Migration planning

Finally made it back from Albuquerque this afternoon and found my luggage had somehow beat me here. Albuquerque was a pretty nice place, but it’s good to be back home.

New computer arrived while I was away, but is out of the box now and ready to be used (unboxing post will come soon). First I need to plan out how I’m going to partition the drives and then work out a reasonably painless way to move stuff over from the old computer, then find time to do it all. I figure I should have it up and running in a couple of days or so.

Woohoo!

New hardware

Time for a major technology refresh.

Just bit the bullet and bought myself a new computer to replace my old frankenputer (2001 vintage). Its been resurrected a few times and probably should have been retired 5 years ago.

Most of what I usually do isn’t very demanding so I tend to keep computers for a while. However, with the number crunching and Monte Carlo simulations I’m anticipating on running for my PhD project, I need something that will be able to handle it.

The new computer isn’t quite as high end as I would have liked, but it’s still pretty decent and more state-of-the-art than any other computer I’ve ever had. Core i7-930, 12GB RAM, 1.5 TB storage (500 GB and 1 TB drives) and nVidia GTX 260 video card.

After the new computer arrives and gets set up, the old computer will likely live out the rest of its days in quiet retirement as a file server.

Cliq: Week 1

It’s been a week now with the new ball and chainphone. I’ve already done a factory reset on it once, but overall it hasn’t been too bad. Not great, but not horrible.

Pros:

As a handheld gadget it’s pretty cool. Lots of apps to help you stay even more connected to the interwebs. If you’re into the whole social media scene, there are plenty of apps to let your stalkersfriends know where you are and what you’re up to. The MotoBlur interface Motorola slapped on top of Android lets you see what’s going on in your social network at a glance.
The slide open keyboard is nice, and the bumpy keyboard is pretty easy to type on. The screen only reacts to finger presses and not fingernails or other stylus type devices so I find using the on screen keyboard pretty slow.

It’s nice and compact, about 3/4 the width of my T3. Nice sharp and bright screen.
5MP camera takes reasonably decent photos. Like with any other tiny camera, don’t expect great results in low lighting.

Cons:

It’s a cell phone.

As a PDA/PIM tool, it (Android) kind of sucks (at least compared to my Palm based PDAs). Calendar comes from the ‘cloud’ (Google Calendar and/or MS Exchange) which is fine but what happens when you have no data or wireless service? Kind of hosed there in that event. Contacts come from all the accounts you set up MotoBlur with, which means you end up with a long list of contacts and probably more than a few duplicates from various sources. Multiple contacts belonging to the same person can be linked together, but that means going through a long list of everybody. ToDo and Notes have to come from third party sources, which aren’t too hard to find in the Android Market. Basic PIM functionality can be replicated, but there’s no integration between them. So now I’ve gone from a formerly state-of-the-art PDA with great PIM capabilities to a state-of-the-art cell phone/gadget with fairly rudimentary PIM capability. Two steps forward, one step back.

Ships with Android 1.5. Android 1.5 doesn’t give me the wi-fi configuration options (without rooting the phone) to connect to the encrypted wifi network at work, options that are (should be) standard on any wi-fi device. They’re options I have in WinXP on my 6 year old laptop. What’s up with that?

It’s a pig on battery. I probably need to spend some more time doing some optimization and figuring out what apps I don’t need and can turn off. Still, you probably don’t want to be very far away from a source of power with this thing though.

Google Chart API and QR codes

Google’s Chart API is pretty cool. I just discovered it can also be used to create QR code graphics.
Cool.