Please pardon our appearance…
The sidebar on my old theme broke down for some odd reason, so here’s an ugly default one in the meantime.
The sidebar on my old theme broke down for some odd reason, so here’s an ugly default one in the meantime.
If you want to restrict a Facebook app to only certain people, you can do so with the “if-is-group-member” tag. Say you are developing an app for your company, Dunder Mifflin, and you only want employees of the company to be able to use it.
First, create a group page for your company. Make it invite only or require the approval of the admin. Then have all the employees join the group and approve them. Find the group’s ID. Look for the gid. It should be displayed in the URL, like so:
http://www.facebook.com/#!/group.php?gid=326245025742&ref=ts
So, the gid for my group is 326245025742. Put this in your app’s code:
<fb:if-is-group-member gid="326245025742"> [ content of you app here & corresponding logic ] <fb:else>Sorry, you must be an employee of Dunder Mifflin!</fb:else> </fb:if-is-group-member>
This morning, I finally got the chance to unbox and test out the newly-released WD TV Live. The WDTV boards have been abuzz with rumors of a mid-October launch since at least May. In light of all the anticipation from WD fans, it’s really puzzling how WD bungled this golden PR opportunity. Many current WD owners and home theater fans have been looking forward to the WDTV 2’s release for months. Amazon had the product listed for pre-order for a few days, then it mysteriously disappeared.
The WDTV Live quietly sneaked into Best Buy over the weekend. Tipped off by forum posts, I ordered mine online on Sunday and went to pick it up yesterday. Visually, the box is almost identical to the original WDTV. It’d be hard to distinguish at a glance if the 2 boxes were put next to each other on the shelf. Inside, the contents are almost exactly the same, only with the additional of component cables. The remote and everything else is the same.
The WDTV2 is not light years ahead of the WDTV 1. It doesn’t add a host of new features. The core features and sleek interface are mostly the same, but it does offer what the WDTV user community has been asking for for a long time. The two major shortcomings of the WDTV have been addressed here, namely lack of network connectivity and lack of DTS downmixing.
I’m happy to report that both features work wonderfully, making the WDTV2 something to be excited about for those of us wanting to build a simple and inexpensive home theater network. The WDTV2 comes with an Ethernet port for wired connections, but most of us wanted built-in wireless (another commonly-requested feature). I am also very happy to report (and surprised) that wireless connectivity works using a WiFi dongle! I had a wireless N key (AirLink USB) sitting around from when I tried to hack the WDTV into a wireless device (and failed). I plugged it right in to the WDTV2, changed the network setting and it saw my share right away (DLINK DNS-321).
I streamed a few MKVs off, each encoded with various audio codec, including AAC, AC3, and DTS. DTS downmixing works flawlessly. 1080p videos now play, which the WDTV couldn’t do. With wireless connectivity out of the box and DTS downmixing, the WDTV2 is now truly portable. You are now free to put it anywhere in the house that has a WiFi signal. This is a major plus for me. With the WDTV, I had to constantly copy files to an external HDD, some of which were 6+ GB and take 20-30 minutes. Now I can stream these movies off my NAS from the living room without any cords cluttering up the TV stand.
Video previews are a new feature. If you pause over a filename for a second or two, a preview will start playing in the right column. The other view options are list view and thumbnail view.
YouTube videos played perfectly, without any noticeable buffer time. I didn’t try Pandora or Live365, since I’m not interested in listening to radio through my TV. One thing I would like to see is something like a WDTV Live Channels guide which would be a list of video sites divided by category. This may possibly be added with a future firmware upgrade. Currently, you can only go to YouTube, but there is a wealth of other video streaming sites available that could be opened up to the WDTV2 user. This would add a lot of value to the device. RMVB playback would also make the WDTV2 extremely attractive to users who download a lot of content from China/Singapore/Malaysia, as a lot of the videos from this region are encoded as RMVB. Hopefully this is something WD can include with a firmware update.
Overall, I am extremely happy with this device. It retains all the features that made the WDTV such a success and builds on them, but offered at the same price as the WDTV when it first came out ($119.99 from Best Buy) . Kudos to WD for making the device support wireless third-party dongles instead of a proprietary WD one.
Questions and comments welcomed.
EDIT: My blog commenting is currently broken. If you want to contact me, it’s zombiedoctor at gmail.
I love documentaries and came across what I thought would be a documentary about sleep. It is NOT.
Well.. that’s all I can think of for now…
1. On the back of every pay-per-ride Metrocard is an expiration date, so pay attention to when it expires. If you have an expired card that still has money on it, don’t fret. You can take it to a subway agent and have the balance transfered to a new card. This happened to a card I had in my pocket and forgotten about.
2. What to do if you have $0.05 or $0.10 left on your card? Don’t throw it away either, like a lot of people do. This is how the MTA gets free money from riders. Don’t give them the satisfaction.
You can do either of 2 things: merge several cards together, or keep filling the card with more money. If you’re paying by cash, you’ll have to refill it until the balance becomes a whole number of rides again. But if you’re paying by credit or debit card, you can add any arbitrary amount to the card, not just whole dollar increments. E.g., you can add $3.17 or $0.18… To merge the balance of 2 of more cards, just take them to a ticket agent and ask.
The Metrocard is a very wasteful design and I see them littered all over the place. People just use them and throw them away, often on the floor. There’s no incentive to refill, so it’s more garbage going into the landfill. I refill until the card becomes faded.
