Damodar's Musings

web development and miscellany

Browsing Posts published in January, 2010

As of January 20, 2010 Comcast is providing its subscribers with free access to the Norton Security Suite. This is huge news for those who are Symantec fans, as well as for those who can barely tolerate McAfee.

As you can tell, I’m excited by this move, and immediately installed Norton – replacing the Kaspersky software that I had running on one of my notebooks. And I love it!

I can’t wait to replace the McAfee installs on my other computers.

The free license is valid for up to 7 workstations for residential subscribers.

Check out this press release from Symantec.

Then head on out here to grab the install from Comcast.

Roxio Creator 2010I’m supposed to review this software for the Vine program, and I’ve been working on it off and on since I received the software on Tuesday.  I’m a sucker for video editing tools – there’s something very satisfying about assembling a “watchable” video out of a mess of home video footage.

Fortunately,  I had over 160 minutes of HD footage from a recent vacation (Jamaica!), that was screaming out for treatment.

The only fly in the ointment? The Roxio software has some rather pitiful reviews – with tons of complaints about buggy installation/operation. Since I’m going to be doing a “semi-professional” review, I decided to see for myself how this software would fare under fairly adverse conditions. I installed it on a laptop that has decidedly seen better days, and … so far so good.

After a fairly painless installation sequence, during which it fetched SP1, I’m yet to experience a crash. Fingers crossed. I’ve imported about 60 minutes of footage, have been playing with scene detection (VideoWave) and automatic movie creation (CineMagic – I hate it!), and audio/video capture from the web.

The bulk of my review will be done this weekend. I’m looking forward to seeing how rendering works.

Watch this space for updates!

Its the old tale of the cobbler’s children, I guess, but my wife says my web site looks like it was done by a 10 year old.

So, I went looking for options to pretty it up without taking up any more of that resource that I already have a deficit of … Time.

The options were quickly narrowed to using Joomla, Drupal, or WordPress.

Given that most of my content takes the form of blog posts, I chose to give WordPress a whirl first.

And, I’m glad that I did. What a marvellous piece of software this has turned out to be.

But, since this is not a review of the software – that’s all I’ll say about it for now.

I needed a book that would get me started quickly, and show me the ropes, without bogging me down in the details. There’ll be time for that once I decide that this is the way forward.

So, one weekend with the book, my hosting provider, and the software – and I’m already knowledgeable enough to be really dangerous!

I really enjoyed the book – it provided clear explanations of all the various options available within WordPress, without the unnecessarily cutesy graphics and vapid attempts at humor. I particularly appreciated its no-nonsense, practical, workbook style.

I’m now seriously wondering whether I even need to try out the others.

WordPress seems to have everything that I need, and with the tremendous supply of customized themes, widgets, and plugins, the web site should now at least look like its been done by a “competent 10-year old” :0)

Click here for a full review of this book on Amazon.

iDrive

I used to be rather proud of my generational backup system, and my techniques for off site storage, until I accidentally formatted my backup drive proving that no backup solution is idiot-proof.

After spending almost $150 to purchase hard drive recovery software (File Recovery from Seagate is also highly recommended), I figured that spending $50/month was not such a bad investment after all.

As an inveterate comparison shopper, I began my quest by running a Google search for reviews on all available online backup solutions.

Note that I wasn’t merely looking for an online file storage solution – I wanted to be assured that my system was going to be backed up regularly – whether or not it was a conscious action on my part.

Google apprised me of the obvious choices – there were Mozy, Carbonite, and a bevy of others.

However, the one that caught my eye, and which I decided to go with was iDrive. While there were not too many comments/reviews for this service, there were a few features that simply made it a no-brainer.

First, iDrive is one of the rare services that let you back up an external drive. 

Second, iDrive does not delete any files from your online account, unless you explicitly do so by forcing a sync with your computer/external storage.

Third, iDrive is almost a version control system, as it stores versions of your file. In addition, only the changes between versions is stored, so the full file size doesn’t count against your storage limits. Needless to say, you can pick the version of the file to restore.

Its hard to overstate the importance of these features. Carbonite Regular, for instance, automatically deletes files after 30 days if it no longer finds the file on your computer. This means that if you were to run out of space on your computer – you have 30 days to go upgrade your hard drive before the files cease to exist on the Carbonite servers. You’d have to upgrade to Carbonite Pro to get service that matches iDrive. I hated the fact that this critical piece of information was not clearly called out on most services.

I shoot in Camera RAW, and my hard drives are always bulging at the seams – so having all those files on my computer forever, was simply not an option. iDrive seemed ideal for my situation.

In addition, the system uses two levels of encryption. First there’s the login that is required to access the account, and the use of the secure HTTPS protocol to transmit your files over to iDrive. Second, there’s an additional password that iDrive claims is not stored anywhere on the iDrive servers, which is used to further encrypt the files with 256-bit AES encryption.

There’s also very convenient access to your files using a web browser interface.

I’ve been using iDrive for about 6 months now, and I must say that I’m relieved not to have to actively think about storage and backup.

I spent some time last night installing and configuring the Netgear WNDR3700 router, and was blown away by everything that this little device does. In addition to serving as a gigabit and wireless router (its raison d’etre), I now have an installed NAS device, and a DLNA-compliant media server to boot!

The highlight of this device was when I copied some photographs and music over to the attached USB drive and ran over to access them on my PS3. Accessing media without having to leave a media server always on is going to be great!

If you’re going to try this at home – note that setting a read-access password seems to disable the media server. It took me a while to figure this out … an hour of my life that I’ll never get back 

Obviously any device that tries to do too much makes certain design tradeoffs, and that’s the case with this router as well. The access to the NAS drive is fairly slow, and there are issues with securing access to it. However, its safe to say that I’m a convert now, and have gladly retired ol’ faithful – my Linksys WRT54GL.

(For more details, see my review on Amazon.)

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