Happy 30th Anniversary, Apple Mac!

This is wild! I can remember when the Macintosh was announced. I was just getting into IT at the time. (Yes, in mini-computers like the Digital VAX!) Wow, seems like yesterday! This writer was there covering it!

The Macintosh Is 30, and I Was There for Its Birth

Wired – By: Steven Levy – “Nineteen eighty-four was not like 2014. When Steve Jobs launched the Macintosh, he had to generate excitement about a product — a computer — that was unfamiliar to most people, if not downright scary. His creation would eventually entice them into changing their minds, but first, they had to be intrigued enough to learn about it.

The Macintosh was new, but the media would have to be old. There were no tech blogs, no Facebook, no Twitter, and certainly no Mac rumor websites. There were no websites at all. So Jobs had to generate his own campaign to tell the world about the computer that he would announce on January 24, 1984, 30 years ago today.

Part of the effort came in the production of the now-famous Ridley Scott Super Bowl commercial that climaxed with a dynamic woman athlete flinging a hammer to disrupt the ravings of an unnamed evil empire’s mouthpiece. For those in the know, the oppressive regime was supposed to represent the ruler of the digital world in those days, IBM. (See, that was a long time ago.) But the stratospheric production values and the epic sweep of those 60 seconds created a promo that was revolutionary even without subtext.

Almost no one remembers who played in the Super Bowl (the Los Angeles Raiders beat the Washington Redskins.1 Like I said, 1984 wasn’t like 2014). But the commercial, aired two days before the Mac launch, is part of history, and many can recite the tagline verbatim: ‘On January 24, Apple will introduce Macintosh. And you’ll see why 1984 won’t be like ‘1984.”

Jobs also planned a massive advertising campaign to follow, including a complete mini-publication that would run in multiple magazines. But, as he would do often in his subsequent career, Jobs relied on the news media to provide the narrative focus for his effort. He decided to give the exclusive story, along with early access to the team, to Newsweek and Rolling Stone, though he also gave briefings to a new magazine called Macworld.

I was the Rolling Stone writer.

No Cover for the Mac

The assignment was my idea. I had been covering the computer world for a couple of years, and while the rest of the world paid little attention, Silicon Valley was buzzing with anticipation about Apple’s mysterious new machine. I managed to overcome editorial skepticism at Rolling Stone to get an OK to cover the launch, something of a stretch for the magazine of music and youth culture. But I was stunned when Apple did not embrace my idea right away. Its reps insisted — on orders from Jobs, I later learned — that my coverage was contingent on putting the Macintosh (or, presumably, Jobs) on the cover of Rolling Stone. And that wasn’t going to happen.

Finally, Jobs relented, and in November, I found myself at Bandley Three, the modest building in which the Mac team was frantically trying to squash software bugs and lock down features before the launch. It was to be one of the greatest days of my life in reporting.

First, I met the machine. From the instant the woman running the demo switched on that strange-looking contraption (inspired in part by the Cuisinart food processor), I knew the Macintosh would change millions of lives, including my own. To understand that, you must realize how much 1984 really was not like 2014. Until that point, personal computers were locked in an esoteric realm of codes and commands. They looked unfriendly, with the letters of text growing in sickly phosphorescence. Even the simplest tasks required memorizing the proper intonations, then executing several exacting steps.

But the Macintosh was friendly. It opened with a smile. Words appeared with the clarity of text on a printed page — and for the first time, ordinary people had the power to format text as professional printers did. Selecting and moving text was made dramatically easier by the then-quaint mouse accompanying the keyboard. You could draw on it. This humble shoebox-sized machine had a simplicity that instantly empowered you.

I had barely taken that in when I was introduced to some of the team that created the machine. I was blown away by the energy of people like Andy Hertzfeld, Bill Atkinson, Joanna Hoffman, Susan Kare, Steve Capps, and others. They went out of their way to connect with me because they adored Rolling Stone. Mostly in their twenties, the Mac people viewed the computer they had created as something akin to the rock and roll that flowed in their veins. The Macintosh was built to be as transgressive and empowering as the music that played on their stereos and opened the world to them.

