Tag Archive for 'geek'

Coolest toy ever – Nokia N95

N95 Nokia Maps - Hell of a lot to do in Helsinki!All work no blog makes Late a dull boy

All work no blog makes Late a…. rich boy I guess.

Been playing with my N95 lately. Why do people always compare the N95 and the iPhone? They are two totally different devices – one of them is a useless toy and the other one is what computers have become – a superb PDA, phone, camera and GPS in one shell. Revolutionary touchscreen interface? Nice, but I find real features much more useful. With the N95 I can geotag my pictures automagically and send them to flickr instantly. How cool is that?

So far I haven’t had much time to experiment with third party apps, apart from twibble, which makes twittering kind of faster and allows you to geotag tweets automagically. ShoZu does the same thing for images. For screenshots, Antony Pranata’s screenshot seems to do it’s job. GoogleMaps and Gmail are simply a must.

The only thing that sucks about the N95 is the battery – with GPS and 3G it’ll run out in couple of hours :) But that’s still better than no 3G and no GPS.

Blogging is hard. Anyway, Sini – I hope you’re happy now ;)

Ubuntu 7.04 with 3D Beryl desktop effects

If you’re wondering if the integrated Nvidia GeForce 6100 on an Asus M2N-MX is powerfull enough to run Beryl:

There’s some flicker and blue lines across the screen on this video, but that’s just due to my nonexistent video editing skills.

Asus M2N-MX motherboard

I busted my old piece of poo ATI 9550SE GPU. Now that was a crappy GPU. The screen would constantly flicker and jump around and do other weird stuff. That could also have been due to buggy Linux drivers, but either way it’s still a poor performance from ATI. Granted it was the cheapest GPU I could find some years ago, but still, it shouldn’t have been that bad. I was happy it was gone, good excuse to upgrade my machine!

Buying a new APG graphics card would have been kind of stupid,I’d just have wasted a lot of money on a card that I could not use with any decent motherboard later. So what the hell, lets buy a new motherboard. Oh wait, my old AMD processor will need a socket 754 motherboard. No way, I’m not going to buy a new ancient system. Wait another sec, my memory won’t be compatible either… It’s not easy to upgrade a system that is friggin three years old! The situation would be slightly better had I three years ago invested in a socket 939, but only slightly I guess.

Anyway, I decided to go for a budget motherboard with an integrated GPU. I chose the Asus M2N-MX, only 58€ @ verkosta.fi, which fared well in hintaseuranta, and they had it in stock. Newegg reviews for this board are spot on – it’s good value for your money, it comes with everything you need, but it’s got some minor problems, such as:

  • Very confusing labeling for DIMM slots, but OK if you read the manual carefully.
  • No locking clip for the heat sink’s retention bracket lock to clip into – but IMHO who needs that anyway? The heat sink will stay on just fine without it.
  • “No mounting points near where the power cable and PATA cable plugs into the motherboard. Plugging and un-plugging those into the board causes it to flex more than I am comfortable with.” – nc3d – I could not agree more, plugging in the power and PATA cables is pretty scary with this one.

I found a couple of additional problems:

Asus M2N-MX no buzzer

There’s no PC-speaker on the mobo! How will I be able to play Space Invaders?!?

Asus M2N-MX scratch

There was a really ugly white scratch on my southbridge heat sink. Overall the product does not look very polished…

Some more pics:

Asus M2N-MX overview

Asus M2N-MX connectors

If you need more connectors than this, buy another motherboard. With the M2N-MX you get no DVI, IEEE 1394, S/PDIF… just the basics. <sarcasm>Serial port is there, which is all I need</sarcasm>.

Asus M2N-MX accessories

The accessories are pretty basic too, nothing fancy, just the absolute necessities. There was a case sticker, which was nice :)

AMD 64 X2 3800+

Here’s my AMD 64 X2 3800+ processor, not the fastest thing on the planet, but a great budget product. Got it for 66€ from Mikromaja, apparently the cheapest in Finland. Also bought some cheap memory from verkkokauppa.com. Here’s my updated machine:

Supertietskari

Pretty leds all-over the case… Notice how the micro-ATX board is just ridiculously small for my huge case.

