Archive for the ‘ Computers ’ Category

GoogleDrive, SkyDrive, Still Useless…

The long rumored Google Drive is now live.  5 GB of free Google hosted storage.  At the same time, Miscrosoft has finally gotten of their asses and given proper desktop support to Skydrive.  Skydrive, if you were previously using Skydrive you can upgrade to 25GB for free.

Both of these are fantastic deals… or… they would be…

At this time, it seems Google Drive is not fully supported by Apps accounts.  Like Google Plus, Apps users get left in the cold.  It seems to work for some people though so it may simply be not turned up for everyone yet.

Skydrive, meanwhile, doesn’t support Windows XP.  It apparently also has issues with Vista as well.  They seem to really want to use it to push Windows 7 & 8, which would be less pathetic if Windows 8 weren’t a festering pile of shit.

I have found at least one page suggesting XP support may come eventually, so there’s “hope”.

At this point, I’ve just got a bad taste from the excitement and then let down of BOTH products.

I’m Pretty Much Done with Windows 8

Ok, so the new and excitement has worn off.  I am back to using Windows XP on my Laptop.  Windows 8 is still there on a second partition but I’ll probably recover that space once I bother to figure out the best way to remove Windows 8’s bootloader.

I have no major issues with it, it runs pretty quick and all and looks, mostly nice.  There are just a lot of really annoying minor issues that all sort of meld together into enough justification to say why bother.  Most of these issues are with Metro, which is of course “the cliché”.  People argue that “it’s just different” blah blah blah.  Guess what.  That’s great.  Just because something is different doesn’t mean it’s useful or better.  After previously working some in IT support (secondary to being a TV Engineer) and doing support for family etc, I can say, that for the most part, I can tell what is going to frustrate people. 

I think what really sealed it for me, was some conversations on the Windows Weekly podcast.  It’s kind of funny, because it seems to me, listening to his deflection and comments, that Paul Thurrott doesn’t really care for Windows 8, but he sort of faux supports it because he needs to keep good with Microsoft.  Anyway, I already wasn’t using the built in IE Metro browser because switching tabs is cumbersome.  When Thurrott made the assertion that they are encouraging people away from Bookmarks towards just pinning a handful of regular sites, this pretty much was the last little point that made me realize I’m totally fooling myself by “giving this a chance”.

Don’t mistake what I’m saying though, Metro, is neat.  I think it will be fantastic for a tablet, it kind of makes me want a Windows Tablet or a Windows phone.  It seems like it’s doable.

Mixing this crappy Tablet interface with a desktop, is terrible.  It is a terrible idea.  Great great, people who use iPads want their lame single tasking and huge buttons and flippy crap.  Guess what, on the desktop, that is inefficient.  When my browser takes up the entire screen, that’s a problem.

“But Josh, you’re a power user, normal epople don’t care”.  I watch my family use the computer, these people are NOT power users, hell my wife still calls the PC itself the “modem”.  I did finally get them to realize that the monitor is not the computer, etc etc.  All of them know how to navigate tabs and do things like, run Youtube in the background, or my daughter opens multiple tabs when browsing for books for her nook.  Then there is the part where they all know how to drag and drop music/ebooks/photos/whatever between two windows for sorting or putting it on an Ereader or MP3 player.

Doing this is not obvious in Windows 8, and it is the sort of thing that’s doable but will frustrate them.  Hell, I can barely get two Explorer Windows open at the same time and I know what I’m doing.  The expected action: Open Explorer, Navigate to Folder A, open explorer again, navigate to Folder B.  Windows 8 seems to just re-bring-up Window A when you try to open a second Explorer Window.

It’s little crap like this.

Also, Metro is really inefficient for a mouse and keyboard.  I have to admit, I barely use the Start Menu anyway and keep most of what I use pinned to the task bar.  Now, when I need the start menu, instead of a list of programs right there next to the mouse, I get this huge ugly ass list of icons that are hard to read and see the more I add.  I get to scroll through mutliple pages of this junk too.

Then there is annoying little features like the stupid sidebar task switcher, which half the time seems to just close and reopen the app making it hard to quickly jump between two apps.  The apps themselves all look similar in Metro, so it’s difficult to tell which thumbnail I want to start with.  One thing that may factor in to this, I have always hated these pop up Window thumbnails and generally disable them in Vista/7 anyway.

