Archive for the ‘Computers’ Category

New BlueTooth Laptop more elusive than I Expected

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

It has been almost 5 days since I set out to purchase a new laptop with Bluetooth capabilities built into the laptop. I thought this would be as simple as going to the store and buying a laptop that had Bluetooth capabilities.  I want a Bluetooth capable laptop so that I can use it with Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10, which now supports Bluetooth noise cancellation microphones.

Boy, I could not have been more incorrect.

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Things you can do with Dragon Naturally Speaking include setting up something of a macro so that you can say one word and Dragon Naturally Speaking will write an entirely different word, phrase or paragraph, essentially triggering the completion of a form!

As it turns out, these laptops are pretty hard to find. I’ve scoured Best Buy and Circuit City and Office Depot with no success. Maybe I should be a little bit more explicit, I have found a couple of laptops with Bluetooth capabilities, but these laptops were definitely not designed for someone like myself in mind. In fact, I have no idea who in the world they could have been configured for.

Then I started looking for Bluetooth headsets. I figured those two would be a relatively easy thing to do.

Boy, I could not have been more incorrect.

Looking in the same stores I could not find Bluetooth headsets, anywhere. I did find some Bluetooth headsets for telephone systems at Office Depot, but these were not designed to plug into USB or anything else related to computer as far as I can tell in the price tags were approximately $350, which is at least $250-$300 more than what I wanted to pay.  You would think that I was shopping for jogging strollers in a Florida Over 55 retirement community where children are banned from eye sight.

So now it would appear that I’m kind of stuck. I need to get a new laptop very soon, but it looks like I’m going to have to go with the laptop that does not have Bluetooth capabilities built into it. L

I will keep you updated as to how I deal with the situation, and hopefully I will figured out before too long. On a side note, I was very successful at finding my wife, a great laptop. I guess I have my priorities straight!

Related Articles on Maven Mapper’s Information

 

Using Dragon NaturallySpeaking 10 On a Windy Day | Maven Mapper’s Information

Untethering Myself from My Computer with Dragon Naturally Speaking 10 Bluetooth! | Maven Mapper’s Information

My New Terabyte Dockffice

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

Last weekend I ran out of space on my primary computer hard drive.  My computer is a laptop and its about 18 months old.  When I purchased it, it was not quite the latest model, but it had a 120 gigabyte hard drive and a centrino duo processor and was fast enough for what I was doing at the time. 

It came with 1 gig of ram and the hard drive spun at 5400 rpms, which was slower than my previous laptop, which I had upgraded to 7200 rpms.  I always meant to upgrade the hard drive but just never had the time or extra few bucks to get to it.

Well, last weekend, my computer finally hit the 111 gigabytes full level and the computer wasn’t running right in my Dock-Office (Dockffice) because temperatures here are in the 90’s.

I’ve been doing more and more video work and that just fills up hard drive space very fast.  I hit the road and headed to Office Depot when I picked up a flyer offering a clearance deal before they reset for back to school stuff at twice the price.

I made it there and picked up a new router and wireless card.  Its a 1 gigabyte linksys router and card.  Then I headed to Best Buy where I picked up a 7200 rpm 200 gigabyte replacement drive for my laptop along with a 1 terabyte external western digital hard drive.  I intended to get the networkable drive from western digital but opted for the $140 cheaper drive that plugs in via usb. 

Next time the networkable drives drop in price, I’ll buy a 1 or 2 terabyte drive and then connect my existing 1 terabyte drive to that future drive and have 2 or 3 terabytes of space on my network.

IMG_3041I also picked up a high speed laptop cooling base station thing, to keep my laptop cool while it runs in my dockffice desktop (essentially a high top stocked bar).

All said and told I have a great deal more capacity and even more speed than I had before, which is definitely helping me get and keep things organized while I work more efficie ntly and effectively.

It has been a long time since I was impressed with a hardware buy ( I seem to recall with awe buying a 100 megabyte hard drive about 12 years ago thinking that was amazing). 

