May 06 2010

The Power of a Printer

Tag: blogging, hardware, help, rant, technology, troubleshootJoe Wegner @ 8:44 pm

Hey, a post!  I feel that this story deserves some internet coverage somewhere, so why not automaticable!  And maybe this will convince the others to post something, other than April’s Fools Posts.

So, as some of you may know, I have been working for a commercial printing company doing IT for about half a year now.  The company has been in the middle of a massive merge and building-consolidation process.  All-in-all, everything has gone quite well.  One server crashed, but everything was recovered from backups.  However, working in a small business during poor economic times means working with some painfully old devices.

Last week I was given a pretty simple task.  I needed to set up a networked label printer that had been moved from the old shop.  Easy enough, it should just grab an IP via DHCP, and I can log onto its web interface to set it up – no big deal.  I hooked up the printer and voila, 192.168.2.13.  It was set up.  Went into our router, changed the IP from dynamic to static, and headed out for the evening.  Seemed like everything had gone great.

Now fast forward to the next morning, the pressmen are just getting ready to pull the press data from the servers, and – oh crap.  The press computer is down.  This press prints out 16,000 sheets per hour, and each sheet has 2-3 pieces on it.  You can imagine how fast I got the phone call.  I went straight to the press when I got in to see an error about an IP Conflict.  Our presses are all assigned static IP’s, so I went in to the network config – the IP assigned was 192.168.2.13.  Sounds familiar.

Turns out this label printer (I won’t name the brand, but I can’t say I’m surprised by this faulty setup) does not quite understand the meaning of DHCP and IP conflicts.  When it booted up the BOOTP process assigned it any random IP, regardless of what else might be under that IP.  I quickly unplugged the printer, and the press came back online.  In the end, I hooked the printer up to a more manageable HP JetDirect, and avoided any more IP conflicts.

The ironic part of this story?

A desk label printer this small :                                                Shut down a printing press this large :

Standard Thermal Label Printer


Dec 09 2009

Stash away, that cash, away. Stash away all!

Tag: hardware, help, how-to, ipod, music, productivity, technology, troubleshootBrian Wegner @ 5:02 pm

sad-ipodIt’s the holiday season, and we all know what that means.  Work WAY too many hours just to buy people meaningless gifts that people will use for about a month and then toss away.  One popular gift that in my opinion is the gift that keeps giving is an iPod.  I bought my first iPod 5 years ago after I graduated high-school.  Exactly a year after I bought it, it gave me that dreaded sad iPod face, and would no longer work.  I gave up.  I was distraught.  I didn’t want to have to resort back to CD’s that scratch and become unreadable, and I didn’t want to spend another $300 on a new iPod when I had one that was only a year old.  Why didn’t I just buy that extended warranty when they asked?

So what did I do instead? I got violent, because violence solves everything!  I banged my iPod against my shifter in my car three times and tired it again just to see if it worked, and by golly it turned on, no more sad face and my music was playing!**  I about shat my pants I was so excited!  Now granted, it froze up every once in a while and gave the sad iPod face again, but no worries, do the simple solution again and it works!  Now after about three years, it doesn’t freeze up anymore.  It may not work the first time, but keep trying and it will eventually.

After some investigation on to why this works, it turns out that in the older iPods there is a small connector cable that becomes loose from the hard drive through normal wear and tear.  You’re simply just knocking that cable back into place so the hard drive can be read properly.  I have had this same iPod for 5 years now, and it works wonderfully, and have not needed to buy a new one.  Nothing flashy with it either, it is the generation 4 iPod, right before it switched over to color and became more complicated.  Now, would I LIKE a new iPod? Sure, but I would only really want one if I didn’t purchase it, and it was atleast 20 gigs like the one I have now is.

So before you go out and spend a whole lot of cash on a new iPod because you think you’ve lost yours forever, try this and see if it works!  Any questions, comments, feel free to ask!

**Automaticable, Apple, and the poster are in no way liable or responsible for any and all damages caused to your iPod, Car, or self, or anything else when trying any and all “violent” techniques in hopes to remedy the sad iPod face from the MP3 player.  Reader and User try these techniques AT THEIR OWN RISK.


Mar 10 2009

Dell Mini 9 Netbook: Ubuntu Linux Version

Tag: hardware, linux, open source, technology, ubuntuKyle Wegner @ 7:01 pm

After much anticipation, my new netbook (which I got a screaming deal on) was delivered this afternoon. It’s a Dell Inspiron Mini 9 Netbook with Ubuntu Linux, though this version of Linux is slightly different than your standard install. While it is technically Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy), it has its own interface which I will do a walkthrough of below, outlining all the differences I can find between this Dellbuntu (my own term) and a standard Ubuntu install.

This screen shot walkthrough will look at the unedited, uncustomized Ubuntu install on my Dell Mini 9. I’m sure I will do plenty of customization down the road, but for now you get the virgin version.

