Archive

tivo = no sleep

It’s official. The only way to catch up with all the shows I have on TiVo is sleep deprivation.

reevaluating Spiderman 3

I’ve slept on it a few nights now and…

Spiderman 3 is *still* the suck.

Just thought I’d let you know.

duck duck screw

My brother blew a tire this morning swerving to miss some ducks in the road.

I went to pick him up only to find out road debris had literally screwed me on the way to our offices.

duck duck

screw

That’s the final straw. We’re moving our business off the Indian burial ground.

Wii, PS3, and Xbox all burn calories

Okay, no surprise on the Wii. I’ve jumped around like a maniac playing my brother’s Wii boxing game. But PS3 and Xbox? Here’s the blurb from Wired magazine.

“Game Gut Begone - Put down those weights! With gyroscopes, force feedback, and active add-ons, videogames are now all you need to become a lean, mean, button-mashing machine.” - Patrick Di Justo (Wired, May 2007, page 57)

The following stats are from the same article:

Gross visions of body builders here…
Instead of… 1.5 hours of weightlifting (842 calories)
Play… 1.0 hour of Dance Dance Revolution (900 calories)

*I* can vouch for this one personally! ;-)
Instead of… 30 minutes of aerobics (242 calories)
Play… 30 minutes of Wii Boxing (250 calories)

BIG SURPRISE TO ME ON THIS ONE!
Instead of… 20 minutes of jogging (198 calories)
Play… 1 hour of PS3/Xbox on the couch (204 calories)

Not tonight, honey, I’ve got tennis elbow!
Instead of… 15 minutes of sex (33 calories)

Play… 7 minutes of Wii Tennis (46 calories)

Spiderman 3 is the suck.

It was like somebody punched me in the gut. All the anticipation and all the build-up from the first two films - that were the best comic adaptations ever - and the most pleasure I got on Spidey 3 night was finally getting to pee after the movie finished. I’ve slept on it since then and there were some good things in the movie. Sandman was well played, well mostly. The actions scenes were pretty cool, well, mostly - when they happened. Venom looked kind of cool, well, from the little we saw of him. Sam Raimi has become my fallen idol.

For some well rounded reviews - that jive with a lot of what I feel but still give the film some credit, check out these links. Well worth the read whether you have seen the film or not.

Ain’t It Cool News - Moriarty

Ain’t It Cool News - Quint

Ain’t It Cool News - Cumpston

These fellows kick butt on reviews. I only wish Mr. Raimi would have consulted *someone* like these folks - rabid fans but still fair - before phoning in this sequel.

Should you see it? Well, it’s better than Highlander 2. Read the reviews, go in with low expectations (and perhaps a bit drunk), and you might be moderately amused.

News blurb on what stay at home moms should earn

I heard a blurb on the news this morning about how much a stay at home mom should earn if it was a “paying job”.

Research estimates mom should be making $140,000 per year - a 3% jump from last year (for you statisticians).

Moms are working a 92 hour work week, including some 10 different jobs (housekeeper, cook, and psychologist to name a few).

First off, I want to say I totally agree - stay at home parents (moms AND dads) are undervalued. Here’s my two cents to go with it, though.

1 cent - The non stay at home parent has additional non-paid jobs dealing with children and home also. Maintenance man, auto mechanic, accountant. The jobs aren’t cut and dry. Both partners in a marriage share jobs and lines blur. The stay at home *IS* worth $140,000 but remember the non stay at home is worth their working day salary + more - in the same vein as the unpaid stay at home (see first cent above). I didn’t hear the research address this (to be fair it was a fluff piece on the morning news so it’s not like it was a balanced report).

2 cents - Remember that *professionally* - in the real paying world - we undervalue educators that take care of entire classrooms of our children every day. They share many of the same jobs as moms and make nowhere near $140,000 per year either.

Are you down with the geekness?

I referenced Star Trek twice in the last half hour at work.

Both times work related and fitting to the situation.

I feel like I’ve crossed over into the dirty side of geekdom.

