On this page
Recent Posts on Technozone
This site
Calendar
<June 2013>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
2627282930311
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30123456
Archives
Categories
Microsoft MVP
Blogroll OPML
Disclaimer

Powered by: newtelligence dasBlog 2.0.7226.0

The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.

Send mail to the author(s) E-mail

Theme design by Craig Pringle

Based on the essence theme by Jelle Druyts

The Tablets I Want to See#

Following on from my previous post speculating that the netbook wave could lead to renewed interestimage in slates, there are a couple of discontinued devices I would really like to see revisited.

HP – word to the wise. 

  • Take the TC1100 form factor.
  • Put in an Atom processor.
  • Add Capacitive Touch to the active digitize.

Instant success.

Another vendor that – I think – could do something similar is Motion.  You have the LS800 design, and it was a great design.  But it suffered heat problems.  Refreshing the LS range with an Atom powered machine would be great.

Friday, January 30, 2009 9:39:40 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
Comments [0]  | 

 

Could the Netbook Craze revitalise the Slate Tablet?#

There is no doubt in my mind that the building wave that is the netbook craze is going to renew interest in tablet an touch technology.  Windows 7 provides a really nice tablet experience and is much more touch aware than Vista was.

We are also seeing something in the netbook craze that I think a great thing for all mobile PCs.  Lots of competition.

The Atom processors provide excellent performance and battery life, but they don’t seem to suffer the same heat problems.

Could it be that the planets are aligning for not only more tablets, but perhaps even more slates?  I think maybe the answer is yes.  The critical question is one of demand.  Is there demand for slate devices, particularly in the consumer space?

There is certainly interest – remember the interest sparked last year when it was revealed that an enterprising user was making a tablet out of an eee PC

And there is interest on the manufacturer side as well.  In December Fujitsu announced its first new slate in quite some time.

I hope we will see a revival of the slate form factor.

Friday, January 30, 2009 9:27:29 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
Comments [2]  | 

 

Why is Live Mesh killing my Processor?#

The Live Mesh process, moe.exe,  is hammering my CPU.  The screenshot below shows this – an average of 51%!  Moe.exe’s usage is the yellow line on the CPU graph.  You can also see that even though it is hammering the CPU there is no moe.exe network traffic.

image

Something tells me moe.exe is about to get killed off…

image

That’s better, but I’d rather figure out why this is happening so I can keep Mesh running.

Friday, January 30, 2009 8:55:20 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
Comments [3]  | 

 

HowTo – Mount an ISO in Windows 7 (and earlier)#

While I was pleased to see that there was, after a fashion, native ISO support in Windows 7 as I’ve previously noted it does not go far enough.  I have been seeing in my blog’s logs lots of referrers coming from searches for the likes of “Mount ISO in Windows 7”.

Here’s the bad news – Natively, you can’t. 

Here’s the good news – the key word there was natively.  You can mount ISOs in Windows 7 and previous versions of the OS, you just need to use a third party tool to do so.

My ISO Mounting tool of choice is Virtual Clone Drive by SlySoft.  I like it because it is light weight and easy to use. It is also free – but that is not a reflection on quality.  It is an excellent advert for SlySoft’s paid offerings like CloneDVD.

After downloading and installing Virtual Clone Drive (and I find rebooting is a good idea) you will find that you can mount an ISO file just by double clicking it (if nothing else is associated with ISO files) or by right clicking it and selecting Open With > Mount file with Virtual Clone Drive.

image

Once mounted the ISO will show up as another DVD drive in Explorer.  If autorun is enabled this does, of course work as well.

There is also a management application where you can add additional virtual drives or change the UI language.

image

Don’t ask me what the Virtual Sheep do – but it is a checkbox I’m sure some of my Aussie mates would tick ;)

According to the website Virtual Clone Drive supports the following Operating Systems:

Windows 98/98SE/ME/2000/XP/XP64/VISTA/VISTA64

I have found it runs fine on Windows 7 build 7000.

Friday, January 30, 2009 8:36:13 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
Comments [2]  | 

 

Creating a Homegroup in Windows 7#

On the weekend I rebuilt my media centre with Windows  build 7000.  This brought the number of Windows 7 machines in the house to four.

