Another nice update on the WDTV Media Player

I have a nice update on the WDTV Media Player.

I gave my original WDTV to my mother so I could let her watch all the shows I have recorded.  But I noticed yesterday that Costco was selling the units so I decided to pick up a second one for myself.

I wanted to know however if I could use more than the two hard drives that it supported.  So this morning, I plugged in a 7 port USB hub and started powering them up, one at a time.  Amazingly, it didn’t have a problem with this.  It simply added another layer to the folder menu where I could pick which volume I wanted to browse into.

I ended up with six USB drives all attached to a single port on the WDTV and it was working perfectly.  I’m very happy!  I might not need to have a PC in the living room anymore.  The only downside is that you need to detach a drive to update it from a computer elsewhere.

This is very cool.

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Got a new HTC Magic phone based on Android

This was originally posted around June 5th.

So, my Rogers 3 year contact on my older phone has expired.  I’ve been watching the latest phones over the last few months to see which one I should get.

Back in April when I started looking, there were really only two phones available in Canada that interested me.  The HTC Touch Pro and the Samsung Omnia.  The Omnia however was still on the way though and not for sale yet.  Both of these phones were based on Windows Mobile 6.1.  And both were supplied by Telus and Bell, not Rogers.  Rogers didn’t seem to have anything as good.  Blackberry is not an option for me.  Telus and Bell’s data plans

The other choice was to wait and see if Apple was going to release a new iPhone this year.  There were rumors posted about a new phone and what features it might have.  The new OS 3.0 was just announced and it sounded like it was going to bring some nice options to the system.  I decided to wait until at least June to see what was coming.  The last iPhone came out in June.

Then May came and the Omnia was released.  I’ve been watching the conversations on Howard Forums.  Some people liked them, some didn’t.  The Omnia has a 5mp camera, FM radio, WM 6.1, and a variety of other things.  The HTC Touch Pro has a physical keyboard and a 3.2mp camera.  Other than that, it’s comparable to the Omnia.

But something also happened in May.  Rogers all of a sudden announced they were going to release two new smart phones on June 2nd.  The HTC Dream and HTC Magic.  Both of these phones are based on Google’s Android operating system.  The Dream has been out in the US for about 6 months already and has quite a following.  Google has updated Android to the next version (1.5) and Rogers is releasing both phones with the new OS.  So the only real difference is that the Dream has a physical keyboard whereas the Magic has a software keyboard.

The rumors were getting clearer on the iPhone though so waiting was still the logical choice.  The rumors were a 3mp camera, 32gb memory, os 3.0, better battery life, stereo Bluetooth, glowing apple icon on the back.

At this point, I’ve already decided against the Touch Pro and Omnia.  I was comparing the iPhone to the Windows Mobile platforms.  The big difference I found was that iPhone apps are between free and $9.99 on average.  Whereas Windows Mobile apps are usually $19.99 and up at most stores.  That’s a big price difference!

Now that Android is in the picture, I was interested in what apps the Android platform would bring to the table.  The online site didn’t list many more than about 50 apps.  Though advertisements stated more than 4000 available.

Now, I already own an iPod Touch 32GB.  I’ve been using this excellent device for just over a year.  Given the excellent battery life on it and the ability to run all the same apps as the iPhone ties into the decision.  If I get an iPhone, then I’d have two devices that had the exact same features.  Obviously, the Touch would sit in the drawer instead of being used.  The only reason to use the Touch would be for the longer battery life if I went into the office and didn’t want to drain the phone itself.

I think it was this last point that helped me make my decision on June 3.  I went into Rogers and bought myself an HTC Magic.  I looked at the Dream and didn’t like the bulk that the physical keyboard added to the phone.  Upon using the Magic though for some time, I think it might have been useful.

One really nice thing Rogers did though was they brought back the 6GB for $30 data plan that they came out with last year with the iPhone.  That’s actually better than the Telus and Bell unlimited plans since those actually cap at 5GB.  Roger’s normal data plan was for 500MB and 200 minutes of voice for $45.  I’m paying more for this data plan but I do have a lower voice plan that suits me.

First thing I found was that the Android did have thousands of applications.  And every single one of them was free!  I guess I don’t have access to the paid applications yet.  I’ll have to figure that out some day.  I have signed up with Google Checkout.

I turned on the Wi-Fi and connected it flawlessly to my home network.  I then downloaded a whole bunch of applications directly on the phone to play with.  It was working very well!

