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yet another Microsoft blogger

 Monday, February 26, 2007

ThinkPad T60 Initial Thoughts

Well I've had my new ThinkPad for a few days now and have some thoughts on it.

Generally I like this laptop a lot. Installing Vista was a breeze. It looks very utilitarian and is a bit larger than I would have hoped (I've gotten really used to 3lb subnotebooks). But I don't want to compromise performance at this point so a fast Core 2 Duo and a 7200 RPM drive are in... I'll go back to subnotebook when Intel's new 45nm chips are out.

I wish the LCD was widescreen (like 13 inches) and that it was LED backlit and had a glossy finish. But that's about the only nit that I have. LED backlit screen would save some battery life.

The LED status icons are very functional. The BIOS is easy to use (I had to set that up to turn on the Trusted Platform Module and Hardware Vitalization) for BitLocker and Virtual PC 2007 respectively.

The keyboard is fantastic as is the tactile feel of all the buttons, trackpad and trackpoint device. Lenovo/IBM has always made the best trackpoint devices IMHO.

The laptop feels very solid. No flex anywhere. It's EXTREMLEY fast. I mean this think smokes my desktop machines.

Running Vista has been a breeze. Other than setting up BitLocker (more on that nightmare later) I basically did a clean install of Vista, then downloaded a single application called ThinkVantage System Update, and that program did all the work of downloading all the required, recommended and optional components and craplets :-). Big Kudos to Lenovo for creating a single unified application to update, download and install all the things required to utilize the enhancements on the laptop (like the volume buttons, trackpoint, fingerprint reader etc).

I would like to point out that the Lenovo craplets are pretty crap free. I mean these things take advantage of Vista. For example, look at this nifty Windows Mobility Center customization.

Nice integration! There are other nice touches like this.... but Lenovo gets big kudos for doing things properly. I'm also really impressed with their battery charging optimization that extends the life of your battery by not charging it if it's got more than 96% juice.

This is also the first laptop fingerprint reader I've used that doesn't suck and works reliably from the welcome screen before and after standby. I like using my finger to login to the computer.

Battery Life is decent but no where near the 5.5 hours I got with my Fujitsu P7120. So far I'm getting close to 4 hours with the 9 cell battery. This is with heavy usage of WiFi and Hard Disk.

OH, BTW, the Lenovo folks get mad props for blogging. It's no wonder they have the best PC Laptop Brand.

I think I might be stuck to this brand. It makes me feel happy and not pissed off. 

Posted Tuesday, February 27, 2007    Permalink    Comments [7]  View blog reactions

 

 Sunday, February 25, 2007

What I learned while on Parental Leave

Today is my last day of Parental Leave. I go back to work on Monday (in a few hours). In many ways I'm really sad, but at the same time I'm glad to be headed back to work. I've been thinking about what I've learned in the past 8 weeks and how I think I will change things.

It turns out that 8 weeks is enough time that you can really pull back from work and not need to think or worry about it. When I go back I feel like I'll be starting with a clean slate. After 8 years at Microsoft it's a nice feeling.

Anyway here it is.