Enough just random bitching.  It’s nothing new that others have not already complained about all over, everywhere.  It just sucks.  Good for a touch interface…

Maybe…

I had the chance to try Windows 8 on an HP Touchsmart PC recently.  Maybe the drivers just aren’t there or the Touchsmart isn’t properly compatible but I could not figure out how to make any of these annoying pop out side menus work on this PC using touch.  I still had to flip the mouse over to bring up the menus.  So all of this ludicrous stupidity doesn’t even seem to work in the interface method it was intended for.  Also, Solitaire was still laggy as hell, which is pretty lame because it’s Windows Solitaire.

Evernote on Windows 8

I will totally grant that this is the whole new Beta style experience and may not be, hopefully is not, final.

Evernote for windows 8 sucks. Specifically, the Metro App, Evernote, sucks.  It is completely useless.  I was pretty excited when I saw it was available in the App store because, as I’ve blogged extensively about recently, Evernote has become the center of my organization.  Here’s a shot of Metro Evernote, some stories I’ve clipped from online, some blog posts I wrote…

ScreenShot001

It looks nice, I will not argue with that.  I love this huge almost newspaper look.  Several Metro Apps use this and I really wish I had an RSS reader that would do this (there may be one, I have not figured it out yet).

The problem is all in functionality.  I can open and read notes all day long.  Great.  I can’t seem to edit these notes.  Most notes, I don’t need to edit.  The pages that are webpage snapshots, I don’t want to edit those.

The blog posts?  I do want to edit those.  I want to correct things, I want to add to them, I need to edit them.

I can make new notes.  So there is hope that the edit feature will be added.  Considering “editing notes” seems like it would be pretty high up there in a “note management app”, I am more hoping that I just overlooked it.  The interface is different and somewhat confusing.  I checked all of the menus though with no luck.  Slide to the left and get the Taskbar pop out thing, not there; Slide right, it brings up the charms menu, not in there.  Right click and it brings up a menu on the bottom with New Note and Sync, but no Edit option.

There is another issue though, which I hope gets fixed.  Here’s a contrasting look of the normal Evernote Program, which I installed alongside the metro version (because I use Evernote a lot).

ScreenShot002

Notice it has a great organizational system going on.  I get a list of all of my notebooks on the left, I get a list of things in each notebook next to that, and I get the Note I’m working on next to that, in this case, an old review of a Transformers Comic.

I went to a fair amount of work developing a usable notebook hierarchy so I don’t have to see everything at once and I can quickly find things.

Evernote for Metro gives me exactly one notebook, “All Notes”.  I also don’t think it syncs everything, because, as shown in the first shot, it says “January – 40 Notes”.  I’m up to something like 300+ total notes now.  January is when I started using Evernote “hardcore”, I transferred hundreds of articles from Instapaper, I started importing all of my old writing.  Probably 75%-90% of those 300+ notes were created in January.

And it lists 40 notes?  Really?

Windows 8 “Full Time”

So, I talked yesterday or so ago about downloading and trying out the Windows 8 Consumer Preview.  I liked it but I know that if I keep it locked in a Virtual Machine I’ll never really use it.

I toyed with the idea of blowing out my Netbook and using putting Windows 8 on it to use full time.  I did the next best thing, I did a dual boot.  I wiped out my unused Ubuntu install, cleaned up and shrunk my XP partition and threw Windows 8 on the new space.

So I’m using it, on a real machine.  Of note, I have heard reports that most Netbooks may not meet the minimum resolution requirements for Windows 8, the HP Mini 311 I have runs at 1366×768.

I logged in with my Live account just like on the Virtual machine.  One thing of note, that Solitaire that I mentioned picking up on the VM?  It automatically showed up in this fresh install, which is pretty neat.  So I decided to load up a few apps I regularly use.  That built in Internet Explorer is kind of neat but I hate that I can’t easily switch between tabs.  Or at least, I have not figured out how to do it yet.  Also all my syncing and junk is in Chrome now, so. Chrome is in.