The Standard Desktop

ubuntu home screen on dell mini 9

The desktop is very clean and appealing to start off with. There are no folders or icons on the desktop itself, which will be quite a surprise for anyone coming from a Windows environment. The large bar across the top is called the Launcher and presents most of the essential programs in a graphical interface. Below are shots of each tab individually.

The Entertainment Tab

ubuntu entertainment tab

While this menu has the typical Music Player (Rhythmbox) & photo manager (F-spot), this is the first time we really see the net-focus on the netbook. Having a specific icon for LastFM shows the imporantance of working in the cloud…which is essential since the Dell Mini 9 comes with only 4GB of memory standard.

Also, notice how I had to specify that the music player and photo manager have actual names. Dell has completely debranded most default programs, which we will see more examples of soon.

The Games Tab

ubuntu netbook games tab

The games tab has many of the typical Ubuntu games so there isn’t a whole lot to discuss here, however there are a few things to note. First, and most disappointing, is that Wormux, my favorite of the Ubuntu standard games, is not included in this install. I’m not sure why they would do that while adding Potato Guy instead! Let me tell you, potato guy is one of the most annoying and pointless “games” I’ve ever run across. Stay away!

The Learn Tab

Dell netbook learn tab

I don’t know who came up with the Learn tab, but I don’t think I’ll ever seriously use it. I guess the Japanese Study Tool and Stellarium might be good for a handful of people, but these do not seem like programs that were worth including in a default install. Actually, more interesting than that is the fact that all of these programs have Kubuntu-style names in the normal programs menu. What this means I’m not sure.

The Productivity Tab

netbook productivity tab

The productivity tab includes all the default OpenOffice.org programs, plus a handy folder called “Dell Contract.” Of all things I want in a quickstart menu like the launcher, I DEFINITELY want fast access to my Dell Contract at all times. Thanks Dell!

The Web Tab

netbook web tab

The web tab is probably the most interesting of all, which is to be expected from a netbook. Can you tell who Dell partnered with to bring netbook services to the Mini 9? Let me spell it out for you…Yahoooooooooo! Not only do they have an entire quicklaunch section dedicated almost entirely to Yahoo pages, but the “Web Browser,” or Firefox, defaults to Yahoo.com for the home page, has the Yahoo Toolbar installed, and defaults to Yahoo search from the quick search bar. While I have no problem with companies partnering with each other to do promotions, Mozilla is largely funded by Google search which is shown by defaulting the Firefox home page & quick search bars to Google. Without this funding, development for Firefox in general would be at risk. But this is an issue for a separate post.

The Keyboard

While the entire set of hardware behind the Dell Mini 9 Netbook is interesting and generally super high quality, what is worth sharing the most is the keyboard.dell netbook tiny keyboard

This keyboard is super tiny, but also extremely functional. My one problem, which I have yet to get over, is the positioning of the apostrophe/quotes key. Dell moved it from its normal position next to the colon key to the bottom row next to the left arrow. See it? Yeah, that will take some getting used to.

That’s it for now. I’ll update if I find anything else that stands out from typical Ubuntu installs. Until then, let me know if you have any questions in the comments and I’ll get back to all of them asap.


Jan 03 2008

Reconsidering Nvidia

Tag: hardwareScott Wegner @ 3:16 pm


So, I’ve had nVidia video cards in just about every computer I’ve worked on to date. Geforce has always been known as cutting-edge; the standard for any graphics-intensive user. But I think things are changing.

Now, I don’t have a very in-depth background in the real trade-offs in video cards, or the specific differences between Nvidia and other cards– my background has been almost purely installing drivers, and their basic features. But this is the core functionality in any card, the bottom line that needs to work on any standard install. And this is where Nvidia has dropped the ball.

I recently made the switch to Linux with a laptop and desktop that both have Nvidia cards. Now, video drivers from Nvidia are all proprietary and therefore discouraged in the Linux community. However if you want to do cool things– like use desktop effects)– a lot of cards require that you use the closed-source driver rather than the free one. The switch is pretty simple, but in my experience, it’s a trade-off between eye-candy and stability. There are a number of known-bugs in the proprietary driver that cripple features like sleep/suspend, multiple X sessions, and in some cases, it still crashes with compiz.

But obviously things are better on Windows, right? That’s where the user base is, so basic configurations should be well-supported. Not exactly. Upgrading to Vista with most Nvdia cards was a huge fiasco when Vista came out, and I believe it still is for some cards. Also, Nvidia has dropped support for most of its older cards. That means no new drivers, and a wild-goose chase even looking for older ones. It has come down to hacking the new drivers to “support” older cards.

Enter ATI. To me, ATI carries a connotation of being a step below comparable Geforce cards. But recently, their Radeon line has come a long way. But the big news is that ATI recently opened up the source to their video drivers. This can only mean good things. On Linux, it means that the ATI-created drivers can be shipped by default, and better supported. On all platforms, it means faster bug-fixes and better stability in general.

So the bottom-line is, I’m still stuck with my Nvidia cards. But, perhaps Nvidia can take a page out of ATI’s book for their support. If things don’t change, I think ATI is going to take the upper-hand in the next few years.