Now that I had the Media Centre it was time to investigate one of the cool new features that Windows 7 brings to the party. This is a feature that will be of particular interest to a specific type of mobile user – the kind that takes their work mobile PC home and wants to make use of the resources – such as printers – and media that on other machines in the house.

In Vista this is a pain.  Typically the home PCs are not in a domain and each machine has its own set of accounts.  Sure they are all on the same Wi-Fi network but if you want to do anything that involves one of the other machines you need to authenticate.  In practice this means that if you want to print something that is on the printer connected to the desktop in the study then you will be prompted for a username and password and you need to use an account that is on that particular desktop.  Similarly if you want to access the media on your media centre PC in the lounge you browse to a share and you are prompted to log on, which you do with an account from that machine.  The alternative to this credential chaos in Vista is anonymous sharing which significantly reduces the security of your home network and, IMO, is not a good idea.

Enter the Homegroup.  The homegroup is a new concept in Windows 7 that lets you establish a trusted relationship between the machines that you use on your home network by configuring a shared secret on each machine in the homegroup.  On each machine you configure what you want to be shared with the other machines in the homegroup.  Once this is set up you can access the specified content on the homegroup machines without authenticating each time you do it.  Very clean.

In order to set up a homegroup your machine needs to have the network type for the active connection set to Home.  If it is Public (the default) or Work then you cannot create a homegroup.  Assuming you have set your network location to home the process for creating a homegroup is as follows.  Click the images for larger versions.

In the Network and Sharing Centre click the Choose homegroup and sharing settings link as shown below.

image

Then click the Create Now button.

image

Specify what you want to share – below are the defaults.

image

The wizard will generate a secure password.  You can change this after the fact – but I think it is good that a random one is generated as this is likely to result in a more secure password than one that is easy to remember.  And you don’t need to remember it – you configure it once on each member of the homegroup and then forget about it. (note that this is not actually the password I ended up using – I’m not that stupid).  Click finish and your first computer is set up.

image

Back in the Change homegroup settings you can view or change the password after you have created it.   For instance if you add a new netbook to your collection months after initially setting up the homegroup – you can view the password from any of the PCs that are already in the homegroup.  If you do need to change the homegroup password you do it by clicking the Change the password link.

image

This gives a a screen that more or less says “Are you sure? This will completely break your current homegroup and you will need to change the password on all the members”   Click on the change the password link to proceed.

image

This will generate a new complex password.  However unlike the initial creation you can choose not to use the autogenerated one and type your own.  The little refresh button will generate yet another complex password (which I did after taking the screen shot below – again not that stupid)

image

Once you have create a home group on the first machine, you then need to join it from the other machines on the network.  This is a simple matter of making sure the machine’s network location is set to home and then clicking that Choose homegroup and sharing settings link in the Network and Sharing centre.  This time t.  he machine will detect that a homegroup has already been created on the network.  Click the Join button and then enter the password when prompted.  Repeat for each machine you want to add.

Once this is all set up the content you are sharing from each machine is available via Explorer:

image

Via Media Player

image

And even in Media Centre, which allows one media centre to play content that is actually on another media centre in the house.  Here we have media centre running on my tablet accessing the music library on the Media PC in the lounge.

image

All and all this makes for much simpler sharing between machines on your home network.  It is set and forget and it just works.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009 9:56:07 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
Comments [2]  | 

 

OK – I was wrong about Twitter#

Until the other day I had avoided Twitter.  I didn’t see the point.  I didn’t understand where it fit in the already crowded and vastly overworked traffic jam that is my attention span. 

What happened the other day to change that?  It’s quite simple really – I was bored and I had a couple of minutes to fill.  I jumped over to Twitter and created an account.  I am now thegoodcraig on Twitter

So why was I wrong about Twitter?  I thought it added no value to the tools I use to manage my social network now.  Live Messenger, Skype, email, LinkedIn, a plethora of RSS feeds and my own blogs (aka the blogoshpere) are pieces of this puzzle.  What could Twitter add?