Now I have more space on my computer arrangement than I my entire company had working in a high rise in Atlanta including 30 some laptops and 3 servers running a $100 million dollar distribution business (owned by crooks in China that I turned into the IRS but that’s another story . . . .  ;)   ).

I’m sure this space will seem like a drop in the bucket after my video production moves to hi definition and I start working with multiple video inputs plugged in to a HDMI switch output to god knows what.  Maybe I’ll have to rent an exobyte (no idea how to even spell that ) from Google located in their new server room on the dark side of the moon operating at close to absolute zero temperatures or something.

Technologies that Sink in after the Fact- Sling Box Pro

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

Last winter when I went to the consumer electronics show in Las Vegas, I saw a technology that seemed impressive, but didn’t seem necessarily useful.

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It was the Sling Box, and it basically lets you watch movies on your TiVo from anywhere in the world if you’re connected to the Internet. Back then I saw the technology I thought that it was executed very well and look pretty cool, but I couldn’t envision the practical use.

Sometimes you just have to let a technology sink in within your brain and give yourself time to envision a use for it. That’s kind of way it is for me with the Sling Box. More and more of my mobile computing is un-tethering myself or my office and for my home and I’m starting to see the uses of potentially having a connection to movies or news recordings on my TiVo.

In part this is probably due to the fact that I do a lot of work with news and media need to stay in touch with things. It definitely has something to do with the fact that I have a WiFi office on a fishing dock and also because I use an air card quite a bit these days as well.

Back in January I couldn’t envision watching TV for my computer very often. But now it seems like every time I turn around I think of a new use for such technology and it makes they consider or reconsider other technologies that I have rolled my eyes at in the past because I wasn’t quite wise enough to figure out a good use for it.

I haven’t purchased a Sling Box yet, so I’m not going to be putting it to the test probably before the summers out, but I have seen that the prices are coming down rapidly. If you take a look at the Sling Box on buy.com its featured in their weekly sale, you can see that the price is coming in under $200 now down from almost double that price not so long ago.

And consumer-electronics terms, that is a good sign that the product is popular with people and that they were buying enough of the product so that the overall cost of manufacturing can come down and the subsequent cost of sales of the product can come down as well.

It wouldn’t surprise me to see this product offered as part of a basic cable lineup package sometime next summer. Dish network already offers its as an accessory, but is not a standard item yet maybe someday and maybe then I’ll pick it up.

If I haven’t purchased at all ready. :-)

 

Sling Box Pro Facts
The Slingbox PRO uses SlingStream technology to adapt the compressed high definition video stream to your current network conditions, whether running on a computer or mobile phone. Have a HDTV setup at home? Enjoy it around the world with the Slingbox PRO and the HD Connect Cable.

Features


Product Features of SB200-100 (SLINGBOX PRO)


Redirects the TV signal to the computer of your choice–providing high quality video, no matter the distance


SlingStream technology delivers up to a 400 percent video quality improvement over the original Slingbox


Connects to digital cable box, DVR, satellite receiver, DVD players, video/security camera, or any NTSC component HD, S-video, or composite video source


Includes free Slingbox Finder service to locate a Slingbox from any network location


Watch and control your home TV, DVR, basic cable, digital cable box, or satellite receiver anywhere around your home or around the globe


Product Features of HD200-100 (HD CONNECT CABLE)


Connects your HDTV source to the Slingbox PRO


Provides pass-through connectors, so you can easily add the cable into existing HD configurations


Provides component video and stereo audio connections


Compatible with Slingbox PRO


SlingStream technology adapts the compressed HD video stream to network conditions, whether running on a computer or mobile phone

Laptop RAM Its Cheap as Hell these Days!

Monday, May 26th, 2008

Many of  remember a few years back, if you had a laptop and wanted to upgrade the memory, it often times cost more than $100 and $200  $300 for 512 mb or 1 GB wasn’t that strange.

ram But these days laptop memory is cheap,cheap cheap!

If you have a laptop there is no better time to max out your ram memory and wash down those memories of expensive ram with a beer.

