The Wampus Cat

2009/07/22

Use The OS X DVD That Came With Your Mac To Install Boot Camp Drivers in XP.

Filed under: macosx, technology — The Wampus Cat @ 13:25

We got a new MacBook Pro 15″ at work. I have been trying to install Windows XP SP3 on it with Boot Camp and was having some annoying problems with driver support. I’d do the Boot Camp Assistant stuff in Mac OS X (partitioning the hard drive), restart and install XP SP3 from its CD (taking care to format the Boot Camp partition in the Windows installer!), restart, put the Mac OS X Leopard retail DVD in the drive, run the Boot Camp Drivers Installer, restart, and nothing would happen. No hardware support for anything (not wireless, not the display, not sound, zip).

I reinstalled Windows once and reinstalled the Boot Camp drivers a bunch of times from the retail DVD. Nothing.

Somewhere on the internet just now (I can’t remember where, unfortunately), a single sentence fixed it. “Use the install DVD that came with the computer.” I uninstalled all Boot Camp stuff from the Retail DVD, popped in the DVD that came with the MacBook Pro, and magically, everything is working.

2009/07/14

Mystery Ranch, Put to the Test

Filed under: hiking — The Wampus Cat @ 15:13

What happens when you give 20 guys drip torches and tell them to burn as much as they can.

I mentioned Dana Gleason’s Mystery Ranch backpacks in a post the other day. Here’s a story attesting to the quality of their packs written by a member of a hotshot crew in the Southwest.

The USPS, Your Box and You

Filed under: internet — The Wampus Cat @ 13:11

Delivery Confirmation Screenshot

I get packages all the time. I buy a lot of stuff on the internet. I always ship USPS because I live in a building where UPS, FedEx and DHL can’t get access to the lobby without you personally being there to buzz them in. The Postal Service, though, does have access to the lobby because that’s where they deliver our day-to-day mail. FedEx/etc. will either leave a notice that they stopped by, leave the package outside the door (on the street) or if you’re lucky, show up just as someone is entering or exiting the building, and they’ll pop it inside. A notice is a tough one, because good luck getting them to reschedule the delivery when you’re actually home. It’s a better bet to go get the package, which entails a bike ride somewhere and negotiations to get your package from the distribution center.

But the non-USPS carriers at least have package tracking figured out. The package tracking number tells you where your package is (or last was scanned) at all times, and is updated in real time. The UPS driver drops off your box to you and as he’s driving away you run upstairs and refresh the tracking page, and it says “Delivered.” The USPS does not work that way, or rather, sometimes they do. There are two different tracking-related products they sell: Tracking and Delivery Confirmation. Tracking is only available on more expensive shipping options (Express), Delivery Confirmation is generally available.

The above screenshot is from the delivery confirmation page for something I was expecting to arrive today. The package wasn’t there when I left the house after 7:15am, and it wasn’t there when I went home on my lunch break just now to go get it. Where is it? Well, as I discovered, “Unit” doesn’t mean your house. I’m not the first one to think it does. It turns out “Arrival at Unit” actually usually means arrival at the distribution point for the delivery zip code. For me, that means my box got to the 47th Street Post Office on Cottage Grove at 7:15am this morning, and is now roaming the greater north Hyde Park, south Kenwood area. It may show up today. It may show up tomorrow. This is the price you pay for Free Super Saver Shipping. (I think the confusion is probably still worth the ~$14 I save, especially now that I know what to expect.) More information on the USPS and their tracking and confirmation options is available in an eBay Guide here.

Switch Users in Bash

Filed under: technology — The Wampus Cat @ 11:29

bourne-4

You can switch users in bash by typing “su username” and entering that user’s password. It sounds so familiar that I bet I knew it once and then forgot it. [Image from UGO Movie Blog and maybe one person will understand why I chose this image.]

2009/07/13

Brent Humphreys and His “Project Le Tour”

Filed under: cycling, design — The Wampus Cat @ 16:58

Labrador with Hat

Project Le Tour is a really awesome project by photographer Brent Humphreys. I’ve seen some of these images before but they’re even better the second time. And you can’t look at that site without reading this interview with Brent. If you’re in Austin, you can see these in person at Mellow Johnny’s until July 31st. [The photo is "Labrador with Hat", number 34 on the Project site. Picked this up on A Photo Editor on RB's Google Shared Items.]

What to Do About Chimpanzees

Filed under: environment, politics — The Wampus Cat @ 14:10

24chimps.1.650Here’s an older article from the NYT written by Charles Siebert about the state of research performed on chimpanzees in the US today, and what happens to them after they are no longer needed for that research. It raises some interesting questions and is worth a read. [Photo from the article; via wndrflu]

Filed under: cycling — The Wampus Cat @ 12:17

10279282.jpg

“The most stirring photo of the Tour so far.” [via Competitive Cyclist]

2009/07/10

Keep It Simple! (Coffee, that is)

Filed under: design, food-and-drink — The Wampus Cat @ 13:36

cm6a

So. I usually brew coffee in a Chemex, of Pittsfield, MA, that I picked up right down the street here in Hyde Park at the Freehling Pot & Pan Company. I think they’re quite beautiful. JPDM’s dad brews coffee in one, has for years, and now so does CJR. (You can buy them here.)