So far I have only started following a handful of people but I have already learned there is value there.  Twitter brings back some of the conversation that use to be in the blogosphere, but was drowned out by comment and trackback/pingback spam. 

The asynchronous of Tweets lets you keep in touch with people you know well in a way that can be quite challenging with real-time tools like Windows Live Messenger and Skype in a global community.  Because tweets tend to be more personal than blog posts the interaction is on a different level as well.

The pull nature of the content also makes it easier to keep tabs when you don’t have time to reach out and keep in touch.  Twitter does add value.  I was wrong.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009 9:46:09 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
Comments [0]  | 

 

Windows 7 Search is a little more tablet friendly#

Way back when Windows Vista shipped one of my favourite features was the Search box in the start menu and in Explorer. 

Unfortunately it was a bit unwieldy when you were using the pen.  I found this really annoying and even had a go at writing a proof of concept application called SearchPad to try make Vista Start Search and Explorer a little more pen friendly.

The Windows 7 Beta makes this a little better.  When you click in a the search field in the start menu and launch the tip your pen strokes are recognised and inserted into the search field as you write – often even before the recognition result appears in the TIP itself.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009 9:15:35 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
Comments [0]  | 

 

pZing and Tablet PC development#

We’ve had some guests staying with us for a week or so and tonight I am catching up on some of my feeds  from the past week. 

My good friend Nick Randolph, in a post about the Self Publishing Service pZing, points out that Dr Neil’s excellent eBook on Tablet PC Development is available for download from pZing.

Another book that was recently published via the pZing service was Dr Neil’s Tablet PC Development eBook:

pzing Getting Started with Tablet PC Development

If you would like to get into tablet and touch development but don’t know where to start this is well worth checking out.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009 8:06:37 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
Comments [0]  | 

 

Windows 7 Beta Installed#

I’ve downloaded and installed the Windows 7 beta – I currently have it running on my Toshiba M750, which I use as my main machine.  It looks fairly similar to the M3 build – but with a bit more of the eye candy implemented. 

There are a couple of hot tablet features I’ve spotted already – I’ll be blogging more on those over the next couple of days.  For now I better head off to bed as I have a wedding to attend tomorrow.

Friday, January 09, 2009 7:27:02 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
Comments [0]  | 

 

Say No Clean Feed Australia#

I'm not Australian - but I live in Australia and as such I am an Australian Internet User.  I have to agree with my friend Chris on this one...

I am a little surprised that there has not been more noise made about this.. thought I would do my bit as I am a totally against internet censorship..

The Australian Federal Government is pushing forward with a plan to force ISPs to censor the Internet for all Australians.

Like Chris I am totally against censorship.  Apart from squashing my civil liberteies, this is a hairbrained scheme at best and won't work...

No Clean Feed - Stop Internet Censorship in Australia
Saturday, January 03, 2009 6:26:39 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
Comments [0]  | 

 

Windows 7 and Hosted Exchange Issue#

For those of you who may be running the M3 build of Windows 7 and using either hosted Exchange or accessing a corporate Exchange environment via Outlook Anywhere (nee RPC over HTTPS) there is an issue you may run into. 

When you try to open Outlook you are prompted for credentials.  With most hosted Exchange providers you use your email address as the username.  If you do this on Windows 7 (M3) I have found that you are repeatedly prompted for your credentials but no matter how carefully and correctly you type your password it just keeps prompting you. 

If you run into this issue try entering you username in the DOMAIN\Username format instead of your email address.  I don't know why this works, but I know it does for at least two Hosted Exchange providers.  Contact your hosted provider if you are not sure what the domain name is.

Saturday, January 03, 2009 5:57:37 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
Comments [12]  | 

 

Good news while holidaying#

I'm holidaying with family in NZ and I just got the news that I have been renewed as a MVP.

Microsoft MVP

This is great news and - as always I am thrilled to be honoured and I am humbled by the exceptional caliber of my fellow MVPs. 

Thanks very much to Microsoft - I look forward to another year as a MVP.

General | MVP
Friday, January 02, 2009 5:59:24 AM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00) #   
Comments [0]  | 

 

All content © 2013, Craig Pringle