That’s what had excited me about computers too, so the Mac team charmed me from the get-to. To this day, some of them remain my close friends.

And Then There Was Jobs

After a series of meetings, I was to meet the impresario of the Macintosh, Steve Jobs. We were scheduled to go to dinner together. By then, I had heard a lot about him, and gotten more than a whiff of the intrigues involved in the creation of the Mac (including an earful from the exiled manager who originally conceived of the project).

I have to admit my first moments with Jobs were not auspicious. He complained again that the story would not be on the cover. Then he proceeded to use scatological terms to describe a recent Rolling Stone story about MTV. I interrupted the rant by informing him that I had written that story. Jobs simply changed the subject.

At dinner, though, he was loquacious, candid, and of course wildly enthusiastic about the launch. He portrayed Apple as a pirate aggregation that was civilization’s last hope against an evil dominant force — just like in the commercial. (He spoke about the 1984 ad with some wistfulness, since at that time the Apple board had decided not to run it on television. Of course, it reversed that decision).

He was also wildly dramatic about what he might do if the world didn’t understand the excellence of his creation — perhaps go to Italy and ride motorcycles, he said. He also talked about the future of Apple, sharing its dream that it would grow to be worth $10 billion. But, he said, he hoped it would be a $10 billion company that did not lose its soul.

It was the first of many conversations I would have with Jobs over next few decades, up to the year he died. But it was perhaps the most unforgettable, simply because it was all so new. The computer. The team. Steve. The whole package was, in a nutshell, the essence of the seismic shift about to occur, one that would indeed, as I heard it said that day, put a dent in the universe.

Universe, consider yourself dented. In 2014, IBM doesn’t even make PCs. Apple is not a $10 billion company, it is a half a trillion dollar company. Jobs is gone, but he left us after having had rebuilt the company beyond its previous glory, satisfied that he’d restored its soul.

Amazingly, one thing has not changed: Through three decades of evolution, we still have a machine whose DNA recognizably traces back to its origin. Indeed, 30 years after Jobs introduced his machine at the Flint Center in Cupertino, I am writing these words on a Macintosh.

So, at least in one sense, 2014 is just like 1984.”

A New Development Version of Wine Released

This release is pretty cool, and has a lot of bug fixes. Install it on your Ubuntu, or other Debian-based distro easily!

Step 1 : Open Terminal by Accessories -> Terminal or CTRL+ALT+T

Step 2 : Add the following PPA via Terminal to install the latest version of 1.7.11

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-wine/ppa

Step 3 : Then update the software repository by

sudo apt-get update

Step 4 : Now install the latest release of wineHQ v1.7.11 by

sudo apt-get install wine1.7 winetricks

Wine development release 1.7.11

“The Wine development release 1.7.11 is now available.

What’s new in this release:

Uniscribe support in the RichEdit control.
Support for condition variables and Slim Reader/Writer locks.
More D3D command stream preparation work.
Optional Start Menu in desktop mode.
Improved support for vertical fonts metrics.
Various bug fixes.
The source is available now. Binary packages are in the process of being built, and will appear soon at their respective download locations.”

Here are the fixes:

Changes / Features in version 1.7.11 :

