Archive for June, 2009

Sour Apples

Eighteen months old. That’s the age of my wife’s laptop – the MacBook Pro that we were going to bring with us on vacation. Turns out the day before we leave, all video output ceases. Kaput.

Interestingly, one of the symptoms (we’ve been told) of this NVidia processor is the computer randomly shutting down. We had that happen a couple of months ago. Something Apple did (or maybe it was just pure luck on their part) made the random shutdowns occur so infrequently (it only happened twice after getting it back) that we felt it was worth the occasional trouble compared to the hassle of the Apple store and their “genius” bar.

I have a feeling that unless you press the issue (and you know you’re affected – see the KB article) that they will try to delay it in hopes that they don’t have to pay for the repairs that they already publicly admitted the need for.

So we’re out a laptop for this trip. Maybe that’s for the best. More time with friends and family – less time blogging and flickring. I’ll still use my iPhone for tweets, though.

– UPDATE –

Apple accepted full responsibility for the defective manufacturing and repaired the laptop’s motherboard. They even replaced the DVD drive that had been acting wonky since we got the laptop! Because of the problems we had experienced with the laptop and because it has been essentially replaced we offered to buy the extended apple warranty. They refused, saying that if we didn’t buy it before the one-year deadline then we can’t buy it at all. Too bad. They could have made some extra money.

Resolutions

I was looking for the top three most used monitor resolutions – pixel width and height – for making desktop wallpapers in my flickr stream. It dawned on me that knowing the three most used pixel counts weren’t as important as moderately high resolution images in the correct format ratios.

Here are the top three as of June 2009.

  1. 1024×768 ( 1:1.33)
  2. 1280×1024 ( 1:1.25 )
  3. 1280×800 ( 1:1.6 )

For example, the MacBook Pro supports 1440×900, which is the same dimensions as the 1280×800. Although there will be some scaling, the 26% difference of area between the two shouldn’t cause enough stretching to make the image unpleasant as a desktop background.

The Internet Paradox

The Internet is a paradox. All technology is, but to keep from generalized statements – the Internet is a paradox. I’ve been told that any element’s strength is also its weakness, so I’m prepared to look through this at both angles.

1. The internet draws the world closer together. I have a friend at work who is able to communicate with his friends in Jordan through Skype. Like the Jetsons they can video chat from thousands of miles away. I know another couple who’s separated by leagues of ocean between the United States and the United Kingdom.

The paradox: The internet pushes away human interaction.Thirty years ago it was unheard of for psychologically healthy citizens to lock themselves up in a room alone for fifteen hours without physical human interaction … even without food – they would be called hermits. Some people have noticed this problem and created sites to help people regain their physical humanity through what’s called a meet-up.

2. The Internet drives the market towards greater global business opportunities. I have no idea how international business interactions took place before the Internet without plenty of money and an interpreter. Today I could open a web store, tie in a free interpreter and start selling product to Sweden in less than a week.

The Paradox: People have learned to be skeptical of businesses and the consumerist is actually empowered to drive the market down. Where the big business practice was to treat the customer as good as the cow, viral videos (such as “Supersize Me”) has provided a means by which businesses suffer consequences for their parasitic actions. This in turn backfires because big government, lobbied by these large businesses, create regulation that kills off all the smaller ones.

3. The Internet makes information more readily available. At no other time in history has there been such a wealth of information across the globe – readily available – instantly available.

The Paradox: Lies spread faster than truth. Pages like Snopes have become a mainstay and students who think Wikipedia has the same credability as the Encyclopedia Britannica are sadly mistaken.

4. The Internet is my friend. You meet people who are friendly, and you open up to them with your life story because of the anonymity you think it provides.

The Paradox: On the internet, nobody knows you’re a dog. Neither do you know if the person you’re talking to is one… or worse! Internet perverts and stalkers are literally out to get our children by the throat. The lure has never been so pervasive or perverted.

5. Internet based education! I can get my college degree in communications without leaving my home!

The Paradox: Think about it … a communications degree … without face-to-face physical interaction with your professor. Hope you can speak “woof” (see #4).

Don’t get me wrong. I love the internet and the wealth it provides – but something it can’t provide amidst all that knowledge is wisdom. And wisdom demands direct interaction between man and God – then with man and his fellow men. Noah, through his fear and respect of God’s authority, was obedient. The interaction he had with his family saved their lives as well. Noah didn’t build the ark completely by himself, either.

Our world is decaying in moral stature and compassion. In the 1920′s great depression, people housed strangers because they understood the power of many working as a unit. They struggled, but they made it through. Today, our mantra of looking out for “number one” drives people to desperation and daycare houses turn into meth labs. It’s no surprise that the sudden singleness and single-mindedness that the Internet meme has caused leads to people trying to find way to care for themselves without asking others for help … or just as bad … being denied help from others because everyone is so wrapped up in themselves to see the larger picture.

Just as much as the Internet represents one of the greatest feats of mankind – a modern day tower of Babel, it also represents one of the precursors to the greatest downfall of the human race.