My Current (no pun intended) Take on Electric Cars

I’ve been sort of skeptical of the real benefits of electric vehicles for some time. It seems to make sense that, if some states (California and Texas, I’m looking at you in particular!!) have recently been facing problems with demand on their electrical grids, it may not make sense to put additional strain on them by moving to electric cars. However, I listened to this Skeptoid episode today that, as they always do, gave a logical and fact-based explanation of the actual potential impact on the US electrical grid

https://skeptoid.com/episodes/4852

Since we live in an area that’s often plagued with power outages, I found the vehicle-to-grid and vehicle-to-home options particularly interesting.

There’s also this older episode that discusses how EVs are not as impactful to the environment as many would have us believe although there are caveats about the mining of natural elements necessary for the creation of batteries. https://skeptoid.com/episodes/4844

At the end of the day, I’m still not completely ready to move to an EV with my next car but we clearly need to do away with fossil fuel powered vehicles sooner than later.

New Blog…More Writing

I’ve been working on moving my blog to a self-hosted WordPress. I’m very impressed at the simplicity and quality of the whole CMS and it’s SO much better than bBlog. It’s been quite nostalgic looking over my past 200 and something posts. I’m really glad that I wrote everything that I did because I’m sure that many details would have been forgotten if I hadn’t. That makes me even more excited about getting back to blogging (even if it’s just for my own memories).

Vision of the Future

Here’s a neat little video from Microsoft that focuses on their vision of technology in 2019. There’s a lot of bright colors and pretty, interactive display technology and ubiquitous gadgets.

<a href=”http://video.msn.com/?mkt=en-GB&playlist=videoByUuids:uuids:a517b260-bb6b-48b9-87ac-8e2743a28ec5&showPlaylist=true&from=shared” mce_href=”http://video.msn.com/?mkt=en-GB&playlist=videoByUuids:uuids:a517b260-bb6b-48b9-87ac-8e2743a28ec5&showPlaylist=true&from=shared” target=”_new” title=”Future Vision Montage”>Video: Future Vision Montage</a>

I really like the “digital wallet” concept. With all the individual pieces of plastic that we carry around all the time in the form of ID cards (ID, driver’s license, medical insurance, etc) and credit/debit cards it would be great to have a single “device” the size of just one card or just a little bigger that would hold all of this data. For me, the security concerns are the top priority, but if I lose my wallet today, I am losing all that plain-text data anyway. The digital device could use both encryption and passwords or some other form of access control to restrict usage of my lost digital wallet. Okay, I’ve decided – I want one! Who’s going to develop this?

Let me know what you think!

Moon Buggy

This is a prototype of the next “moon buggy” that NASA is developing:

How cool is that thing? It’s a little retro looking, but I think there are some great features.

Although GW really kicked off the new return to the Moon initiative I don’t think that he was really too keen on diverting a little money from the wars we’re fighting to get these new projects up and running. There have already been several schedule slips in the development of the new rocket technologies that will be used to get us to the Moon. I hope our next President will expand the funding of these things. I get so excited when I see that there [i]is[/i] work being done on these projects!

Hard Drive Upgrade Woes

I spent a good portion of this weekend upgarding the boot drive on our home PC. The Dell PC that we’ve had for a few years came with a 40 gig Maxtor hard drive. Not only was the drive becoming smaller and smaller as we filled it with more and more stuff, but the inevitable Windows XP bloat was getting serious and slowing important things down. At some point over the last couple of years, we also lost the nice XP login screen and fast user switching which was a nice feature that we really missed.

A few weeks back, got a good deal on a 160 gig drive at Best Buy and I started to plan my upgrade. All of our personal and work documents, audio and video are stored on a second drive, but I wasn’t enthusiastic about the idea of having to reinstall all of my applications. The first thing I needed to do was slipstream XP Service Pack 2 into my existing XP installation disk. I used [url=http://www.nliteos.com]nLite[/url] to do this as well as add in the required drivers for my hardware. This is a great app. I burned a new bootable XP disk and the first part of my upgrade planning was complete.

The next step was to back up the application data that resides (for the most part) in the Documents and Settings directories. Microsoft makes some useful applications for this including the [url=http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/setup/expert/crawford_november12.mspx]Files and Settings Transfer Wizard[/url] and the [url=http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;826809]Office 2003 Save My Settings Wizard[/url]. I had never used these before, but they were quite efficient and performed as advertised. One note – if you have a multiuser system, you’ll need to back up the Office settings for each user!

I realized at this point, that rather than backing up the rest of the files for our important applications (Opera and IE, EditPlus, Adobe apps, newsreader software, iTunes, etc), I would just reconnect the old drive once I had most everything on the new and copy whatever I needed. Simple!

Surprisingly, this tactic worked pretty well. Some companies are getting good about letting the user specify the location of their configuration files. Opera is a great example of this and I’m sure they will continue this trend with version 9. It was nice to have all my Adobe options stored away as well, although I did copy over most of the settings from the Application Data directory just to be safe.

Once all this was done and the apps reinstalled, we were ready to go. Just a couple more things to install and then I am going to create an image that I can use going forward. I’m looking at [url=http://www.acronis.com/homecomputing/products/trueimage]Acronis True Image 9.0[/url] as a way to do this. I’ve had some negative experiences with Norton Ghost, so I think this is a better option. Acronis’s software has some nice features. In addition to just making drive images, you can schedule backups of various directories and file types to different media. This is something that I’ve been doing through BAT files and WinZip, but I think I need a more integrated solution.