Everything works just fine for me with the Asus M2N-MX. Installing Ubuntu 7.04 was a breeze, although there were some problems with X settings after installing the proprietary Nvidia drivers, but not a big deal. More on that later, if I bother…

EveryScape – Discover the world

EveryScape screenshot

Just check it out. EveryScape is darn impressive. Sure you could view Flickr pics from a beautiful city placed nicely on Yahoo maps, or download GoogleEarth to view the world in 3D, but EveryScape is something totally different – you get an actual 360° image of the scene. You can rotate the view and move along to the next block… just try it for yourself, no registration needed and all you need from your browser is flash. I wonder how long it will take them to scape tho whole world though. Currently they have a whopping 5 blocks of downtown San Fransisco scaped, so I think they have a long way to go still. When they do get it done, it’ll probably be really awesome. Meanwhile, you could just go for a stroll downtown – now that’s the most realistic experience you’ll ever have.

45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2

Try to find this number at Digg.com.

No longer illegal to break DVD DRM in Finland

From Turre Legal:
DVD - S3isDVD - by Daniel Y. Go

In an unanimous decision released today, Helsinki District Court ruled that Content Scrambling System (CSS) used in DVD movies is “ineffective”. The decision is the first in Europe to interpret new copyright law amendments that ban the circumvention of “effective technological measures”.

Oh joy! Oh 09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0! Boy am I relieved to hear this decision. It means that I no longer need to be on the look out for the police when watching a DVD on Linux. I can now safely admit that I have libdvdcss installed on my computer. All the guilt and shame has finally been lifted off my shoulders. To watch a DVD on Linux no longer means you’re a criminal (in Europe at least).

But wait, there’s more:

According to the court, CSS no longer achieves its protection objective. The court relied on two expert witnesses and said that “…since a Norwegian hacker succeeded in circumventing CSS protection used in DVDs in 1999, end-users have been able to get with ease tens of similar circumventing software from the Internet even free of charge. [...].” Thus, the court concluded that “CSS protection can no longer be held ‘effective’ as defined in law.”

According to Finnish copyright law and the underlying EU directive, a protection measure is effective if it “achieves the protection objective” – that is, if it has not been “broken” or circumvented. Any protection measure which has been cracked is thus not effective, and it is legal to crack such a protection measure. This means that it is only illegal to crack protection systems which have not, or cannot be cracked. Wow, what a smart EU directive! Imagine if there was a law banning the picking of a lock which cannot be picked. That would just as smart.

It’ll be really interesting to see what happens to HD-DVD and Blu-ray. There will very likely soon be software to crack both, and following this court decision it should be legal to use such software.

So, kudos to the Helsinki District Court!

Citywall.org – Incredible public multi-touch user interface!

Citywall.org

If you’re in Helsinki, you want to check out CityWall at the corner of Lasipalatsi (map). I took some pics in Helsinki, then went home to upload them to Flickr. When I came back a couple hours later I walked past the CityWall and saw my pictures there. That was pretty awesome! The CityWall automatically fetches pictures from Flickr that are tagged “Helsinki”. Kind of neat, you can watch in close to real time what’s happening in the city. For mobile users it works even better. The user interface is like something from Minority Report, it’s something you’ve never seen before but you know straight away how to use it. You can rotate and stretch pictures, you can zoom into the timeline and throw the pictures around… I saw a couple of little kids try it out – even the kids knew immediately how to use it! This is really the user interface of the future, the most intuitive thing I have ever seen. Cooler than the iPhone. Really awesome. Jeff Han has demonstrated this kind of technology earlier, but this wall is the first public multi-touch interface of this scale in the world. Just come to Helsinki if you want to play with it ;) If you don’t believe me, check out this video. Oh and they interviewed me about my experience. I hope I managed to say something sensible.

