February 2007

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What a great headline.

Multiplayer Games

I added a Multiplayer Games Plugin (link at the top), with 3 games to choose from. I’m interested in getting feedback.

The first exhibit of its kind, Star Wars: Where Science Meets Imagination, combines costumes and props from all six Star Wars films with real-world technologies, video interviews with film-makers, scientists, engineers, and exciting hands-on components, including two large Engineering Design Labs, where guests can build and test speeders and robots. The exhibit is currently at the Boston Museum of Science. As part of its multi-city U.S. tour, it will make a stop in Fort Worth in summer of 2007.

Anyone wanna tag along?

Date: Feb 23, 2007 11:20 PM
Subject: sup
Body: dude you look older than 14 ;) or 15…

Is the age on my profile incorrect?

Readers, feel free to send him weird messages of your own and post them here.

Speaking of urinals, about a fifth of the time I visit the second floor men’s room here at the office, I’m faced with a shallow pool of a dark yellow, foamy bladder juice, left on display as some sort of trophy, eagerly awaiting the appreciation of the next unsuspecting visitor. (How’s that for being influenced by Stanhope?)

When I’m faced with this small, yet irritating obstacle, I habitually left-kick the flush valve and swing my momentum backwards to avoid potential splashy badness, in one fell swoop. You know, so I don’t have to make skin contact with it.

Each time this I witness this phenomenon, I ask myself “WHY?” Did my trophy comment get close to the truth behind this mystery, or is the culprit germophobic and afraid of making contact with the flush valve, similar to myself (well, besides the germophobic part)? If the later case, I’m willing to share with him my momentum kick technique.

P.S. This is sort of an attempt at humor and entertainment. I’ve added an “Observations” Category for this post. If viewer demand warrants it, I’ll add more Observations, rather than mind numbing Archive and Hardware posts.

Kenwood KA-7100

Integrated Stereo Amplifier

I traded my old pair of 6600 GTs for this amp, via austin.craigslist. It’s the one on the left and has been working well so far, over the past few weeks. The guy I traded with supposedly repaired it before his wife brought it by. It’s in great shape, especially considering it’s literately as old as I am. As far as the audio quality, it sounds much brighter than the Yamaha whatever that it took the role of.

Calendar

The calendar is now at the bottom, out of the way, and letter abbreviations are now full words.

michael-and-jeremy-with-birds-small.JPG

    If this isn’t the cutest shit.

Not on a related note, but while I’m here, I’m considering making some sort of weekly contest to draw readers in (and for fun, of course). Haven’t thought about it very much, suggestions are welcome.

Also, note related, The Stills latest album “Without Feathers” is purdy gewd.

My Computers

img_1193-cropped-medium.jpg

A work in progress but it’s been sitting too long as a draft, so I’ll publish it and update it periodically. I’ll also add some pictures.

  • Hostname: RUSTY
    Role: Gaming / Daily Driver
    OS: XP SP2
    Case: Powmax ???
    Mobo: Asus A8N-SLI Premium
    Chipset: NVIDIA nForce 4
    CPU: Athlon 64 3700+; 1 MB cache
    RAM: Corsair TwinX – 2 GB (4 sticks)
    Video: XFX GeForce 7600 GT XXX Edition – 256 MB DDR3, PCI Express
    HDD: WD Raptor – 37 GB, SATA, 10k RPM
    Power Supply: Antec TruePower 2.0 550W
    Audio: Onboard; considering a Creative X-Fi once the prices drop
    Mouse: Logitech MX-???
    Accessories: Nostromo Speedpad n50
    Monitor: 21″ Dell (Sony Trinitron) – bought used for $40!
    Display resolution: 1600×1200 @ 85Hz (desktop and BF2/CS:S)
    Average FPS: BF2 = 80; CS:S = ???

