Google excited much of its Android developer base with the announcement of Android Studio which replaces Eclipse as Google's recommended Android IDE. While there were plenty of news outlets touting this announcement most failed to provide info on where to grab a copy of the new IDE -- probably because Android Studio has not been officially released. You can, however, get a copy of the "early access preview"...
May 15, 2013
May 7, 2013
TIP: RAM and Virtual Machine Speed #VMGeek
"More is better" as the current pitch line of a certain US cellular carrier says. For computers the "more" benefits are obvious for things like disk space, memory, CPU cores and network bandwidth. The same holds true in the virtual world: virtual PCs like to have more as well.
As a point of interest I recently conducted a very informal speed test between two identical virtual machines. My only (big) variable? RAM. One machine had twice as much RAM as the other. My goal was to see how much the extra RAM would benefit me during set up of a new virtual machine (even if that machine were destined to be allocated less RAM once it was up and going). Temporarily adding RAM should translate to a shorter set up time but would it be enough of a difference to bother with?...
As a point of interest I recently conducted a very informal speed test between two identical virtual machines. My only (big) variable? RAM. One machine had twice as much RAM as the other. My goal was to see how much the extra RAM would benefit me during set up of a new virtual machine (even if that machine were destined to be allocated less RAM once it was up and going). Temporarily adding RAM should translate to a shorter set up time but would it be enough of a difference to bother with?...
April 24, 2013
Soluto: Acer, Apple, Dell top Windows reliability #PCGeek
A new report for PC reliability is now available from Soluto. This ratings system considers factors such as system crashes, non-responsiveness and boot up times to determine the most reliable PCs. Topping Soluto's first list of reliable Windows PCs is Apple (!) closely followed by Acer and Dell.
Plenty will be made of this ratings scheme but a few things stand out...
Plenty will be made of this ratings scheme but a few things stand out...
April 8, 2013
Google Fiber -- What are my chances? #NetworkGeek
Google is bringing its fiber service to Austin and it seems half the city is absolutely delerious about it. The other half, however, isn't really sure why 1Gbps is any more special than the various vowel-free Mbps speeds Austin already has. If you're in the first half then you're anxious to know: When can *I* get it?
The short answer: not very soon.
The long answer involves demand, population densities and dark fiber...
The short answer: not very soon.
The long answer involves demand, population densities and dark fiber...
February 5, 2013
Free up lots of Android memory #PhoneGeek
Whatever your smartphone preference, the truth is that the major smartphone operating systems are all pretty darn good across the board. I've been toting various modestly-equipped Android devices for the past two years and have been generally pleased except for storage management: on every device the primary (internal) storage would eventually unexpectedly fill without explanation. I read manuals, combed forums, migrated apps, moved photos, cleared app data and cache folders all to little avail. Finally I identified the culprit behind the disappearing storage and discovered it had nothing to do with my devices or with the Android operating system...
January 14, 2013
January 10, 2013
Pebble Watch = Madness #HumorGeek
Along with CES 2013 comes news that the most-funded Kickstarter project to date, the Pebble E-Paper Watch, is nearing its goal of shipping actual product: the new devices are slated to hit the market January 23rd. The Pebble isn't the first wrist-based device to wirelessly link to a smart phone but it does appear to have the best chance for success of all such devices to date.
That said, a number of people take the view that it is a bit too much to expect someone to invest in a watch that tells you what is happening on the phone in your pocket. In that vein of thought ATXGeek presents you with the timeline graphic to the right:
Pebble Watch = Madness
Enjoy.
(Click image to view it full size.)
That said, a number of people take the view that it is a bit too much to expect someone to invest in a watch that tells you what is happening on the phone in your pocket. In that vein of thought ATXGeek presents you with the timeline graphic to the right:
Pebble Watch = Madness
Enjoy.
(Click image to view it full size.)
January 7, 2013
Hosted jQuery fallback plan #WebDevGeek
It's estimated that jQuery is employed by over half of all "major" websites. "Major" means highly-trafficked-sites such as NBC, Amazon, Twitter and ESPN. Close to one-in-four of these sites use Google's hosted jQuery library files (a.k.a. Google's "Content Delivery Network" or "CDN") rather than serving local copies of files. There are some great reasons to deliver jQuery via a CDN -- namely a better end-user experience and less server and network loads thanks to CDN content originating from localized source servers and end-user web browser caching of commonly-served files. Employing a CDN, however, introduces an external dependency that can cause sites to seriously malfunction if the CDN becomes unavailable.
The easy solution is to dual-source those critical jQuery files: attempt to load from a CDN and, if that fails, load from a local source instead. The code for this is super-simple and is being used more and more often as websites feel the bite of unexpected CDN service interruptions...
The easy solution is to dual-source those critical jQuery files: attempt to load from a CDN and, if that fails, load from a local source instead. The code for this is super-simple and is being used more and more often as websites feel the bite of unexpected CDN service interruptions...
December 12, 2012
Lorem Ipsum ...and Bacon #WebDesignGeek
"Lorem Ipsum" is nonesense placeholder text created by printers either in the 1500's or in the 1960's depending on which site you trust most for your historical facts. Its use has thrived as part of modern-day print and web design. Placeholder content is useful for mocking up web pages and free online Lorem Ipsum generators abound, including a few rather unique options...
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