ScreenShot004Next up was Windows live Writer, which, despite being a Microsoft product, doesn’t appear in the app store.  I also added the Printscreen software I use so that I can make spiffy screen shots.

I also downloaded drivers for my Netbook.  They are listed as windows 7 but I took the chance it would work because the touchpad needs a driver in order to disable “tapping”.  This way, when I type, I don’t cause the courser to fly all over the place with my thumbs.  It’s stupidly simple but it’s pretty much the primary reason I never could get into using Ubuntu.  There is no way to turn this off in Ubuntu.  Suggest away, but I have literally tried everything already.  Others have had this issue, it has something to do with the way the touchpad is emulated by the OS or something.

Anyway, Windows 8…

On the new features of the actual OS, I decided to look into the whole X-Box thing.  There is a strong suggestion that you can play X-Box games or X-Box marketplace games on Windows 8, which would be pretty bad ass.  In fact, Solitaire has “X-Box” written across the top of the Start menu tile.

ScreenShot002I looked into it.  I did a search for the Scott Pilgrim vs the World game, because I really want to play it, but I don’t own an X-box.  Fortunately, it has a free demo, which means I’m not wasting money.  UN-fortunately, it didn’t work as expected.  I could “buy” the game, but it just gave me a message that it’ll be waiting for me in my X-Box download queue.  This is really lame.  If this functionality isn’t going to be added, it needs to detect that I don’t own an X-box and not show me these games and, at the very least, not let me buy them.  I can see many angry people who tried to buy a game only to find that it doesn’t work on their PC, X-box only.  This functionality is neat, but I guarantee that MS knows if you own an X-box or not.

My next complaint, which may be able to be corrected, or may end up being better in the future iterations.  I suppose at this point it’s not really a complaint but something I want to fix…  When you open the Music or video app, the default screen it to show the marketplace (presumably the Zune Marketplace).  I get that they want to push their own store, but it really needs to default to my own library.

ScreenShot003On a related note, it does auto detect music in my “My Music” folder.  Simple test, pull music across the home network and drop it in.  This is nice.  not so nice, I store my music remotely, and I have yet to find a way to map that network drive to be included in my music collection.  I have limited space on my laptop and I could probably store everything I want to listen to easily in a gig or so, it would be convenient to use the network storage.  I’m not saying it’s not doable, but I didn’t find a way to do it in the time I tried.

Which brings up my main and only real complaint so far…

I don’t use Apple products.  This isn’t some lame “Apple sucks” crap, I have two legitimate reasons why I refuse to use Apple products.  Firstly, Apple is too expensive.  Secondly, I have no desire to get “trapped” in the Apple ecosystem.  I’m already irritated being semi trapped in the android Ecosystem on my phone, but honestly, over the life of my phone, I have maybe $30 worth of apps I’ve paid for.  If something better came along *cough*WindowsPhone8*cough*, I could fairly painlessly dump Android.  Which I may do, because the new Windows stuff is really interesting and exciting, and I like Microsoft.

This whole App store, limited search locations, auto detect media, tiled start thingy?  It feels, very very much like an enclosed ecosystem.

I hate that.

Windows 8 and Raspberry Pi

So, just to start off, before anyone gets the wrong idea, this is not about Raspberry Pi running windows 8 or anything.  It is some discussion on two recently released technologies and actually amounts to “Two Blog Posts One entry”.

Raspberry Pi

Register here to express an interest in Raspberry Pi-001052The other night, as Midnight at the start of February 29th my time to be precise, Rasbperry Pi announced the launch of their product.  Rasberry Pi is a charity/non profit producing extremely cheap and small and basic design computers.  This is an ARM processor, like you’d see in a tablet, with 256mb or so of flash memory on a board the size of a credit card.  It has USB inputs, a power socket, an Ethernet jack, which is the largest component on the thing as near as I can tell, and an HDMI out.

It also costs somewhere in the ballpark of $35.

I really wanted to try to get one.  There are any number of projects you could use it for from a small media box, to a small dedicated emulator box to whatever.  I have read some suggestions over on /g/ that it’s not as capable as it’s touted but I didn’t read the entire thread so they may have been referring to some alternative product or something.   Still, for $35 it seemed like a neat experimental toy.