Microsoft spend $3.7 billion in China

Pirate. Public Domain.Amount of money Microsoft has committed to spending on technology and investment in China over the next 5 years: $3.7 billion

Height of the largest Windows Vista ad bought by Microsoft, projected on the side of the Jin Mao tower in Shanghai: 421 meters

Price for a basic, legal copy of Microsoft Vista in China: $295

Price of a pirated copy of Microsoft Vista on the street in China: $1.30 to $4.00

244 genuine copies of Microsoft Vista sold in China in the first two weeks after its launch: PRICELESS!

Source: FP Passport

Christmas comes early, thanks to Fon

La FoneraThis is old news, but Fon gives out free wireless routers (Finnish) to all Finns who request one before 24.12.2006. The La Fonera is “free” as in “free beer” – you don’t need to pay a single nickel or a penny for it. Nope, not even for the delivery. It comes hand-delivered to your front door and they also bring you a bouquet of flowers with it! OK, well they don’t bring you any flowers, but it is totally free (as in beer). I ordered mine just before December and got it last week.

The deal is that you have to share your WiFi connection with other registered users. That’s pretty cool, because if there are a lot of Foneros out there, then you have a good chance of using a Fon connection for free when you travel. You can use maps.fon.com to check out Foneros closest to your location. Tech.am has some “real statistics” of Foneros worldwide, claiming that Fon isn’t actually as widespread as they let you believe. Well I don’t care if there aren’t any Fon hotspots in Bangkok or Cathmandu, there are some in Helsinki and that’ll be enough for me.

The La Fonera is “free” as in “free beer for a limited time only”, but how “free” is it as in “freedom of speech”? (See “Gratis versus Libre” if you are still confused.) The La Fonera wireless router uses the open source OpenWrt firmware for embedded devices. It’s nice to know that my Fonera router is running open source software. If I want to, I can download the source code for OpenWrt, hack it, share my hacks with others, and install it in some other device. The Fonera router is therefore “sort of free” – but it’s not free for you to hack and do whatever you want with it. It’s like a piece of free software locked up in a cage. Anton Demartini writes:

“What I mean is that perhaps, leaving la fonera open, and freeing the possibility for anybody with skills to reflash it, to enhance it and, why not, to correct bugs along you, could be a great benefit also for FON business.”

I completely agree. It would be much smarter If I could just use my hardware of choice, install more features on the router and provide a better service for the Foneros that connect to my WiFi. It would be possible to create a free wireless network similar to Fon, which is open for all registered users, but gives the users more flexibility with their hardware and software.

The bottom line is, I got a free router from these guys and I get to use WiFi for free when I travel, so I should not complain. However, I do suffer from the “free all software” syndrome. I just hate to have a piece of free software on my device, which I cannot use as I like. Thankfully, there are some solutions. Jauzsi explains how to open up the device and attach a connecter to allow ssh on the device. As far as I know Stefan Datenbruch was the first to use shell code injection to free the device. The exploited weakness has been fixed by Fon, so that hack doesn’t work anymore, but it worked as inspiration for this hack, which works like a charm. Follow the hack and then just SSH to your La Fonera, enter password “admin” and behold:

Fonera root

Next it’s up to you what you do with your unlocked Fonera. If I come up with any hacks of my own, I’ll be sure to post them here.

Update: There’s now a third hack for firmware version 0.7.1 r1. If you’re feeling especially white and nerdy today, check out gelPlog’s instructions on how to recover a bricked Fonera.

Sonera – Finland’s worst broadband

sonera_sadI lost my internet connection yesterday at 18:06. No work, no play – nothing. Life sucks when you have no internet. So I called Sonera’s technical customer service and waited in queue for 1 hour and 29 minutes before I hung up, frustrated. Meanwhile my Linux box was sending DHCPDISCOVER messages but received no DHCPOFFERs. I got my first DHCPACK at 20:48. That’s 2 hours and 42 minutes without internet and without any customer service. This morning I had the same problem, it took me one hour before I got an IP-address from Sonera’s fucked up DHCP-server. So Sonera can go to hell. This isn’t the first time I’m having problems like this. What’s even worse, when I moved in it took Sonera two months to get the friggin broadband working. I’m going to stab someone from Sonera. Die Sonera, die. :(