    10-15-2006-007-rotate-right-small.jpg


      Old 6600 GT cards with Zalman coolers. I miss the blue LEDs.
  • Hostname: GEEXBOX
    Role: Media Player (mainly video, can also stream Shoutcast audio/video)
    OS: GeeXboX v1.1 rc1 (custom .iso with support for Packard Bell remote + IR receiver)
    Case: Shuttle XPC
    Mobo: ???
    CPU: Athlon XP 1500+
    RAM: 512 MB DDR400 (running at 333 due to mobo)
    Video: MSI Radeon 9250 – 128 MB, AGP (Fanless GPU cooler was a must for this media PC), S-Video out
    HDD: No hard drive! GeeXboX runs in memory
    Power Supply: Shuttle proprietary (? watts)
    Audio: Creative Soundblaster Live! PCI

    02-23-2007-001-small.jpg

  • Hostname: N/A
    Role: Retro Gaming (Windows 9x and DOS games)
    OS: W98 SE w/ Unofficial Service Pack 2.1a
    Chipset: Intel 440BX
    CPU: PII 450 MHz; ??? L1 Cache, ??? L2 Cache
    RAM: 384 MB (3 x 128 MB); PC100 ECC
    Video: 3dfx Voodoo3 3500, 16 MB (AGP)
    HDD: Maxtor – 4 GB, IDE
    Floppy: Single 5 1/4″ enclosure accepts both 3.5″ and 5 1/4″ disks, thanks to Goodwill Computer Works
    Audio: Creative Soundblaster AWE64 (ISA)
    Accessories: Labtec LCS-3010 shielded speakers
    110824-th.gif
    Monitor: 19″ MAG 986FS

  • Hostname: AUDREY
    Role: Hardware Firewall (between cable modem and LAN)
    OS: IPCop v1.4.11
    HDD: Using a 512 MB Kingston CF card for the hard drive, via a IDE-CF adapter (less noise)

  • Hostname: INSPIRON
    Role: Digital Recording Studio (my laptop, my brother’s project)
    OS: XP SP2
    Dell Inspiron 8500
    CPU: P4 @ 2 GHz
    RAM: 1 GB (2 sticks)

  • Hostname: JIM
    Role: peetwopee
    OS: W2K SP4
    Case/Mobo: Gateway Select 1200CS
    Chipset: VIA KT133/KT133A
    CPU: Athlon (0.18 core) 1.2 GHz; 128K L1 Cache; 256K L2 Cache
    RAM: 512 MB (PC100, although mobo accepts PC133)
    HDD1: Seagate – 20 GB (OS, Program Files)
    HDD2: Maxtor – 60 GB (peetwopee data)
    Power Supply: Antec SmartPower 350W

    01-06-2007-003-small.jpg

  • Hostname: NASLITE
    Role: File Server
    OS: NASLite+ with files from the CD copied to a USB flash drive. Booting to kicker/config floppies.

    Mobo: Asus K7V (UDMA66)

    CPU:
    AMD Athlon 800 MHz
    cache size : 512 KB
    bogomips : 1595.80

    RAM: 768 MB (PC133)

    IDE Disk Drives (all 8 MB cache):
    160 GB Samsung SP1614N
    160 GB Western Digital WD1600JB-00GVA0
    250 GB Western Digital WD2500JB-00GVC0
    200 GB Western Digital WD2000JB-00EVA0
    Total of 704 Gibibytes (GiB = useable space)

    Misc:
    Video adapter: Diamond Stealth 64 DRAM T PCI (2 MB!)
    NIC: Fast EtherLink XL PCI (3C905B-TX)
    Power Supply: ENlight 300W (HPC-300-101)
    And black Asus 80-conductor IDE cables

    Performance:
    About 9.7 MB/s read, 11.1 MB/s write
    (Transferred a 775 MB .wav file to/from NASLite+ using FileZilla as a quick/dirty test through a Linksys 10/100 switch)

    01-06-2007-001-small.jpg

  • Protected: Videos from the 2006 Drive-In Funeral reunion

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    02-23-2007-001-small.jpg

      Note the (red) passively cooled video card and (black) sound card.

    Thanks to Erin, I now have a “cooler” GeeXboX machine. In exchange for some computer help (video card and external hard drive installation, which, of course, took way longer than it should have), she gave me her old Shuttle PC. I’ve seen these before and they are great small form factor computers, although I don’t know much about the reliability of the components and noisy they are. I believe they use proprietary form factor motherboards, which is an advantage over Mini-ITX, because the later limits your choice on motherboards, processors, and other components. This leads to the questions “how good are Shuttle motherboards?” and “who makes Shuttle motherboards?”.

    This little guy came with a chassis, motherboard, Athlon XP 1500 MHz CPU, 512 MB RAM (1 stick, DDR400), an IDE DVD-ROM, and a proprietary small power supply (output in watts?), onboard video, audio, and NIC.