  • Not a lot of men get or take this much Parental Leave. When people asked me what I was doing most of them were surprised or amazed. I was pretty much the only "dad" with a infant when I was out and about.
  • The first 3 months of caring for a child are simply the hardest thing I've ever done. Our life has changed in many ways, but none of the changes are things I regret in any way. Life is just "different".
  • I've gotten closer to my family in ways that simply weren't possible before. Having a child has really brought together our two nuclear families and they have been amazing in supporting us, visiting, and helping in countless ways. I'm really thankful and happy about this part. We could not have gotten where we are without their involvement in our lives. At the same time I think our daughter has really had a profound impact on their lives as well.
  • The last 3 weeks have been amazing as our daughter has started to really interact with us; smile, giggle, grab, play and eat/sleep well.
  • Not working is more than a full time job. I woke up every morning at 7 am and had a completely full day every day. It was harder work than going to work. I have a new found respect for stay at home parents. I completed a number of significant projects that I'll blog about later and it was nice to have some whitespace to do so.
  • I've decided that jewelry was invented as a way for men to compensate for the significant hardship that pregnancy and nursing is. Having your body change over 10 months and then try and get back to normal is simply not easy and men get off easy. I can't understand how my wife must have felt and feels, but let me tell you... giving birth and being a mom is hard work with a significant physical, mental and emotional cost.
  • Being home all day makes it really easy to get stuff done at home. Scheduling service appointments and such is way easier since you don't have to stress about being home and missing work.
  • The Email behavior that I experience at work is simply a tax that is unnecessarily high. I've realized that too many of my cycles are spent not being productive and simply falling into a trap of just passively working... basically not doing things I need to do because it's too easy to stare at my inbox and triage email most of the day. This is going to stop.
  • High volume RSS feeds are out. Even when I didn't have a day job I was unable to keep up with my RSS subscriptions. Gizmodo/Engadget and any site that posts more than 40 things a day is simply not in my RSS reader any longer. The signal to noise ratio on these blogs has gone in the wrong direction over the past 2 years. Most of the good stuff is picked up by the blogs with fewer posts anyway.
  • Limiting yourself to watching 1-2 hours of TV a day is a good thing (or eliminating it entirely).
  • Podcasts are simply amazing. There is so much good stuff out there now, including all the NPR and KQED podcasts.
  • NPR is the best. Each year I find that I value their programming more and more and as a result increase our yearly donation to them.
  • Cooking your own food saves you a ton of dough and is a lot healthier than eating out all the time. My wife and I have gotten in the habit of going to Whole Foods every Sunday and buying ingredients for 1 - 2 dishes that we cook that night and eat during the week. It's a huge time saver and we eat well. After all, from 6pm to 8pm every night it's all about hanging out with Sarah and then bathing her and putting her to bed. Around 9pm we are both finished and can't think of anything but going to bed. Life does feel a little bit like ground hog day.
  • Simplification and efficiency are necessary. My life was pretty simplified before but I'm on a rampage now to really make all my technology stuff work for me, rather than have me work for it. I've sold a lot of gear I no longer use on craigslist and ebay and am in the process of streamlining the computers I use, how they are backed up and the number of gizmos required to make it all happen. This will be a work in progress.

Well, I guess that's it for now...

Posted Monday, February 26, 2007    Permalink    Comments [8]  View blog reactions

 

 Friday, February 23, 2007

Hierarchical Keywords with Lightroom and Vista

One of the nice features in the Windows Photo Gallery in Vista is the ability to add hierarchical keywords. I have a few hundred keywords right now. A subset of these keywords are People, Events, Places etc. I would like to collapse the flat list of keywords so I can more easily browse.

Well in the Windows Photo Gallery you can create a keyword like Foo\Bar and it will nest Bar under Foo. Cool.

But....

Yep you guessed it. Adobe's newly launched Lightroom has it's own incompatible hierarchal keyword system. When you export a RAW photo the hierarchy is collapsed and the parent/child relationship is not included.

This whole metadata, xmp, exif stuff is still not interoperable.

Posted Friday, February 23, 2007    Permalink    Comments [3]  View blog reactions

 

 Thursday, February 22, 2007

Cingular gives free extended battery for BlackJack

Unusual and a nice gesture from Cingular, but if you got your BlackJack a while ago then it came with two standard batteries. In my experience the standard battery lasts less than a day if you are using 3G and have Push Email enabled all day.

The Extended Battery easily lasts more than a day. It does add some bulk to the device, but it's much better integrated then the extended battery on the Moto Q.

Anyway, the current BlackJack comes with the extended battery and Cingular has set up a rebate program for previous owners to get theirs.

You can find your IMEI number by entering *#06# on your phone.

Posted Thursday, February 22, 2007    Permalink    Comments [6]  View blog reactions

 

 Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Thinkpad Beeping

It's funny how every laptop maker has strange quirks.

Playing with my new T60 I noticed that it randomly beeps when I am typing emails.

