Updating my Windows Media Center config

IMG_1564

For completeness, updating the configuration of my Windows Vista Media Center

  • Installed Vista Ultimate x64 (all drivers found and installed OK, just need to load SATA RAID drivers for Gigabyte motherboard at install time)
  • Upgraded the case, swapped out the 500Gb PATA with a quieter Samsung 500Gb SATA drive (making a total of 4Tb in the house, ouch!)
  • Trying a Leadtek PvR3200 as tuner for Digital TV
  • Using MCE Buddy to transcode to .WMV to place on Windows Home Server
  • Using Window Media Center Extender technology to connect to Xbox 360 on new 42inch LG HD TV
  • 4Gb of RAM taken from General Melchett’s upgrade to 8Gb. My desk now has 17Gb of RAM across 4 computers.

Australian Accent and Blokey Good Looks

Microsoft’s answer to Ewan McGregor, Nic Fillingham, has joined the http://on10.net/ (Channel 10, on10) team at Microsoft.

Apart from being Ewan good looking, he’s a smart and hard working bloke.

…first day on the job, he gets to interview Bill Gates and Robbie Bach. How do you top that?

The Australian Mafia gains a posterboy.

 


Robbie Bach @ CES 2008

 


Bill Gates @ CES 2008

Windows Home Server team just ROCK!

The Windows Home Server team absolutely rock. OK, I work for Microsoft and am paid to say that.

Well, today I am on holiday. So, I am saying this as private citizen Nick Hodge.

Listening to users, researching and fixing bugs quickly; and adding requested features in an open and rapid way. This is the way to make software.

Watch Todd provide an overview of the forthcoming Power Pack 1:


Windows Home Server Power Pack Announced

My personal thanks for popping x64 client support in there.

Our Benevolent Federal Government should Filter More

As commented over on Stephen Collin’s Blog: Dumb decision by our new government over ‘Net filtering. Some people mention this is a mere policy dump on the last day of 2007. Of course, the Australian web 2.0 community is not necessarily happy about all this talk of censorship.

OK, can we then get our trusty government and ACMA to stop the SPAM I get from Nigerian scammers living on the Gold Coast; offers to enlarge my crown jewels and keep them shiny and bigger than other jewels; Phishing attempts for all those offshore bank accounts on dodgy islands in the Pacific; get-rich-quick schemes co-promoted by members of border religious hill cults.

Since Opt-out is the new word for hidden censorship, that is: how would the non-savvy internet user know they are getting a dumbed-down internet feed, maybe it’s time to ask the Federal Government to do more.

Here is my list:

  1. Spam filter at the border. Why should Spam filters need to be installed on email servers at schools and at home? As Spam is internet traffic, just block nasty emails at the digital border. Usually spam contains naughty words like p3n15 enlargement that our women-folk should not have to read about.

    All we need are virtual drug- and foliage- sniffing dogs, just like Customs owns, and train them to sniff for spam.

  2. Stop an Nigerian Scams (419 Schemes) from both internet via email and via fax, too. The first Nigerian scam I saw was a fax sent to a work colleague in Perth about 12 years ago.

    Stopping the outflow of funds by non-savvy Australians, presumably the same ‘gullible internet users’ the Australian Government is attempting to protect, will help our balance-of-trade.

  3. Phishing. Since the success of capitalism over that nasty communism and the fall of the Iron Curtain, malevolent Russians have found a quick way to readdress the last 60 years. Sending out emails that look like your bank’s login page. Hey presto! Username and password is logged, and some geek slave of an ex-KGB Colonel is removing your hard earned South Pacific pesos and turning them into Euros.

    As this is just internet traffic, the Australian Government must help us to extend the cold war and protect us from new capitalists.

  4. Identity Theft. A few google searches, and some searching in Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter – all legitimate services, and a scammer could pretend to be anyone. Even me.

    Using my details, they could attempt to falsely claim social security benefits. Get the $60-odd per month I get and route it to their accounts on a former Australian immigrant processing centre in the Pacific. As identity theft can occur over the internet, the Government should just filter this out too, and protect us all.

All of the above are illegal either directly in statute or in common law.

