My laptop is back!

Woo hoo! SantaDHL came by yesterday and I got my PowerBook G4 back from Apple! In fact, I’m posting from it right now. I’m a bit busy preparing for Christmas to spend much time on recovering all my files, settings, etc., but at least I’ve managed to set up my login account and wireless network.

I’ll probably get down to serious recovery efforts on Dec 27–We’re going to my parents’ house for Christmas Eve, Christmas Day is obviously booked, and “Boxing Day” (Dec 26) we’re going to Kevin’s house for a game of Civilization.

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Delicious library, anybody?

Delicious Monster logo

One of the things I’m going to try out when my PowerBook comes home is Delicious Monster. This is a library management system for the Mac which can catalog books, movies, music, and video games. I’ve got plenty of the first three, (although most of them are currently in storage), but I don’t have any video games. One thing I’ve proposed to the developer(s) is a way to support boardgames, especially providing links to the corresponding BoardGameGeek entries for my games. (And for extra-cool bonus points, provide some way to synchronize my BGG collection with the DM catalog.) I can’t find my feature request on their web site, nor does it appear on the DM blog. Well, I guess I can submit it again…

Some of the other slick features of DM are public “shelves” to display your stuff and a “borrower” tracking system so you can share your books, music CD’s, videos, and (hopefully!) boardgames without losing track of them. (I’m really looking forward to the tracker, since I’ve lost more than a few books over the years that I loaned out but were never returned to me–usually nothing intentional, just people forgetting to return the book and me not remembering to whom I loaned it.)

Just an aside: I found a story on Wired! about the original development of Delicious Monster. This sounds like my kind of “office”!

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The continuing PowerBook saga

It’s been over a month since I wrote anything about the boot failure issues on my PowerBook. It hasn’t been for lack of material; rather, no single issue has warranted a post of its own. But looking back, I now have a month of experiences (mostly bad) to relate.

DiskWarrior wasn’t able to recover my disk. I tried DataRescue, and it seemed to work. (More details below.) I was hoping to wait until I verified DataRescue’s performance before I wrote about it, but I haven’t been able to restore my data yet. Why? Well…

We purchased 3-year warranties when we bought our PowerBooks. Some time during the first year, you have to fill out the AppleCare warranty registration. I did this, but I made a mistake on the paperwork. They claim to have notified me of this, and I have to give them the benefit of the doubt. (My desk is buried under about 3 feet of crap, which could easily be hiding the notification letter.) So now, since my PowerBook died after the first year, I had to jump through several hoops to get my additional two-year warranty activated. This took about 1.5 weeks to get straightened out.

While I was waiting for my AppleCare warranty paperwork, I stopped by my local Apple store. I wanted to find out if I could keep my busted disk drive for a few days after they gave me a replacement drive, in order to attempt recovery of the drive’s data. The person I spoke with at the retail counter assured that this was possible. When I finally got my warranty authorization, I took my laptop to the GeniusBar. They ran some diagnostics to verify the disk failure and began filling out a work authorization when I asked about keeping my old disk. Now I was told that there was no way I could keep my old disk. Grrrr! So I took my baby home for one final data recovery session. (Lesson learned: Never ask warranty questions at the retail counter! Always head to the Genius Bar for this sort of thing.)

By now, it’s early December. My PowerBook G4 has been dead for over two months! I had received the copy of DataRescue II that I ordered, so I hooked up a FireWire drive and booted DR2. (The DiskWarrior CD was still in the drive. In order to eject the CD-ROM, I had to hold down the mouse button while powering up the laptop.) DR2 seemed to work great. It took several hours to examine the disk, but it beat the pants off DiskWarrior! Since I was going to permanently lose the disk, I ran several recovery passes using nearly every trick that DR2 provided, saving both the file/directory structure as well as “content-based recovery” which is able to recognize JPEG, MP3, PNG, et cetera, files based on their content. When the AppleStore opened the next morning, I was able to make an appointment at the GeniusBar using the Concierge service. (Requires Flash.) They didn’t have a replacement disk available at the store, so they suggested sending it in for “depot repair” since it would probably take a day or two longer for them to order a replacement disk and perform the repair at the store.

