Kindle Fire Review

Just got a Kindle Fire a few days ago. I have owned my first generation iPad for awhile now. So, time to compare these two devices.

So, let’s start with the annoying things about the Fire.

  • Heavier than I thought it would be, but lighter than iPad.
  • Shiny screen, like the iPad, so lots of glare.
  • Amazon App store is lacking. For instance, there was no Dropbox app there. I was able to manually install it though.
  • WiFi is not easy to set up. I can’t figure out how to get connected to the corporate network. It works fine on a home WiFi, but has issues with things that require certificates or even ones that require a confirmation page to attach.
  • Power button location is horrible and too easy to press. I have a silicone cover on order, so hopefully that will provide protection from accidental powering off.
  • No Text-to-Speech capability for books. This is a major bummer as it is one reason you might want an actual Kindle versus any of the Kindle app readers. Had I read this beforehand, probably would not have ordered this. (I hastily ordered it when it was massively discounted one day. I got a refurb for $134 net price, delivered. I should have done more research first, but didn’t want it to sell out before I snagged one.)
  • Thicker than an iPad. A lot thicker.

Things I like:

  • It’s a good size. Big enough to read on, easier to hold with one hand. A good in between size when you want to read on something bigger than an iPhone but smaller than iPad.
  • I like the Carousel concept. Is this an Android thing? Or just a Fire thing? I like it either way.
  • Good battery life.
  • Easy to copy files to it from your computer if you plug it in. (Micro USB cable sold separately.) iTunes is a pain so it’s nice to not have to use that.
  • One free month of Amazon Prime. I’m taking advantage of that!

I am too lazy to return it and I’m sure it will be handy to have an Android device, so I am keeping it. If you have no iPad I suppose it is more useful. If someone offered me $150 in cash for it, I would probably sell it and then get an eInk Kindle with Text-to-Speech.

Disclosure: I directly own shares of Apple stock. I may or may not have a vested interest in Amazon stock, depends on what my mutual funds are into these days. Haven’t checked lately.

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Opera and the System Tray

Serif "O" used by the Opera Software...
Image via Wikipedia

As my readers may know, I use the Opera web browser as my primary browser. In addition to having the usability features that I desire (and have grown used to), it also winds up seldom being the target of malware writers due to its low market share. But as much as I love it, I do have to complain about one issue. Opera insists on putting its big red ‘O’ icon in my system tray.  Continue reading

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Opera Web Browser

I’ve been using Opera as my main web browser for many years, since the 5.x version. A lot of the features we take for granted today were either popularized or invented in Opera. And despite great progress in the field of browsers , I still find that Opera still is the one that meets the most of my needs.


Despite all that, there are a couple of things I find annoying with the last few releases. After installing version 10.5 and today, 10.51, I have found that the status bar on the bottom of the page is losing my settings. I like to have the status field on the bottom in the status bar. The status field shows the user  what web site a link points to when you hover over the link. I never click on an unknown link without looking at the status field to see where it is taking me. So, it was very annoying when Opera 10.5 decided I didn’t need that on the status bar. I manually added it back. To do so, follow these steps.

  1. Right click the status bar.
  2. From the Customize menu, select Appearance…
  3. Go to the Buttons tab, and on the Category list, select Status
  4. Now find “Status Field” and drag it to your status bar.
  5. Click OK when done to dismiss the Appearance dialog.

The other annoyance is the Opera red “O” icon appearing in the system tray. I don’t need this icon as I don’t use Opera for email. To get rid of this, find the shortcut you use to launch Opera, right click it and select Properties. To the Target, after the endquote as a space following by: -notrayicon

Be sure to include the dash. Click OK, and then exit and relaunch Opera. It should load without the tray icon.

The only problem is, every time you update to a new version, you may have to repeat both of these sets of instructions to fix it again.

While Opera has a low market share (and has fallen behind Google‘s Chrome in fact), it still has a loyal following. One of the advantages of Opera is the fact that I don’t think anyone has ever crafted an exploit that is specific to flaws in Opera. Hackers would rather target browsers with more market share.


