More Product Plugging
Posted by KTK

I had another major computer disaster this past week, and still haven’t resolved it. I’ve lost days of work, and possibly completely tanked one important project. I finally completely lost my shit and awoke from a trance to find myself standing in my living room vigorously miming punching Bill Gates repeatedly in the face while making little grunting noises. (Tgirsch had some smart remarks to make about that but I think it’s perfectly understandable.)

So I took the plunge and decided to set up a Linux system - all the caveats notwithstanding. From what I know, the current Ubuntu distros are stable and offer a choice of usable GUIs. Still a few bugs in the system, but wireless Internet (Tgirsch’s concern) is not my current problem. My biggest worry was MS Word compatibility - I like Open Office despite its slightly weird interface, but it really only emulates Word about as well as any “emulator” does, meaning that formatting gets significantly futzed when you move files from one to the other, as I often have to do. But when Windows ate its own registry and refused to boot - and MS’s Web site confidently encouraged me to copy the old registry file onto the corrupted one to fix the problem, not stopping to realize that you’d have to boot the computer to do it!*, I just gave up. Anybody who wants to trust themselves to Word and the rest of Bill Gates’s demonspawn is welcome; I’m bugging out.

So I started looking around. A friend suggested to me Everex’s new $200 Linux computer - a decent system at an outstanding price. It retails through WalMart, whom I didn’t want to patronize, and also through an outfit called ZaReason, who build customized Linux systems at good prices. But when I checked ZaReason’s Website, I immediately got seduced by the slightly higher-priced systems they build themselves, which are much more powerful than the Everex. I couldn’t find quite what I wanted so I e-mailed their tech support address, and got a response (on the weekend!) from their CTO himself. (I suspect he’s actually the entire tech-support office, but that’s still awfully good service.) He made some useful suggestions and alerted me to an upcoming offer they were just about to release that would be an even better deal than what I had been looking at. I thought that was great, and got ready to order one.

By coincidence, however, while I was waiting for the new deal to show up on ZaReason’s Website, I stumbled across a discount ad from Dell. This week only, they’re offering $350 off any “Inspiron 531″ system retailing for $1,000 or more (go here, configure the system however you like, and enter discount code 4J1M7748R2RRV6 at checkout; you also get free shipping and a $100 gift card for future purchases). By judicious juggling of product options, I was able to put together a screaming system that far outpaces the ZaReason configuration and comes with a boatload of accessories and peripherals as well. Of course, it also comes with Windows Vista, and they won’t preinstall all the Linux OS and apps that ZaReason loads to your specifications for you for free. Too bad. But it’s got a huge hard drive, so I figure I can partition it and set up a dual-boot system, thus still being able to boot to Windows if I absolutely have to, but with lots of room for Linux as a main configuration. And, the 19″ flat-screen that comes with it is selling on eBay for over $150, and I already have a better monitor of my own, so, I see a way I can recoup almost a quarter of the expense of this system, coming out within $50 of ZaReason’s price for a much more powerful setup.

It also means I’ll have to install Ubuntu and all the apps myself, so if you don’t hear from me for a few days, send somebody by my apartment to make me stop shadowboxing and screaming “Torvalds! I’ll kill you! . . . “. But that’s not what I wanted to write about.

I actually felt guilty not buying the Linux vendor’s system, and I e-mailed the CTO guy back to thank him for his input and explain the special offer Dell was making, and ask if he thought I was overlooking anything by not buying from him. I assumed he’d give me some line about “build quality” or something, but in fact he wrote back and said flat-out that it was a good deal, and that if I thought I could handle the install myself, it was a better system than they were offering for the price.

I thought that was very honest and fair, and was impressed. After dithering around a bit more and comparing options, I finally bit the bullet and bought the Dell system - paying (of course) a good bit more than I’d originally intended, but coming away with a hell of a lot of computer for the money. Out of some weird sense of loyalty I wrote back to the ZaReason guy again, thanking him again for his input and explaining that I’d felt I couldn’t pass up the Dell offer, but that it had been a close call. I didn’t expect to hear back from him, but I wanted him to know I had regard for his company. I also didn’t expect him to care what one single customer did, or why.

Today I got another e-mail back from him, congratulating me on getting a good deal and suggesting a Website I could go to for help in doing the Linux installs! Yep - he wrote me a goodwill note for buying someone else’s product, just because I got a good deal, and then went out of his way to be helpful in getting it set up!

Now, that is just too goddam cool. Go buy something from them.

*No, I didn’t have a backup, or a boot disk.**

**Yes, I think installing and configuring a complete Linux system from scratch should be perfectly simple for someone with no experience who’s too dumb to make a Windows boot disk.

November 20th, 2007 | General, Economics, Technology | 5 comments

EBooks Getting Closer
Posted by Kevin

Yes, this is not the most attractive thing in the world, but the Kindle looks like a very good evolutionary step in the ebook reader. It appears that it has web browsing capabilities, so that you also get an internet appliance for the cost of only the reader, since the service is free to users. Since the service is free to users, I doubt it is a complete internet experience, but it might be good enough. I have seen e-ink screens in action, and they really do look good quality paper, if a bit gray. Browsing through the store, it seems to have a very good number of books, including quite a few by my favorite authors(thought none of the O’Reilly technical books, a serious hole in their offerings in my opinion), at less than 10 dollar prices, sometimes even less than paperbacks. The magazine subscriptions, at least, look cheaper than their paper counterparts, though I need to examine that further. Charging for rss subscriptions is dumb, but if it does have web browsing capabilities, then you don;t need to worry about that. Finally, it has search an annotation capabilities, along with a built in dictionary and complete access to Wikipedia. Those are features that ever ebook reader should have as a bare minimum requirement (I’m looking at you, Sony).

I understand the objections of book traditionalists. I and my wife are readers, and our children, thankfully, are turning into the same. I appreciate the advantages of real books, and the emotional attachment to real books. Books don’t run out of batteries. Their DRM doesn’t die or get updated to an incompatible version. They don’t break when you drop them, or become unusable when they get a bit damp.

But I have over 500 hundred books — and that count is from before the birth of our children. I shudder to think of the number now. I am a programmer, so I have dozens of pounds worth of technical references at my various desks. I have countless folders of meeting reports, technical specifications, etc from my work. It would be wonderful to store all of those items in the future someplace compact and portable like the Kindle.

I am not completely sold on this. I would want confirmation that I can store the Kindle books off the machine, in case of hard drive failure. I would want to confirm that the internet access is really complete and completely free. I would want to confirm that I could print out the contents of their proprietary files (a tech spec for a new project that I cannot get off my Kindle once I have gotten to the meeting city isn’t terribly useful to me). I would want confirmation that the free conversion service is reliable, even if a bit slow. I would like to know that the book prices are going to largely stay in the 10 dollar or less range.

I don’t like the price. But if I get five years of good use out of the thing, then as long as I don’t lose any of my books, the convenience alone would make it worth it. And if this is a real internet appliance on top of it? Thats makes the calculus all the better.

I cannot know for certain, because I obviously cannot try one out (that’s a hint Amazon. Surely, the power of a blog with, umm, hundreds of readers, must be worth something?), but it looks as if Amazon may have moved the ball considerably on ebook readers.

November 20th, 2007 | Technology | 4 comments