouldn’t include items in OS X but this really is essential. See this post for more details. Mac only obviously.

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Apple Geek

Time Machine

In all the years I’ve been using computers for day to day work [since around 97-98 when I started uni] I’ve never had to do a full backup of a system after a catastrophic failure. By catastrophic I mean water in my MacBook…

So I was a little worried that I’d lost everything! My laptop has all my portfolio of work on which essential for me gaining employment and also all my Part 3 work, not to mention all my music and photos.

Since upgrading to Mac OS 10.5 I’ve been using a program called Time Machine to back up which comes as part of OS X on the Mac. I’d never had to test how good it is and kind of hoped that it would just work when I needed it to. I’ve never needed to recover an individual file either as I’m usually careful about what I delete.

My new MacBook arrived from Amazon yesterday and as soon as I got it home I rebooted from the CD and selected restore from Time Machine Backup. An hour or so later my laptop was exactly as it was the day before the flood! Needless to say I am very impressed!

F*%*#d laptop