Monthly Archive for April, 2007Page 3 of 3

Laptop action, part 2

Finally, after weeks of anxiously waiting, I have been able to play with my new laptop. As I said earlier, it’s a Dell Inspiron E1505, complete with 15.4″ widescreen monitor, 256 MB ATI graphics card, 80 GB hard drive, 1 GB of memory, and a combination CD/DVD burner running Vista Home Premium. I also took the liberty of ordering an Easy Transfer cable along with the laptop to make the move from my old Toshiba to the new Dell a snap.

Contrary to what you may hear, the set up was the easiest part. I plugged it in, started it up, and ran into no problems whatsoever getting things up and running. The free trial apps included were easily uninstalled and replaced with my personal favorites, such as avast! for anti-virus (replacing the already halfway done McAfee trial), Firefox for a browser, and Office 2007 (which replaced Works 8.5, which is practically useless). I installed a few more applications so the Easy Transfer process would bring over all my application settings, and finally set about getting things transferred.

The first step in this was to install the Easy Transfer program on my old machine. Next, plug the cable into both laptops and let it get detected. Neither of those posed any problems. However, when it came to actually getting things transferred, I ran into major obstacles. The program worked fine on both computers and I was able to select what documents and settings I wanted from the old computer. Unfortunately, every time I clicked the “transfer” button after selecting what I wanted, the program worked for a couple minutes…and crashed. Only on the XP machine, however. I thought I had overtaxed it by having it transfer while it was still calculating the size of the transfer. But no matter what I did, it always crashed, making it impossible to transfer my files as easily as I had hoped.

You can imagine my frustration. I have over 20 GB worth of documents on my old machine which would have transferred very quickly over the USB transfer cable. But since the program refuses to work, I’m forced to send the files over a wireless network, which is quite a bit slower and has the added risk of failing randomly (for whatever strange reason) and mucking up the whole transfer. Hopefully it won’t, but it will still go all night if I’m lucky.

On the bright side, however, the Vista laptop is great. I’ve run into almost no problems getting things customized and installed, although the requisite User Access Control dialogs can get kind of tedious (and eye-straining due to the screen flickering they cause). I’ve yet to put any games on, but I’m hoping to do that soon to see how well it performs at gaming. I’m not expecting anything dazzling, but an ATI graphics card should put out quite a bit better performance-wise than the old Intel integrated graphics I had on the Toshiba.

More stories on how this laptop fares will be sure to follow. Hopefully it will turn out to be a nice little machine (especially considering how long I had to save up my money to buy the bugger).

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When space hexagons attack

What’s the one thing you least expect to find at the north pole of a gas giant? Well, I don’t know about you, but a giant rotating hexagonal cloud probably tops my list. Just recently, NASA’s Cassini probe took pictures of the formation, which is over Saturn’s northern pole, using an infrared camera, since the pole is currently too dark for visual images. More info on it at NASA’s website.

The most interesting aspect of this cloud, as you can see from pictures on the mission page linked above, is the fact that it’s a hexagon. Clouds don’t generally form into shapes like that, even at the poles. For instance, around Saturn’s southern pole, clouds form into swirls and other generally round shapes. So you can imagine how confused the experts have been looking at the pictures sent back by Cassini. However, it’s apparently possible to make such shapes by spinning things at certain speeds.

However, the excitement doesn’t stop with the cloud. No, instead of accepting that this is a freak natural event, some people have decided that NASA does know why the hexagon is there, and that they’re covering it up (for whatever strange reason). Not only that, but the hexagon is populated by aliens, who are using its powers to influence evil on Earth (what else are six-sided shapes good for?). I’m serious. People actually think this. If I could find more links, I’d put them up, but I think all the conspiracy sites have blocked me for being too rational. It’s a conspiracy!

Anyways, scientists are hoping to get actual visual images of the hexagon in a couple years, once Saturn’s north pole begins moving back into the sunlight. It’s definitely something taking a better look at.

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April Fools!

If you missed the Mad Rants April Fools joke…there wasn’t one. Yeah, I’m too lazy to do anything clever like that.

Shootings are never good

You can imagine my worry when I got a call from my parents this morning asking if I was all right. I couldn’t think of any reason why I wouldn’t have been all right, so I asked about the sudden concern. Apparently, my mom had heard in the news just this morning that there had been a shooting on the University of Washington campus this morning, where I go to school. I hadn’t heard a thing about it, but I looked it up and found that at around 9:00 or 9:30 am, there was an apparent murder-suicide in the school’s architecture building.

Now, I’m not a news site, so I won’t go into all the details, but it’s not every day that two people die on your college campus while you’re in class. Granted, I was halfway across the campus from Gould Hall (where the shooting was), but still, it’s kind of creepy to think about. What if I have a class in the room where the two people were found? What if more shootings happen? Now, I don’t feel especially unsafe at UW, but this is yet another event that highlights the danger of an open campus. Of course, most of the non-students who wander around are mostly harmless (unless long scraggly beards, constant muttering, and shopping carts are considered dangerous), but just about anyone can come on campus during the day. The UW police force can’t be everywhere at once. Although, I’m sure there’d be complaints if they were…

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Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States