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Windows Home Server

SEE UPDATE BELOW.

So, Friday evening, the UPS man brought my pile of parts from Newegg and I began assembling my new file server. I could have just used my old hardware, except for the fact that the old hardware is not going to work with the new 2.0 release of Windows Home Server due to not having enough RAM and more importantly, only having a 32-bit processor. RAM, I could fix possibly, but not the CPU problem.

I bought really cheap stuff, because WHS just doesn’t require that much, and I also wanted low power. So, I got a really power frugal, single core AMD Sempron, a couple of gig of RAM, a cheap ATX case and motherboard, and a SATA 750 Gig hard drive (the 1TB drives are still not getting good reviews, so I’m waiting on those.) I originally was going to get 2 of these drives and just sync, like I did on the old server. However, I decided to save some money and use the two PATA drives (500 Gig each) out of the old server as the backup drives.

I also pulled a power supply out of one of my old PCs I had lying around. Unfortunately, that PS was too old. It was 20 pin and I needed a newer 24 pin. Fortunately, I had one of those in another old box (and it is a fairly new PS with good efficiency and hybrid modular outputs, sweeeet!).

The initial building of the box went well, and other than the fact that the Phoenix BIOS writer couldn’t spell device correctly, I was pretty well pleased with everything. I didn’t initially install the PATA drives, just the SATA, but it was working fine. I had decided I would have no optical drives in the server, so I took my external, USB case that I had a CD ROM drive in, pulled that out, and threw in an old Sony DVD/ROM/Burner. This will be handy, as I can use it on my NetBook as well, and there’s no optical drive in the server sucking power and restricting airflow.

Speaking of airflow, the case fan was quite loud. I ran the box for awhile without that fan plugged in, and while I think it would have been just fine that way, I decided I should really plug it back in. I also had an issue when I installed the WHS software. It couldn’t recognize the Realtek onboard network chip. Fortunately, I had an old 3Com card in another box (this is why I don’t throw this old stuff out folks). I popped that card in, added the two PATA drives, and reconnected the case fan. I also configured the BIOS to enable smart fan control. This had the effect of reducing the CPU and case fan to half their previous RPM, and made the noise accetable, though it is still louder than the old Dell GX260 that I was using as a server (I had specifically bought a refurb GX260 because it was quiet). I still may unplug the case fan if the noise is too high. The drives will be spun down most of the time, there’s not video processing going on, and with the single, low power core, it just doesn’t need much cooling. This will be even more true when I put it on the floor of the downstairs level of my house which is a good 10 degrees cooler than anywhere else in the house.

After putting the 3Com card in, my server got onto the network with no problems. I validated the OS, and then started the updates. This part took awhile. They’ve made a lot of updates since the RTM of WHS. Also, got tons of patches for Windows Server 2003, upon which WHS is built. I enabled remote connections to the box, so I can run it headless, and yet still get to the innards of the OS if (well, when) I need to. Adding the PATA drives required installing a third party partition manager since the drives were in a FreeBSD native format that no one else supports.

Hardware list:

Rosewill R102-P-BK 120mm Fan MicroATX Mid Tower Computer Case – Retail

BIOSTAR MCP6P M2+ 6.X AM3/AM2+/AM2 NVIDIA GeForce 6150 / nForce 430 Micro ATX AMD Motherboard – Retail

Western Digital Caviar Black WD7501AALS 750GB 7200 RPM SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5″ Hard Drive -Bare Drive

AMD Sempron 140 Sargas 2.7GHz Socket AM3 45W Single-Core Processor Model SDX140HBGQBOX – Retail

Crucial Vostro 2GB 240-Pin DDR2 SDRAM DDR2 800 (PC2 6400) Desktop Memory Model CTVOS2GBD2S806C – Retail

For the above components, I paid $224 delivered. Then, from my old computers, I scavenged these parts:

2 x Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 ST3500630A 500GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache IDE Ultra ATA100 3.5″ Hard Drive (Perpendicular recording) -Bare Drive (Discontinued, but I paid $119 each on 11/28/2007).