–> F1 button in WinAMP Milkdrop visualization shows garbage instead of the help info
–> Frets on fire doesn’t start(python issue) [dogfood]
–> Garmin MapSource doesn’t run anymore after upgrading to the latest version (6.14.1)
–> Bombzone won’t start
–> POI Loader 2.5.x and 2.7.x fail to run
–> Guitar Pro 5.2 demo file browser treeview has extraneous “:” item
–> WinWULFF (VB6 app) fails on startup, reporting “Run-time error ’10’: This array is fixed
or temporarily locked”
–> OLE error 800200009 on EasyWorship 2009 eval version startup
–> MSN Messenger Live 2009 (14.0) installer crashes on startup
–> Graphical glitches in Big Fish Games client
–> Spotify Crashes On Log In
–> EasyHook 2.6 ‘ProcessMonitor.exe’ example (.NET 2.0 app) crashes shortly after launch
–> ScriptTextOut passes wrong widths to ExtTextOutW
–> iexplore https://www.coupons.com/ shows blank page
–> Multiple applications need KERNEL32.dll.InitializeConditionVariable implementation
(Adobe Lightroom 4.x and 5.x, Sibelius 7, 64-bit Dolphin Emulator)
–> Adobe Lightroom 4 fails to start: Unimplemented function
KERNEL32.dll.SleepConditionVariableCS
–> June 2010 directx sdk installer: fails with builtin mono
–> Garmin ANT Agent 2.3.3 doesn’t recognize ‘ANT’ USB stick, crashes on unimplemented
function cfgmgr32.dll.CM_Get_Device_ID_ExA
–> GetResolvedNeutrals always returns input
–> iexplore https://imgur.com doesn’t open
–> Installation of Garmin Training Center 3.6.5 fails
–> GetLongPathName does not properly resolve the relative string ‘.’
–> Garmin WebUpdater says “You must be a local administrator to run this application”
–> Pinging 0.0.0.0 returns success, when it should return failure.
–> POI Loader 2.5.x and 2.7.x refuse to install, claiming “No administrator privileges for
install”
–> Regedit doesn’t import .reg files formatted like the example in the FAQ
–> When leaving full screen mode IrfanView creates an on-top unusable excess screen-wide
control
–> Application DesignSpark Crashes when adding components to schematic
–> SolForge needs msvcp110.dll.?_Init@locale@std@@CAPAV_Locimp@12@_N@Z
–> Foxit Reader 6.xx crashes on opening Help->About
–> Incorrect SourceDir used for product update.
–> Shattered Horizon needs msvcr90.dll.?_is_exception_typeof@@YAHABVtype_info@@PAU_EXCEPTION_
POINTERS@@@Z
–> RSA SecurID token v411 crashes on startup
–> Depth Hunter crashes when changing video options
–> Secret Files 2: hardware mouse pointer corrupted
–> Ivona Voices needs MSVCP110.dll.?setw@std@@YA?AU?$_Smanip@_J@1@_J@Z
–> Teleglitch: Die More Edition needs msvcr110.dll._libm_sse2_sqrt_precise
–> Ys 1 crashes on startup
–> Multiple Realarcade installers fail on startup, complaining with COM/LUA scripting errors
(need support for IFolder::get_Files)
–> build fail on FreeBSD
–> Multiple Realarcade installers fail on startup, complaining with COM/LUA scripting errors
(need support for file collection ‘_NewEnum’ property)
–> sscanf clears first unmatched string arg
–> PSO2 Tweaker needs Win32_OperatingSystem WMI class ‘Name’ property
–> Multiple applications fail to install (IE7, MS .NET Framework 4.0)
–> Warhammer 40K Dawn of War and Winter Assault: not working on 1.7.10
–> League of Legends launcher crashes on start

The Top 25 (Most Used) Passwords for 2013!

Come on, folks! You HAVE to be able to come up with better passwords than this!

The 25 worst passwords of 2013

By: Melanie Pinola – ITWorld — “Once again, it’s time to look back on last year’s worst passwords and wonder if there’s any hope for us and online security.

Password management developer SplashData announced it’s annual list of the 25 most common passwords, according to password leaks. For the first time, ‘password’ lost the top spot and moved to second place, beat by ‘123456’ (which took second place in 2012).

‘123456,’ I’m sure you’re well aware, is only a little more secure than ‘12345,’ which even Spaceballs says is the stupidest password ever (and happens to be #20 on this list).

