You are looking at posts that were written on March 27th, 2008.
Posted on March 27th, 2008 by arnljot.
Categories: Apple.
My first computer was an Atari 2600jr, okay - so it was a game console. But don’t hold it against my parents, they didn’t know better.
But it was what sealed my fate as a “nerd” after having getting hooked on computers after having played games on an Intel/IBM box of some sort at the neighbours house.
I shortly upgraded to an Atari XE 64, a computer I sometimes think that I’m the only one who ever owned. And searching google it might seem so.
But I quickly became an Amigian, and joined the Clan. I had the 500, the 1200 and the 4000. I also spent all my money on the Phase5 PPC cards, but in 1999/2000 as I was finishing up my IT degree at college, I wanted Java.
Java was, and is not available to the Amiga platform, so I had to leave. Going Wintel was not a choice, so I bought an Apple iMac. It was as modern as I could get back then, without breaking my Amiga heart too much.
Now to what this post is really about.
My recent purchase. The Apple Mac Mini.
In my living room I had a HTPC (XP based) and a PS3 hooked up. Currently the PS3 isn’t complete and versatile enough yet to completely handle all my needs.
The XP based HTPC has always given me grief in one way or an other. And lately it’s become so unstable (hardware) that it’s been crashing and rebooting a lot, and worst of all. The sound has been corrupted.
So I looked for a replacement, that would work great, and be very silent. Very very silent.
I considered the Psile PC briefly. And even though I used to hate Windows and all it’s incarnations, I’ve grown to accept it’s existance over the years, and even like some of it’s ease of use and features… But don’t tell my friends at Amiga.org
But the Psile option could not simply compete with the Mac Mini on price. And also, it was hard to determine if it was quieter. In fact, some reports reported the opposite. So at more than double the price, I determined it was a no-brainer, and got myself the Mac Mini.
Tuesday this week it arrived, and I was very curious to see if the myth “It just works” was true.
Here are my experiences:
Posted on March 27th, 2008 by arnljot.
Categories: Playstation 3, Playstation Portable.
I was reading the Playstation Blog, especially this posting.
I’ve played the game, “Everybody Shooter” and I enjoyed it. It’s a fun little retro experience, it’s easy to get to grips with. And it’s hard to be excellent at it. Just the way it should be I think.
But reading about Johathan Mark was almost just as fun as playing his little gem of a game. Here follows some quotes from the post.
In the day of 42″ and 50″ plasma rave, I quite loved this byte: “I look forward to playing Heavenly Sword on my 12″ TV.”
And these were suspicious. They are surely not the variety that one finds in Amsterdam Coffee houses? The quote: “Yesterday I bought 5lbs of hash browns.”
And the best one, the one which convinced me that this is a genuine character: “The Everyday Shooter code has no 4s or 5s execpt in the combination of 54, or in very rare instances 0.5, because 5 and 4 are very unlucky numbers.”
Now, so that it’s perfectly clear. The term “character”, is a term of endearment.
Another guy, who’s got plenty of character is Jeff Minter. If you want insight to the way he thinks, and what he’s up to check out his blog where he excersises his freedom of speech.
Posted on March 27th, 2008 by arnljot.
Categories: Playstation 3, Playstation Portable.
I recently left M33 customfirmware for Sonys offical Playstation Portable PSP firmware (version 3.93).
No loss, actually. Sony is really getting to grips with the whole media home experience. And I hate be left behind when Sony is racing along with new features all the time for this killer combo.
But there is still a lot of “missing features” and tuning that has to be done for the features that’s there.
I posted a little comment on the playstation blog here, about what I feel has to be done to the RemotePlay feature.
I love my PSP and PS3, especially with Remote Play!
But I would like a little more tuning to when I’m able to connect.
Currently my PS3 has to be switched off, or listening for connection for my PSP to connect (I have the last but one FW for my PS3 “pre 2.20″, and 3.93 on my PSP).
I’d like it to be so that if I connect my PSP with RemotePlay to a running PS3, it’ll connect if no “counter meassure†is taken on the PS3 locally.
This ofcourse assumes that the PS3 is running in a RemotePlay compatible mode (RemotePlay enabled game, XMB, Folding@Home, etc).
When running something, and PSP attempts to connect, the PS3 should notify the local user to press the PS button or something within 5 seconds or so to reject the connection. If not rejected the PSP is allowed control.
The PSP should get appropriate error messages, like “Connection rejected by local user†or “PS3 running RemotePlay incapable game/activityâ€.
Posted on March 27th, 2008 by arnljot.
Categories: appfuse.
After a long time away from Appuse I recently had to download it again to make a POC.
It’s really coming along real nicely, I love the ready to go DAO layer, and I was quickly able to produce the POC. My only snag was the bug with full source. It doesn’t work currently. I’ve posted it to the userlist, but hasn’t been able to follow up with more debugging details.
Will have to do that soon.