To quote Erik immediately after installing iTunes for Windows:
Erik: I just installed iTunes for Windows.
Erik: argghh.. needs a restart
Erik: brb.
Well, at least it feels a little like a Windows app….
Busy making things: @mc, notes, tinycast, github, links, photos.
To quote Erik immediately after installing iTunes for Windows:
Erik: I just installed iTunes for Windows.
Erik: argghh.. needs a restart
Erik: brb.
Well, at least it feels a little like a Windows app….
Frank pointed me to MacMinute’s coverage of the Apple event at the Moscone center in San Francisco. It looks like us lowly Windows users will be getting iTunes after all.
I really want to know how the did it on a technical level: how hard the port was, if they used XCode and cross-compiled, or if they ported XCode to win32. What kind of libraries did they have to port over in order to get things to work. How hard would it be to port other Mac-centric apps (like NetNewsWire!) over to the PC?
I’ll be downloading iTunes for Windows as soon as I can get my hands on a link. Frank points out a load-balanced download link. Get ’em while they’re hot!
Talk about a great day!
Update: Russ threw up the first screenshot. I installed it on my laptop but don’t have many MP3’s on it yet and don’t have connectivity at the moment to buy and download new tunes. I can’t wait though!
In NetBSD news:
Frank van der Linden announced that the NetBSD/amd64 Port is now completely crossbuildable. Please see his message to the port-amd64 Mailing List for details.
I did most of my picture taking at foo camp with my mobile phone. Most of the pictures are on my moblog. I did take a few pictures here and there with my Sony DSC-U20. You can find them at my foo camp gallery.
Some personal favorites: My campsite, gadgets galore, Russ’ hand in my picture, and Halo at 37,000 feet.
I had some extra time to kill before class, so I decided to drop by a Borders on the way. After firing up my aggregator, I found some interesting links:
I apologize in advance if this entry is malformed (from an HTML perspective). I’m putting it together by hand and don’t have a whizzy HTMLArea to double check it.
Click on the image above for a full file listing of my Halo install directory.
In order to get Halo to run correctly on my laptop, I had to first run Halo with the -safemode option in order to tweak the video settings. I navigated to the install directory with my good old standby the dos command prompt. While I was there, I noticed xiph_license.txt as well as ogg.dll and vorbis.dll. Could Halo (distributed by Microsoft Games) be using cool and subversive open source technology?
The answer is “Hell yes” aparently.
The use of Ogg Vorbis in such a mainstream game from such a big company totally rocks. It’s not suprising really, just cool. The Xiph license is BSD-like, so there should be no licensing problems, and MS should not have any issues using it. That’s what the BSD license is for. No politics, just get it out there and use it. Of course Microsoft’s use of GPL software in Windows Services for Unix is more amusing from an open source at Microsoft point of view.
I’d love to know who decided to use Ogg Vorbis in Halo. I wonder if Bungie used it in the original Xbox title or if Gearbox added it in during the porting process. Was it similar to geeks deploying Linux boxes in the enterprise without telling their managers, or was it planned all along?
Regardless, my hat goes off to whomever decided to go ahead and use it.
Pardon the meta-navel-gazing, but I don’t recall hitting the Popdex Top 100 before.
I’m getting ready to hop on the plane. I’m sitting at the gate here at
SFO. There happens to be a closed starbucks about 50 feet behind me.
Luckily they don’t seem to turn off their t-mobile hotspot when they shut
down. This is a good thing, as I have a 2 megabit connection here at the
gate.
Sounds like they’re calling my flight.
It’s going to be weird going from a place like SF which is just awash
with Wi-Fi to the DC area where coverage is spotty at best.
–Matt (SFO, gate 89)
I’m on my laptop. Using Wi-Fi. At McDonald’s. I’m across the street
from Fry’s in Palo Alto. Sometimes technology just RULES!
Sorry, I had to get that out of my system. I’m down in Palo Alto after
doing chowder, Fleet Week featuring the Blue Angels and seeing San
Fransisco with Russ.
It’s been a long but wonderful weekend. I’ve got to head back up to SFO
to hop on the redeye back to the east coast. I’m not looking forward to
that part.
I picked up Halo for $39.99 today at Fry’s. I almost picked up a used
beat Zaurus 5500, but they wanted freaking list price for a beat up one
with all kinds of stuff missing. Oh well.
The best part is that I didn’t pay for it. I asked if I could purchase
wireless access at the counter or if I had to do it online with Wayport.