SplashData notes that a couple of new entries reflect the major Adobe passwords breach last year: ‘adobe123’ and ‘photoshop’–and cautions that using the site name in the password is a no no.

Other new entries include ‘123456789’ (variation on the same theme), ‘princess’ (perhaps a reflection of more princesses going online), ‘assert’ (?), and ‘000000’ (at least more efficient in terms of typing the keys in).

Here’s the full awards list for SplashData’s ‘Worst Passwords of 2013′”:

Password List

Dr. Bill.TV #323 – Video – “The Pro Net Neutrality Geek Show Edition!”

YouTube launches new comments, why I am pro Net Neutrality! Glucose monitoring via Google contacts, Google purchases Nest! 3-D TVs are out, 4K TVs are in! Novena: a leather-bound Open Source laptop. GSotW: Free File Shredder, Acer C720P Chromebook report!

Links that pertain to this Netcast:

TechPodcasts Network

International Association of Internet Broadcasters

Blubrry Network

Dr. Bill Bailey.NET

Free File Shredder


Start the Video Netcast in the Blubrry Video Player above by
clicking on the “Play” Button in the center of the screen.

(Click on the buttons below to Stream the Netcast in your “format of choice”)
Streaming M4V Audio





Streaming MP3 Audio

Streaming Ogg Audio

Download M4V Download WebM Download MP3 Download Ogg
(Right-Click on any link above, and select “Save As…” to save the Netcast on your PC.)

Available on YouTube at: https://youtu.be/sc3fKQdHxy4

Available on Vimeo at: https://vimeo.com/84491196


Dr. Bill.TV #323 – Audio – “The Pro Net Neutrality Geek Show Edition!”

YouTube launches new comments, why I am pro Net Neutrality! Glucose monitoring via Google contacts, Google purchases Nest! 3-D TVs are out, 4K TVs are in! Novena: a leather-bound Open Source laptop. GSotW: Free File Shredder, Acer C720P Chromebook report!

Links that pertain to this Netcast:

TechPodcasts Network

International Association of Internet Broadcasters

Blubrry Network

Dr. Bill Bailey.NET

Free File Shredder


Start the Video Netcast in the Blubrry Video Player above by
clicking on the “Play” Button in the center of the screen.

(Click on the buttons below to Stream the Netcast in your “format of choice”)
Streaming M4V Audio





Streaming MP3 Audio

Streaming Ogg Audio

Download M4V Download WebM Download MP3 Download Ogg
(Right-Click on any link above, and select “Save As…” to save the Netcast on your PC.)

Available on YouTube at: https://youtu.be/sc3fKQdHxy4

Available on Vimeo at: https://vimeo.com/84491196


Chromebook Experiment Report!

Acer Chromebook C720P
So, a lot of you have been waiting patiently for me to report on how my experiment is going with my new Google Chromebook. Well, I can report great success! I find my new Google Chromebook, which by the way, is an Acer C720P, to be very light, small, easy to use, and very, very fast!

In terms of actual use, since a lot of what I do is already in the Cloud, it’s really no different than using my Chrome browser on a regular computer. And, that makes sense. Since I use my Chrome browser exclusively, with a few minor exceptions, such as, I use Mozilla Firefox to view certain RSS feeds because I like the way it displays the feeds, and Google Chrome does not display those feeds, except as raw XML. Now, yes, there are tools available as Chrome plug-ins that will allow me to view those feeds. In fact, I use one called “Slick RSS.” It works really well and I like it. But, sometimes I just want to see an RSS feed displayed like Mozilla Firefox displays it, so there you go…

What I was most concerned about when using a Chromebook was my ability to be able to connect to other computers, which I need to manage. I have two options to do this, which I use for different situations. One is the Google Chrome Remote Desktop, which can be set up very easily on computers that you own, such as your home PC, and it allows you to connect to, and display the console of that PC. The other option that I have is the use of VMware View, which I use to connect to a View session at work to do computer management at the hospital that I work at. VMware has an HTML5 View Client that works well under Chrome.