On December 4, I finally got my laptop in for repair. That was a Sunday, so it should have been shipped out on Monday. The “repair” is merely replacing the hard drive, which ought to take under an hour. Then the unit was going to be shipped back to me. This should have been finished in about a week, right? Wrong! Problem number 1: some chowderhead at the depot accused me (via a customer service person) of installing a non-Apple hard drive, so my warranty was void. I assured the CS rep that I hadn’t opened the case, so she asked the repair tech to send her photos of the “unauthorized” drive. A day later, I got another call from the CS rep telling me that the Apple sticker was clearly visible in the photo so she graciously reinstated my warranty and authorized the repair. (There went at least two days.) I was told to expect my system back early the following week (12-14 December). Well, it didn’t arrive last Monday, and I was meeting with a vendor all day Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. On Friday morning, (16 Dec 2005), I still hadn’t seen my baby so I called Apple. It turns out that they had been sitting on my repair because they didn’t have the exact same part in stock, and they won’t do anything (beyond ordering the part) until two weeks have passed! I guess last Friday was close enough to the 2-week limit that they initiated a “thorough inventory check” to see if there are any identical hard drives stashed away somewhere. They will supposedly wait two business days for a response on this, before they allow substitution by an upgraded part. So my PowerBook should be repaired tomorrow and shipped back to me, but the PowerBook G4 Support page still shows “On hold – Part on order” as the current status.

Once I actually receive my laptop, I’ll finally get to see how well Data Rescue performed. More to come…

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Transit status alert system

Monday’s Sacramento Bee had an article on Regional Transit‘s recent problems with light rail operations. The most frustrating thing about the system running behind schedule (to me) is lack of notification. I usually don’t care if my bus is running 10 minutes late — I just don’t want to stand at the bus stop for an extra 10 minutes, especially when I don’t know how long I’ll have to wait. Near the end of the article, a passenger-notification system is mentioned:

In Washington, D.C., rail officials now send electronic alerts directly to commuters’ computers, cell phones and personal digital assistants.

Joseph and I discussed a similar system for the Sac State shuttle service, which routinely runs behind schedule at the beginning of every semester. Joseph’s idea was to set up an email list server with a separate list for each of Sac State’s three different routes. Transit riders would subscribe to the alert service for the route(s) they take, using their cell phone’s text messaging address, an alphanumeric pager address, or any other device capable of receiving email. Thus if the driver on route #2 is running behind schedule, s/he would alert the dispatcher, who would in turn send a single email to route #2’s subscribers. The email list server would then notify all the subscribers’ pagers, cell phones, PDA’s, etc. This same information could, with a bit more effort, also be posted on a web page or put into an RSS feed. Email list servers are very mature technology, and they don’t require much infrastructure. Such a system could be implemented on a commodity PC in a matter of hours. The only other requirement would be a decent internet connection.

According to the Bee article, RT’s future projects list includes a public information system for light-rail stations, costing $2,000,000. ?!? That’s crazy! RT should follow Washington DC’s example (or just hire Joseph for a few days) and send alerts directly to patrons’ alphanumeric pagers and cell phones. How much could such a system possibly cost? Granted that they have many more routes and riders than Sac State, but the basic idea should scale up very well by investing a bit more money in the hardware. Spending $2 million just on kiosks at light rail stations doesn’t make any sense to me.

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University Village survey results in Sac State Bulletin

Today’s Sacramento State Bulletin has an article on the University Village housing survey. Interesting how much emphasis is on the faculty responses, considering they are only about a third of the respondents (196/551). Given that:

Staff seemed particularly interested in the project, making up more than 57 percent of those who expressed an interest.

I think some of the earlier comments on this issue are spot-on: this project seems intended almost entirely for faculty. Troubling…

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New game at home: King of the Beasts Mythological Edition

I picked up a new game last week: “King of the Beasts Mythological Edition” is a 2- to 5-player card game. It plays very fast, maybe 5 or 10 minutes for experienced players. I’ve had a little trouble teaching it to my family so I tried the “learn it by playing it” trick, and they all got it right away. Everybody has enjoyed it so far, but we’ve only played about 4 games so I don’t know about it’s replayability.

One thing we have found out is that the cards are a bit flimsy, as they’re already starting to show signs of wear. These cards are nothing like those in other games by Playroom Entertainment, e.g. Killer Bunnies or Sitting Ducks Gallery. Since the cards represent basically the entire game, I think Playroom should have put more production emphasis on the cards. They could keep the price down by shrinking or eliminating the box and/or cardboard insert.

I’m going to stick a tally sheet in the box so we can keep track of exactly how many times we play this before the cards become unusable. Given the already evident wear, I have suggested to Jess (Viking Hobby) that she not re-stock this game until the company does a better job on the cards. Too bad, because it really is a surprisingly interesting little game.

Check the BoardGameGeek ratings for this game.

