Tuesday, 13 April 2010

The Spirit of blogging

Yes, its been a while since I've posted here, or updated it at all.

As well as working part time and trying to get a new college course sorted out, I've also been writing video game stuff for Game Attic, which you should totally check out. I haven't had much time to think about this place.

I do want to blog stuff, mainly crap, but its still stuff all the same, so I'm gonna make an effort.
I still need to make the thing look better though, so Im starting now to tear it apart and start over.

Wednesday, 10 February 2010

Why Japan freaks me out



The last one on the bottom right is particularly scary.

Thursday, 4 February 2010

What if the iPad was only 4 iPhones stuck together?


Would be fine by me. At least I’d be a quarter of the way there.

Is he all shook up?

The Failure of Twitter



The Failure of Twitter...
..is? The People that use it. Well, some of them.

Don't get me wrong. I use and do like Twitter a lot. I think it can be a great communication tool, and a very simple one too.

But the Johnny Depp death thing is a prime example of what happens sometimes with Twitter. Some person starts a rumor, and within 40 minutes, the whole world, the ones that use Twitter anyway - know about it, and then re-tweet it. Which makes the whole thing worse. Then the traditional news sources pick it up and the whole thing gets out of hand quicker than a drunk driving a bus. All this, without a single thought about where this actually comes from, and if its true. Its on Twitter though, its must be true!

Wrong.

But, that’s not the worse thing about it. Twitter is now well into the mainstream. It’s no longer for geeks and the very tech savvy Hollywood celebs. Everyone’s on to it now, and a lot of them aren’t that aware of the bad guys in the online world, and what happens if you click a lot of links.
Malware through Twitter is growing. If a lot of people click a link claiming to be something it’s not, it doesn’t take a computer genius to workout the outcome.
So,

  • Check your sources
  • Don’t click shit in a frenzy because you think a Jonas brother has died, your computer probably will, and that’s not cool. Then how you gonna tweet?
  • Don’t believe everything you see on Twitter. They may be slow on the uptake sometimes, but the likes of the BBC, CNN etc are actually viable news sources.
Oh, and for the record, Gene Simmons ISN’T dead either. I would of donned my fake tongue, and KISS make up by now if he was.

Wednesday, 3 February 2010

How to get your O2 Mobile Broadband dongle working with OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard

UPDATE - February 2010: I had written this guide back in 2009 when Snow Leopard shipped, and put it up on my old website. Since then, I've moved host and thought I'd move this along too. I'm not using the dongle anymore, so I don't actually know if the drivers have even been fixed yet, but in any case, this guide will still work. Hope it helps!

September 2009

So heres the deal. With all new operating systems, theres always a certain degree of driver issues out of the box. I had it with Windows XP, Windows Vista (the worst offender) and even OS X 10.5 Leopard. Usually its just a matter of time before the new drivers become available, then they can be easily downloaded and your back in business again. But what if the missing driver means you cannot get online in the first place to download said driver? Ah.



Well it happened to me recently when I upgraded to Snow Leopard. At the moment, I only have Mobile Broadband, (My new ADSL provider gets connected in the next couple of weeks) so I need the dongle provided with it and its drivers to work without fail. My O2 Mobile Broadband dongle worked fine with Leopard and Windows, but crashed when fired up in Snow Leopard.

So after much trolling using my Windows PC, I managed to find a solution and get the Mac back online again.
The solution basically bypasses the Mobile Connect software thats bundled with the dongle and gets it running via Network Preferences..

This will work with any 3G network your on, and works well with most of the HUAWEI dongles -E220/E270/E272/E169G/E160/E180

1) Firstly remove the Mobile Connect program that came with the dongle and then unplug it. Download a new set of drivers from here. Unzip, and install. Simples.

2) Wack the dongle back into your Mac, and wait for the green lights to stop flashing.

3) Next, open up Network Preferences and click the “+" sign in the bottom left to add a new service.
After that, select HUAWEI Mobile from the list on the left and then name your service.

4) Now setup your service by entering a telephone number of *99#, and fill in the account settings as follows: Account Name - o2bb, Password - password. Then, from the Configuration drop down menu, select Mobile Broadband. After that, hit Advanced.


 5) In the Advanced window, select Generic as the vendor then GPRS (GSM/3G) as the model. Enter APN as m-bb.o2.co.uk. If your not using O2, you can enter your own provider's APN, but leave the Account name and Password blank. Leave CID as 1.


6) Click Apply and then hit the Connect button back in Network Preferences, and you should see this:
 

And thats it! Hopefully your connected. Below are some APN's for providers in the UK. Google Mobile Broadband APN's for international ones.

  • O2 - m-bb.o2.co.uk (Account Name: 02bb Password: password)
  • UK 3 – three.co.uk
  • UK t-mobile – general.t-mobile.uk
  • Vodafone UK: APN: internet, userid/password: web, web on CHAP
  • Vodafone UK prepaid: APN: pp.internet, userid/password: web, web on CHAP
  • Vodafone UK pay-as-you go and topup: APN: pp.internet, userid/password: web, web on CHAP

Whats on my iPod #1


Muse's latest album is stunning. One of my favourite albums of the last decade, and I'm constantly playing it. "United States of Eurasia" and "Uprising" are particularly great.