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March 20th, 2008

USB Copy Tower - 11 copies of a flash drive

Every once in a while you come across a product that seems really cool. But on the other side you cannot even imagine a situation when you would need it. Aleratec 1:11 USB copy tower is one of those products. It comes with a price tag of $1575.

In the words of Keith Shaw at Network World, "If you’ve ever had to sit at a computer and copy information onto a USB drive over and over and over again, this device may make for a simpler process.". Unfortunately, I have never faced such situation, otherwise I would have loved to try this product.  

 

via crave

Posted by admin as system at 6:39 AM MST

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March 14th, 2008

Death of a Power Supply (rant)

So, the PSU of my Media Center PC died. Luckily, this power supply was made by Ultra products which are known to make products of good quality and that probably the reason why they back it up by good warranty (it should have been a life-time warranty in this case). So, I was delighted that I will not have to shell out cash to get a replacement. Little did I know that the Support/Warranty system of Ultra Products is kind of a scam. I called them up to RMA the PSU. From my talk with them I found/realized the following things.

I think I was better off not RMA’ing the PSU at all. I could have bought a newer and better power supply by adding some money to the $29 I shed to return the PSU. After this experience with them, I will prefer not to buy any product from Ultra in the future unless I can just afford to throw it away once it fails.

Posted by admin as system at 2:43 PM MST

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March 7th, 2008

Windows Home Server - Part 2

If you are recycling one of your old machine to be used as your Windows Home Server box. But also want to give it a hot-swap functionality (like HP MediaSmart Server), I would recommend getting one of those multi-bay hot swap HDD racks. There are quite a bunch available at reasonable prices. The advantages these offer include -

Here are some available on Amazon.

You can find some more on other stores like newegg and tigerdirect.

Posted by admin as Network, system, windows at 8:31 AM MST

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March 4th, 2008

Nine Inch Nails’ new album for only $5

Nine Inch Nails are offering their new album - Ghosts I-IV for only $5 as a download. It contains 36 tracks. You can download in one of the following formats - 320kbps LAM encoded MP3, lossless FLAC format, lossless Apple format. As a bonus you will get a 40 page pdf and other extras like desktop wallpapers, icon set etc. They are even offering the first nine track for free (in MP3 format only). Great deal for Nine Inch Nails’ fans. You can of course decide to go for more expensive packages, also available on the website, that come with some more goodies.

 

via Uncrate

Posted by admin as fun, music at 8:01 PM MST

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Using Windows Live writer to publish your blog

Windows Live Writer now has very good support for blogs published on Wordpress. I like to write my posts in installments, currently using the save feature provided by Wordpress. I tried using Windows Live Writer when it was in Beta but somehow my wordpress theme was not imported correctly and hence WYSWNWIG (What I Saw Was Not What I Got). Once it got out of beta, I tried to give it another try. The configuration was a breeze as it picked up the theme and configuration in 4 easy steps.

writer_1 writer_2 writer_3 writer_5 writer_6

All set! I am writing this post on Live writer only. You can download various useful plug-ins for Live Writer from WLWPlugins or from Windows Live Gallery. Some of my favorites -

Windows Live Writer promises to be a very useful tool for people who have limited amount of time at their hand and still want their blogs to have that well-designed, professional look n’ feel.

And btw, this post was created in Windows Live Writer, using some of the plug-ins mentioned above.

Posted by admin as blog at 11:59 AM MST

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Home network upgrade

Yes! The new member of my network is a Windows Home Server.

If you are like most people, you probably fall under one of the two categories - people who do not back up or the people who do not back up soon enough. Till about a few years ago, my idea of back up was just copying data to an external hard drive or burn DVDs. That was till a friend of mine lost a lot of invaluable data (mainly pictures) due to crash of his external hard drive. It was then that I started backing up data online with one of those free web space providers. But there is only limited data you can backup there. Also I could not back-up as often I would like to as it takes a lot of time to manually upload (no automated service from my provider). It was then, that I started using a old box for a file and backup server.