Antec NeoPower 550 550W ATX12V SLI Certified CrossFire Ready Active PFC Power Supply – Retail (Discontinued, but paid $69.99 on 8/26/2008)

3Com 100/10 PCI Ethernet card. No idea what I paid or when I bought it.

So, that’s the hardware. Reusing parts saved me a good bit. I could have saved more if I had just wanted 1 Gig of DDR2-400 RAM instead of the 2 Gig of DDR2-800 and if i had just used my old drives.

Software:

The setup of the software was very easy. It took quite a learning curve to get the old FreeNAS box set up, and upgrading was also a pain. While WHS, out of the box, is much more limited than FreeNAS, it does come with a https web server that is very easy to set up so you can remotely access your files. It was also easy to set up a remote backup of my PC’s OS partition. While I don’t have SSH/FTP access to the WHS box, the web interface will do most of what I really need, which is allow me to access my data from anywhere. There are also plugins that extend its abilities, and some of these are free. In addition, I am sure I could just administer the box as a 2003 Server and change some things around if I needed to. (And indeed, I already did custom power settings to make the drives spin down after 10 minutes of inactivity.)

While I love to hate Microsoft, the experience of getting this box up and running was very easy compared to FreeNAS. I love my old FreeNAS box and hated to give it up, but it was just going to be too much of a hassle to upgrade it (and hope the upgrade fixed my problems with it.) Maybe one day, someone in the open source community will get it right, but so far, I haven’t found a solution as easy to set up as Microsoft (and I’ve tried several, from Ubuntu server to OpenFiler.)

UPDATE: Almost one year later, I would like to update my experiences. After having problems with the Windows Home Server domain service, I was unable to connect to my machine over the Internet. After reading about the new version of WHS and seeing that it was having important features removed, and vendors have pulled out of supporting it, I decided to abandon the OS and instead, go with Windows Server 2008 R2.  I am able to access it easily through DynDNS and also it will allow me to set up IIS, SQL Server and Sharepoint. I might even set up Exchange. MS is just not putting money into WHS. It was a good idea, but the industry seems to regard it as a dying product. To beef up my box, I replaced the Sempron with a Triple core Athlon II X3 450 Processor (3.2 GHz) and added 4 more gig of RAM bringing the total to 6 gig. I also put a total of 4 half terabyte drives into it, with 3 of them in a RAID 5 (software) configuration.


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Free Icons

If you need a really nice, large set of free icons to use in your web or desktop applications, I recommend the Fugue set. As of November 30, 2009, it has 2360 icons, includes the Adobe Photoshop PSD files in case you need to modify them and they are free if you provide a link back to the site from your application, or you can pay a fee of $50 and skip the link back.

Below is a sample of the icons:

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Kindle for PC

Amazon has just released a beta of software they call Kindle for PC. I’m not going to review the software itself. There are other sites that have done that (like ARS Technica, and CNet among others) but I’m going to describe my experience using it on an ASUS EEE PC 1005-HA, 10.1 inch screen, 1.66 mHz Atom rated at 10.5 hours battery life.

Amazon Kindle with carrying cover, Open.
Image via Wikipedia

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Mousewheel Improvement

Using dual monitor setups on my work and main home PCs, I’ve become increasingly frustrated by the default operation of the mousewheel. I’m hovering over my browser window, I start scrolling, only to find that the email client is scrolling on the other monitor because it’s the active window. The free software KatMouse, fixes that. Continue reading

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LG Glimmer Cell Phone Review

Today boys and girls, we will take a quick look at some new phone hardware. I recently updated my phone to a new model. For the past two years, I was using a PPC6700 from AudioVox. It is a Windows Mobile 5 based PocketPC device. It has a touchscreen and a slide out QUERTY keyboard, but it’s clunky and hard to dial the phone. Since my two year contract was up on the old phone, I decided to take a look at newer models. Continue reading

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