Now, you might say that it’s cheating for me to use a Chromebook to connect to a full-blown Windows computer to do certain things that I need to do at work! Maybe. But that’s the nature of the technology at this point. I have to work with what I have to work with. So, you may say that I’m not really using my Chromebook to do everything I need to do, but within the parameters of my experiment, I think I’m doing pretty well.

The question was, “can I use the Chromebook for the majority of my computing and get the job done?” To me, the answer is “yes.” You may quibble with my belief that I can do all my computing via my Chromebook. That’s entirely up to you. But for me, I find that I can function quite nicely using the Chromebook as a primary computer. Notice I said a primary computer, not the primary computer. That’s a fine distinction, but one I feel I have to make. A lot of what I do requires a lot of computing power. One thing that I do every week is my own video netcast. This requires editing my video and then rendering it into different formats. Now, there are video editors available that work well with chrome. One is WeVideo. It’s okay. I’m not that enthusiastic about it. Maybe it’s because I’m really used to the editor that I use every week. That is, the AVS Video Editor. It simply rocks!

But again, other than that, most of what I do, I can do with a Chromebook. At least, that’s my findings so far.

Geek Software of the Week: Free File Shredder!

Free File ShredderWe should all be concerned about security. That pretty much goes without saying. However, every so often, somebody has to say it! So, “be concerned about security!” There, I said it!

This week’s Geek Software of the Week provides you with the option of not just deleting a file, which we all know, doesn’t really delete the file. What? You didn’t know that deleting a file doesn’t delete the file? Well, it’s the truth! All deleting the file actually does is mark it as deleted in the file table of your computer. The file is subject to then be written over by new data, which will eventually render it irretrievable, but, if you want to be absolutely sure that a file is gone forever and cannot be retrieved, then you need this week’s Geek Software of the Week! And, it is, Free File Shredder!

Free File Shredder

“With File Shredder you can remove files from your hard drive without fear they could be recovered. There are quite a few software tools today for retrieval of deleted files under Windows OS. Those tools, often referred to as ‘file recovery’ software, are taking advantage of shortcoming of Windows ‘delete’ command that we all use regularly to delete files. Actually, the ‘delete’ operation in Windows only removes bits of information from files so they appear deleted in OS. It is easy to retrieve those files using aforementioned specialized file recovery software.

In order to remove, or shred files permanently from your system you have to use a program that is capable of rewriting the files with random series of binary data multiple times. This process is often called shredding. That way, the actual content of the file has been overwritten and the possibilities to recover such a shredded file are mostly theoretical.

File Shredder has been developed as fast, safe and reliable tool to shred company files. The author of this program released it free under GNU licence and you are welcome to download File Shredder and use it without any restrictions. File Shredder is simple but powerful program that surpasses many commercial file shredders out there. The Author believes that such a utility should be available to anyone for free and that permanent and safe removal of confidential documents is a matter of basic right to privacy.

In File Shredder you can choose between 5 different shredding algorithms, each one gradually stronger than the previous one. It also has integrated Disk Wiper which uses shredding algorithm to wipe unused disk space.”

Open Source Laptop!

How cool is this? An Open Source, leather-bound laptop computer! If you are a hardware geek, and have plenty o’ money, this would be a very cool project!

Novena: A leather-bound open-source hacker laptop that you can build yourself

Novena Project LaptopExtremeTech – “The beautiful laptop that you see before you, called Project Novena, was built from scratch. Because its creators have open-sourced the laptop’s blueprints, you can even build a Novena yourself — if you had a lot of time, money, and technical expertise, anyway. In keeping with the laptop’s open computing roots, even the motherboard was designed and created from scratch. Inside the laptop, which was created specifically for hardware hacking, there’s a whole range of goodies: an FPGA on the motherboard, dual Ethernet sockets, a USB OTG port — and again, due to the open-source requirement, a Freescale iMX6 quad-core ARM CPU. The build took more than a year and a half to complete.

