Unquiet Desperation

To be awake is to be alive.

Thank you for reading Unquiet Desperation. Please consider
grabbing the RSS feed to stay updated on new articles and podcasts.

Category : Reviews

Thoughts on the G1

CurrentCost on my phone Creative Commons License photo credit: dalelane

About a month ago, I got a G1 from my local T-Mobile dealer. I’d like to bore you with the details.

  • I like the style of the phone. At it’s most basic, the G1 is a Sidekick with a better OS and rounded corners. Since my last phone was also a Sidekick, I’m right at home.  I do wish the G1 had the translucent trackball, which you could program to light up in different colors in different situations1.
  • I also love having a physical keyboard. The iPhone keyboard sucked when I used it. This one is perfect for me.
  • I like the size of the screen and the apps that come with the phone.  Linking things in to my Google accounts has made my life one hell of a lot easier.
  • Everything you’ve heard about the battery life is true…if you’re an idiot.  Yes, if you leave every service on all the time2, the battery will be dead in two hours.  It just so happens that there is a great app called Locale which fixes this little problem. Developed by a group of MIT students, this app tracks where you are using both Wifi and GPS and will switch off services when you are in a certain location automatically. With will also change your ringer volume and make decisions based on system status, such as low battery life. It completely rocks.
  • The App market is still underdeveloped, but it’s a new platform, and that’s to be expected. There are some great apps in the Android Market, such as Park Mark, Wikitude, Shop Savvy.
  • The only downside I’ve found is that sometimes the memory gets pegged and the whole phone slows or pauses  When apps stop responding, the system handles it gracefully, asking if you want to force the app to close, or wait for it to finish.  I’ve never had a full-out crash or needed to reset the phone.

Would I recommended it?  I already have, several times. The most common criticism of the G1 is that it’s not an iPhone. That’s just fin with me. I love the openness of the Android system, and I cannot wait to see what people find to do with it.




  1. for instance, blue if you have voice mail, red if your boss called and you missed it, etc[back]
  2. GPS, Wifi, and Bluetooth[back]

The Basics of Wine

This was a lot of fun to watch, and I’m not just saying that because I work for Mahalo. I’ve been wanting to learn things like this for some time. I think I’ll be checking out Gary’s show.

Penguicon Wrap Up

On the second day of Penguicon, the furries came out. Luckily, they weren’t drawn to the technical track, so for the most part, we were safe.

Most of the morning, Rick and I hung out. There weren’t any sessions that we wanted to attend, so we headed out for a few hours and wandered the local mall, which was roughly the size of the UCLA campus. It was two massive structures connected by a skyway over West Big Beaver Road1. Astonishingly, it was filled with…nothing. Well…nothing for two computer geeks on the prowl. To be fair, there was an Apple Store, but even that felt half-assed.

Heading back, we met back up with Cmdln for his afternoon sessions. The poor guy looked like something out of Infected, his head cold threatening burst out of his skull and wreak havoc over the con. He held the beast at bay with liberal application of Dayquil. He and I headed off to his three panels.

I have to say, his Third Wave Power2 was sorely tested by the panels he had that day:

Read More…




  1. No joke. I’m not making that up.[back]
  2. Cmdln’s Third Wave power is the ability to as intelligent on the last day of a con, after having little sleep, as he sounds on the first day. Personally, I think this definition needs to be refined thusly: he has the ability to sound intelligent no matter how tired he is.[back]
The Consuite
Creative Commons License photo credit: paulgorman

There may be no place quieter than a con on a Saturday morning.

Still, I’m up. And this is the Penguicon Update: Day 1.

The con itself is good size…it’s pretty much taken over the Troy Hilton, which is not a small hotel. Like all Sci-Fi/Tech conventions, the glasses to non-glasses ratio is pretty high, and most of the other usual stereotypes about the population of geekdom also apply. I’ve seen all ages here, it does not skew young or old, and so far, there are no furries.

Read More…

Notacon 2008

Originally posted on RefreshCleveland

You have to learn why things work on a starship.
- James T. Kirk to Savik in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Kahn

the fat man
Creative Commons License photo credit: ejhogbin

I attended Notacon 2008 this weekend. I’d like to tell you about it.

I learned a lot. See…I’m not much of a hacker. I’ve never played with Ham Radio for my own wifi, I’ve never attended a demoparty, and I know just enough about networking to get by. Notacon was an educational experience, one of the sort I don’t get often in day-to-day life. I don’t have much occasion to reflect on the necessity of editing information, but thank goodness Jason Scott does. I have not mulled over the current state of election technologies, but Smoke and Phreak had. Bruce Potter taught me more about the challenges of router monitoring than I’d learn in a year of working at my desk.

Read More…