    Add to that the fact that my Radeon 9250 AGP and Sound Blaster Live! PCI cards both fit inside! The mobo has exactly one AGP slot and one PCI slot. Although the mobo has onboard sound and video (with a S-Video output and 2 VGA outputs, oddly enough) I’m sure my cards are better without having to find out what’s onboard. Plus, I’ve heard that the CPU isn’t “hit” as much when you use cards instead of onboard, so this should improve performance.

    02-23-2007-006-small.jpg

      Pretty small chassis eh? Although it’s difficult to see, the “radiator end point” of the CPU heatsink is the metal piece on the left, between the chassis and chassis (LED) fan.

    Not that it really matters, but it’s much more cosmetically appealing than the other GeeXboX computer (a standard mid tower). Also, the other motherboard and CPU is my brothers (although we share most of our belongings), so if and when I ever move, this GeeXboX machine can come with me. So, um, that makes it portable too.

    Initial tests went great with the exception of a .wmv file I tried to play (a GeForce 8800 demo). It lagged almost to the point of freezing the video. I’m not sure if this is because I need to download better Windows Media decoders as part of a custom .iso from the GeeXboX generator. I’ll try that out this evening. Update here, it didn’t help. 02-23-2007 Update, it’s because that video is 720p =) glitch and I are interested in seeing if more RAM will help. That video is a good “baseline” to see what exactly helps performance. Not that there’s much realistically that I can change besides adding more RAM.

    I’m already thinking of what I can do to make it passive, or at least closer to passive. In the BIOS, there’s an “ultra low” fan speed setting that makes it the least noisy, but my goal is silence rather than quietness. This leads to the question “how hot do these Athlon XPs get?” Can they be passively cooled? Would there even be room for one of those massive CPU heatsinks? What I’ll do is attach one fan at a time (CPU, power supply, chassis) and see how much noise they make individually. I think the chassis fan is the loudest of them all. 02-23-2007 Update, I disconnected the (small, 4400 RPM) fan that’s for the nForce 2 chipset. Thanks to glitch for the recommendation that it’s probably not needed, especially since onboard video is disabled and I’m using an AGP card. The temperature increase of the motherboard and CPU was very minimal – only a few degrees C. They’re still under 40 degrees C which should be very cool, although I’m not sure what the ideal temperature of an Athlon XP is. I also swapped out the chassis fan with a spare LED fan (2 colors, pink and purple) of the same size. This fan seems to be quieter and it adds to the whole “cool factor”. It’s not obnoxiously bright – you can only really see it if you look at the PC from the back. Sitting on the couch with all the lights off in the living room, there’s only a faint glow reflected against the wall, so it shouldn’t be distracting to the video viewing experience. I unplugged this fan too and watched the CPU temperature increase to 60 degrees C, and that’s when I plugged it back in. I’m sure it’s still safe but until I do more research I didn’t want to risk anything. It was a lot more quiet though, with only the power supply fans running. Oh, one more thing I noticed last night. The CPU actually does have a passive heatsink! Through a few “pipes” the heat is channeled up towards the back of the PC, where it looks like a radiator. The said chassis fan mounts (easily, I might add) on that radiator to push the heat out of the PC. About the power supply, once I find out how many watts the system (CPU, video card, sound card, DVD-ROM) needs, I may get one of these passive power supplies. That would mean 2 less fans (which the current power supply has) and less heat (so maybe I can get away without the chassis fan).

    Now that I have more horsepower, I can potentially run Windows MCE 2005 at 1080i, but there are three issues with going that route:

    1. Is there enough HD content to justify it? Most of the video files I have are at low resolutions, so would it even matter that I’m running at 1080i instead of whatever my S-Video output is running?
    2. My HDTV is not a widescreen, so when I run video at 1080i, a few inches from the top and bottom are chopped off. This results in a smaller picture, although the quality is higher, of course.
    3. Hard drives are noisy, and one would be required for MCE, which is another reason to run GeeXboX, as it boots from a CD and runs in memory.
    4. I would need a video card with DVI out, and a DVI cable (AGAIN!). I just returned a video card and DVI cable to Fry’s, for the second time, as part of this project (well, related projects, I should say) after I spend time trying to get GeeXboX to run at 1600×1200.

    So, in conclusion, I think I’m going to stick with GeeXboX mainly because of the lack of HD content that I’m interested in, i.e. modern TV shows. HD n0rp is nice but doesn’t warrant the time and effort alone.

    02-23-2007-011-small.jpg

      Note the small chipset fan (which is now disconnected) and the passive CPU heatsink above it. The mobo is easy to access by removing the DVD-ROM/floppy tray (pictured on top).

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