scott.hodson.blog

January 2, 2007

How to Get Rid of the Firefox “Restore Session” Window

Filed under: Technology — scott @ 5:41 pm

When I startup my computer, and start Firefox 2, I often get this window pop-up window below

Annoying Firefox Restart Session Window

I never want to “Restore Session”, I just want to start with a clean slate, so I don’t want this window to even pop-up anymore. To turn this off you can change the browser.sessionstore.enabled setting in Firefox. To do that,

  1. type about:config in your browser URL
  2. go to the browser.sessionstore.enabled setting
  3. change the setting to false

For more information about this config setting and other settings related to Firefox SessionStore features, check out http://kb.mozillazine.org/Browser.sessionstore.enabled

January 1, 2007

Why is Adobe Acrobat Reader Slow? Don’t Know, Use Foxit!

Filed under: Technology — scott @ 7:04 pm

If you’re tired of waiting forever for Reader to load up your PDFs you should try Foxit Reader for Windows, a free PDF reader that loads up much faster and gets your PDFs open much quicker. It even works embedded in web browsers for when you click on a PDF on a website. Check it out!

December 31, 2006

“Bluetooth license check failed” Error Message on Dell

Filed under: Technology — scott @ 5:18 pm

If you get a “bluetooth license check failed” error on your PC, especially if you have a Dell, an optional software update was published in Microsoft’s Windows Update for a new “Dell Wireless 355 Bluetooth Module (Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR)” driver, which actually breaks the WIDCOMM drivers that were working. You can simply restore the earlier, working drivers by installing them again. You can download the working drivers from here. You can read more about the problem in Dell’s forums here.

And don’t download anymore drivers from Windows Update “Optional Software” area, particularly drivers. I’ve had too many problems downloading “updated” drivers from there. I sometimes see drivers in there for devices I don’t even have running on my machine! Scary…

How to Setup Bluetooth Connectivity For BlackBerry Pearl

Filed under: Technology — scott @ 5:10 pm

If you are using a Dell E1505 like me, which comes with WIDCOMM drivers, you need to remove them and use the default Bluetooth drivers that come with Windows XP SP2 to enable your Blackberry to work with your PC via Bluetooth. As for Vista support, who knows, I wouldn’t chance it at this point. The original post is here. It is referenced in the Blackberry Desktop Manager help file as article “KB-04132″ but the URL in the help file is wrong.

December 19, 2006

WinRAR better (and cheaper) than WinZIP

Filed under: Technology — scott @ 7:50 pm

So over a year ago I asked my Asian colleagues to send me a bundle of files. I expected to get them as a ZIP file. Instead the file I got attached to my email had a .RAR extension. .RAR? What? So I found out that a tool called WinRAR could extract these files. I told them to not do that again and to send ZIP files in the future. All I needed was another program installed in Windows cluttering up my registry! Yet, after spending some time with it and receiving more RAR files occasionally, I noticed that RAR files were noticeably smaller than standard ZIP files.

I wondered if the difference was attributed to the level of CPU time each tool uses. I noticed WinRAR, out of the box, takes longer to create and deflate compressed files. Now I remember way back when creating ZIP files I could specify how much compression I wanted to achieve. On a 200MHz Pentium II that could be a big deal, and it could mean starting to create your ZIP and then go to lunch. So at the time I would stick with the standard ZIP compression. However with the CPUs of today it’s not nearly as big of a deal. Yet as I use WinZIP 10.0 today I don’t see an option to change how deep of a compression to use so I’m stuck with WinZIP’s standard level of compression. Because of this WinRAR will always achieve higher compression than WinZIP, and without all of the annoying startup delays WinZIP’s demo version has today. After a hundred or so uses the WinZIP demo becomes almost unusable anyways. Yet another reason to dump WinZIP…or pay for it to make the annoyances go away.

I’ve done several tests and I don’t remember the results for all of them but here’s one test I did today with a 16.1 MB SQL Server database backup file.

WinRAR – 84% compression – (2.56 MB)
WinZIP – 79% compression – (3.46 MB)

Percentage-wise, the difference may not seem that dramatic, but in terms of bytes it’s almost an entire megabyte! That can make the difference between fitting in someone’s email inbox or not. And when you’re flinging files around the world sometimes to people that don’t have broadband it could mean increased productivity.

So, why aren’t you using WinRAR? Probably because the person you would send the file to would open their email and think “.RAR? What?”

December 17, 2006

Speed Up Your Web Browser

Filed under: Technology — scott @ 12:49 pm

I saw this on Digg, it really works, especially for broadband users. For Firefox users, just go to your about:config and set your network.http.pipelining to TRUE. You can also bump up your network.http.pipelining.maxrequests to 8 if you want as well.

There are instructions for IE too, but you have to change some registry settings and I didn’t bother since I don’t usually use IE. But the speed increase is very noticeable, on both Windows and Mac versions of Firefox running on my Cox Cable Internet service.


Lightning Fast Browsing Trick For Internet Explorer And Firefox – video powered by Metacafe

Click Here for original page.

December 16, 2006

Net Neutrality Mumbo Jumbo

Filed under: Technology — scott @ 4:15 pm

Maybe you’ve seen this commercial. I’ve seen it running on Cox Cable for a while now. What a bunch of hooey! This commercial is so deceiving and blatantly manipulative that it will probably backfire. This reminds me of lame negative campaign ads during election season that are of bad taste and do more harm than good for the candidate. People are too easily informed these days to fall for this mumbo jumbo!

