Author Archive for john
Ok, so, as you may or may not know, I’ve been in Las Vegas for the last two weeks. I’m in the McCarran International Airport soaking up some more wifi waiting for my flight to Houston where I’ll grab another flight to Pensacola. I have to say that my vegas trip was fun, though probably not in the way you might think. I didn’t even get to see the strip much less a show or blow any money at the Blackjack tables. I spent the large majority of my time working and relaxing in my hotel. The place I stayed at was a Hilton Garden Inn. Nice place. No where near “actual” Vegas though but that was ok.
Coming out here was actually kind of liberating. I’ve only flown a few times in my life, and up until now I’ve never flown alone. I was concerned about getting through security and all that but all that went really well. The media really has sensationalized the difficulty of getting to your flight. I’m sure it’s much harder in some other airports, but here it’s been pretty easy. All of the workers are quite helpful and are more than willing to point you in the right direction.
Anyway, enough gabbing. I’ve learned a lot while being here. I came out here for business. As I posted before, I was trying quite hard to nail a position as an ASP developer for the ISP I work for. As some of you know, I got the job. As a result, they flew me to Vegas to meet the other half of the team I’m joining. While I’ve been here, I’ve learned a lot about the larger and more technical aspects of the development process. It’s been lots of fun and lots of work.
I have to get to my flight so I’ll cut this one short.
Good day.
- john
leaving on a jet plane
I wasn’t going to write about Google Chrome.
I wasn’t going to write about Google Chrome because I didn’t want to join the blogsphere trend-flood.
I was’t going to write about Google Chrome. But I am. I am writting about Google Chrome because it’s amazing.
A m a z i n g .
Read the comic about it here (complete with technical information). I’ll warn you, it’s slightly technical but explains the majority of the stuff that some might not get. The ideas behind Google Chrome are fantastic.
I’m at work right now and we’re quite busy so I don’t have the time to devote to posting anything of any depth right now. Definitely check it out and read the comic.
- john
celebrating
I recently purchased a Dell Studio 17 that shipped standard with Vista Home Premium. Now, typically I would have paid more to have Ultimate if I didn’t already own my own copy. I posted about that fiasco on the forums if you’d like to see what happened there (see the last two posts on that thread).
Since the Vista installation on the laptop is the first real hands-on I’ve had with the OS, I tried to embrace it with an open mind. I booted up, went through the normal setup things and got up and running fairly quickly. The first thing I did was turn off the UAC notifications since, being the type of person that performs admin level activities on a minute by minute basis, it gets quite annoying. (Note – you might be asking how I knew to do that if I had no real hands-on until my laptop got to me. Well, I deal with the OS daily from a support stand point and have had to fight against it quite a bit). All in all, the first day went well. I got my email setup with Windows Mail, downloaded Firefox 3 and AVG, played with the Dell Dock a bit (kind of neat but shouldn’t be necessary if Microsoft had done it’s job), changed around my sidebar options, etc, etc. Then I started realizing how much junk was pre-installed on my system. Google Desktop, Dell Dock, a ton of Dell apps for the built-in webcam, photo/video editing/archiving, and on the list goes. So I spent some time just uninstalling software I didn’t want while enjoying some YouTube hilarity.
Once I got all situated, I decided to try to break it. I setup Task Manager to open with windows so I could watch the memory usage. Windows comes up, task manager loads, 800MB, 850, 1GB, then stopped at 1.4GB. Shocked, I just looked at the number for a few seconds then started checking the processes that were running. “Surely not,” I thought out loud to myself. “Surely this isn’t what a clean boot up requires.” Almost every single process that was running was necessary except for about 30MB of stuff that I could do without. That’s disgusting. Half of the memory my laptop shipped with is being taken up by my OS. Are you serious? This is a problem for me.
“Wait a minute… I know what this is.” I say thought out loud to myself again. “It’s all the graphical stuff. Right? The fuzzy-see-through window edges, window transitions, glossy boxes… Yeah. That’s what it is. Has to be.” So I set it all back to “classic” (aka “ugly”) mode and restarted the computer.
1.3GB
Wait.
I blinked my eyes.
I chuckled to myself.
I saved a tenth of a gig by turning off all the pretty colors?
Unacceptable.
Keep in mind, this is with nothing extra loading at boot. I walked over to my desktop running XP pro and booted it up. With all of my start-up apps I had less than 600MB. If I did my math right, which I’m pretty sure I did because I used a calculator, that’s a SEVEN HUNDRED MEGABYTE boot-up memory foot print difference and with drastically different start-up extras (vista having NO start-up extras, XP having all my normals including Thunderbird, Firefox 3 with four tabs open, AVG, ATI software, and task manager). That’s more than half a gig!
Not only is navigating Vista much more difficult than it should be, it was just developed badly. From a software giant like Microsoft I expect much more. Apple products are simply too expensive to switch over to entirely. Not to mention the fact that the Mac OS isn’t built for a programming environment. Which leads us to a free, simple, pretty, low resource requirement solution… Linux.
Some times I just hate the OS market.
- john
disgruntled vista user
