by Dwayne Phillips I had been using a Unix command for Mac backups. My recent experience with a dead disk drive showed that the strategy didn’t quite work. I don’t like commercial products that make backups for disks. My worry is that the backup data are useless without the product to unpack them. Hence, for […]
Entries Tagged as 'Technology'
Mac Backups
September 6th, 2012 · No Comments
Tags: COTS · OS X · Technology
More Accepting Less than Perfect
June 25th, 2012 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Self-flying airplanes are coming. They will be very good, but not perfect. Younger generations may accept that less than perfect. Aviation is repeating its history from about a hundred years ago. Instead of the Wright brothers, we now have “drones” or “UAVs.” I put these terms in quotes as they are misused […]
Tags: Technology
The iPad – part 0.11 – even Better Writing
June 4th, 2012 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Using the iPad (version 3), PlainText and DropBox makes writing even better. I now have the new iPad or iPad version 3 as some of us like to call it. I even have an Apple Bluetooth keyboard (I know, the keyboard is an old device, but new to slow adopters like me). I […]
Tags: iPad · Technology · Writing
Changes and Change
May 28th, 2012 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips If we change something, it will be different. We know that, but we act surprised when we see it. Recent studies indicate that large wind farms increase the temperature of the wind farm area. People are speculating if there will be other changes in the weather at wind farms. Some people are […]
Tags: Change · Technology
Necessary Evils and Paradigm Shifts
April 26th, 2012 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Sometimes the world changes and you have to alter your product in what may seem to be an evil way. Samsung recently announced that they are including WiFi in their higher-end cameras. I can see some of the engineers and scientists at Samsung wincing in pain. Excellence in cameras is about lenses and […]
Tags: Change · Technology
Computer Vision and the Blind
April 16th, 2012 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips The cell phone camera plus computer vision plus computer speech equals apps for the blind. I worked in computer vision during the 1980s and early 1990s. My work was mostly with having a computer transform an aerial image into a map. I didn’t foresee the technologies that would make the digital image […]
Tags: Computing · Family · Health · Image · Technology
You Don’t Need Us
March 29th, 2012 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips There are times when a customer calls for a technical solution to one of their problems. They may, however, have a management problem instead. I work for a technology company. When our customers call, we deliver technical solutions to their problems. Sometimes, however, the customer comes with a fuzzy problem. We investigate […]
Tags: Management · Technology
The New I/O – The Camera
March 22nd, 2012 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Computers still have three basic parts: (1) processor, (2) memory, and (3) input/output (I/O). The latest addition to the I/O is the camera. This post is a little late – several years late, but better late…and so on. In the early 1970s, I was introduced to the computer. There were and still […]
Tags: Computing · Technology
The Nerd Dad – Zero to Hero
March 8th, 2012 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Long scorned by kids, especially teenagers, the nerd dad is now the hero. This story brought an idea back to mind. I had this idea first a couple of years ago, but didn’t blog about it. The time has come. The story linked above from The Telegraph bemoans that many parents don’t […]
Tags: Family · Technology
Entering and Using Unstructured Fiction Information
January 30th, 2012 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips I look at a couple of methods of storing information to be used in fiction writing: mediawiki software and good old HTML. Writing a large piece of fiction, like a novel, can be messy. How do you keep track of characters, places, dates, and all that stuff? The answer for many writers […]
Tags: Technology · Writing