So of course I did a search for "thinkpad beeping" and found this post.

It seems if you press any 3 combinations of these letters:

4567rtyufghjvbnm

the Thinkpad will make that classic old heartless annoying PC BEEP.

Weird. Why on earth would it do this?

Posted Wednesday, February 21, 2007    Permalink    Comments [6]  View blog reactions

 

 Saturday, February 17, 2007

Priceless

73 degrees on Feb 17th... the east coast is freezing right now. Why would you live anywhere else :-)?

Posted Saturday, February 17, 2007    Permalink    Comments [10]  View blog reactions

 

Outlook 2007 Perf

Not sure about you, but I have a ost file much smaller than 2GB and I'm experiencing pretty bad perf.

When I launch Outlook on a variety of machines (Vista, Core 2 Duo etc) it can take over a minute before Outlook is usable. Most of the time it will also make my machine generally unusable. I suspect this is due to the fact that there has been a lot of churn in my mailbox and between cached mode and the indexer my hard disk is being pummeled making disk i/o the bottleneck.

My laptop has a 4200 rpm drive and Outlook 2007 really suffers there. Not sure what kind of hard drive this intel iMac has but if it's 5400 rpms that explains that.

If I am using any kind of add-in that is disk intensive on boot (like ClearContext and SpeedFiler) forget about it. Launch Outlook and go do something for like 5 min.

Is your Outlook boot time longer than Windows?

Posted Saturday, February 17, 2007    Permalink    Comments [9]  View blog reactions

 

 Thursday, February 15, 2007

Why Sony laptops are ridiculous

Read this. Not that the rest are any better, but my Fujitsu doesn't require any drivers to "work". My Dell (when I briefly had that) didn't either.

Posted Thursday, February 15, 2007    Permalink    Comments [1]  View blog reactions

 

 Monday, February 12, 2007

UPS is incompetent?

Last week I was expecting 2 packages. One was sent via 3 day ground saver and the other was sent overnight saver.

The first package made it to Sunnyvale, CA (minutes from my house) and was then routed to Oregon (on a truck). It wasn't until the next day that their stupid tracking system updated the status from "on time delivery" to rescheduled. When I called the guy on the phone was like, "at worst you'll get it to tomorrow". I was like "do you have a map, did you see where my package is heading to?"

The second package, the overnight one, arrived in Menlo Park (my home) and sat on a truck all day long till the driver came back to UPS with the package undelivered. When I would call to ask about status they said "drivers are expected to attempt to deliver all packages before returning" and that I could receive my package up to 8pm.

No such luck. I got the package the next day...

Moral of the story? UPS, who has never failed me in all my years has two strikes against them.... what the hell is going on over there?

Looks like I'm not the only one with UPS problems.

Posted Tuesday, February 13, 2007    Permalink    Comments [5]  View blog reactions

 

 Friday, February 09, 2007

How to customize the LifeHacker Feed

I love LifeHacker but IMHO they post to much stuff I'm not interested in... especially the self promoting crap.

Well the good news is that you can customize what you see in the LifeHacker feed.

Check out this post for details.

For example, to move the Retro self promotion junk you would subscribe to:

http://lifehacker.com/software/not:retro

to remove that and the mac os software as well you would use:

http://lifehacker.com/software/not:retro/not:mac-os-x/

Posted Friday, February 09, 2007    Permalink    Comments [1]  View blog reactions

 

Put IE7's file menu back where it belongs

From LifeHacker: Put IE7's file menu back where it belongs].

And the world rejoices.

Posted Friday, February 09, 2007    Permalink    Comments [2]  View blog reactions

 

 Thursday, February 08, 2007

Windows Live Hotmail

WOW! This is awesome news. A few months ago (before I stopped working on the mail team) I jokingly suggested that we ditch "Windows Live Mail" and convince someone to let us call it Windows Live Hotmail. Why? Cause the entire world recognizes the Hotmail brand... for one reason or another.

Anyway, the someone was the key. Doing something like this could be impossible and engulf someone's life for a few months trying.