The person behind the counter gave me a coupon for free access. I don’t
remember which number it is, but I bought the two cheesburger meal. I
think I’ll get a shake to go.
I’m going to finish my fries and head out, but hopefully I’ll be able
to hop online at the airport. I don’t leave until after 11:30pm PDT and I
don’t get back to DC until after 8:30am EDT. After hearing about Russ’
flight, it does not seem as painful.
–Matt Croydon (Palo ALto, California, in a McDonald’s. Rawk!)
Here is a snapshot of the Rendezvous discoverable sites and servers during the afternoon.
There are a lot of default Powerbook G4’s with Apache displaying the default page.
Of course there are many other rendezvous discoverable services that I do not have access to because I am running the wrong operating system (Windows).
Windows really needs tighter Rendezvous integration. Things like finding local devices, printers, and music could be so much easier if Rendezvous was integrated into the OS.
I already poked Scoble about it via IRC.
I didn’t recognize Doc Searls passed out in the back of the room last night. It was late. My body was still on East Coast time.
Rich Brunner at AMD is giving a quick talk on AMD 64 bit architecture. They’re going to demo the new SuSe running on AMD 64.
Of course, AMD’s x86-64 works in compatability mode for full 32 bit and also long mode, either in mixed 32/64 bit or pure 64 bit flavours. They just extended the 32 bit space by adding another 32 bits to integer registers, as well as adding on to the SSE registers and GPR registers.
They’re going to demo a dual proc 64 bit system with 8 gigs of memory. The default data size is still 32 bits while allowing you to address 64 bits of memory. Code bloat for x86-64 is about 20% more than x86. Not bad. Default data size helps that. The added just two new instructions.
The adoption curve will look like this:
Hammer == K8 == core that’s in an AMD Opteron, AMD Athlon64 and AMD Athlon 64 FX. Got it?
AMD64 == x86-64. Athlon’s marketing department likes AMD64 better. I like x86-64 myself.
Hypertransport is important for speed increases. Memory controller is run at processor clock frequencies. The latency to memory is reduced significantly.
HyperTransport rules. It removes bottlenecks between processor and memory. This is good. Right now it’s clocked at 800MHz, but that will ramp up and increase throughput with it. Hypertransport is point to point. Legacy south bridge, PCI-X 1.0, and eventually a PCI-X 2.0 tunnel. Supports a 2GB/s (8x) AGP interface. PCI-Express.
Hypertransport scales quite well to mutliprocessor systems. With HT, as you add processors, you add memory to hang off them. Each processor has access to their own memory. As far as they’re concerned, memory is globally addressable. Each processor gets three HT links, so it can link to two other processors and an IO bridge, or whatever is neccesary.
Be afraid. It’s easier for your phone to get owned than you think. I’m listening to some Shmoo gurus on Bluetooth discovery.
Finding a device
Bluetooth is spread out throught the spectrum. To find a device, you have to hop around the spectrum sending out requests and waiting for responses.
Pairing
Defaults
Profiles
Embedded Devices
Finding Undiscoverable Devices
A little online note taking.
What is social software?
I’ll be collecting links gathered during the various talks/sessions here:
There is a good collection of people listening to a talk on Rendezvous. It was nice to see a somewhat mid-level discussion of it, and it looks like we’re about to dive a little deeper.
Links:
I am here.
Test to make sure mail-to-weblog still works.
I’m heading to San Francisco in a few hours. I’ll be moblogging up a storm at my textamerica moblog. If I go silent here, check for me at mattcroydon.com/blog (my movable type backup blog).
It looks like Russ will also be in town later this weekend. This is going to be fun.
One of the interesting things that hit me as “way cool” while using Mandrake 9.1 was the inclusion of Zeroconf (aka Rendezvous) in the network setup wizard. You could configure manually, or you could use BOOTP/DHCP/Zeroconf. How cool is that?
I wasn’t able to test Zeroconf out, as I only have aging Mac hardware (one has a G4 processor upgrade though, does that count?) and nothing that runs OS X. There is a Sourceforge project that includes a partial yet working implementation of Zeroconf for Unix/Linux, but it’s really nice to see something like this enabled by default in a Linux OS.
You can download zcip for Unix/Linux, and there is also a Debain package. It appears that Mandrake also uses zcip. A quick googling yields no RPMs for Red Hat, but it shouldn’t be too hard to compile from source. At the time of this writing, I can not access zeroconf.org, but it is/was an informative site.