I’m online again
Well, the wireless modem on my laptop is dead as a doornail. HP's "customer service" wasn't much help. I really wasn't inclined to send my laptop in to them for two weeks, particularly due to the stories I've heard of them reformatting hard drives and resetting everything back to the way it was when the computers were first purchased... Instead, I just bought an inexpensive USB wireless modem that works with Linux, and I'm back online NOW, with no risk of someone wiping all my data.
Dead wireless
The wireless modem died on my laptop the other day. As a result, the only working connection on the thing is the ethernet jack. Unfortunately, the only way to get online with the network at home is wireless. I'm able to bring my laptop to work and plug in there, so I can at least check my email, but they restrict the access pretty heavily, so I can't do a lot of things that I would normally do online.
I wrote to HP about the problem, but their response was fairly typical. They first told me to try reinstalling the drivers (even though I told them I'd already tried that, but the computer isn't recognizing even the presence of the hardware in either Vista or Linux, indicating that the modem simply burned out), and then said to mail it to them for servicing. My main problem with that is the fact that my laptop has been my primary computer for nearly a year now, and it will likely take nearly two weeks for the turnaround on repairs. My desktop has been sitting in the garage unused, so I may end up sending the laptop in and using that at least temporarily.
This is, to say the least, more than just inconvenient. I'm halfway tempted to just buy a replacement modem and do the repair myself, even if the computer is still under warranty. They're sending a postage-paid box for the laptop, however; I'll probably send it in after I get my desktop set up and running again.
Laptop screen works now
I got the screen on my laptop working now. Turns out I had to use the vesa driver instead of the ATI driver. As always, it's something simple that trips everything up. I'm still working on getting the wireless and ethernet connections working, but that's a less pressing matter. At least until the movers come and take my desktop system, anyhow.
My laptop’s working… sort of.
Last week I bought an old IBM Thinkpad A22M on eBay for $150. Damn good deal. It's an older system, but $150... Seriously. 900MHz Pentium-III, 128MB RAM, 10GB Hard Drive, DVD drive...
So what's the catch? No operating system installed. Like that's an issue for an alpha geek like me, right?
Watch out CD, it’s DVD
Originally published in the Fullerton College Hornet, Vol. 78, Issue 23; 28 Apr 1999
Though identical in size, DVDs can hold up to 25 times more data than a CD, leading one to wonder, "how do they cram all that graham?"
The CD, or Compact Disc, was developed by Phillips and Sony in 1981 as a new medium for stereo music recordings.
DVDs and CDs can easily be mistaken at first glance. They are both 120 millimeters in diameter and 1.2 millimeters thick. Both rely on lasers to read data stored in pits in a spiral track. Beyond this, the two are quite different.
On a CD, the space between the tracks is only 1.6 microns and the pits range from 0.83 to 3.0 microns long. A micron is one thousandth of a millimeter.
After the pits are stamped into a plastic disk, it is then coated with aluminum, giving the disk its characteristic silver color. The aluminum is then coated with a thin layer of lacquer, which provides a smooth surface on which the disk's label is printed.
A CD can hold up to 74 minutes of audio, or about 680 megabytes of data. Since the data is evenly spaced in the track, the laser will read more data in a single revolution at the outer edge than the center. Therefore, the disk needs to spin faster at the center than the outer edge to maintain a constant linear velocity, or CLV.
Originally, DVD stood for Digital Video Disk, as it was intended to replace videotapes. A little insight and creativity led to a host of other applications, so the name was changed to Digital Versatile Disk. Fortunately, nearly everyone simply calls it DVD.
Where CDs are adequate for music or most computer applications, full-length movies and large programs that span multiple CDs are too large and require a faster CLV than is available on a CD.
Major differences between CD and DVD drives are the spacing of the pits in a track, the width of the track itself and the wavelength of the laser that actually reads the disk.
On a DVD, the width of a track is 0.74 micron and the smallest data pit is 0.40 micron. The laser's wavelength was reduced from 780 nanometers to 640 nanometers.
The result is a disk with a capacity of 4.7 gigabytes, but since the disk needs to be only half as thick as a CD, a blank platter can be glued on top to create the necessary depth. However, a second track can be placed on the platter to give a 9.4 gigabyte capacity. Also available is an additional track on each platter, allowing a maximum 17 gigabyte capacity per DVD.