They try to make you think that Google is going increase your internet bill! Sorry, you don’t pay Google, you pay your ISP, and if they charge you more than you’re more likely to shop around for another provider.

I’m not saying I’m totally for or totally against Net Neutrality as I think both sides have some valid arguments. But this commercial is in such bad taste I think it hurts to discredit those against Net Neutrality and especially the cable providers since they’ve been gleefully airing this commercial for some time now.

For some more info on the Net Neutrality issue see the Wikipedia article about it

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_neutrality

December 11, 2006

Are Project Management Tools Useless?

Filed under: Technology — scott @ 5:18 pm

Henry Gantt, inventor of the Gantt chart

I remember when I used to toil for hours creating MS Project plans for certain projects. These helped justify dates and cost estimates to the higher-ups. Then, mid-stream I would try to keep the task percent-complete numbers up to date and balance the availability of development resources, but sometimes it’s hard to know how far you are on a task while you’re still discovering unknown aspects of a software project. I would sometimes even decrease the percent complete of tasks because more unknowns were uncovered. Of course, to management unaware of the software development process, this seemed hard to believe so as to not let my credibility with them suffer I would just tick up the percentage completes by tiny amounts until some real progress was made. This is akin to stock analysts rating a stock “Underperform” which everybody knows means “SELL!” because the analyst doesn’t want to upset the company by actually recommending a sell-rating of a company that he’s covering, but I digress…

But the thing that bugs me most about systems like these are the emails that I would still get that such project management tools are supposed to prevent: “Where are we?” or “What still needs to be done?” or “What tasks do we still need to complete?” or “When will we be ready?” Even with newer, online tools I get the same problem. One company I work with imposes on me to keep my tasks up to date in their Basecamp account but just today I got a “What tasks need to be complete?” email from them. What use is it for me to do all of this electro-micro-management if nobody else reads it or follows it or tries to use it after I’ve dedicated so much time into trying to keep it up-to-date and accurate?

I think the illusion that tools are going to make our lives easier is only as powerful as the team’s commitment to using such tools for their intended purposes. If you don’t get buy-in from other stakeholders to the tool and it’s meaning to the team then the tool won’t do any good for you. If you can’t get any group buy-in then just use a GTD Tiddly Wiki for yourself. However, the people usually imposing upon you to justify and manage your project with Gantt charts do so just to give them a comfortable feeling that the project has been thoughtfully planned, but they don’t want to refer to the project chart to see where the project is, it’s easier for them to interrupt you while you’re editing your Gantt chart.

October 20, 2006

MacBook Pro and Dell Update

Filed under: Technology — scott @ 5:22 pm

The Dell arrived over a week ago but it’s configured with 4 partitions and loaded with bloatware, very annoying. I’m thinking of sending it back! I’ve been spoiled by my MacBook Pro. I can’t wait to see what Stevey launches before Christmas, rumors are that new MacBooks are coming.

I just sold my Mac Mini yesterday to a bass player in Long Beach. He’s pretty stoked, and he got a great deal. I threw in a keyboard, mouse and CRT monitor so he got a whole system for $350.

And as far as the Dell E1505 notebook, I’ve finally configured it to work better and faster, especially setting up XP to work without a paging file, which really speeds up performance with 2GB of RAM available. Still, it has 4 partitions: 2 for files, 1 for the MediaDirect feratures, which don’t work anyways, and another for restoring back to the original Windows settings that shipped with it. I’ll just wipe the hard drive clean when Vista comes out and rebuild it from scratch then. In the meantime it seems to be working well, but I really wish it had DVI-output like my MacBook Pro, it’s really sharp when I connect it to my 22″ Samsung LCD.

Overall, I like my MacBook Pro better. I have Windows 2003 server running in Parallels in the MBP and it runs Windows faster than my Dell, mainly because it has a 7200 RPM disk drive, I just wish it was > 100GB. My Dell’s HDD is 160GB but if I had stuck with Dell’s original configuration I’d only have 100GB of usable space! Lame, now I see why HP is taking away market share from Dell. I think HP’s selling of AMD-based servers, a product line Dell has dragged their feet with, has helped too though, but I digress.

October 4, 2006

How to Shoot Yourself in the Foot in Any Programming Language

Filed under: Technology — scott @ 1:19 pm

These are pretty hilarious! Some of my favorites are

  • JAVA – After importing java.awt.right.foot.* and java.awt.gun.right.hand.*, and writing the classes and methods of those classes needed, you’ve forgotten what the hell you’re doing.
  • Ruby – Your foot is ready to be shot in roughly five minutes, but you just can’t find anywhere to shoot it.
  • PHP – You shoot yourself in the foot with a gun made with pieces from 300 other guns.
  • ASP.NET – Find a gun, it falls apart. Put it back together, it falls apart again. You try using the .GUN Framework, it falls apart. You stab yourself in the foot instead.
  • SQL – SELECT @ammo:=bullet FROM gun WHERE trigger = ‘PULLED’;
    INSERT INTO leg (foot) VALUES (@ammo);
  • Perl – You shoot yourself in the foot, but nobody can understand how you did it. Six months later, neither can you.
  • Visual Basic – You’ll shoot yourself in the foot, but you’ll have so much fun doing it that you won’t care.
  • Python – You try to shoot yourself in the foot but you just keep hitting the whitespace between your toes.
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