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Sacramento Boardgames Meetup 2005-12-06

We had a great turnout at the December boardgames meetup, especially since our numbers usually plummet during the holiday season. There were about 28 people (+1 baby) gaming at the Fox & Goose Public House on Tuesday night. All together we played about 10 different games — we would have played more, but about ¼ of our players left early to go to a karaoke (sp?) bar. I took a bunch of pictures, but I didn’t want to blind anybody with the flash, and I didn’t bring my tripod. As a result, only one picture was even marginally viewable.

We’ve been trying to keep track of all the games we play whenever we get together. There is a thread on the meetup message board with a list of nearly all our events since May 2005. Each event has an associated “geek list” which shows the games we played that night, usually including the players and their scores. Many thanks to Kevin for coming up with this idea and doing nearly all the work to make it happen!!!

We get together every Tuesday night at the Fox & Goose, but the first Tuesday of each month is usually our best attended. There are also several other events every month at other venues. See the full schedule on the Sacramento Boardgames Meetup site. If you’d like to join us, feel free to drop in during a scheduled event or you can join the Meetup group (free) and RSVP. You can use the RSVP comments to request a particular game or to pre-arrange players for a game.

Many of our members have listed their games collections on BoardGameGeek, also known as “BGG” or “the ‘Geek.” You can find our members’ BGG usernames by checking their Boardgame Meetup profiles for an answer to “If you have a profile on BoardGameGeek.com, what is it?” (Take a look at my Sacramento Boardgames Meetup profile for an example. About halfway down my profile you’ll see my BGG username and URL:

“I’m jimv on the ‘Geek, http://www.boardgamegeek.com/user/jimv

Unfortunately, Meetup doesn’t convert all URL’s into clickable links, so you’ll have to copy-and-paste the URL into your browser.)

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Thai Kitchen: An understandable addiction

About three weeks ago I sent Sgt. Goetz some chow, since the government (or is it Halliburton?) can’t seem to provide edible food to our troops in Iraq. The box I was using would only hold 12 noodle bowls of the 14 I had bought, so I had 2 left over. My wife and I tried these, and I can now understand why somebody would enjoy getting these in the mail–they’re really good! I’ve tried 4 of the 6 flavors available, and my absolute favorite so far is the lemongrass & chili although the hot & sour is also pretty good.

Thanks for getting us hooked on these, Daniel! I just wish it hadn’t gone down the way it had! 🙁

Support our troops-Bring them home now!

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Model railroading

I’ve been a model railroader ever since my dad brought home a simple HO train set back around 1970. He didn’t want me fiddling with it, (rightfully so, since I probably damaged it within hours of its arrival at our house!) So I took all the money I had saved up and rode my bicycle down to our local hobby shop. (Back in the 70’s, we still had general hobby shops. They sold all kinds of stuff — model rockets, yarn and thread crafts, wood-burning kits, and train sets, among many other things.) I didn’t have enough money for an HO set, but I was able to afford an N-scale set! I’ve been working with N-scale ever since.

I dropped out of model railroading (and most other pastimes) during college due to lack of time and money, and I just kind of forgot about it. But a few years ago my brother-in-law started getting into model railroading, and it re-awakened my interest. I dug up my old N-scale stuff and started thinking about how I could manage to squeeze a layout into my house. N-scale models have improved vastly over the last 30 years. But even with a space-saving scale such as 1:160 (N-scale), I still couldn’t find a way to fit a model railroad layout into my house. Then I remembered about
N-TRAK

N-TRAK is a standard that allows N-scale model railroaders to build relatively small modules (say 2′ x 4′) which can be connected to other people’s N-TRAK modules. The resulting layouts can be record-breakingly large, e.g. the Capitol Limited ’04 show last year in Chantilly, Virginia. I couldn’t find a local N-TRAK club in my area, so I put together Central Valley N-TRAK so I could start publicizing and hopefully attract some kindred spirits and start a club. (A Sacramento NTRAK club has formed, but not quite the way I expected…)

Meanwhile, we’ve moved about 30 miles up the valley into a “fixer-upper” and now I have no time (or space!) to do any model railroading. Sigh. 😐

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Coconut creme brule

Hooray! Holly posted the recipe for the dish she was cooking with a blowtorch on Thanksgiving. Sounds like it would warm up the kitchen, a welcome bonus considering that we have no heat right now. 🙁

The coconut creme brule recipe is available on epicurious, and copyrighted, so I won’t be posting it here. But once I figure out some improvements, I’ll post my own version of it.

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