I’ve loaded my laptop up with 4 gigabytes for next to nothing.  Now, my XP laptop will only recognize 3 gb even though the hardware can handle 4gb, but at about $20  – $40 at Buy.com, who really cares! 

Max it out and forget about it.  It is then just one less thing to worry about when you are running to many applications on your computer.  If you have Vista on your machine the OS can recognize a lot more RAM too.

These days it costs less to fill up your laptop with RAM whether or not it is on sale or not than it is to put a half tank of gas in your car.

Besides with the money you save from running a faster machine, you might then be able to invest that money in gas or even in going mobile completely and picking up an aircard.

My New Favorite Data Storage Toy – Tool

Friday, May 9th, 2008

Last month I picked up a little hard drive, and it has rapidly become my favorite new electronic gizmo.  Its a hard drive and that may not sound glamorous or even as fun as GTA IV, but it just might be.

Its a 320GB Western Digital hard drive.  Its completely powered by USB, so I do not need any extra power cables or anything.  Its just a little longer than my Treo 700 and its half as thick!

western-digital-hard-drive-320gb-thinner-than-a-treo

This drive works with USB 2.0 and the drive is fast.  One of the things that I like about it is that its easier to add on to a laptop than doing a hard drive upgrade.

My current laptop has a 120 GB hard drive, and its pretty much full with pictures and video (from all of the tutorials and Camtasia videos that I create.

Upgrading a laptop hard drive is expensive and a little tedious.  But you can just plug in and play this micro monster.

Plus, its generally cheaper than upgrading your laptop hard drive too.

This only costs $135 at Buy.com for example.

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Other Sizes

Now, I needed a lot of space because of my video work, but you can get smaller sizes (for less money too).   The 160 GB version from Western Digital is featured as one of Buy.com’s weekly deals with free shipping no less at a total of $79.99. 

Its the same size in physical dimensions and looks the same as well.   Or the in between size is 250 GB and costs about $113.  Color is not important for me, but if you are looking for color, they come in just about everything under the rainbow from black, red, blue, yellow, orange etc.  If you want sturdy and tough, there is a titanium cased version that typically costs an extra $10.

Now if you go looking for these, they are in the ‘My Passport’ Line.  There is also a ‘My Book’ line as well.  The My Passports are the thin little USB powered hard drives.

When You Need a Terabyte Drive

The My Books are named because they are about the size of a thin Harry Potter Book, but they have the added capability of being able to hold up to a terabyte of data and they can be configured to run on a network all by themselves.  I’m looking at getting one of those terabyte drives next.

Doubled My Ram for Dragon Naturally Speaking

Monday, September 3rd, 2007

This weekend I doubled my RAM on my laptop computer going for 1 GB to 2 GB.

I have a number of memory resource hog programs on my computer and I wanted to see if more RAM would improve the accuracy and speed of Dragon NaturallySpeaking 9.  I’m writing this article right now using Dragon NaturallySpeaking 9, and it’s the first time I’ve used Dragon since upgrading my RAM.

Here are some of my early first impressions:

  1. Dragon NaturallySpeaking 9 put up time is a lot faster
  2. fewer small word errors (such as an instead of and or in instead of an or and)
  3. Much faster response time for commands like ‘wake up’ and ‘Go to Sleep’

I was worried that I would upgrade my computer and not see any benefit at all.  Fortunately, I am seeing a benefit.  For what it’s worth I didn’t upgrade my computer just for Dragon NaturallySpeaking 9.  Firefox and Dreamweaver and Outlook are bigger resource hogs in Dragon NaturallySpeaking 9.  Unfortunately, I use all of those programs the most and usually at the same time, that is why I upgraded my RAM.

I intend to create a new user profile and test the new user profile with the additional RAM.  I have been curious if my profile has picked up a few bad ~ less correct words lately.  I have a suspicion that I might improve my accuracy if I start fresh.

I will probably use this for a few months while I work at home and travel and then upgrade my RAM again to four gigs before too long.