I am currently running a file server on my linux box for back-up and file sharing. I had been wanting to try out the Windows Home Server product, for the same. It is basically a stripped down version of Windows Server 2003, hence based on a very stable, well tested platform. Another reason for switching was that since I changed my jobs last year, I haven’t worked on linux and am kind of drifting away from the latest in that market. I had two options, I could just get a out-of-the-box Windows Home Server or go with a home brewed server. I decided go with the latter for 2 main reasons - one, I was going to recycle a lot hardware that I already have for it, so it would be cheaper and second, this way I will be able to learn more about the product and its internal workings.

Step 1 - the Hardware
I am going to use the current file server box for the installation. The specs are quite low but so are the minimum requirements of the Operating System. Here are the specs -

Step 2 - Installation
Since I am not going to use a DVD drive on the server after the installation, I just borrowed on from my other system. Here is how it went. First I decided to install the OS on the 500GB drive to avoid hitting the copy size “Wall” (more on that here). But I faced a issue in that right away. Apparently WHS does not like my motherboard’s chipset. There are no drivers available for the SATA on Windows Server 2003 platform. A little search showed that there are issues with the SATA drivers for the Uli chipset. So I ended up moving a spare 200GB ATA133 HDD from another system to this and using it as the sys drive.

So I popped in the disk again and after a couple of questions in the beginning, the installation process begun. After about 1.5 hrs and a couple of reboots, I was logged in. now comes the next step. I connected the 500GB hard drive, and surprisingly it got recognized. I added it to the storage handled by WHS. and now I have 700GB of storage on the Home Server.

Step 3 - Configuration
The network configuration was easy. WHS auto-configured my router Netgear WGR614 using uPnP. I got a subdomain registered for my home server. Microsoft provides you a free subdomain - <subdomain>.homeserver.com. Through that you can log into your home server and other systems through it. All you need to do is enable remote access for your computers.

Next I enabled the back-up for my systems. Also copied the media on the home server so that I can access all my songs, photos and videos over the network and play it on my HDTV through my Media Center PC. I also created a couple of guest accounts that I can give to my family/friends to share my pics with them rather than loading them to an online gallery.

I have to say that the installation and configuration went with no-hassle (except the non-available drivers for the SATA during installation). The configuration was a breeze.

Step 4 - Installing Add-Ons
Now I need to install various Add-Ons already available for the platform. The best site I would recommend for finding a comprehensive list of the Add-In’s and other tweaks you can do with WHS, would be We Got Served. I will be trying these over the next few weeks and posting about them. So stay tuned.

My opinion so far - Windows Home Server is a really good product based on a well tested platform. The functionality it delivers is highly beneficial in today’s day and age everyone has multiple computers and media extenders and want common storage and back-up, and don’t want to spend too much time maintaining it. But as any other Microsoft product, it has some issues and some bugs. So wait for Power Pack 1, and we should see a really stable product, which does not have any current competition in the market.

For those who do not want to go through doing this and want a good out-of-the-box product with support, can get the HP Mediasmart Server. It is priced very decently and has a really small form-factor.

Posted by admin as system, windows at 12:09 AM MST

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March 3rd, 2008

Mommy, Why is There a Server in the House?

I am working a new member for my network family over the last few days. I am almost done, so soon you will hear the complete details.

Meanwhile, a hint:

Posted by admin as Network, system, windows at 8:47 PM MST

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March 1st, 2008

why so serious??

What comes to mind when you see this ?

Dark Knight

One word - DISTURBING!!

Posted by admin as fun at 6:44 PM MST

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somebody is wrong

I was working till late last night, working to get my network all connected (more on that later). While waiting for some things to be installed, came across this

somebody is worng

more like this here - http://www.xkcd.com

Posted by admin as fun at 8:47 AM MST

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