Anyway, Richard Sim just announced on the mail blog that the new name for the service will in fact be Windows Live Hotmail.

Congrats to the mail team! That's great news.

BTW, recently the mail team released the M9 release. It's great to see the app get faster and all the new features. I love the sorting stuff that Ellie added.

Boy it's weird watching that team from the sidelines :-). M9 is the 2nd milestone I haven't directly worked on :-(.

Posted Thursday, February 08, 2007    Permalink    Comments [3]  View blog reactions

 

 Wednesday, February 07, 2007

WWII is not shorter than the IRAQ war... yet

A few months ago it was announced that the United States involvement in the Iraq War/Occupation/Whatever exceeded the United States' involvement in World War II.

"The U.S. role in World War II started in December of 1941; it ended with the Japanese surrender in 1945."

[Source: NPR]

Now, since then I've seen a number of politicians and news casters (like CNN and the like) state that The IRAQ war is now longer than World War II. Um, I know what you meant to say, but you screwed it up... WWII lasted 6 years, from 1939 to 1945.

For the people out there that didn't live during WWII or didn't learn about it in school, they probably think "Oh my god, the Iraq war is longer than WWII"?

And I feel sorry for those people.

I feel even more sorry for the idiots on TV that are saying this, or the media reporters that aren't correcting the politicians when they say this. It's just sad.

Posted Thursday, February 08, 2007    Permalink    Comments [9]  View blog reactions

 

Carphone anyone?

Who has a Carphone these days?

Both Outlook and Windows Mobile still have a field for Car Phone.

Do people even know what a car phone is? It was literally a phone, hard wired in a car. Before the days of portable mobile phones this was where it was at. You were a bad mofo if you had a car phone.

My Dad had a carphone back in the 80s... later he got a "portable" carphone. A car phone that could be moved between our two cars. It was portable but did not have a battery that lasted more than 10 min. It had a handle and everything and you could lug the 10 pound thing around.... state of the art back then.

Then mobile phones arrived and that was the end of that... probably 15 years ago.

But Outlook and Windows Mobile still have "car phone" field.

Today I know people that have 2 mobile phones. My mother and father have two mobile numbers. One is in the US and the other in Egypt. In fact, many of my international friends have two mobile phone numbers.

Right now I've repurposed the carphone field for mobile phone 2, but I would like to see the next versions of Outlook and Windows Mobile ditch car phone and instead replace it with mobile phone 2.

Posted Thursday, February 08, 2007    Permalink    Comments [2]  View blog reactions

 

 Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Apple Commercial on Vista

The Apple Commercial about the PC Guy going to get upgraded to run Vista is funny. But what happens next? I mean the commercials are funny because they poke fun at the fact that the PC has been carrying around a lot of baggage for the past 5 years while the Mac OS has received almost yearly upgrades.

But common. Vista is fan freaking tastic. Everyone that has come to our house and used our iMac running Vista has had a favorable impression. It's dammed cool and has some killer features that I will blog about soon. Vista Media Center simply rocks.

The hardware will probably never be as cool. I mean never, and here is why:

  1. Cables. A PC OEM will never care as much about cables, adapters and plugs as Apple does. You will mostly get some nasty wall wart. They don't give a rat. Some one at Apple deeply cares about how the cables look, feel, and their usability.
  2. The blinking lights, leds and other useless nonsense will always be there. Even Sony's have buttons like "S1" and "S2". What the heck do those do.
  3. Screws, compartments, and protrusions. Ever look at the bottom of a powerbook? Take a look at the bottom of a dell, hp, thinkpad, any dammed laptop. Enough said.
  4. Stickers. Macs will never come with stickers on them. It would be like buying a Ferarri with a big sticker on it for the brand of tire.
  5. Crapware. Your brand new PC is going to be busting from the seams with crapware, the Mac never will.
  6. Backwards Compatibility. Apple routinely chops off support for legacy peripherals. My PCees still have parallel ports. One even has a joystick port. Sigh. These are ugly and take up valuable space.
  7. DVI. Mac's have digital video for everything. every Mac, laptop etc has a DVI port. Why settle for less? Oh right, when you are trying to save $2 on the box you are making.
  8. Big Ugly Boxes. Generally speaking PCees are ugly as sin. Every single PC at Best Buy is just terrible looking.

