Uncategorized Archive

Want To Cancel An Account With 1&1?

Go to http://contract.1and1.co.uk/ and fol­low the on-screen instruc­tions. Amer­ic­ans should use http://cancel.1and1.com/. Hav­ing just spent the morn­ing in the depths of the 1&1 FAQs, I’ve noticed a lot of tutori­als and inform­a­tion that is no longer rel­ev­ant or no longer works so I strongly advise ignor­ing it alto­gether and check other blogs to see how they did it. The dif­fer­ences between the Amer­ican and Brit­ish sites are very subtle and usu­ally just boil down to .com and .co.uk. And as I’ve spent a good hour try­ing to login into the Amer­ican can­cel­la­tion site, I can assure you that the cus­tomer IDs (more com­monly known as Account IDs or a domain name registered with the account) do not work with the wrong site — which, in hind­sight, should have been expected.

Virtualisation

I’ve been exper­i­ment­ing with vir­tu­al­isa­tion for the last few days. Being on Win­dows Vista 64-bit, I can’t use VMWare (because of driver sign­ing) so I had to use to Vir­tu­al­Box which, I’ve found, is actu­ally bet­ter and lighter than VMWare. Des­pite a few (very minor) bugs, I love VirtualBox’s seam­less mode — it essen­tially allows you to work with two oper­at­ing sys­tems as if they were one.

It’s also given me a chance to play about with Ubuntu 8.10. Since the release of Ubuntu 8.04, I’ve been set on 8.10 being the defin­it­ive ver­sion and whilst it does feel a bit stronger and more cap­able than 8.04, I’m not so sure that it is what I had hoped. The UI is still ugly and Open­Of­fice is still lacklustre com­pared to the likes of Microsoft Office. In a nut­shell, it needs to take a big step towards Win­dows in order for it to be a viable option for reg­u­lar con­sumers. It is, how­ever, defin­it­ively ready as a home server and I’ll defin­it­ively be incor­por­at­ing it into a pro­ject. Details to follow…

Ubuntu 8.04 — A Full Review

Pre­vi­ous ver­sions of Ubuntu have been prom­ising but noth­ing short of hassle and annoy­ance for an aver­age com­puter user. The prob­lem lies with Win­dows, and the fact that it’s tied into everything and every­one. Mov­ing some­body away from it just spells trouble.

First Impres­sions

Even from the first screen­shots, I could tell 8.04 was going to be dif­fer­ent. The pre­vi­ous ver­sion, 7.10, had installed Compiz Fusion, a 3D effects engine, by default which really made Ubuntu shine. It still needed more though.

Wow

In terms of “wow”, 8.04 really scores high. It comes installed with Fire­fox 3 (Beta 5) which is some­thing in its own (espe­cially as it feels so at home in Ubuntu) but what really grabs me is the fact that I really want to use it as a primary desktop and that I can feel that I can make it work. Strange, I know, but all the other Ubuntu ver­sions just never had this. I’d try it in VMWare and delete the vir­tual machine a week later, sub­sequently revert­ing back to my trusty Win­dows XP. There’d always be prob­lems with drivers, pro­grams or some other major hassle. 8.04 seems to have all I need which makes it dynamite.

Compiz Fusion

Compiz Fusion is fant­astic! Let me reph­rase that, Compiz Fusion is the best! It’s able to just do the job with no hassle. I can barely hear the fans on my graph­ics card (256MB nVIDIA 7900 GS) which, com­pared to Vista, is an incred­ible achieve­ment con­sid­er­ing the immense work its doing to wobble win­dows and so forth. You’ll real­ise that most of the effects are utterly point­less but once you begin to use them, you’ll be mes­mer­ized by them.

But, Oh Wait…

There are still prob­lems I should add. It took sev­eral attempts to install Ubuntu and it’s still made a mess of my RAID array (I can only access one of the two 250GB hard drives), not to men­tion enter­ing BIOS setup is a time-critical night­mare (the screen loads in lit­er­ally mil­li­seconds). I’ve got an Cre­at­ive X-Fi sound card which I’ve found that many people have had prob­lems with. After a good day of search­ing, the OSS driver is the only easy solu­tion — but you’ll only get ste­reo sound (as opposed to the meaty 7.1 I had with Win­dows). Also part of my prob­lem was my Logit­ech G15 which now is a nor­mal lit-up key­board, it’s extra but­tons unable to facil­it­ate. Hav­ing said that, most of my hard­ware was auto­mat­ic­ally picked up and con­figured without any bother.

Final Ver­dict

Ubuntu 8.04 has very good poten­tial to use as a primary desktop but not if you’ve got incom­pat­ible hard­ware and you may find set­ting up to be a pain. Things are get­ting bet­ter all the time, though, and I dare say that 8.10 is the def­in­ite one to get, if not this one.

As for me, I’ll be rein­stalling XP on one drive, with Ubuntu on another so I can switch between the two. I’ll be keep­ing a close eye on Ubuntu and I recom­mend that you do too because it can really revo­lu­tion­ize how you work.

Ubuntu 8.04 Released

The latest ver­sion of everyone’s favour­ite Linux fla­vour, Ubuntu, is out. Gran­ted, the site isn’t fully updated and some down­load serv­ers appear to be either down or unable to pro­cess any requests. For­tu­nately, I found an Irish server that was still host­ing it with decent speed which means I’ll be able to report fully in about an hour.

What’s Up With This Site?

That’s because today is CSS Naked Day 2008 — a day where developers and design­ers remove the style sheets from their web­sites to show the bare HTML.

The idea is to raise aware­ness to semantic design. Check out the offi­cial CSS Naked Day site.