Archive for the ‘The new stuff chronicles’ Category

The new stuff chronicles #4: Knepper Special!

Music, The new stuff chronicles | Posted by Zhooibaal
May 22 2007

A little quick one today. Some good news before I actually get to the point. I see a slight increase in site traffic on almost a daily basis! Yay me! Seems like people actually read and like my stuff, but they hardly ever post any comments :( and the comments that do arrive are usually spam, which is the reason why I have everything helt for moderation before it actually appears on the site. So if you post a comment, don’t be shocked that it doesn’t arrive immediatly.

Anyway, to the point now. This is the one and only “The new stuff chronicles #4: Knepper Special!”. What makes this into the Knepper Special is that today my Knepper merchandise arrived. For those who don’t know what Knepper is: it’s my very own band. And yes, I ordered merchandise for my own band, so what? Got any problems with that? No? Good.

So here is what I ordered and received:

  • Teddy

Knepper Beeah front Knepper Beeah back

  • T-Shirt

Faster Louder Knepper front Faster Louder Knepper back

  • Wallclock


Now it might be possible that you’re thinking “Holy cow! I want one of those!”. If that is the case then you can click here** to go the spreadshirt shop we opened and get some of the stuff we got there. After ordering it might take a while for it to be shipped and a even a bit longer for it to arrive as it is all printed on demand.
** Allthough it does say “Hello, you’re not logged in. Login now!” you don’t need to log in to place an order.

So that’s it for today, go get that stuff and be sure to take some pictures of it and send them to me. Maybe I’ll post the pics on here if you’d like that.

The new stuff chronicles #3

The new stuff chronicles | Posted by Zhooibaal
May 15 2007

So much stuff, so little time, anyway, there’s some new things:

  1. Sega Megadrive
  2. Clerks 2 DVD
  3. Mag-Lite 2-D Cell

Sega Megadrive

So, let’s start with the most important one, the Megadrive. I already have a Megadrive 2, but the Megadrive just looks a lot cooler :P The only thing I don’t like is that it has these ugly stickers applied on it’s top and I can’t get them off (yet). Technically it’s exactly the same console, but this one has something that the Megadrive 2 doesn’t have:

  • 1 headphone jack
  • volume slider

So what exaclty did I gain by buying this console? Right, nothing at all… No cables, no nothing. It’s still a nice addition to my still small collection. Here’s a picture of it:

Sega Megadrive

Clerks 2 DVD

Clerks 2 boxClerks 2 is a movie written and directed by Kevin Smith. As with many Kevin Smith films, it includes the two memorable characters named Jay and Silent Bob who are all well known for their appearances in movies like Clerks, Mallrats, Chasing Amy, Dogma and Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back. I haven’t yet watched Clerks 2, but I can’t even imagine that this movie won’t be good. A good thing about this DVD box is that it also includes Clerks which I just recently watched with my girlfriend and all that for only €12,00 at the Mediamarkt :D

ClerksClerks 2

Mag-Lite 2-D Cell

Yeah, now what’s to tell about this one? It’s green, American, it emits a rather sharp light and it runs on 2 D cell batteries.

Mag-Lite

The new stuff chronicles #2

The new stuff chronicles | Posted by Zhooibaal
May 03 2007

And here we are with the second part of the “The new stuff chronicles” series. The thing I got now isn’t some old thing that other people didn’t want to have anymore, quite the contrary, allthough I do know some people who don’t want to have it.

Today’s subject is a brand new Palm T|X handheld which I got from coolblue. I got it together with a 2GB SD memory card and a light metal case to carry it around without risking to severely damage it and here are 2 pictures of it:

I received this little thing last tuesday and I must say that it’s really nice. The screen looks good, it’s responsive and it’s also reasonably fast. It offers some nice new features over my old Palm Tungsten E handheld which I got from my former boss like a bigger screen with a better resolution, built in bluetooth and wifi, newer versions of the installed software like Documents to Go and a completely new UI. The old UI is also still there, but the new one works easier and looks friendlier.

There are only 1 thing I don’t like about the T|X:

the sync cableThe sync cable is terrible, it works, but it’s terrible anyway. It fits perfectly into the connector on the Palm, but it’s still terrible. The bad thing about the sync cable is that it doesn’t have a decent system to remove it from the T|X. It has these little metal clamps with which it secures the connector to the Palm, but it doesn’t have something like a button or anything like that to remove the clamps to easily remove the cable from the Palm. Instead of that you simply have to pull it out and hope the guts of the Palm remain inside or you can try to remove one side (which goes quite easily) and then remove the other side, which is much easier to do than to simply pull it out, but it feels rather strange and it still feels like you’re going to rip out some internal parts in the proces.

But normally you don’t have to worry about the sync cable as you can also use the Hotsync application to synchronise using either Bluetooth or WiFi. I have tried Bluetooth yet, but synchronising through WiFi works really well.

The biggest advantage of the Palm T|X over most of it’s competition is it’s operating system. It uses Palm OS 5.4 Garnet as where most PDAs use Windows Mobile. I consider this a plus, because Palm OS is much faster and it’s much easier to use. Especially Garnet. Previous versions of Palm OS only offered the applications screen as a GUI on which you have a list of all installed executable programs grouped by catagory. On Garnet you have a second menu called favourites on which you can create a list of programs you use frequently and this is also the list that comes up when you press the home button on the device. When you tap the home icon on the graffity area you will still get the other list.