Keep your eye open for a new speed typing test I am curious to see if I can do better on the speed typing tests with more RAM and a more responsive Dragon Naturally Speaking9!

Past Articles with Typing tests

    1. Video Running Dragon Naturally Speaking in a Typing Test
    2. Hit 130 – 150 Words Per Minute with Dragon Naturally Speaking!

Flash-based Hard Drives — Your Future Is Calling

Thursday, June 7th, 2007

Flash-based solid-state hard drives are soon going to be the way of the future. They’re faster, and they use less energy. Those are two of the primary ingredients needed in making any computer batter. Flash has been utilized for years in RAM, but it’s only in recent years that a limited number of computer manufacturers have begun to create a hard drive system of flash hard drives.

They require less energy because there’s no disk to spin up within the computer. The elimination of this movable parts that only both the computer because it doesn’t have to spend anything up, but it also helps to keep the computer cooler enabling the other parts of the computer to work more efficiently.

You get a direct boost and you get an indirect boost from using flash drives. You might even call this synergy.

Flash hard drives to represent a new technology and as all new technologies go their prices are much higher. However historically the price of all hard drives always comes down, and this is been true in the flash market relating to ram and portable flash drives.

It will not be long before people adopt more solid-state flash drives and computers take another small quantum leap forward.

Link to PC World – Solid-State Drives Coming on Strong

Laptop Cooling Analogy to Cooktop Stoves

Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

Not too long ago I upgraded my kitchen. We tore out of wall that separated a dining room and a kitchen that were both rather compartmentalized and we’ve put in a great big Island with cooktop stove. Cooktop stoves do not have range hoods to suck out the hot steamy air that would rise up off conventional stovetops. Instead it has a fan built into the center of the cooktop stove that draws the steam and smoke down into the cooktop itself and out through events that go up through the floorboards of the House.

This technology fights the natural progression that hot air would like to make as it attempts to rise, however it does do a good job of minimalizing the impact on the space above the cooktop.

The laptop analogy to cooktop stoves

Now as I look at the fans used on cooktop stoves, I come back to the fundamental question and problem that I always face with my laptop. How to keep it cool and running efficiently and strange conditions especially when I’m working outside life and this evening. I have to wonder if the would be possible to create a desk similar to a hockey table where you play air hockey that has holes in it that move air. Those holes could instead of pushing air of suck air down pulling the hot air surrounding the laptop service down into the desk and out through events. Instead of blowing cool air on the laptop you could take the hot air away essentially.

Similar to a aerosol can that contains compressed air, the air leaving the can could even serve to cool the of the desk. There’s got to be a better way it’s a simple thing…

Diet Pills for My Computer

Monday, May 28th, 2007

To finish out a diatribe, I thought I’d add something to my wish list of computer applications.  I would like a diet pill of an application to help slim down the processes that are continually running.  Something like ionamin to trim some memory fat producing memory hogs.

Something to automatically shut down processes that aren’t really being used.  There are applications that help clean up desktop icons why not task bar programs and processes?

Not ready for Vista's Memory Requirements

Monday, May 28th, 2007

I have 1 gig of memory in my Toshiba Satellite laptop.  That is definitely not enough.

I am running Windows XP.  I don’t think I can even consider upgrading to Vista at this point until perform a computer memory upgrade Additional Notes: Extra assignment Please Complete by 4-20.

Truthfully, I don’t necessarily think its Microsoft’s fault entirely.  I seem to have 2 categories of problems

  1. Firefox is a massive memory hog.  The program works great as a web browser, seems to be far better than Internet Explorer 7, but if you leave it open on your desktop with a few tabs for more than a few hours and you are just asking for memory trouble.  I also use Dreamweaver and MindManager and they do not help either and don’t even get me started on the video applications that I use from time to time.
  2. There are far too many programs that want to run all the time on my computer taskbar.  I currently have over 80 processes running.  In part this is Microsoft’s fault.  They let and encourage this type of program hijacking of a computer.

I think I’m going to need to go up to about 4 gygabites of memory to keep things running smoothly and still make it to Vista someday. 

One of these days  . . .

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