Sticky sITUATION - the rest of the story!

My brother scooped me on this one… But I’ve got the rest of the story!

As he posted, we received the following support e-mail:

“Well it had to happen sOMETIME I THINK I ScrewED UP MY LAP TOP I Spilled glue on the left sIDE OF MY KEY BOARD NOW i get indicriminate letter flucuation’s UPPER AND LOWer casE Words IF THIS contin ues MY CUStomers Will thin i have a sEVERE CASe of a. d.d. this IS not going to wORK FOR ME IF THIS connot be deglued i wILL NEED A NEW L T”

And now the rest of the story…

We both thought it was a joke but found out the next morning that it was true. And the best part?

The user spilled the glue while attaching a lucky penny to his laptop.

100% true.

Western Digital MyBook Open Case Recover Data

I have a 500 gig Western digital MyBook external drive. One day I hooked it up to my computer and it would not power up (for the purposes of this post, the background as to why it might not boot up is irrelevant ;-)). Horror! Of course I didn’t have everything backed up - time to start saving money for a second 500 gig drive I guess. Western Digital sent me a replacement drive but told me that my data was lost unless I wanted to talk to their data recovery department and that it would most likely be costly. After reading a bit on the ‘net, common opinion was the power or USB on the MyBook was likely the cause - that these elements were not as robust as the drive itself. After a little more research and some playing I did manage to disassemble the MyBook, recover my data, and return it to Western Digital (as pristine as possible so hopefully I did not obviously void any warranties - which would be ridiculous since I just wanted *MY* data back from *THEIR* broken drive).

Here’s what I was looking for on the ‘net and did not find. Hope this helps someone else. Click any of the images for a larger image.

1

(1) There is a black sticker covering one screw securing the case. Remove this sticker (mine was more like black paint that chipped off) and remove this screw.

2

(2) On both the top and bottom of the drive there are plastic “catches” that must be pressed in to allow you to slide the outer case off the drive. See the next picture for a clear view of the “catches” with the case off. It may be tricky getting both sides pressed in at the same time to slide off the case. On my drive, I used a flat-head screwdriver to push one side in and a little to the side to lodge it just a little under the plastic case so it would stop popping back up again. Be careful not to push in too far and break the “catches” off.

3

(3) Slide the case off. In truth, easier said than done so don’t cuss me out when you try it. I had to use my fingernails and pry the edges of the solid black case away from the drive unit and just keep carefully working at it until I could get it to start coming apart. When you’re doing it, you’ll see what I’m talking about.

4

(4) Remove four screws securing the drive unit to the inner case.

5

(5) There is a small circuit board attached for the LED power light that you need to remove to make the drive easier to get out of the case. Remove the three screws holding it on and gently unplug it from it’s connection on the drive unit.

6

(6) Peel back the foil tape so that you can access the power and data connector on the drive. Unplug the connector attached to the drive. This is a SATA hard drive and can be hooked up to a desktop computer (that accepts SATA drives) or I’ve seen adaptors on the ‘net that you can plug into a SATA drive to turn it into a regular IDE drive (not exactly something most people have laying about though). I happened to have a DELL Optiplex in the office that uses SATA drives so I opened it up and hooked the second power connector coming off the main drive to my newly freed MyBook drive. I still needed a SATA cable so I “borrowed” one from another office computer to connect the drive to the motherboard. If you are unfamiliar with all this, just look at how the main drive is hooked up - it’s not rocket science.

7

(7) On my DELL Optiplex I had to go into setup when the computer started and enable the second SATA drive. Okay, I didn’t know to do this right off - the drive just didn’t show up and after scratching my head for a few minutes I rebooted and checked setup. After this everything showed up fine - there was ALL my pretty data. I attached my new MyBook and moved everything over. Note - over 350 gig of data takes a while to transfer.

For the curious, all pics were taken with my Verizon LG8000 cellphone and quickly edited in Photoshop.

Starbucks called me a doof.

Starbucks Doof

Poopyheads.