Moving to hosted blog software? [update]
I am thinking about moving my blogs to a hosted blog software service like Wordpress.com or blogger.com. This would reduce the amount of work that I would need to do to keep the software up to date. Currently, I need to manually upgrade my installation of WordPress when ever a new version comes out, or if new versions of the plugins are made available.
Also since don’t have the ftp server enabled on my server, this would make adding/upgrading plugins a lot easier.
I am leaning towards WordPress.com, as it is an easy export of my blog into that server. (I have already done this.) I would just need to pay $10 to have my domain pointed to their servers.
Update: I am going to stick with running WordPress on my own server. There are several things that are missing from WordPress.com:
- You can’t have a custom permalink format
- You can’t upload themes or plugin (Adsense and Bad Behavior plugins are not available)
- If I don’t want their ads, I need to pay an extra $30 a year.
Windows Media Center Setup
I have now been using my Windows Media Centet setup without cable television signal for a few weeks now, and I am pretty happy with it. I am not missing anything not having a cable source. This is the description of my setup.
Over the Air Content
HDHomeRun
We are using a HDHomeRun Dual for our ATSC source. The HDHomeRun allows me to keep the antenna in the attic, and the PC downstairs, without having to run a antenna drop down the several floors. It will also be possible for us to add an additonal HDHomeRun if we want to add extra tuners. The tuners on the HDHomeRun can also be used on other computers in the house, though I am not currently using that feature.
My recommendation for anyone using an HDHomeRun is to use Gigabit Ethernet for the drop between the main network switch and the Media Center PC. When recording two 19Mbs ATSC streams, you will want to leave enough network bandwidth, so if anything is happening on you network, the video quality is not affected. For example, on our Media Center I want to make sure that I can record two shows, while the Media Center is backed up, movie that is stored on the Windows Home Server is being watched one the Media Center, and some recorded content from the Media Center is being watched on one of the Media Center Extenders.
I was seeing some degradation of video quality when using 100 Mb Ethernet, but haven’t had a problem since upgrading to Gigabit Ethernet. I haven’t upgrade my whole network to Gigabit, but that isn’t a problem as most of the other devices can barely saturate a 100Mbs drop. Read more
CloudBerry Backup for WHS [updated]
HP appears to have dropped support for their online backup add-in for Window Home Server, HP created their online backup software for the ex47x and ex48x MediaSmart servers, but now are promoting other backup services for their current line of servers. Their add-in used Amazon S3 for storage. I have used JungleDisk on my desktop machines to backup, so I am pretty used to that storage system. But since it that HP probably not continuing development, I wanted to find a solution to have an offsite backup for some of the files on the server, that would continue to be supported.
I am trying CloudBerry Backup for Windows Home Server. This is very similar to HP’s online backup add-in and the old JungleDisk Windows Home server. CloudBerry lets you pick any share or a connected drive to backup. Also you can set a time range when backups can happen.
I did have a problem after setting this up. I has some paths on some of the shares that were too long for Windows (These were copied from my linux computer). When CloudBerry encountered this error, it listed the error in the error email that was sent.
I will probably pay for CloudBerry Backup once the trial is over
tubeCore
A few weeks ago, I installed our networked ATSC tuner, and I disconnected our Comcast cable feed. This has been working great, as we are able to get our network shows over the ATSC tuner, and movies and older shows over Netflix streaming. The one thing that was missing is recent shows on cable channels.
I mentioned before several solutions on getting access to Hulu content in Media Center. vmcPlayIt allowed you to play content from a PlayOn media server, but the UI didn’t look good at all. Then there are solutions that let you launch Hulu Desktop, like HuluDesktopWMC and Hulu Desktop Integration, but those have problem when switching back and forth between the applications.
tubeCore appears to be the best solution. It is similar to vmcPlayIt, where it connects to a DNLA server like PlayOn, but the UI is a lot better. The other good thing about tubeCore is that it is compatible with Media Center Extenders
HDHomeRun for Media Center
As I have mentioned before, I am looking to cancel our cable TV service. This weekend I purchased a HDHomeRun Dual network tuner. The HDHomeRun is an ATSC and QAM tuner that you connect to your network. You are able to access the tuners with any Mac, PC or linux computer on the network.
I installed it in our attic, where our networking panel is, and the installation was very easy. All I had to do was connect the antenna cables and connect the tuner to the network. When I installed the software on one of my computers, I was able to scan for channels and make sure that the antenna was pointed in the right direction.
I was then able to install the tuner software on our Windows 7 Media Center. The tuners were instantly recognized, and the Microsoft’s program guide had all of the data for those channels. The quality of video is very good. I can tell that the video is not as compressed as it is through Comcast. Read more
Setting up D-Link DAP-2553
Our Airport base stations were starting to die. Every once in a while, the basestations would still broadcast the SSID, and wireless devices could still connect to them but wouldn’t transmit any data to our wired network. Since this was happening to both our Airport Express and Airport Extreme base stations, I assume that there was something, either on the wired network, or some RF interference that was causing them to lock up.
I took this opportunity to upgrade to a 802.11n base station, so I bought the D-Link DAP-2553. This was one of the few dual-band, non-router, base stations. Once I set it up, things have been working a lot better than they were with the Apple base stations.
Avast! antivirus and HP Time Machine support
A while ago HP added Time Machine support to their MediaSmart servers. I have mentioned previous problems getting Time Machine to back up to the server. Since I had to restore the server, I had to re-setup the Time Machine drive.
This time I was having a hard time creating a volume large enough to back up all of my data. The disc image creation would fail and state that there wasn’t enough space on the server, even though that there was plenty.
In this post I mentioned that I was trying to uninstall Avast! antivirus and see what would happen. It looks like Avast! was preventing me from creating a disc image large enough. I believe that the scan was causing the reads to time out on the Mac, so the process just stopped.
Removing Avast! Antivirus from Window Home Server
I was having a problem creating some large disk images on my Windows Home Server from my Mac. I thought that the Avast! antivirus could be causing some problems with this. So I decided to try uninstalling it, and seeing if I could create the files. Unfortunately, attempting to uninstall it from the Add-in screen of the Windows Home Server or from the Add/Remove Programs from the Control panel failed.
This post has a some steps that worked for me to uninstall Avast! antivirus. It looks like the disk image creation is also working better without Avast!, so I probably will not reinstall it.
Sending links via Gmail using Chrome
This page has a javascript that makes it easy to send the url for the current page in Chrome as an email using Gmail.
I did have to modify it to make it work for my Google Apps for Your Domain account. I just had to modify
mail.google.com/mail/
with
mail.google.com/a/{your domain}/
[via Lifehacker]
Music format support on Nintendo DSi
Today I bought a new microSD card for my phone. My son also wanted a SD card for his Nintendo DSi. He wanted to use it to put music on for playback. So I figured that I would give him the 2GB card that was I was using in my phone.
When I copied some mp3 files to an SD card, and they were not playable. It looks like the Nintendo DSi only plays AAC files. On their web page they link to the Nero software where they sell it for $6. You can do the same thing for free with iTunes.