Then, the announcement came out that Apple was going to talk about some new hardware on June 8!  That was sooner than everyone was expecting.  Did I make a bad choice?  June 8th finally came and after 40 minutes of blathering about the 3.0 OS, they finally got to the new phone.  Most rumors were true.  3.0mp camera, compass, video recording, 32GB memory, twice as fast, stereo Bluetooth support.  Plus some voice control support for many parts of the phone.

Funny thing though as they listed off the features, I compared them to my Magic and was basically saying check, check, check, …

My phone has a 3.2mp camera, compass, video recording, fast enough, Bluetooth support.  Everything the iPhone just got was already in my phone!  That made me feel a lot better!

There are many advantages to my phone though I think.

  • Google integration is complete.  GMail, Contacts, and Calendar sync directly over the internet to my accounts on Google.  I don’t have to use ActiveSync or go through the iTunes software to sync the calendar and contacts. Having contacts sync up is a huge benefit.  I can keep all my personal contacts on the web and the phone will use them to email or phone them.
  • Google Maps works very well and I can locate myself via cell tower or GPS.
  • Apps that I paid for on the Touch had free equivalents on Android.
  • Twitter clients linked in well with the notifications

Some disadvantages though.

  • Battery life is very short.  I have to charge it daily.  I have found though that if I keep WIFI disabled, the battery life extends to 3 or more days.
  • The soft keyboard is not as easy to type on as the iPod Touch keyboard.
  • The headphone jack requires a special mini USB connector but the sound is awesome.

I found one nifty application that counts how much data usage I’ve been using.  I turned off the WIFI and watched how much data usage I was using over the Rogers network.  SHOCK!  About 1.25MB a day just doing background updates of email and Twitter.  There’s no way in hell that I’ll ever use 6GB in a month, let alone the 500MB that Rogers was going to give me.  I think my most active day only added up to about 4MB.  I’ve only used 23MB in the last two weeks.  What’s very odd, is that Rogers went from the worst plan to the best plan…

Some other things I like are the integration.  I used the browser to load up canada411.com to look up a name.  Then I just selected the displayed phone number and I was sent directly to the phone dialer with the number displayed.  Very cool!

So, I am happy with the Magic.  I’m not mad that I didn’t wait for the iPhone. The Magic is slightly smaller and easier to fit in the hand.  I have the selection of all the Android applications on the Magic, and all the iPhone apps on my iPod Touch.  Best of both worlds.  I can use the Touch with all its music, videos, podcasts, and games, and keep my phone with a full battery.

More on the phone later.

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Western Digital WDTV HD Media Player

So, I just picked up the coolest little device that I’ve seen in a while.  It’s the Western Digital WDTV HD Media Player.

It’s this tiny little box that you plug into your TV.  Then you plug any USB hard drive or thumb drive into it.  Turn it on and it lets you play any of your audio or video files.

So far, it seems to support almost any video format.  I’ve seen it play my xvid files, downloaded movies, Windows media files, and they say it will also do those pesky MKV files.  Someone even mentioned it will play content in an ISO of a DVD!

I have it hooked up to a 1TB drive formatted with NTFS and it seems to be playing very well. It has a folder browse mode so you can lay out the files anyway you want.  Or you can just browse alphabetically, or by timestamp.  I consider the last two useless if you have lots of TV shows on there.  The way I name episodes would have all the shows combine together.

For outputs it has HDMI for HD content.  It has an Optical output if you need it.  It only supports 2 channel stereo with Dolby though. There is also standard RCA connections with stereo audio and video.  I would have liked to have component outputs since my TV only has the one HDMI connection and I’m using that already for the Playstation.  I think I can convert the PS3 to component though and use the HDMI for this device.

In comparison to the media capabilities of the PS3, this device seems to play all the file types.  The PS3 was dependent on TVersity for data and could not play all my files correctly.

The only thing that would be better on this device is an Ethernet port so it could read content from your network.  But still, loading up a drive is not too much of an issue. It’s just a nuisance to put files on daily.

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Acer One NetBook

I got a netbook!

I decided on the Acer One A150 since it was in stock at the local store and had the same internals as the higher priced Asus EEE models.

This one has an 8.9? screen so the keyboard is a little small but it’s what I was looking for. A small computer that I can load up with all my documentation and things. I’ve been trying this on PDA’s for years and they just never work.