Most Windows Mobile devices also have a screen resolution of either 160×240 pixels or 240×320 pixels. This Palm has a screen resolution of 320×480 pixels and it looks beautiful. The colors are very good and it looks really clean. There are also Windows Mobile devices with the same resolution, but those are the expensive ones. You won’t get a decent Windows Mobile device with a big 320×480 screen at the same price as the T|X.

When it comes to software, then the Palm T|X is also doing very well. It comes with a variaty of software products pre-installed and I haven’t felled the urge to remove any of them (yet).
It has it’s simple applications like the Calender, the World Clock, Tasks, Contacts, Memos and Note Pad which are the basic applications to store appointments, tasks, quick memos and notes and to view the time on nearly all possible places on the planet, but the interesting software is third party software that comes with it as well:

  • Dataviz Documents to Go
  • Pocket Tunes

These 2 programs can come in very handy. Documents to Go is your mobile office suite. It can read and write native Microsoft Word and Excell files and it can read Microsoft Powerpoint files and it has it’s own document, spreadsheet and presentation formats as well to save space.
Pocket Tunes is not much more than a simple MP3 player, but it’s a good one and it’s easy to use.

Both Documents to Go and Pocket Tunes can read files from an SD memory card.

There is also some other handy software on it from Palm itself like Blazer, the web browser, and VersaMail, the e-mail client. Blazer isn’t ideal for full blown webbrowsing, but it can come in handy when you have to look something up quickly and VersaMail is simply an easy to use and straight forward e-mail client which works really well.

And for the people who like to play a little game every once in a while there is a pretty good Patience game present on the T|X and you can ofcourse also install a few other games if you like. 2 games that I like a lot are Minefield, which is a freeware minesweeper clone and Handland, which is a freeware lander game where you have to land your moon lander on the surface of the moon.

The new stuff chronicles #1

Cisco Systems, Networking, Nortel Networks, The new stuff chronicles | Posted by Zhooibaal
Apr 11 2007

The TEFAF is long gone and still it’s been nearly a month since my last post. Anyway, I have made a decision: from this day forward I shall name the posts that are about new stuff I got “The new stuff chronicles #x” and today is #1.

The new stuff chronicles will be a new series of posts here on Pingwing.us purely and only for new stuff I receive as gifts or which I buy or otherwise aquire. Today I have some new things I got through second hand internet trading and something I got from a classmate a whole while ago, but I haven’t told the world about that yet and something I got for free from another classmate, also a whole while ago…

So what is the stuff that’s going to be shown is this post:

  1. 2x Nortel Networks Baystack 450 24T Ethernet Switch
  2. 1x DAP Audio DJ-Station
  3. 1x HP Laserjet 3150 multi functional printer

Let’s start with the switches

Baystack 450 24T

Baystack 450 24TThe Baystack 450 24T is a 24 port fast ethernet switch which is fully managable. Fast ethernet means that it supports up to 100mbit/s rather than only 10mbit/s like the Baystack 310 24T or the Cisco Catalyst 1924E which is displayed on this page.

Amoungst the things that this switch supports are VLAN, multi link trunking, spanning tree protocol and management through Telnet. There are ofcourse a lot more things supported by this switch, but those are probably the most notable.

Another interesting feature is the possibility to upgrade the switch with a cascade module in the back to enable 2.4gbit/s connections between up to 8 Baystack 450 switches. The cascade module connects the switches directly on their backplanes and more or less makes them function as one big switch and the best thing about that is that the cables required for this feature are standard SCSI cables which are relatively easy to find.

The only real downside of these switches is that they don’t have a built in uplink port. Allthough an uplink port of nothing more than a cross linked ethernet port, mostly the uplink port is faster and a 1000mbit/s uplink port would have been very nice. But an uplink port can be added with a fiber optic uplink module, but I have no use to fiber optics whatsoever.

And here is a picture of all my Cisco Systems routers and the switch and my three Baystack switches stacked on top of eachother:

Stack

DAP Audio DJ-Station

DAP Audio DJ-StationThis is my mixer panel. Now you might ask what the use of a mixer panel is for home use, but I can tell you that the sound quality is much better with this thing connected between my computer and my speakers than with the speakers directly connected to the computer. And added to that I also experiment with audio (mainly vocals) on my computer and the recording quality of the microphone is also a lot better through the mixer than directly into the computer.

The DAP Audio DJ-Station has 8 stereo channels of which 4 can be used simultainiously. Which ones to use can be chosen with the little switches above each volume slider. It also has two seperate microphone input channels than are used independantly of the other channels. It has 3 stereo outputs on the back and an extra on on the front. The one on the front is the cue output, which is normally used to listen to a song by a DJ before actually playing it on the main output. It also has a main output which is a 2 channel stereo output, a booth output, which is pretty much the same but has it’s own volume knob and is meant speakers that the DJ himself listens too instead of the main speakers and it has a record output, which I connected back to my computer’s line-in.

Besides that it features some pretty useless but funny sounding soundeffects and echo and reverb for both the main/booth/cue output and for the microphone input.

HP Laserjet 3150

HP Laserjet 3150I got this cute little printer from a classmate who had upgraded his system with Windows Vista and this old bugger didn’t work with that anyway, so he got himself a new one and this one was standing in the way.

In Windows XP I still can’t use all of it’s features, but the main feature, printing, works just fine.

This thing is actually a fax machine as well as a printer, scanner and copier. To use it as a fax machine I would need to connect it to an analog telephone line, but I have no use for that feature and I haven’t tested the copier function as of yet and the scanner function doesn’t work on Windows XP. You’ll need Windows 9x/NT 4.0 for that feature. A shame really, but it just scans grayscale anyway, so it’s not that usefull.