But anyway, besides the obvious I wonder where they are going to go with this. Seriously... what's the Mac guy going to make fun off when PC guy is running Vista?

The fact that iTunes doesn't work well?

Posted Wednesday, February 07, 2007    Permalink    Comments [6]  View blog reactions

 

Taxes 2007, AMT, Tax Credits and what a mess.

Well, tax season is about to start. Like always (since 2002) I did my return in TurboTax this year. The product seems to improve each year, but there are still a lot of usability problems. Sometimes "back" doesn't really go back etc. Either way, I like doing my taxes and I find that with the new autodownload capabilities for W2s and 1099, data entry mistakes are greatly minimized. Sadly Microsoft doesn't participate in the W2 download feature (although they did 3 tax returns ago).

Anyway, my taxes were especially complicated this year. Mainly because we sold our condo in San Francisco and we had some extra paperwork. Lora also rolled over two accounts since she switched jobs. Anyway, it still took me about 4 hours to complete the whole return minus the charitable contributions stuff that I need to collect my receipts for. Oh, and as usual calculating ESPP tax liability was a breeze thanks to my handy dandy excel spreadsheet (drop me an email if you want it).

Anyway, this year I qualified for a few tax credits. IMHO These things are silly and represent how screwed up our tax code is.

Foreign tax credit

I owned some overseas fund and had to pay $78.55 in foreign taxes. I had no idea really as my broker took care of this. But lo and behold TurboTax tells me I qualify for a $79 tax credit. I have no idea why, nor do I care.

Energy Tax Credit

In doing our remodel of the kitchen this year, I got a credit for the insulation and the windows & skylight we put in in the name of energy efficiency. I have no idea why. I imagine this tax credits are supposed to incent you to pick energy efficient items when doing repairs/remodels etc. But I only knew about this because TurboTax asked me about them. No accountant would have done this unless they knew we did a remodel... and if they did they would need to know to ask if we had any insulation or windows replaced.

Anyway, I get $322 off my tax bill for spending $3,216 on windows and insulation.

Telephone Tax Credit

The government stopped requiring that phone companies collect some arcane tax from us decades late, so we can either estimate how much we get back by pouring through phone records I no longer have, or I can take $50 off my tax bill.

AMT

For the 3rd year in a row I get to pay the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT). Lucky me. Because I live in California and pay high state taxes, have a wife (and child), and own a house (that has a huge mortgage) I fall into a category of Americans that is subject to a tax that was put into place by a bunch of morons that did not index the thing to inflation. This means that I am paying taxes based on income limits from 1969 that was meant to target 159 households.

Well, here is how the AMT works. You get a mortgage deduction, and you can deduct charitable contributions. But you cannot deduct property or state taxes from your AGI.

This year the AMT is expected to catch over 20 million people (today less than 4 million households pay it). It will continue to rise and rise till a lot more people are paying it. Each year congress passes a bill at the very end of the year that gives people some amount of AMT relief but has not offered a permanent fix. The problem you see, is that our current 2.5 trillion dollar budget includes AMT revenue for the foreseeable future. Nuking the AMT will only make our budget deficit worse.

"But now, due to inflation coupled with administration tax policies, the AMT is hitting millions of ordinary families, many earning well under $100,000 a year. Within five years, 37 percent of people earning between $50,000 and $75,000 and 73 percent of those with incomes between $75,000 and $100,000 will pay the AMT, compared with less than 3 percent three years ago. Nearly all families earning over $100,000 will pay it, according to a Brookings Institution study."