The model I got has 1GB memory, 160GB drive, 1.67Ghz Atom processor and Windows XP. Basically, like all the other net books. It has connectors for audio, 3 USB, VGA, Ethernet, SDHC slot, and Wireless B/G.

I wanted Windows XP on it so I would be able to install all the documentation and software that I use on a regular basis. I don’t want to waste time trying to find pathetic Linux wanna-be software that never measures up. (Not that I hate Linux in any way – just not for this purpose).

First thing I tried was installing all my video codec’s and BSplayer and that played videos well. There are issues with Wireless G keeping up sometimes though.

Next, I installed Visual Studio 2008 on it with all the extras (minus SQL) and it’s very functional. I don’t think I’d want to code all day on the small keyboard but for quick little things it works well.

I took it into the office the other day and hooked up a USB keyboard and mouse, and a monitor to the VGA port. I ran at 1280×1024 resolution and used it all day. It was perfectly good at running Office 2007 and VS 2008. I’d swear it’s better performance than the Dell 810 my employer has me using. The Atom is a dual core processor so that is already better than my Dell 810.

I was thinking that it would be smart for companies to start using these net books for people. They almost always provide keyboards, mice, and monitors at the office so carrying a small net book is nicer than a big Dell laptop.

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Well, starting my blog over again

I’ve been playing with my computer setups the last few weeks.  I wanted to convert my Linux server back to a Windows 2008 box so that it was similar to my other machines.

So, I tried out some Windows based blog or CMS packages.  I tried playing with BlogEngine.Net, DotNetNuke, and one other free system.  I got BlogEngine.Net running in non-SQL mode but found it hard to configure.  I think they actually wanted me to edit the source to change the themes.

DotNetNuke seems to be very commercially biased.  The CMS is free, but all the good looking modules seem to be commercial.  I had trouble getting it even running though.  I followed the instructions step by step and just ended up with an ASP.NET error message.  Googling didn’t help.

So, I setup a SharePoint services site.  I’ve played with them before and I know it has the three things I really like in a web site.  Files, blogs, and a wiki for free format documentation.  I haven’t seen any open source tools that have all those.  Big downside is that it depends on Windows authentication, and it looks ugly as hell. Not good for public internet use for a personal site.

So, I decided to look at my Linux based solutions again.  I setup a few Linux servers in VMware using CentOS, Ubuntu, and Gentoo.  I ended up going with the Gentoo installation.  It’s been so long since I worked with it though, it was tricky trying to get it working the way I wanted it.

My choices for running the web sites was Drupal, Joomla, and WordPress.  I had been using WordPress for quite a while when the host machine was running on Linux.  It’s very nice for a blog site, but doing other things is trickier.

I was planning to go with Drupal for this site, my Dennis-It.org site, and my other special project.  But I really wasn’t finding the output to be very nice.  I looked at about 30 different themes and did find the Wabi one which I liked.  Though, just the way it displayed output bugged me.

So, I’ve decided to go with WordPress for my personal site, and Drupal for my open source site.  I figure it will be more of a static page site which will be okay in Drupal. I don’t know if I’ll add a separate blog for it, or just make my posts here.

So, you may be asking why I decided on Gentoo instead of CentOS or Ubuntu server.  Mainly I just found the bigger distributions annoying in that they decided which versions of applications that I’m expected to run.  And neither had MySQL 5.1.  Installing the MySQL rpm’s in CentOS caused other dependency issues.

I personally like a distribution that provides the bare minimum OS requirements, and then let me pick the versions of the applications I want to run. OS’s that let you do this easily are Windows, FreeBSD, and Gentoo.  IF you don’t mind compiling your own installs 🙂

In my case, I wanted Apache 2.0, MySQL 5.1, and PHP 5.3.0.  I need the older Apache so that i can do pass through NTLM authentication for SharePoint sites.  And I want the newer MySQL and PHP so I can do better apps.

I also installed my Subversion repository on the same host since I can’t have the web site and svn URL on two different computers.  I like it this way though anyway.

Now, the fun part.  I have to transfer all my older blog content back into this new WordPress install.  I searched everywhere for my export file from the previous one but can’t find it.  I have copies in a word doc though so it’s just a matter of copying.

So, I may have a whole lot of blog entries in the next few days.  Sorry if it takes you a long time to catch up.

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