Today I downgraded by NAS from 1.06 to 1.05. I got fed up with 1.06’s bugs and non-functionality. Problems included:
Downgrading fixed the first 2 above problems, but now my fan is always on. I am not sure if problem #3 happened in 1.05 or is new to 1.06.
Before updating the firmware, you may wish to remove your drives, or do a backup. I was nervous about this since the last time I installed a new drive, the NAS lied to me and said all my data on the existing drive would not be touched. It went ahead and formated both drives! Needless to say, this caused much unhappiness.
I’ve always had an interest in plants since I could remember. Maybe I owe it to my public school teachers. Every year in elementary school, we got seed catalogs in the spring. We ordered our seeds and a month later, they arrived. One year, we all planted them in cut-open milk cartons and placed our pots on the classroom window sill.
Well, anyway, fast forward 20 years or so and I’m in Japan. I saw a plant growing on the side of a house, along the road, with beautiful, round red and orange fruits resembling cherry tomatoes. They looked so tasty, so I took one and popped it in my mouth. I took a bite and instantly knew something was wrong. It was not sweet and juicy like I expected. I don’t remember what it tasted like, but I knew right away something was wrong. I spat it out immediately and spat a few more times for good measure. Good thing too, because today, I learned the name for them: Jerusalem Cherry (Solanum pseudocapsicum). They are a member of the nightshade family and poisonous!
We have some of these plants around the house. I had forgotten this incident until today. I’ve been learning about different edible weeds and have been sampling a few plants.
What is the point of this whole story? There’s none really… just be careful about what you put in your mouth. A lot of plants look similar, so watch out.
I have a love-hate relationship with my D-Link DNS-323 NAS (network attached storage device). Most of the time, I love it. It just sits there quietly, downloading torrents and generally playing nice with the other computers on my mixed PC/Mac home network. It now even works as a DLNA server after re-installing Twonky Media Server. I can stream movies and music directly off the device to my PS3 and Xbox 360.
Then there’s the times when I really hate it. Like the time it REFORMATTED MY MAIN DRIVE when I installed a second drive even though the screen clearly said all my data on the first drive would remain intact. I lost over 60 GB of data. If you are installing a second drive, make sure you have all the data from the first drive backed up!!
Problem 2: Sometimes, it’ll lock me out of the BitTorrent web management page on random occasions, forcing me to reboot it. I can still access the web configuration page to reset the device, but can’t manage my torrents. When it reboots, all the torrents have to be checked again before resuming, which can take up a lot of time.
Problem 3: With firmware 1.6, a lot of people are also getting complete lockout of the web manager. They can’t even get to the reset page, so they have to do a hard reboot by powering the unit off manually. When trying to access the IP address of the NAS, you get this:
Access Error: Site or Page Not Found
when trying to obtain /web/login.asp
Cannot open URL
You can read more about the problem here. But chances are, if you’re seeing this error and you’ve found my page, you already know what the symptoms are.
I think I’ve isolated the issue. It started happening when I stuck in a second drive. Before that, I don’t remember ever having this issue, even with the 1.5 firmware. I can say for certain that having a second drive in there causes the NAS to go bat-shit. I experienced this several months ago, took out the second drive and was problem-free afterwards. I decided to put the hard drive back in last night and the problem came back.
I do not think it’s related to drive size. I have a 250GB in slot 1 and a 500GB in slot 2.
My friend Mary found this children’s ABC book of people and nationalities, written in 1901 by T. W. H. Crosland. A is for Arab, B is for Boer, C is for Chinaboy… Crosland was probably English, as the letter E is particularly flattering.
As a product of it’s time, it’s funny to see. Most of the letters are benign or even cute, but some are pretty racist by today’s standards. Like J for Japanese (”little Jap”) and K for kaffir. The author probably thought he was being progressive or fair-minded, if grossly inaccurate or stereotypical. He takes many artistic liberties for the sake of a rhyme:

Russia is noted for its tar
its leather, and its great white Czar
Caviar would’ve kept the rhyme with czar and would’ve been factually correct too. Thanks Mr. Crosland, for spreading ignorance to a generation of children.
U is for United States. Americans are portrayed as bustling industrialists and millionaires living in 20-story buildings.
And from a web geek’s perspective, the interface is not user-friendly.
While the page flipping animation is nifty, it quickly wears out its welcome and leads to a bad user experience. There’s no way to bookmark a particular page, or copy the URL to send to a friend. You cannot go to a particular page if you wanted to. If you’re on page 30 and want to go to page 2, you have to click the book 28 times.

These are can crushers outside my neighborhood Key Food, a New York area supermarket chain. You can take your cans and bottles here to get back your 5¢ deposit. Rubberized rollers inside the hole suck the can or bottle in and spin it around for the laser eye to read the UPC code. I tried these today with some old cans in my recycling bin. They’re quite a lot of fun to operate. Any can with a valid CRV (California Redemption Value) gets kicked to the left by a mechanical arm and where it goes CRUNCH. Any can that doesn’t gets kicked to the right and falls back down to the reject bin. Not all cans with CRV’s redeem. The machine rejected Pepsi cans and Monster Energy drink.
In the past, these machines gave out coins as refunds. At some supermarkets, Pathmark in particular, this led to some unpleasant shopping experiences as homeless people congregating around the redemption machines with giant bags full of cans and bottles. Now they print out paper receipts which can only be used towards groceries in the store. A little LCD strip shows you how much you’ve redeemed. Once you’re done, push the little green button and a receipt comes out the slot to the left. Today I got back 50¢ and brought home some bottom round roast and a giant 16 pound Butterball turkey.
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