Sadly, the initial run was only 10,000 and as near as I can tell, it was UK exclusive.  It also had enormous demand, both retailers offering it essentially had their websites completely crash.  Neither seemed to be willing to ship over seas, or at least, to the US.  I gave up after about a half hour of just trying to get the page to load. 

I’m not upset about it, I’m sure it’ll be put out somewhere locally within the next few months.

Windows 8 Consumer Preview

win8installWhen Windows 7 came out, I tried out the preview/beta of that too.  I may have gone as far to install that on a spare laptop.  At this point I’m just using Windows 8 in a Virtual Machine using Virtual Box.  There were a few issues but I found a simple fix here.  The fix was that, by default, “Enable PAE/NX” was not selected.

Simple.

So I loaded it up.  It detected the virtual network connection perfectly, which is great because Windows 8 has all sorts of neat online integration.  The best analogy I can give is to any Smartphone with Android or iOS (I assume, never used iOS), and presumably, Windows Phone 7.

For example, my sign in, is my Live account.  I don’t use my Live email for anything so that’s not too exciting but when I entered my Google account into it, it picked up my contacts, it picked up my email, it picked up my Calendar.  Everything. 

This is very excellent.  I went through a lot of work a few years ago making sure everything was consolidated and would sync properly via my Google account, Android has already made it worth it, this is just Icing on the Cake.  It’s too bad that my corporate employer would freak if I tried to push all of my emails to my Google account the way I did at my old employer, because I’d have everything all in one place once again.

Ah well, I barely get any email at work worth reading anyway.

Anyway, some interesting aspects.  There is some interesting X-Box live integration going on.  I’ll need to investigate earlier, but as near as I can tell, “Games for Windows Live” is just becoming X-Box Live.  There also seems to be some marketplace sharing involving the games on X-Box Live, and I’ve heard a rumor of Windows 8 supporting playing 360 games.  This is all speculation and I have some other speculation I may get to related to this in a later entry.

win8solitairI tried out Solitaire, because it’s simple and free.  Interestingly, it shows up now in my GFWL online account.  I actually have always been kind of jealous of the whole X-Box live ecosystem.  Steam is great but they have zero Social going on.  Hell you can’t even make a Steam Badge without using some third party.

The Solitaire game ran extremely slowly though, which was disturbing.  I didn’t have any sort of graphical acceleration enabled on the VM, something I fixed later, so I may have to try again to see if that was related.  On the other hand, needing a 3D card to run Solitaire is very much in the camp of “Really Fucking Lame”.

Anyway, I will need to use  it more and throw some third party stuff at it like Steam and Chrome to make a better judgment overall.  I will say, I like Metro way more than I expected.  It needs some tweaks to work better with a mouse though.  It’s like, it wants Gestures that I can’t give it.  Also, the pop out menus are confusing but only because I’m not used to them and how to work them.  Also related, I’m not sure how well those pop out menus will work in a touch interface either.

There is a basic desktop but the lack of a normal Start Menu and it feeling like it’s basically just an “application” and not the base of everything disturbs me slightly.  Other applications I have running do not appear on the desktop Taskbar, as an example, it’s all still on the left hand side pop out task window thingy.  I suppose that doesn’t make any sense if you have not used Windows 8, but basically, mouse over to the left side and a thing pops out with thumbnails of everything running.

I am not sure I like this system, because nothing has a clear “close this” option and it is very easy to get a whole pile of crap running stacked up in the background.

I guess to close up I’ll just say, I do like Metro, but I think this combo Metro/Desktop idea they are pushing, may be a completely shit idea.  Give people one or the other.  On the other hand, if I can get a beefy Windows 8 tablet with a dock that turns it into a Desktop system, that could be great.  I just lack confidence that a Windows 8 Tablet will be able to run say, Team Fortress 2 or even World of Warcraft with any sort of decency.  Basically, the gamer in me, hates this.  It’s the same reason I don’t use Ubuntu full time.  I like it, it’s neat, on a basic level it’s more than functional.  It completely falls apart for any real games.  Yeah, yeah, “use a console for that” but why the hell would you ever use a controller for FPS games.  Or any game that’s not a platformer for that matter.  Don’t even get me started on Touch for games….