Wait, Nerevar Rising (Morrowind), Reign of the Septims (Oblivion), and Dragonborn (Skyrim) are the same song?
*mind goes kersplat*
Wait, Nerevar Rising (Morrowind), Reign of the Septims (Oblivion), and Dragonborn (Skyrim) are the same song?
*mind goes kersplat*
Great music video!
Nothing to Prove – Geek Girls & The Doubleclicks (by thedoubleclicks)
I love the DoubleClicks
The idea that someone can’t be a geek because of some physical difference or the fact that they identify something differently than others is maddening. Geeks come in all flavors – even key lime!
On a related note, I’ve heard that part of this was filmed at my FLGS here in Mad City. Probably some of the bit at the end.
Great music video!
Nothing to Prove – Geek Girls & The Doubleclicks (by thedoubleclicks)
I love the DoubleClicks
The idea that someone can’t be a geek because of some physical difference or the fact that they identify something differently than others is maddening. Geeks come in all flavors – even key lime!
On a related note, I’ve heard that part of this was filmed at my FLGS here in Mad City. Probably some of the bit at the end.
Vlog 41 – Welcome to Lords of Waterdeep!
Vlog 41 – Welcome to Lords of Waterdeep!
Vlog! I talk about the XBone which is probably a bad idea. It is also not a console. Say what?
Vlog! I talk about the XBone which is probably a bad idea. It is also not a console. Say what?
I’m completely serious when I say that every device that writes to non-simple* storage should have a battery backup.
All of them.
Since I posted a quick five minute vlog about this, I couldn’t quite get in to too many details, so I thought I’d post them here.
As alluded to in the vlog, you need a battery backup because the world isn’t a perfect place. All it takes is one power outage, one cat-based incident, or one klutz of a human to eliminate the power to your computing device**. Losing power obviously would mean that you’d lose anything unsaved, but you also run the risk of losing saved data as well due to something called ‘caching’.
The idea behind caching is simple – you probably use the same concept on a day-to-day basis without realizing it. We’ll use an example. Say you and a partner are washing dishes by hand because some klutz killed the power to your computer and your house. You’re responsible for rinsing the suds off of the soapy dishes and your partner is drying them. However, you’re far better than your partner at everything in the world and are much faster at rinsing than they are at drying. You can do one of two things about this.
Option #2 is exactly what a computer does when it caches data. In the case of a PC, your computer’s memory is far faster than your hard drive or SSD***. So, rather than just having your computer sit around for a while waiting for it to finish writing to the hard drive, it caches the data and writes to your hard drive over time while you’re doing other things with it.
Well, let’s go back to that example above. Say the reason why your power is out is because your partner is the klutz. While you have that set of dishes cached up behind them, he trips over an invisible cat and knocks all of those plates to the ground, shattering them. If you weren’t caching, your partner would have only broken one plate at most (the one they were drying).
Mostly same with computers. If you were to suffer an unexpected halt of your computer, you would lose everything currently being saved – including things you may have hit save on a few seconds before the crash. Now, where computers differ is how computer file systems work. You can actually lose a lot more than just the plates cached – if you happen to time it just right, your computer is capable of crashing its file system, potentially losing all of your data. This is a bit more common in older file systems – FAT-based ones are notorious for this.
Lots of things, actually. Memory cards (both SD and console), USB flash drives, older computers, your 360…
Ah, now THAT is a much more complicated question. Here’s the short version:
Buy a backup solution that lasts long enough. ‘Long enough’ is defined as the longer of either the amount of time it takes you to shut down everything plugged in to it or the expected length of your average power outage, whichever is longer.
Uninterruptable Power Supplies typically have a “VA” rating (Volts*Amps) that they’ll have in big numbers. Ignore it.
I’m serious, just ignore it. Yes, there is a reason for it and if you know enough about UPSes you’d probably use that instead of watts, but chances are you would be better off just looking at what it says for Watts. If it doesn’t give that number somewhere, it should give a PF (Power Factor), which should be a percentage (or expressed as a decimal). Take the VA and multiply by the PF and you’ll get the wattage rating.
In general, the higher the wattage, the longer it lasts. Most UPSes have specs as to how long they last at what wattages – just look at the box and see how long a particular wattage rating lasts. If you don’t know how much power you’re drawing from your devices, buy a device that lets you measure power draw, like a kill-a-watt.
Yep. UPSes are the one piece of computer equipment (well, more like ‘power equipment’) that is cheaper to buy offline in the US than online (and likely that way in other nations as well). It typically isn’t by much without a sale, but with a sale I’ve seen UPSes up to 50% off of the best online price I’ve seen them, mostly due to how ridiculously expensive shipping is. Office supply stores frequently carry them.
A few, depending on what you’re protecting.
Personally, I buy cheap ones for my router/modem (so I can remain online during an outage, plus protecting external access points) and expensive ones with the LCD display for my computers / consoles. In my current place, that means the modem gets a cheap 40 USD UPS and my two active desktops get their own highish end (110 USD) UPS for their respective areas (file server + router, gaming PC + consoles).
That’s mostly me being silly, but an interesting device to have anyway for other reasons. A portable USB charger is typically used for charging portable devices from an external battery. I primarily use mine to keep my devices charged while I’m traveling, but I also use it when I’m recording vlog things due to the amount of power draw I have recording 1080p video.
If you have other questions, let me know in the comments below or on the video.
* – By non-simple, I actually mean devices that do any form of caching to write to them. This is pretty much every modern device with storage outside of things like basic digital recorders and apparently 14k USD fridges. Basically, if it has a filesystem that you can read on a computer somewhere, it is probably non-simple.
** – laptops, desktops, phones, tablets, complex watches, 14k USD fridges, and so on.
*** – As a quick rule of thumb, RAM is a full order of magnitude faster than hard drives. Processor cache is a full order of magnitude faster than RAM. SSDs are somewhere between HDs and RAM on speeds (typically).
Felicia’s Melange: Star Trek Movie: SPOILERZZZZ
I can’t say I’ve ever understood why this is the case. Why aren’t there as many strong women in this movie as men?
You are officially spoiled if you read below, NO COMPLAINTS!
Up front I will say I enjoyed this latest Star Trek movie a lot. It was super noisy, but enjoyable, beautifully executed, and I particularly like some of the secondary characters, Spock was excellent, etc etc. I just want to share an…
Felicia’s Melange: Star Trek Movie: SPOILERZZZZ
I can’t say I’ve ever understood why this is the case. Why aren’t there as many strong women in this movie as men?
You are officially spoiled if you read below, NO COMPLAINTS!
Up front I will say I enjoyed this latest Star Trek movie a lot. It was super noisy, but enjoyable, beautifully executed, and I particularly like some of the secondary characters, Spock was excellent, etc etc. I just want to share an…