David's Warm Blanket of Technology

I wrap myself in the warm blanket of technology.
I am lover of tech and believe that tech all tech, business, needs to server the user. That is why I don't hold to just one technology. I love Windows, Apple, Linux, or WebOS.. Its all good.
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  • Smart #pup #glasses #dog #intelligencebeyondbelief ##smart #bichon

    Smart #pup #glasses #dog #intelligencebeyondbelief ##smart #bichon

    • 1 month ago
    • #instagram
    • #photos
  • Always a Seattle classic.

    Always a Seattle classic.

    • 1 month ago
    • #instagram
    • #photos
  • The Bar at the #geekwire awards

    The Bar at the #geekwire awards

    • 1 month ago
    • #instagram
    • #photos
  • Zoidberg our savior #emp #futurama

    Zoidberg our savior #emp #futurama

    • 1 month ago
    • #instagram
    • #photos
  • Me and Robby the robot at the EMP

    Me and Robby the robot at the EMP

    • 1 month ago
    • #instagram
    • #photos
  • EMP

    EMP

    • 1 month ago
    • #instagram
    • #photos
  • STOP SCROLLING

    So I convinced my mom to buy me the work at home system at http://bit.ly/RUVEXF because it was cheap as hell, and I wanted to try making money online. I made $190 in like 3 hours. It seemed too good to be true so I stopped doing it to see if they’d actually pay me.

    This arrived yesterday:
    So I spent the past 9 hours grinding hard yesterday and made $850… this is surreal and I am so fucking excited. You guys need to break out your credit cards or get your parents to do it and buy this http://bit.ly/RUVEXF (I know I posted this yesterday but it’s my good deed of the week to keep reblogging it, plus I found a cbs article talking about it. Get it while the getting is good! Article: http://bit.ly/RUVEXF )

    • 9 months ago
  • thisistheverge:

These Are The Complete Blueprints For The iPhone 5 | via Cult of Mac
Get the high-res PDF of the blueprints here.

    thisistheverge:

    These Are The Complete Blueprints For The iPhone 5 | via Cult of Mac

    Get the high-res PDF of the blueprints here.

    Source: cultofmac.com
    • 9 months ago
    • 86 notes
  • 
And Now Let Us Gasp In Astonishment At What Just Happened To The Newspaper Business Henry Blodget, businessinsider.com
Tech/Media
Over the past decade, lots of big news­pa­per com­pa­nies have gone bust.
But when you take a look at what’s hap­pened to news­pa­per adver­tis­ing over that peri­od, it’s a won­der they all haven’t.
Below, via Mark J. Perry and B…

    And Now Let Us Gasp In Astonishment At What Just Happened To The Newspaper Business
    Henry Blodget, businessinsider.com

    Tech/Media

    Over the past decade, lots of big news­pa­per com­pa­nies have gone bust.

    But when you take a look at what’s hap­pened to news­pa­per adver­tis­ing over that peri­od, it’s a won­der they all haven’t.

    Below, via Mark J. Perry and B…

    Source: futuramb
    • 9 months ago
    • 32 notes
  • Wrapping myself in the warm blanket of technology…. And loving it!

    Wrapping myself in the warm blanket of technology…. And loving it!

    • 9 months ago
    • #geek
    • #profile
    • #techlove
    • #nerd
    • #obsessed
  • My dog has been up to no good!

    My dog has been up to no good!

    • 9 months ago
    • #baddog
    • #dog
    • #funny
    • #guilty
  • undercovercoffee:

Day 10- Decided to try and get a girls name today, so I had to start with a very strange one! This one definitely got some interesting looks, but I have to say the best reaction wasn’t even in Starbucks at all. It was in my first class of the day, as I was drinking the coffee. A girl in the class came up to me after class and said “I didn’t know Hermione drank coffee!” 

    undercovercoffee:

    Day 10- Decided to try and get a girls name today, so I had to start with a very strange one! This one definitely got some interesting looks, but I have to say the best reaction wasn’t even in Starbucks at all. It was in my first class of the day, as I was drinking the coffee. A girl in the class came up to me after class and said “I didn’t know Hermione drank coffee!” 

    Source: undercovercoffee
    • 1 year ago
    • 2 notes
    • #Love this!!
  • bigBrains.com Is Self Aware

    BigBrains.com has been around since 1992. I have been posting on and off about different technology interests of mine.  recently, I have been looking at ways of making bigBrains.com a much more robust source of up-to-date tech news. To that end, I have highly automated, and jokingly say made “self-aware”, bigBrains.com and the twitter feed @bigBrains.

    please check them out.

    • 1 year ago
  • This is so great.  It brings a little tear to my eye.  I remember coding on a monitor just like this.  
joshuatopolsky:

Older but awesome.
jstn:

This is a VT220 serial console (circa 1983) set up as a terminal for my Mac Pro (circa 2010), a nerdy dream I’ve had for a long time that I finally made a reality yesterday.
Some quick history: in the early days of office computers, it was rare that you would actually have one on your desk.  Instead there might be a central mainframe (running Unix) and everyone would have a terminal that connected to it over a long serial cable or modem connection. One computer, many users.
The terminal has a keyboard and monitor, but it’s not a full computer and worthless without the mainframe.  It’s more like a teletype machine, all it can do is display the text sent to it (like a paperless printer) and send text back.  It doesn’t have any knowledge of pixels or colors or graphics of any kind.
In modern times we don’t have mainframes in the average office, but Unix is more prevalent than ever.  It runs on the servers delivering this page and the iPhone in your pocket. For developers and power users the command line has never gone away, but instead of a dedicated hardware serial console we have Terminal.app, which runs in a convenient window alongside all our other windows.  The software is just emulating the old hardware, though; the protocols haven’t changed much in 30 years.  The Unix underpinnings of OS X still have all the stuff required to use a real serial terminal.
I’ve always thought those old terminals were beautiful, and I’m not the only one—there’s a Mac app called Cathode that does a convincingly wonderful job simulating vintage terminals, using OpenGL to degrade things into a nice analog haze.  But it’s not quite the real thing.
Hardware terminals regularly crop up on eBay for around $100.  They’re actually still used in a lot of places (old warehouse systems, supermarkets, banks) and there are still companies that support and refurbish them.  Back at Vimeo we discovered one abandoned in a server closet when we moved into the office.  Finding one isn’t a problem, the main challenge is stringing together the right adapters to use an ancient serial port with modern USB.
My biggest source of information getting this going was Paul Weinstein’s post about setting up an Apple IIc as a terminal for his Mac mini (which is similar, but not quite the same since the IIc still has to emulate the terminal in software).  I got the same USB-to-serial adapter, a Keyspan USA-19HS ($27), which has Mac drivers that I can happily confirm work well with 10.7 Lion.  I also needed a null modem cable ($7) and 25-pin female/female gender changer ($4).
At first I used the same method as Paul to get it working, gluing together the terminal and OS with a utility called screen.  As Paul notes, this is less than desirable.  It still requires you to open a software terminal to make the connection, and you’re still operating through a layer of emulation.  On most Unixes you can simply add a line to /etc/ttys and everything just works via getty, but apparently this has been disabled in OS X since 10.5.
Eventually I found this page, which explains the problem and how to fix it.  After adding a line in /etc/gettytab to manually set the terminal type to vt220 everything works perfectly!  A real hardware terminal directly connected the old fashioned way, with no emulation.  Awesome.
If this is something you want to attempt yourself please drop me a line; I learned a lot about how terminals work over the last couple weeks and the final result is quite satisfying, a soft amber glow and one less window on my desktop.  It’s also a nice reminder that we didn’t get to where we are overnight, user interfaces and software development have been evolving in an unbroken chain for a long time and some of the old ideas are so solid that they persist 30 years later. Why not use the proper hardware?

    This is so great.  It brings a little tear to my eye.  I remember coding on a monitor just like this.  

    joshuatopolsky:

    Older but awesome.

    jstn:

    This is a VT220 serial console (circa 1983) set up as a terminal for my Mac Pro (circa 2010), a nerdy dream I’ve had for a long time that I finally made a reality yesterday.

    Some quick history: in the early days of office computers, it was rare that you would actually have one on your desk. Instead there might be a central mainframe (running Unix) and everyone would have a terminal that connected to it over a long serial cable or modem connection. One computer, many users.

    The terminal has a keyboard and monitor, but it’s not a full computer and worthless without the mainframe. It’s more like a teletype machine, all it can do is display the text sent to it (like a paperless printer) and send text back. It doesn’t have any knowledge of pixels or colors or graphics of any kind.

    In modern times we don’t have mainframes in the average office, but Unix is more prevalent than ever. It runs on the servers delivering this page and the iPhone in your pocket. For developers and power users the command line has never gone away, but instead of a dedicated hardware serial console we have Terminal.app, which runs in a convenient window alongside all our other windows. The software is just emulating the old hardware, though; the protocols haven’t changed much in 30 years. The Unix underpinnings of OS X still have all the stuff required to use a real serial terminal.

    I’ve always thought those old terminals were beautiful, and I’m not the only one—there’s a Mac app called Cathode that does a convincingly wonderful job simulating vintage terminals, using OpenGL to degrade things into a nice analog haze. But it’s not quite the real thing.

    Hardware terminals regularly crop up on eBay for around $100. They’re actually still used in a lot of places (old warehouse systems, supermarkets, banks) and there are still companies that support and refurbish them. Back at Vimeo we discovered one abandoned in a server closet when we moved into the office. Finding one isn’t a problem, the main challenge is stringing together the right adapters to use an ancient serial port with modern USB.

    My biggest source of information getting this going was Paul Weinstein’s post about setting up an Apple IIc as a terminal for his Mac mini (which is similar, but not quite the same since the IIc still has to emulate the terminal in software). I got the same USB-to-serial adapter, a Keyspan USA-19HS ($27), which has Mac drivers that I can happily confirm work well with 10.7 Lion. I also needed a null modem cable ($7) and 25-pin female/female gender changer ($4).

    At first I used the same method as Paul to get it working, gluing together the terminal and OS with a utility called screen. As Paul notes, this is less than desirable. It still requires you to open a software terminal to make the connection, and you’re still operating through a layer of emulation. On most Unixes you can simply add a line to /etc/ttys and everything just works via getty, but apparently this has been disabled in OS X since 10.5.

    Eventually I found this page, which explains the problem and how to fix it. After adding a line in /etc/gettytab to manually set the terminal type to vt220 everything works perfectly! A real hardware terminal directly connected the old fashioned way, with no emulation. Awesome.

    If this is something you want to attempt yourself please drop me a line; I learned a lot about how terminals work over the last couple weeks and the final result is quite satisfying, a soft amber glow and one less window on my desktop. It’s also a nice reminder that we didn’t get to where we are overnight, user interfaces and software development have been evolving in an unbroken chain for a long time and some of the old ideas are so solid that they persist 30 years later. Why not use the proper hardware?

    Source: jstn
    • 1 year ago
    • 1040 notes
  • Gears of Wars 3  (Taken with Instagram at Microsoft Store)

    Gears of Wars 3 (Taken with Instagram at Microsoft Store)

    • 1 year ago
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