Re: Away from Dial-up

On August 22, 2009, in General, by Neil Stevens

Two final notes: I think the reason it didn’t work on the Curve is that I missed the extra initialization commands. And this will save me more than $10/mo. It will also save me $10/day when I travel.

 

Away from Dial-up

On August 22, 2009, in General, by Neil Stevens

I don’t do a lot with the Internet connection on my development laptop, usually. I just check websites for compatibility with browsers. But I don’t want MS Windows (necessary for checking MSIE) on my network, so until now I’ve used a dial-up connection.

What changed? Tonight I decided to try again to see if I can use my Blackberry as a modem to get onto the wireless network. I tried once before, a while back, on my Curve, but it never worked. I tried again on the Bold because I got instructions from AT&T to tell me how to do it.

However, in case the page goes away, here’s what I did:

  • Install the Blackberry Desktop Manager. Make sure it’s running.
  • Right-click the Device Manager in the system tray and click Properties.
  • Configure the COM port. Set a speed (presumably the max speed) and disable USB-to-Serial (which is needed to dial to a remote modem, rather than to the AT&T network).
  • Open the Modem configuration in the Control Panel. Configure the Standard Modem corresponding to the Blackberry (Modem Diagnostics will show it to be a Blackberry if the Blackberry is plugged in and the Desktop Manager is running). Set its Extra Initialization Commands to AT+CGDCONT=1,"IP","wap.cingular" which is a setting specific to AT&T and this phone, apparently.
  • Open the Connect to a Network window. Click Set Up a connection. Create a Dial-up Connecton.
  • Dial **99***1# with no username, no password.

To use it, ensure Desktop Manager is running, the Blackberry is plugged in, and just dial up. Works for me. I just have to avoid making big downloads on it, and I’m no longer out $9.95/mo for dial-up. Hey, it adds up.

 

Civilization: Revolutions done

On August 22, 2009, in General, by Neil Stevens

For a while now I’ve been playing Civilization: Revolutions on Chieftain, working through and getting each type of win for each civilization. I play on Chieftain while exercising because it’s easy and I won’t get frustrated ever, which is a bad thing when I’m trying to keep my mind occupied and keep myself going the full hour on the elliptical.

Well, with my Culture win for the English yesterday, that task is complete. Now I guess I’m going to revert to a combination of Picross, Etrian Odyssey, and SimCity on the elliptical. Civ was perfect for that, though.

 

Nippon Ichi sucking all my time away

On August 21, 2009, in General, by Neil Stevens

I’m never going to get in my 200 hours of Makai Kingdom at this rate. Today my CDs came from RosenQueen USA: Netherworld Harmony: Inauguration and Phantom Brave Wii. Well, technically I bought Phantom Brave Wii, but I only did so to get the soundtrack that came with it as I already own Phantom Brave PS2.

Of course, the real bad part is that I’ll now be tempted to replay Phantom Brave on the Wii since the We Meet Again version (We, Wii…) includes new chapters. Another 200 hours re-acquiring Laharl, Etna, Flonne, and the rest? When I already have Disgaea 2 and 3 in the queue? Oh no.

Nippon Ichi soundtrack collection now up to four, as the two join the Disgaea 3 CD that came with that game, and the La Pucelle CD I had a while ago. NIS passes Square, stuck at three (Chrono Trigger The Brink of Time, Chrono Trigger Original Soundtrack, Final Fantasy XII Original Soundtrack).

 

Twitter

On August 21, 2009, in General, by Neil Stevens

The mean* person who runs Blueshelled suggested I start using Twitter if I want to drum up business for myself. So here I am.

* She’s not really mean. She just pretends.

 

Gawker: Only terrorist furriners have rights

On August 20, 2009, in General, by Neil Stevens

You may recall that during the Bush administration and the Presidential campaign, Gizmodo was constantly harping on wiretaps of terrorists. Specifically, Gizmodo claimed that the Bush-era program constituted “domestic spying,” that telecommunications firms spied as well, and that they ‘won’ out over the American people on the matter.