In none of the above cases can any Government provide a safe environment to all its citizens all the time. Just how far is our benevolent Federal Government willing to go to protect it’s citizens?

I’d prefer the Federal Government set up a division of Department of Foreign Affairs online ready to help out netizens as they travel to this unique universe, not just fearfully blocking. Use the technology to educate people.

Australia is going to be stupider in 2008

Mandatory censorship is bad. Strange day for an announcement: a day when the powers-that-be deliver our deserved bread and circuses.

Who decides what is good or bad? We each have our own definitions of good and bad. I saw the Coen brothers film a few days ago, No Country for Old Men: it was absolute shite. Others, including film critics, love the movie. I see very few redeeming qualities in a movie about a psychopathic serial killer-for-hire. But I am thankful I could choose to see the movie and make up my own mind.

Do you trust the government or faceless bureaucrats to decide what books, newspapers or movies you shouldn’t see? Who black-lists an IP address? How do you get off the black-list?

Maybe internet black-lists are not enough. Next we should have black-listed countries. Cannot go to Brunei, sorry. Oh, and if you get there by a circuitous route, we’re going to jail you. Cars are dangerous too. People die in cars. Cars are bad, and should be banned.

Come on, people. Education. Teach people. Spread out knowledge. Using the internet is like reading and writing: online literacy is absolutely vital.

Stop being a nervous nanny and “just blocking” sites. It will not work in 100% of cases, so why do it? How will the unitiated know if a part of the internet is black-listed and they cannot see it?

I am with Uncle Mike. Educate, not Censor.

Books, DVDs

Les Carlyon, The Great War. Documenting Australian stories from individual soldiers to the indifferent commanders on the western front of World War I. Excellent 2.5 day read. Highly recommended for lovers of Australian Military History, and a good followup to Les’ previous tome, Gallipoli. It also documents the interference of then journalists Charles Bean and Keith Murdoch in military and political matters. That would never happen today, right?

US version of The Office. Not as tightly written as the extremely original UK version, but a fun watch.

Yes, Prime Minister.

Re-watched Band of Brothers. Always good.

Nemesis, by Max Hastings. I love Hasting’s histories of World War II.

Currently reading Finished The Vietnam Years by Michael Caufield, and the autobiography of Richard Hammond.

Personal and Professional Resolutions for 2008

  1. The home matters.
  2. Weigh less again at the end of 2008. Improve on 2007 results.
  3. Geeks Who Care matters.
    There is something in Cameron Reilly’s initiative. If all this technology does wonderful stuff, and we geeks are the mavens: where are the so-called benefits? Politicans should care less about censorship and control, and more about what they can do to make life better.
  4. Think simple. Be social. Uncomplexify and connect. Use the technology at hand. Find and spread info about the good stuff, ignore and don’t sweat the bad stuff.

Reviewing 2007

Goodbye, and good luck 2007.

Reviewing 2007, there were 4 resolutions/tasks to complete:

  1. Take family back to Japan, this time getting out of Tokyo (geek out in Blade Runner 2007 not 2019)
  2. Weigh less in December 2007 vs now (eat better)
  3. Refind my geek roots
  4. Write more interesting, technical articles on this blog (become less boring)

Point by point in review:

  1. Completed
  2. Lost 7kgs through the year, and as much as 8kgs. Lost 5cm from waist line.
  3. Well, joining Microsoft as a Professional Geek and the incredible journey has been cathartic/eye opening/learning rollercoaster. Loving it
  4. More technical articles. 2007 was about posting. Learning video techniques. Over 5000 on twitter alone. Maybe 2008 will be more geeky/technical?

In hindsight, I’ve loved 2007. The people I’ve met, befriended, worked with, learnt from have saved my mental state: and given me unspoken inspiration.

Biggest shout out and thanks to @frankarr. Thanks for trusting me.

Think simple. Be social.

Joe Wilcox, at Microsoft eWeek watching Microsoft with an eagle eye, has a strategic "Top 10 List for Microsoft in 2008"

It all boils down to a two-part mantra: Think simple. Be social.

I like it. And many of the other suggestions to. That is, as a mere worker bee in the hive.

Ah, and if Joe is reading this, the Enthusiast Evangelist team are working on No. 6. Thanks for the extra support, dude!