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Mar6
Technology Addiction
Filed under: Digital Life;Richard Forno has an interesting editorial over at ZDnet about technology addiction.
Yesterday I went for a hike in the local San Diego mountains. My Cell phone does not work up there, which is a double edged sword. I enjoy the safety that a cell phone can provide and coupling it with a bluetooth GPS navigation device it can even give turn by turn directions.
Being out of cell coverage can be a bit unnerving, not having direct access to email or the Internet leaves the user in an information black-hole.
While on a less-popular trail, I realized that the sun was setting, and I wondered what time the sunset would be at, so I could cut the hike short if needed. Normally I would pull up wunderground mobile and pull the date from there. But without service, I was a bit dumbstruck.
This all ties back to technology/information addiction. We have become a society so connected that we can even break down when we get disconnected.
I liked the bit of panic that set in, when I could not immediately access information, it allowed me to clear my mind, and enjoy the beauty of nature.
Eventually I did realize that my GPS has a sunset calculator in it, so much for pulling away from it all.
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Mar2
Best Practices for Recovering a ThinkPad Laptop.
Filed under: IT Services;Â I find myself being the go-to guy for system rebuilds for my friends and family.
Today I am doing my normal workload, pushing around numbers and billing customers while multi-tasking a Windows XP reinstall on a thinkpad laptop (model t40).
Thinkpads have to be my favorite laptop to work on (I have three of them at home). IBM writes good drivers for their legacy equipment and uses brand-name hardware for what they don’t make (ATI Video cards, Intel Chipsets and communications gear).
Recovering a Thinkpad is pretty easy if the service partition is still intact. This system nolonger had the service partition.
Given that the OEM drive was dying (bad sectors, sluggish read times)
I am doing a simple install of windows on a fresh drive. Using my custom made Windows XP with SP2 slipstreamed into the install and an autoinstall configuration to save me the tedious install steps of entry of a serial number.
Installing Windows fresh is a 5minute event for myself and the automation takes over.
Once Windows is installed, I bring over drivers for video and NIC. I install both and connect to the Internet and grab IBM’s System Update Utility. This is a great tool for finding the right drivers fast it automatically installs them and performs both embeded controller updates and BIOS upgrades.
I sysprep the system and enter the correct OEM serial number and run windows update and get all of the latest patches (on average about 100mb).
I Copied the files from her old drive to a sub folder and enabled automatic updates on the system.
Total time, 3hours depending on Microsoft’s Windows Update servers.
