Archived News starting from 12-16-2004 and earlier
BlogAfter my server alert network called and left me messages I realized this server was down, and had been down for over an hour. I left work and came home for lunch to find the cable modem flashing and laughing at me (integrated taunting voice chip). After contacting
Road Runner I learned the outage was area wide with no estimated down time. With more than 45 minutes left in my lunch, I decided to try
using my phone as a modem for a short while to see if it would work. Surprisingly Verizon doesn't block any incoming port request and between 11:45 and 12:15 the server again had connectivity. Once I realized I only have 200 peak hour minutes the excitement faded and connectivity was again dropped.
Initial Outage: 10:00am - 11:15am
Second Outage: 12:15am - 3:56pm
Also: Happy Birthday Missy!
After
many problems with my
attempt to go wireless, I finally admitted defeat tonight. While the 11Mbps and 54Mbps speed networks may be stable enough to use, they just aren't fast enough. The 108Mbps version I tried is definately not stable enough for me, and the advertised speed only occurs when you are right next to the router. I typically saw 54-75Mbps max, for unsustained periods. The good news is how easy it actually was to run cable through my house. I took the cheaters route and ran it through the
return vents in my house. I
had some help patching the panels which shortened the time to less than an hour. I also
found some interesting things in my return vent system. Now I'm back to good old 10/100 Ethernet and it's giving me my old familiar feeling of
stability and speed.
Watch
this flash video and you'll be hooked too.
The recent
death of my
NEUTRON machine prompted the purchase of a new case and motherboard. Today I got the new system installed and running great. No problem whatsoever until I installed my
Netgear WG311T Adapter EXACTLY as prescribed in the
driver download section. Just like my old system, any network activity above 2Mbps caused a blue screen and system reboot. Fortunately this new system had a slightly more robust BIOS and didn't die completely. Still unsure, I searched google and found
this post which confirmed the problem. Apparently Netgear denies the problem exists despite over 50 people having the same issue in this post alone. Even though there is no problem with the card they decided to change to an entirely new hardware design for the adapter that does not cause the blue screens. I plan to head to Best Buy today and try my luck at getting this new version. In case you find yourself with this problem, look for the number on the card near the antenna:
- FAULTY Netgear WG311T Adapter: U12H009.0 Rev4
- REVISED Netgear WG311T Adapter: U12H019.1 Rev1
An obvious identifier is the large metal box on the faulty adapter. The revised one has the chip flush with the circuit board. I can confirm the revised one has no issues because it's currently in my
ELECTRON media machine which runs constantly with moderate network traffic and has yet to blue screen. Oh yeah, happy birthday to me.
Driving home from work today I was suddenly surrounded by a brilliant white light with a matching "wooomf" noise from my MP3 player. It was brighter than any lightning I had ever seen, and I was certain armageddon had begun. Before I could figure out what had caused it the same thing happened again. This time I saw sparks fly near an overpass I was about to drive under and suddenly it all made sense. A high power transformer had blown either from the wind or an accident (paramedic lights surrounded it). I was still pumped with adrenaline and realized if I had a pacemaker I would probably be dead. The high level EMP resulting from the explosion would have most likely killed it. It was more than enough to interfere with my highly shielded automotive MP3 player. It's amazing how much EMP we encounter on a daily basis. Maybe the climbing cancer rates are related? I'll leave that rant for later. If you need me I'll be in my grounded metal mesh cage.
The
BlackNova Traders game has been reset. I'll be following a 6 month reset schedule from now on, so this game will last till June, 2005. The game was reset as requested by the
overwhelming response to the survey. Settings also adjusted accordingly.
My old house (
Beta) recently suffered a leaky valve at the incoming line past the meter. A call around to some local plumbers revealed a charge of $200 to repair it. Fortunately I was involved in deep conversation with
Brian who had experience working with other peoples pipes. He offered to fix the problem for the low price of zero, which was better than the professional plumbers guild had to offer. Having never done plumbing before, I was fascinated with his expert handling of the pipes, the pipe fittings, and the blow torch that heated up the pipe connections before he smeared a load of solder all over them. Exhausted, we left the job in anticipation of the water being turned back on. Unfortunately, the first attempt proved leaky, but Dr. Plumber never leaves a job undone and was quickly back smearing another load of solder all over my leaky pipes. This time there were no leaks and my pipes were stronger than ever. Dr. Plumber: you can blow torch a load of solder on my pipes anytime.
Only 16 days after upgrading
NEUTRON I was greeted by
this screen of doom after a system hard freeze (not even a CTRL-ALT-DEL response). I again rebooted and was told my BIOS Checksum was incorrect. A short while later I had the BIOS reflashed and finished setting up the CMOS settings only to receive another BIOS Checksum error. I again flashed the latest BIOS direct from
BioStar for my
iDEQ 200n and reset the CMOS jumper on the motherboard. This time the video would not even initialize. I then decided to remove my add-on GeForce 6800 card along with my Netgear WG311T wireless card and tried again. Still no video initialization. I put my old components back into the system and still no result. Frustrated, I took all my brand new components and set them on top of the iDEQ where it currently sits awaiting a new motherboard/case combo. Fortunately my sister left her laptop so I have a working computer to use while I'm waiting. I have never had a BIOS corrupt on me before, and if anyone is so inclined I'll gladly deliver for troubleshooting. Otherwise I'll try Ebay and hopefully get enough to pay for my replacement motherboard/case. I'm theorizing my WG311T may have required too much power and shorted the system since at least 2 of my frequent reboots leading up to the hard freeze occurred during heavy network use. Defiantly getting a 450wat power supply regardless.
After an
associate informed me the latest version of
Windows XP Media Center Edition had recently been released for purchase, and my subsequent
upgrade of my
media machine to MCE, myself and everyone I work with is going crazy over this new operating system. It truly does change the way you watch television and manage media. Anybody who hears about it wants one, and if you build it yourself it's not prohibitively expensive to get one up and running. I've
updated my photo gallery with more screenshots to share when I preach to the next unsuspecting victim. Here are some useful links I've found during my obsession:
Today I finally got my
ELECTRON machine running
Windows XP Media Center Edition properly. I found this
list of accepted hardware which saved me TONS of time trying to find a tuner/video card combination that would work. XP MCE has very strict hardware requirements since it's designed to work on $2,000 machines. Not having $2,000 to spend I decided to bastardize my existing media machine into one. Unfortunately, the ATI All-In-Wonder series video/capture card I previously had in ELECTRON is not directly supported by XP MCE without a proprietary MPEG encoder by ATI, and even then it's slow (because it's software encoding). I had to
E-bay that card to pay for some new, XP MCE approved
hardware. The combination I went with is the
Hauppauge WinTV-PVR-150 MCE and the
NVIDIA GeForce FX5200. Total hardware cost was $60 for the tuner and $100 for the video card. My recent upgrade of
NEUTRON left me with some donor memory and a new processor upgrade as well which I also threw into the mix. After configuring all the hardware and finding the right XP MCE drivers I was still unable to watch Television due to another obscure error. Some more research and I found out I had to purchase the NVIDIA DVD Codec to decode the MPEG stream my tuner was constantly encoding. After this final hurdle came the
big payoff.
As you can see it's now a very advanced media management device. Although the hardware/software and labor cost was much higher than I expected (still way less than $2,000) it was definately worth it.
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