[Source: American Prospect Online]

The dirty little secret of the president bush tax cuts is that they won't matter anymore cause anyone that would benefit will likely be paying the higher AMT:

"Bush also assumes that Congress will make permanent his first-term tax cuts, which are set to expire in 2010. If the tax reductions were made permanent and the AMT were allowed to hit millions of Americans, the AMT would reclaim any benefits from the cuts for many taxpayers."

[Source: Mercury News]

The bad news for you is that if you are figuring your payroll withholdings using the regular tax and you fall into the same boat I am, you are underpaying your taxes and you will owe the government money. I figure out my tax liability for the year by just not including my property taxes or my state income taxes in my Federal AGI. That gets me within shooting distance of my REAL tax liability.

The only real way to get away from the AMT is to move to a different state with lower home prices and no state income tax (like Washington State). However, if I amortize the extra money that I pay for each sunny day we have, and each rainy day they have, I think California is worth the extra dough ;-). Can you put a price on amazing weather?

Final Thoughts

In a way, I'm amazed at how much I can deduct from my taxes. Then again, I could not afford my house and my life if I just got by with the standard deduction. Not sure what that says about our tax system.

For the last 5 years though I have always managed to owe about 4% of my tax liability in Federal/State taxes. This is all thanks to using Microsoft Money to project my tax liability in real time so that I can adjust my witholdings 2 times a year. Since I itemize my paychecks money has an accurate forecast of what I am actually paying and what I will owe. I prefer to owe a small amount of money rather than get a refund.

Why? Cause you don't earn interest on the loan you are giving the government. As long as you don't owe more than 10% of your tax liability you won't pay a penalty. So if your federal tax liability is $20,000 you can have a payment of up to $2,000 without paying a penalty.

Posted Wednesday, February 07, 2007    Permalink    Comments [4]  View blog reactions

 

 Saturday, February 03, 2007

Go Go Gadget Mouse!

This is the most amazing mouse EVAR (Microsoft Wireless Presenter Mouse 8000).

  • it's bluetooth
    • the dongle is unnecessary if you have built in bluetooth
  • the packaging doubles as a carrying case
  • it has the ability to control powerpoint from across the room
  • it has a laser pointer... WOW
  • it has a ton of buttons
  • the button presses are silent, and the scroll wheel is silky when it moves.
  • pairing is super easy. I didn't do anything special to make it "work".

 

Here is a bad pic of the case:

 

 
 

Posted Saturday, February 03, 2007    Permalink    Comments [2]  View blog reactions

 

Search for Amazon.com Prime eligible items

I use and love Amazon Prime. I hate that Amazon.com doesn't provide a good way to search for items that are Amazon Prime eligible.

Well, you can use http://www.isearchbetter.com/ to do that :-).

Posted Saturday, February 03, 2007    Permalink    Comments [2]  View blog reactions

 

GTD on your smartphone

This is an awesome article on how to implement GTD on your Smartphone, pocket pc, and palm.

I currently use Oxios ToDo for managing my tasks on my Smartphone. The built in tasks app on the Windows Mobile 5 Smartphone is just a joke.

Coming soon is a post on how my blackjack is configured for a lean, mean GTD machine.

I've tried Power Tasks, SmarterTasks, Agenda One, and Pocket Informant.

But Oxios todo is the most customizable, I can use almost any button on the phone to navigate around. Another nice feature is that when you are grouped by category any new tasks created are automatically entered into that category. Nice.

Posted Saturday, February 03, 2007    Permalink    Comments [2]  View blog reactions

 

The next latptop... is black

My trusty old Fujitsu P7120 is coming to the end of its life... it simply can't run Vista and is so dammed slow these days (XP has been running on it for a year) that I can't use the thing. Launching Outlook literally takes as long as making coffee and Windows Desktop Search sucks up all the 4200 rpms that the little slow hard drive has.

Anyway, finding a replacement is no easy task. I considered a number of alternatives. They included:

  • Sony Vaio SZ
  • Lenovo Thinkpad T60
  • Lenovo Thinkpad X60
  • Apple MacBook

I REALLY wanted to get the X60 Tablet (I mean real bad). It seems like the perfect blend of portability and performance. Plus it would be nice to have a tablet again (one that didn't suck).

