Archive for the 'Geek' Category
Published by Si at 19 September, 2008
in Geek and Tech.
If you have an iPhone with Optus and are trying to sign up to their Usage Alerts thingy through the website, you will get this error:
The service you have selected is on a mobile plan or fixed line service that does not support Usage Alerts.
I just spoke to a guy at Optus who was actually useful and actually knew what was going on and actually spoke English! What are the chances? He said the website is still being updated to include Usage Alerts functionality for the iPhone because it’s a new handset this hasn’t been done yet. Apparently the update is not so straightforward as the iPhone (allegedly) uses different technology for its data usage than regular phones. They don’t have an ETA of when Usage Alerts will be available to iPhone users. This could all be bullshit but it makes me feel better believing I will be able to get it one day.
If you’re on a Post-Paid mobile Cap Plan or have a fixed line account, it’s easy to control your spending. Just set up a Usage Alert and we’ll send you an SMS when you reach your chosen limit.
DO WANT.
Published by Si at 22 August, 2008
in Geek and Tech.
I’ve had it for a while but only now got around to writing this. Despite the negative points below its still by far the best phone I have ever owned and I love it to bits.
The OMG!!!
- Flush headphone jack and dramatically improved audio quality! Summed up: it’s actually an iPod now. I can easily say this is the one feature that sold me on the new phone. On the old iPhone every preset I wanted to use caused serious distortion even at low volume, making it utterly useless as an iPod.
- The new case. I continually rejoice at the curved all-plastic back. The plastic has a much higher friction coefficient than the old aluminium back. In other words, the new back is way more “grippy”. The old phone would slip and slide around in my hand, leaving me anxious about dropping it. The result of this was that I actually used the front glass to hang on to the phone. Not ideal when this is the main control interface. The curved edges are nice too, doing away with that scary sounding thud when placing your phone on the table. Now you get a brief wobble which sounds way better for the phone.
- Aurora Feint. Freakin awesome puzzle/RPG game. Totally addictive and very immersive animation/interface/music/sfx. And Free! Unfortunately, it’s a total memory hog, and menus can sometimes lag. In most cases it requires a phone reboot prior to play. But its all worth it.
- The App Store. What an excellent idea. Makes the phone a true “platform” swinging the doors wide open for some extremely creative software. A shame Apple is so restrictive about some of their apps. Google “rejected from app store“.
The Good
- I complained to Optus staff that I didn’t want to be sans-phone while my number was ported over to Optus. So they gave me my new SIM early so when the port occurred, I could just chuck the SIM into my interim phone. Oh yeah, and the closest store is 1.5 hrs drive so they posted my phone, which was nice. Still had to visit the store to sign up which was to be expected.
- No in-store activation! As a consequence of the first point, I managed to completely avoid the rumoured in-store activation. When my iPhone arrived, I just chucked in the SIM and activated it myself through iTunes. Interesting side-note: The store trainee was the one who suggested iPhones could be activated by users at home. She said “the only reason we activate in-store is so that customers can walk away with a working phone”.
- The country code bug is gone. I won’t say “fixed” because it could have been a quirk of Virgin’s service. The bug was that texts came from number format +61418555555 whereas calls show up as 0418555555. The phone saw these as separate numbers, so you had to have both numbers stored in a contact which is just annoying.
The Dissapointing
- My biggest disappointment is that most developers, including those at Apple refuse to acknowledge the device’s superior usability when turned sideways. Not only is typing remarkably more efficient with a bigger keyboard and nice fat buttons, but most non-keyboard apps are more comfortable to use, especially Safari which I use exclusively sideways. Apps I would like to see with sideways support include SMS, Mail (composing), Maps, and basically anything where you type.
- The App Store interface needs some work. I read in a blog about the lack of a shopping cart. This becomes a big deal when you are scrolling through a list of 500 apps, you install one and it exits App Store. You go back into App Store and its at the summary screen of the App you just installed. You go back to the list of apps and you’ve lost your place in the list. This forces users to remember their place in the list and this is a serious usability flaw. A shopping cart would eliminate this by removing the “exit after install pressed” behaviour. It would also be useful as you could browse the store over EDGE/3G and wait until you had WiFi to “checkout” as it were.