CCD_withcoffeefrontMED

I found this great filtercone coffee brewer on Sweet Maria’s this morning. I’ve been buying things from Sweet Maria’s of Emeryville, California for years now. When it comes to coffee, they really know their stuff. They have all kinds of information on roasting, brewing, and drinking coffee (I myself only have experience with the latter two). Their site is a real goldmine. I have a filtercone coffee brewer too, they’re cheap and simple, and don’t generate much waste if you use a reusable filter. (The benefit of the one pictured above over mine is that you can hold the hot water in the filter with the grounds for the recommended 3-4 minutes, rather than just pouring it through. Better coffee that way.)

maestro_plusI picked up my coffee grinder from Sweet Maria’s a few years ago, the Solis Maestro Plus burr grinder. Solis is now selling them as Baratza’s, but they look just about the same. This is a tremendous grinder, I’ve never had a problem with it: perfect grinds for drip and french press, and the grinder itself feels very well constructed. Sweet Maria’s has them. [Solis photo from UltimateCoffee.net]

zass.151MA

If I was in the market for a new grinder though, there’s no doubt in my mind it would look a lot like this. It’s a Zassenhaus hand-cranked burr grinder. No electricity required. J’s got one like this one, it’s great. (Again! Sweet Maria’s sells ‘em.)

The world of making coffee is huge, even before you get to espresso and home-roasting and the rest of it. I like simple drip coffee, but there’s something to be said for electric drip coffee. The best coffee I’ve ever had was made in Clover vacuum machines, there’s one such machine at Z&H in Kenwood (just north of Hyde Park on 47th Street) and a bunch at Intelligentsia (which used to be a Chicago thing but I now here is the place to go in Los Angeles). There are some vacuum coffee makers for your house, I’ve never tried them but they look great. And then, the new darling of coffee devices, the Aeropress. I’ve never used one of these either, but they’re supposed to be the most anything can turn coffee making on it’s head for about $20. Good coffee makes you happy. It’s not expensive to make, and it’s fun. Go buy some coffee and get to it!

On Backpacks

Filed under: design, hiking — The Wampus Cat @ 12:49

Picture 1Just like my dad, I have a sturdy collection of outdoor gear. I have a few things left that I could pick up (like a SVEA stove and a way fancy 4-season tent, but probably more like a way regular 3.5-season tent), but really, I’ve got it all. There isn’t much point to go to the outfitter any more except to get rope or more little Nalgenes, or find a new place to walk around in the woods.

Some things I have a lot of, like backpacks. I spent my childhood using Dana Design packs. My dad swears by them and he has a small collection at home in Vermont now. I came of age in the lightweight / disposable gear era (where you buy new backpacks every few months because the old ones have separated into their constituent parts, not to point any fingers). I have gone through four backpacks that became either unrepairable or so complicated to repair that I just couldn’t figure it out. The first big pack that I myself owned was an Osprey, shortly after their manufacturing moved to (I believe) Vietnam. The internal frame on that broke after 4 months, I tried to fix it with duct tape but it’s a pernicious problem and that pack doesn’t get much use any more. The Osprey had a single point of failure, these packs seemed to be points of failure themselves. One thing that never ripped was the shoulder straps; everything else was fair game. This type of backpack is pretty cheap, and I guess many people regularly replace this style of pack. That doesn’t make a lot of sense to me, we’re supposed to be behaving ourselves so that everyone can enjoy the outdoors way into the future, not enjoying it now ourselves fast-and-light and generating a lot of waste throwing something out that is produced quite far away.

So, Dana Designs, pre-K2. Their Bomb Pack is really good looking, durable and heavy. The material holds together so even if you do rip it, someone as unskilled with thread and needle as I am can fix it pretty easily. Dana Designs, of course, is gone now, but Dana Gleason is still making packs under the Mystery Ranch marque, a lot of them made almost completely or completely in the United States, and all nice, like this one.

I opted for packs that remind me a lot of the old Bomb Packs. I wound up with two that will last me the rest of my life, made by hand for me by Randy Rackliff in Jackson, New Hampshire with the Cold Cold World label. We talked it over last summer for a while and I got a big box in the mail one day containing a Chernobyl and an Ozone. The Ozone is my every day pack, I load it up for work, take it to the Dunes, use it as a carry-on and as an overnight pack. It’s made of thick black Cordura, 1000D all around. The only things wrong with it are my fault for not specifying (the top needs to be removable). The Chernobyl is the only backpack I use for hiking any more. It’s amazing. It fits well, is very durable, and is blaze orange. The whole pack. I am never mistaken for a deer any more. For longer trips, it won’t be appropriate, it’s just not big enough, but for anything up to 4 nights, you couldn’t ask for anything more. Both packs are the exact opposite of disposable. I would highly recommend them (other people feel similarly about packs Randy has made them).

And as for the picture above, weird stuff pops up on eBay all the time. That picture is of one of the rarest backpacks I’ve ever seen up for sale, one of Warren Chouinard’s Basically Absurd Technologies rucksacks. Easily 35 years old and it looks to be in great condition. Naturally it’s got a Buy-It-Now price of $350, but for good reason. Someone out there will get a piece of history, the rest of us can just get a look. Be sure to check out the BAT single point hammock the seller has a photo of, as well. Amazing!

2009/07/06

The Stella Ring

Filed under: cycling — The Wampus Cat @ 14:14

From PezCycling

Let’s go ride here. PezCycling in the Stella Ring.

[via the Competitive Cyclist blog]

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