However, now that I don't live in San Francisco, I don't need a tiny tiny commuter friendly laptop... I could afford to get something bigger. Additionally, I plan to use this laptop at home in my home office connected to a monitor and keyboard which means..

DVI is a must (image from Jeff Atwood)

I haven't used an analog monitor or a VGA connector since 2002 or something. I CAN tell the difference and will not go back to VGA. Even my plasma has been DVI to my Media Center since it was possible to do so.

Anyway, the X60 does not do DVI via the docking station. D'OH!

Why oh why is Apple the only vendor that supports DVI on its laptops?

Anyway, I ruled out the Sony Vaio SZ cause of my last experience with Sony, and the laptop is dammed expensive.

I ruled out the MacBook because Vista support with bootcamp is a bit spotty right now (specifically waking from sleep and external monitor support). Plus I really wanted the MacBook Nano but that isn't out yet.

I ruled out the X60 as I mentioned above.

That leaves the T60, which is a dammed fine machine. It's got a Core 2 Duo (the X60 had that ultra low voltage stuff I have now... and an original Core Duo), a decent graphics card, big hard drive, great resolution and a respectable weight.

BTW the specs for size and weight look like this:

laptop width height depth weight volume
X60 10.8 10.5 1.1 - 1.3 4.23 lbs 127 - 147
T60 12.2 10 1 - 1.2 5.5 lbs 122 - 146
MacBook 12.78 8.92 1.08 5.2 lbs 123
MacBook Pro 14.1 9.6 1.0 5.6 lbs 135
Vaio SZ 12.5 9.3 1 - 1.5 4 lbs 116 - 174

The T60 doesn't look bad. For once it will be nice to have a fast, well built machine. I've never owned a Thinkpad before (refused to buy one in the past due to lack of windows key) but have heard great things about them (still, even after IBM handed the reins to Lenovo).

When it comes I'll of course post my thoughts.

I'm also thinking of possibly getting an Origami PC at some point for the thin and light category... but I'm in no hurry to get one right now.

Posted Saturday, February 03, 2007    Permalink    Comments [15]  View blog reactions

 

 Friday, February 02, 2007

Vista Laptop for my sister

Like a hawk, on Jan 30th my sister started bugging me about a Vista laptop. If you will recall, she didn't know what Vista was a few short months ago. Thanks to my readers, she has a new found interest in these things :-).

Anyway, here is what I'm telling her to buy: A Sony Vaio VGN-C240E/B. I can't recommend a Dell (cause of their horrendous customer support and quality issues of late) or an HP (cause they are huge and ugly). That leaves Sony and their horribly confusing list of models (what's the difference between a VGN-C250N/B and a VGN-C240E/B).

More later on what laptop I'm getting (hint, it's not a Sony, Dell, HP or Apple).

Posted Saturday, February 03, 2007    Permalink    Comments [6]  View blog reactions

 

I hate Engadget

I love Engaget but I hate the way they link to themselves.

I hate when you read an article like this:

and you click the link for "Velocity Micro" and that does a dammed search on the Engadget Web Site.

THAT'S NOT WHAT I WANTED TO HAPPEN.

I want to go to http://www.velocitymicro.com/.

Geez, all this hoopla about not linking to bloggers. How about linking to the dammed products!

Does Gizmodo do this nonsense as well?

Posted Friday, February 02, 2007    Permalink    Comments [6]  View blog reactions

 

 Thursday, February 01, 2007

Why I blog sometimes

The Reverse Google effect. When I searched for "xmp jpeg C#" I got hundreds of useless results and it took me 2 hours to fine a newsgroup posting with some details that pointed me in the right direction.

Now:

Sadly my "homepage" is listed on live.com search results as the last item on the first page of results, but it's not a direct link to the post. Hmm.

I suspect the Google results are better because Google has my sitemap. I have no idea how to submit my sitemap to search.live.com.

Posted Thursday, February 01, 2007    Permalink    Comments [2]  View blog reactions