Practical Technology

for practical people.

April 18, 2007
by sjvn01
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Michael Dell’s Linux choice? Ubuntu

What operating system do the heads of Fortune 500 companies run on their personal laptops? In the case of Michael S. Dell, president and CEO of Dell, it’s Ubuntu 7.04 Feisty Fawn.

Yes, the head of Dell Inc., with a market-capitalization of just south of $56-billion, isn’t just saying that Dell will be selling Linux-equipped PCs in the near future — he’s already running Linux at home.

To be precise, Mr. Dell, in addition to running the latest version of Ubuntu, which is still scheduled for final release on April 19, is also running the VMware Workstation 6 Beta, OpenOffice.org 2.2, Automatix2, Firefox 2.0.0.3, and Evolution Groupware 2.10.

The only name that most Linux users may not recognize immediately on that list is Automatix2. Automatrix2 is a popular Debian, Ubuntu, Pioneer, and MEPIS Linux add-on program. With that application in place, it becomes mindlessly simple to install useful software that doesn’t come with a vanilla Ubuntu installation. It includes access to Skype, Opera, Macromedia Flash, Google Earth, Picasa, Adobe Reader, DVD support, WiFi, and so on.

Mr. Dell is running all this on a loaded Dell Precision M90. The company describes this as a mobile workstation.

Certainly the model that Dell is running at his Austin, Texas area home qualifies as a mobile workstation by anyone’s definition. His machine comes with an Intel Core 2 Duo T7600 Processor, which runs at 2.33GHz and comes with a 4MB cache. It also comes with 4GB of DDR2 (double-data-rate) 667Mhz DRAM, a 17-inch WXGA+ Widescreen LCD, a 160GB 7200rpm SATA hard drive, a 8X DVD +/- RW optical drive, and a NVIDIA Quadro FX 3500 512M graphics card.

While no WiFi card is specifically mentioned, Dell also offers both its own Dell Wireless 5700 (CDMA EVDO) External Express Card for Verizon Wireless data connections and an assortment of 802.11a and g WiFi cards.

By our calculations, the total bill for Mr. Dell’s system, as described, comes to $4,703. It could have been more. He didn’t splurge on the optional Blu-Ray drive.

Unfortunately, if you tried to order it yourself, your only operating system choices on that system today are Windows XP SP 2 and Vista. Sources close to Dell, however, tell us that pre-installed Linux on Dell systems may be coming before the end of April.

We still do not know which Linux Dell Inc. will be installing on its desktops and laptops. Among the distributions we know to be under consideration are: Novell/SUSE, Red Hat, Fedora, openSUSE, and Ubuntu. It would be safe to say now, though, that Ubuntu will be at least one of the Linuxes that Dell will be offering.

Of course, Mr. Dell also uses no fewer than four other high-end systems. Each of these is running Windows.

Still, while many millionaires, such as Ubuntu’s Mark Shuttleworth, Red Hat’s Matthew Szulik, and Novell’s Ron Hovsepian, are running Linux on their own machines, Michael Dell is almost certainly the first billionaire to embrace the penguin. And, far more importantly, he’s the first one who also owns one of the world’s biggest PC vendors.

Pre-installed Linux on top brand-name computers is so close to becoming real you can almost run it.

A version of this story first appeared in DesktopLinux.

April 17, 2007
by sjvn01
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Calling Apple TV Hackers

Hardware hackers, as tracked on the Apple TV Hacks site have been having a grand old time working on the Apple TV. But, one accomplishment has been eluding them: getting an Apple TV to use an external USB drive for storage.

On April 8th, Apple TV Hacks, together with FatWallet.com, a site devoted to tracking online sales, teamed up to offer a $1,000 bounty for the first team to get an Apple TV to use an external USB drive. Since then, programmers have managed to do bits and pieces of the hack, but no one has managed to put it all together yet for the $1,000 prize.

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April 16, 2007
by sjvn01
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Sony DRM Hell Revisited

You can’t make up stuff like this. Sony has once more shot itself in the foot with an idiotic DRM (digital rights management) scheme.

Back in 2005, Sony introduced XCP DRM technology on to some of its CDs. The technology proved much better at ripping Windows PCs wide open to rootkit attacks than it did protecting content.

Now, in 2007, Sony has again introduced another horrible DRM scheme. This time around Sony is using the latest version of its own home-grown DRM technology called ARccOS. It works, if you can call it that by placing sectors containing corrupt data on the DVD. DVD players that know ARccOS can play it because they know how to follow the disc encoded map of the good sectors. DVD players, and computers, that don’t know ARccOS completely fail while trying to play the ARccOS ‘protected’ disc.

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April 12, 2007
by sjvn01
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Where, oh where, is my Apple TV Remote

I like the Apple TV; I really do, but that slightly larger than a pack of gum remote control has got to go.

It’s not that the remote doesn’t work. It does. While no one will ever think it a smart piece of design genius the way people do TiVo’s peanut shaped remote, Apple TV‘s remote is easy to handle and makes using Apple TV’s menu and basic fast-forward, reverse, pause and play functionality a snap.

Well, if you, like yours truly, has small hands anyway. I could see how someone with a size 12 ring finger might find it hard to handle.

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April 10, 2007
by sjvn01
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Do you really need to upgrade your Apple TV’s hard drive?

Let’s head deep into Apple TV video geekiness shall we?

Many users, and I was one of them, looked at the Apple TV’s 40 GB hard drive, and said, “You’ve got to be kidding.”

In what seemed like a matter of hours, other Apple TV fans came up with hardware hacks to add a bigger hard drive. Heck, within days, there were Apple authorized resellers who could add a bigger hard drive for you and not blow away your warranty at the same time. But, now I really wonder if you need to go to all that trouble.

I took a long, hard look at the Apple TV’s actual video output, at its networking capabilities, and what happened in the real world when I watched movies and TV by streaming them instead of storing them on my Apple TV’s hard drive. Here’s what I found.

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April 9, 2007
by sjvn01
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Why the Apple TV is your Best Media Extender Choice

Tens of thousands of words have now been written on the Apple TV. Let me give you some bottom-line words. The Apple TV is the best media extender on the planet. Period. End of statement.

Now, some writers will tell you that an Xbox 360 or another media extender like D-Link’s DSM-520 Wireless HD Media Player, or Media Center Extender WMCE54AG already can give you everything Apple TV does and more. Unlike those people, though, I’ve been using, and getting annoyed at, media extenders for years now. Here’s the key difference: the Apple TV works, the others don’t.

Oh, you can get any of them to work. All it takes is blood, sweat, tears, and an electrical engineering degree. Well, OK, I’m kidding about the degree, but not about the rest.

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