Monday, 30 August 2010
I have just ownership of the new Samsung Galaxy S, and have to
say I am impressed. I was due for an upgrade in April, but the HTC
Desire just didn't seem to gel with me, particularly because I knew
that the Samsung was due. I was very happy with my previous (then
current) Samsung SG-i780, so I decided to wait.
First impression were fantastic. The phone i packaged in a sexy
black box with silver embossed writing.
As for the phone - thats even sexier, nevermind the 1Ghz
processor, the 5.....
Posted by Andrew at 11:08 PM
Leave comment
Tags:
Open Source | Phones | Samsung | Technical | Android
Monday, 19 July 2010
Last month, I
wrote about my problems with syncing my windows mobile phone
with Outlook 2010 64-bit. I tolerated this, on the hope that it
will be corrected/remedied at some point. Added to that it did not
directly affect my ability to get my work done. The second issue is
a lot more troublesome as it is effecting my ability to get a job
done. For some reason, when shipping the 64-bit office, Microsoft
decided to not upgrade their common controls to 64-bit
(MSCOMCTL.OCX). As a result of t.....
Posted by Andrew at 10:15 AM
Leave comment
Tags:
Microsoft | Technical
Friday, 04 June 2010
Recently, after upgrading my Office to Outlook 2010 64-bit, I
plugged my phone in to my standard weekly sync with my Outlook, and
up popped a message along the lines of "wrong outlook client". At
the same time the sync (or lack thereof) process deleted all my
contacts from my phone. After a very quick search I soon dscovered
that this is a known problem between WMDC and Outlook 2010 64-bit.
The official statement from Microsoft is this:
Question/Issue
"Windows Mobile Device Center (WMDC).....
Posted by Andrew at 08:34 AM
Leave comment
Tags:
Microsoft | Phones | Technical | Windows Mobile | Office 2010 64-bit
Wednesday, 02 June 2010
My Vodacom contract has recently come up for renewal, and as
usual I started the process of searching for a new phone. My
current phone is a Samsung i780, which has served me extremely well
over the past two years. As I have been very happy with Samsung, I
first looked at what new Samsung had to offer me. Their smartphone
replacement on the Windows side is not bad, but with no touch
screen, is not really useful (why they did this is beyond me). I
was initially focusing my attention on phon.....
Posted by Andrew at 03:37 PM
Leave comment
Tags:
Open Source | Phones | Samsung | Technical | Android | HTC | Vodacom | MTN
Tuesday, 29 September 2009
Over the past couple of months, I have painstakingly avoided any
articles related to Windows 7. My daily RSS feed, lifehacker,
seemed to be particularly enthralled with all the new features. I
did not have the time to "play" on a virtual server, and not
wanting to install a beta or pre-release software as my primary
operating system I simply ignored all of these articles.
The other day, however, we acquired some new laptops and I found
myself in a bit of a quandary with regard to.....
Posted by Andrew at 11:32 PM
Leave comment
Tags:
Microsoft | Technical
Monday, 31 August 2009
With the price of terabyte level storage media coming down
significantly in the past few years, we decided it was high time
that we setup a network backup server. In reality, the price of a
computer and storage is marginal in relation to the cost of losing
the data that i am rather embarrassed we have not done it
sooner.
Not wanting to invest in software, and also wanting to keep OS
size down to a minimum, we decided on Linux as an OS. Since we had
a copy of Ubuntu 9.04 on disk,.....
Posted by Andrew at 08:30 PM
1 comment
Tags:
Linux | Open Source | Technical | Network Utilities
Friday, 07 August 2009
EDIT: I see SAGNS has updated and improved their website since
this article (edited: 15 September 2009)
A while back, while working on a rural settlements database, we
were asked to consider the SAGNS database as a reference for
settlement names. The data that we received was, to put it mildly,
very poor. Locations were in the sea, in the northern hemisphere,
in South America and for 50% of the database - nowhere at all.
added to that, the alphanumeric data was full of mistakes a.....
Posted by Andrew at 10:40 AM
Leave comment
Tags:
Data | Government | Technical | Web
Thursday, 30 July 2009
a bit late, but I read a very interesting article - the anatomy of the twitter attack,
outlining exactly how a twitter employee was recently hacked.
Baiscally it boils down to the hacker using the Gmail password
recovery which emailed the password to that Gmail account users
secondary mail account. When requesting the password recovery
tool, Gmail offers a reminder as to which email account it is
in the form of *******@h******.com. The
hacker then guessed it to be a hotmail.....
Posted by Andrew at 08:24 PM
Leave comment
Tags:
Technical | Security | Web | Hacking
Thursday, 30 July 2009
A couple of weeks ago, I read an interesting article about Ekahau Heat Mapper through my RSS subscription
to Lifehacker (article here).
Ekahau offers a range of features depending on the version you
choose (from Free to Survey professional). From their website, the
primary features are listed as:
"Ever wondered how far your wireless goes, or how far do the
neighbouring wireless networks extend to? Ekahau HeatMapper will
display the coverage area of all the access points in the .....
Posted by Andrew at 05:07 PM
Leave comment
Tags:
Technical | Wireless | Network Utilities | Wi-Fi
Wednesday, 17 June 2009
We are busy on a project that requires the application to be run
on a windows 2003 server running Apache 2.2 as the primary internet
server. Since IIS can run PHP applications, I figured that Apache
would run dotnet without any problems. As it turns out there is a
module for running dotnet application. It is however not very well
supported and you have to make sure you get the Apache 2.2 version,
which can be found here
http://sourceforge.net/project/platformdownload.php?group_id=.....
Posted by Andrew at 08:10 PM
Leave comment
Tags:
Apache | asp.net | Open Source | Technical