- YouTube is inexplicably slow at buffering videos even over WiFi. I load the same movie in Firefox and there are no underruns, but on the iPhone, videos take minutes to buffer (longer than the length of the video in some cases). This just makes you ditch the phone and walk over to your computer! YouTube also lacks a proper cache, meaning that if you’ve just watched a video a minute ago and want to watch it again, the whole movie is downloaded again. There is so enough room on the flash for even a small cache of 50MB or so.
- No MMS. I didn’t actually realise this until I was sent a text saying “You have recieved an MMS. Visit this website to view it” Lame Apple. Just LAME. This omission of a technology that has been present in phones for several years simply lets down something calling itself a next generation device.
- Lack of proper Gtalk app. There is Palringo but it’s bloatware. I just want a slim Gtalk app with push message support. Thanks in advance Google.
- No 3G Optus coverage. I’m stuck with GPRS up here. There is “3G” coverage, but on the 900MHz band which conveniently is not supported by the iPhone. Not such a big deal. I’m over it.
- Still no Flash. Perhaps we can blame Adobe and licensing restrictions etc. for this. But why the lack of flash, Apple? Please explain.
- Shazam. You hold your iPhone up to the radio or some other music source. The app picks the artist and track name. It works, but the probabilty that a track is correctly identified is directly proportional to the popularity of the song. Not something I’ll lose sleep over, but disappointing nonetheless.
- No Dock. Last in the list because I wouldn’t use it anyway. But I didn’t get a dock with my iPhone. Meh.
The Downright Bad
- The Ringtones. No excuses! These are some of the worst ringtones I have ever seen in the history of the universe. Seriously, I would have Crazy Frog before I would have some of the included ringtones. At least you can (relatively) easily make your own. This customisation doesn’t extend to other sfx, most importantly the SMS alert. I shouldn’t have to jailbreak my phone Apple. But your sounds are SO CRAP I’ll do it in a blink once a suitably stable hack emerges.
- No Visual Voicemail! WTF? Excuse me while I rewatch the Keynote and observe this as one of the key features of the iPhone. I smell a class-action lawsuit, I do. Unfortunately, I doubt the ACCC could do much as I suspect Apple were very careful not to advertise this feature in Australia.
- iTunes Account problem. You can only authorise 5 computers to download apps to the iPhone. If you want to waste one of those auth slots, here’s how. Sign in with iTunes account. Authorise that computer when it prompts you. Change your email address on iTunes account. Attempt to download apps to iPhone. Get prompted again to authorise this computer. Lose one of your auth slots. Voila!
- The Optus support voice recognition lady. OMG she is such an idiot! Why can’t these things just say “Press 1 for mobile phones”, “Press 2 for landline”? I want to know who on earth decided that voice recognition in this context is more usable than the old number menus. She is kinda fun to mess with though. I was so frustrated one day at work I started shouting at her. Her response induced at least 30 minutes of uncontrollable laughter. Me: “Suck my balls!” Response: “I’m having trouble with that”. I guess you had to be there…
Fate has clicked me through to a site with some awesome pictures of Tesla coil fun. This guy and his cronies must have a death wish. Apparently they’re in Bunbury! There is obviously nothing better to do in that town than try and electrocute yourself and your neighbours. And as for Tesla coils: DO WANT. Hmm… I wonder if there are any instructions on how to build one…
Sadly, this post isn’t about the New Years kind of resolutions, but rather the kind that generally hangs out on TVs and the like. While reading up on the Wii’s (alleged) technical specs, the Wikipedia page managed to clear up some things about resolutions on the Wii. There are 3 TV types to choose from in the Wii settings menu; 50Hz (576i), 60Hz (480i), and EDTV/HDTV (480p). Without a component cable, the third option is greyed out. But the first two options are ambiguous and probably confusing to some.
When I first started up Super Mario Galaxy, I was greeted with a message asking me to switch the Wii to 60Hz mode for better graphics (not its exact words but the message has gone now, and I forget). I tried it for a while but have switched back as I’m convinced it’s all a complete load of weapons-grade balonium. My first argument for not using 60Hz mode is the lower resolution. Last time I checked, 480 was still less than 576. But then it occurred to me that lowering the res could plausibly increase graphics performance on Wii games as they would have less work to do. But in 60Hz mode (on my povo CRT anyway) the quality is visibly poorer with the whole screen looking very obviously interlaced.