Built by Sean ‘xobs’ Cross and Bunnie Huang, Project Novena is truly a wonder to behold. We’ve seen a lot of DIY desktops and case mods, but laptops — because of their smaller form factor and non-standard parts — are very rare indeed. Open source DIY laptops are almost unheard of. In this case, ‘open source’ means two things: The blueprints for the custom circuit boards (the motherboard and battery board) are available on the Project Novena wiki, and where possible Xobs and Bunnie tried to use components that had complete and NDA-free documentation. That’s why they chose the Freescale iMX6 CPU — unlike most CPUs, you can simply hit up the Freescale website and download an almost-complete 6,000-page programming manual. If you wanted to get your hands on Intel’s internal documentation, you would need to sign a lot of paperwork.”

4K, 3-D, and Other Acronyms!

One thing that we saw a lot of at CES this year was the introduction of much more affordable 4-K television sets. Some of you may be asking what’s a 4-K TV? Basically, think of it as a television system that allows viewing of four times the information of a 1080P television system. That’s much denser pixels that we currently have on our flatscreen TVs!

Now, for all intents and purposes, 3-D didn’t make it as a popular TV option. Now, before I get a lot of letters about how great 3-D is, and how much you love your system, hold on! You have to agree that 3-D as an option on HDTV’s has not really caught on in a big way commercially. In fact, Visio has announced that their new lineup of TVs for 2014 will not include any 3-D systems. That ought to tell you something!

Call me old-fashioned, but when I go to see a movie these days, I specifically go to see the 2-D movie, and skip paying extra money for the 3-D movie. The 2-D version is much clearer, easier to watch, and I don’t really feel that I’ve lost anything by losing 3-D. It’s just not that big a deal. Maybe it’s because I’m used to 2-D, or maybe my mind allows me to conceive of what I’m seeing as a 3-D spatial environment without any visual trickery!

Either way, expect 3-D to be totally phased out by other manufacturers as well, and look at it this way; your current 3-D HD television will be a collectors item! Although when it comes to technology, that’s not necessarily a good thing!

Google Purchases Nest!

So, I was reading this week that Google purchased Nest for $3.2 billion! Nest is a developer and manufacturer for home automation devices, such as smartphone controlled thermostats, and other innovative home automation.

Nests products do look very cool, and actually bring to mind the design style of Apple. These devices appeal to high-end homeowners that want a “cool factor” in their household automation devices. In fact, these devices can be controlled by a user’s iPad, or Android tablet, which again, is a pretty good idea!

Some pundits are asking the question, “Do we really want Google to have access to data from our homes through these devices?” I’m not sure what Google would do with information on what temperature I keep my home, are how often I turn my lights on and off, but then, I’m not Google! I’m sure they could come up with a way to monetize it, if they put their mind to it!

And, I’m sure my buddy at work, that I call “Jim Bob Not-his-real-name” would remind me that Google is “the devil” and, that one should never let Google monitor anything… much less your house! So I’m sure he would find their purchase of Nest very troubling.

This could begin Google’s entry into what some pundits are calling “the Internet of things.” The idea being that having your toaster, or your microwave, or your refrigerator, connected to the Internet can be useful. So, I understand that having your refrigerator report via e-mail that you need to buy some milk on the way home from work could be handy. But, maybe a little creepy! Welcome to the future!

Having an Internet connected house would provide a lot of neat information to the homeowner, but, I would be concerned about how that information could potentially be hacked and used! We seem to be losing more and more privacy every day as these Internet connected conveniences make it possible to have information from our homes, and our devices; and as we saw all in an earlier post, even from our bodies!

If hackers can get to this information, they would have even more information about us! For instance, if they can find out by your home automation system that you’re not at home, then it would make your house an easier target for people that want to break in and steal all your cool gadgets. Something to think about!

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