They were practically in hysterics, hiding under sheets and crying into a camera “Leave the phones alone, Bushitler” over the matter.

So imagine my surprise when I find out today that when Nokia is being protested for taking part in a genuine domestic spying program of the Iranian Islamofascist regime, they don’t care. It’s not even worth a post. It’s so unimportant they go out of their way to say they didn’t post on it.

So, to recap: American firms aiding the US government in spying on calls between foreign-based terrorists and their US-based cells: a crime for which they must not get immunity. Foreign firm aiding the Iranian government in oppressing the opposition: “Nokia’s role here seems to be the same as a car company’s role in a drunk-driving incident.”

Clearly the signal here is that the Iranians just don’t really need rights, unless they’re terrorists plotting attacks against Americans. After all, they’re only foreign Muslims. They don’t even have a European complexion. Gawker must think they’re barely even people, which is why they opposed liberating brown-skinned Muslims from Saddam Hussein, and they oppose brown-skinned Muslims from liberating themselves from the Islamic Revolution.

 

Ramune

On August 15, 2009, in General, by Neil Stevens

I’m a sucker for things I see in shows. I tried Pocky because of Youko‘s constant snacking on it, and now I’ve tried Ramune because of Sasshi‘s drinking of it.

Ramune

I drank the original flavor on the way home. I’m not sure how to describe it. Not bad though. Next up later is the Strawberry flavor.

What’s most notable about it though is the packaging. On top of the plastic top (the blue on the original flavor) is an upper cap. to open it up, you take off the plastic seal, break a plunger out of the (green) cap, and shove it into the plastic top. That pushes a marble out of the top and against the narrow area in the glass, where it can’t get lower. Pretty complicated, but I think it gets some of the excess fizz out to drink it through that set up.

 

Canon PowerShot SX110 IS

On August 14, 2009, in General, by Neil Stevens

I picked up the PowerShot SX110 IS yesterday, with the idea of it being useful for website work as well as any activism I can find to do in the area.

It seems like a lot of camera for the $225 + tax I paid for it.

 

MicroSD Icon

On August 12, 2009, in General, by Neil Stevens

So while I was waiting for a grep to finish today, I decided to get proper Volume icons on my Blackberry. Finding a Blackberry Bold icon for the Bold’s internal storage was easy. But nowhere around could I find an icon for a MicroSD card, to represent the card I have in the Bold.

So, I made my own MicroSD icon. It’s an SVG graphic. Enjoy. I know I am:

Blackberry and MicroSD Icons

I think the next step is to edit the Blackberry icon to include the theme I have installed on it.

 

Tip Jar

On August 11, 2009, in General, by Neil Stevens

Caleb Howe is a fantastic reporter. He finds things. He reports facts. He causes trouble for the Democrats. It’s great stuff.

There’s just a catch: he needs money. Unless people give him money to do the work, he can’t pay his bills and feed his family. Then he continues to find other work, which takes time that could be spent on reporting.

So Caleb is raising money at his site Acticons and at RedState. I hope someday he’s able to secure some funding to just become a full time nuisance with a camera.

And of course, the motivated activist and talented writer Moe Lane is always raising money. He deserves it. His work moderating at RedState alone is a job that helps the movement by helping make the site strong. The fact that he’s also a practiced public speaker and witty writer, and uses those talents to lead and motivate activists for our cause, is a bonus. We get two hats on one guy. And both hats cost money. So I hope people buy lots of stuff through his Amazon affiliation. Who motivates the motivator? Us.

And, finally, at Caleb’s suggestion I made my own tip jar. There are so many things I wish I could buckle down and do for RedState, but starting a business, it’s just impossible to commit that kind of time. I have to try to get work for that, plus keep money coming in. My RS time has a cap as a result, which is why my writing on the site has virtually vanished. So any generosity is greatly appreciated, and will help.

I committed to putting the time into RedState when the readers donated for RedState 3.0. I’m honoring that commitment, but helping me gives me more time to do that.

 

Nima Jooyandeh facts.