But the Wikipedia page lists the modes as: 480p (PAL/NTSC), 480i (NTSC) or 576i (PAL/SECAM). For a while I thought PAL-60 was NTSC but its not, its just PAL with higher refresh rate.
So now I want to know when Super Smash Bros. Melee asks you to select 60Hz or 50Hz, can anyone actually quantify the reduced graphics lag in 60Hz mode, or is it just one giant placebo? I also suspect that when played on the Wii, it will ignore the choice at this screen, preferring the setting chosen in the Wii menu, but I can’t confirm this.
Published by Si at 27 October, 2007
in Geek and Tech.
Tonight, I decided to give my Topfield 5000PVRt a new lease on life. The first upgrade was to swap out the standard 120 GB Seagate hard drive with a 200 GB Western Digital. Now it can store approx 61 hours instead of ~38 GB. The swap was very straightforward but I read this FAQ just to get some pointers. Then I remembered that the WD in my desktop PC runs pretty hot. And the Toppy ran pretty hot even with the Seagate HDD.
So I thought, why not install a fan as well? I found another FAQ that shows just how to do it. I used cable ties instead of those rubber things though. I’m happy to report that the fan is hardly noticeable, especially while watching a show. On mute, or with the TV off, you can hear a faint whirring, but the disk is actually louder than the fan. The WD may be louder than the Seagate but it’s probably worth it. Anyway the fan of my aircon is way louder and I totally ignore that. Those with a closed cabinet for all their Hi-Fi stuff wouldn’t hear anything at all.
Next on the agenda is to get the serial interface and web interfaces for the Toppy working. Should be fun!
Published by Si at 19 October, 2007
in Geek and Tech.

It came with OS X Tiger so I guess I’m ordering Leopard. There was hearsay today about Leopard not supporting Dual-boot with Windows, but seriously, it’s all bollocks people (feeling slightly guilty for picking that as the link keyword, but oh well). Hey I just realised the pic loosely qualifies for LOLcat status (sans caption). It’s running “Tiger”, get it? Must. Stop. Laughing.
First Download: Firefox (well, duh!)
First Customisation: Turn on touchpad tapping, dragging and two-finger right click (OMG mega w00t!)
First Drool: keyboard backlighting (yummy!)
First Design Observation: At first glance, disconnecting the MagSafe power adaptor without yanking on the cord requires Herculean strength. But I found if you kind of lever it off from the side, you can remove it without joining the local gym, or wrecking the cord.
First Annoyance: Software Update has no “I’ll restart later” button. Grrr. One of my pet hates.
First Challenge: somehow I have to get middle click working for Firefox.
First Road Test: time to get some XviD out and try out this FrontRow thing. But if I had half a brain, I would have ordered an S Video adaptor with the MBP.
Stay tuned for more Maccage.
Published by Si at 22 September, 2007
in Geek and Tech.
You’ve probably heard the old claim that Macs are preferred by graphic designers and desktop publishers. It’s often dismissed as a fanboy statement being totally without merit, but I came across an article which could very well explain the reason behind this old myth. It would seem that Mac OS X renders fonts properly, staying true to the design of the typeface, whereas Windows manipulates them so they better fit the pixel grid, which apparently results in sharper text.
The difference became more obvious recently, when I installed Safari for Windows. I have always thought that Arial on Mac looked much smoother and rounder, and I found it easier to read. Observe the difference below. Top: Windows with ClearType; Bottom: Safari with medium font smoothing (default).

Now it may just be personal taste, but when I’m trawling through RSS feeds, I’d rather stare at the bottom rendering for hours. It might be a bit blurrier, but who ever said sharpness was the holy grail of on-screen reading? The Safari rendering is easier on the eyes (softer, if you will) and much faster to read. In comparison, the Windows rendering looks awkwardly spaced and horizontally condensed, with circular letters appearing oval-shaped.
The obvious consequence of all this is that on a Mac, the on-screen rendering of a document is a more accurate representation of the printed product. If there is any truth to the “Macs are better for publishing” myth, I suspect this is a major contributor.
Manifest is on this weekend, and while I’m not going per se, I’ll be there vicariously by watching my fill of hilarious and gripping anime titles this weekend to make up for it. I may even cosplay in my own loungeroom… Although lack of costume could be a problem. Does going as Neo from Animatrix count as cosplay?
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