Archive for the 'personal' Category

The Post with No Content

Monday, August 4th, 2008

Time for some shameless self promotion. I know that bunch of people read this blog via feed readers and rarely clicky the things on the sidebars. I also know that I rarely update the sidebar links to the other services I use. So this post will be a sort of “if you like this blog, you may also like this other stuff by me” kind of deal. I’m going to throw a few links out there and tell you what content you can expect there and you can decide if you want to check it out or subscribe. )

First of, let me tell you why I just don’t put everything here. Over the last few years I sort of figured out what I what kind of stuff I want to post on this blog. My topic choices are still a rather wild scatter shot but I cut them down to the following list:

  1. Programming and Web Development
  2. Various IT and Technology stuff including security, software, and reviews
  3. Linux fanboy stuff
  4. Video Games and video game reviews
  5. Book and Movie Reviews (leaning heavily towards SF/Fantasy genre)
  6. RPG and Tabletop Games
  7. Random humor/rants related to any of the above

So in broad terms this collection of topics can probably be defined as “geeky stuff” or “the stuff that definitely won’t get you laid”. That is sort of the direction where I’m taking this page in case you haven’t noticed. There is a wide array of things that I used to do here, but then stopped. For example I try to refrain from posting about politics and religion. When I had 2 regular readers who I knew in real life, and who shared my political and religious views this sort of stuff was fine. Now that I see more than a dozen of regulars from all parts of the world, and from across the political spectrum commenting on my posts I think I can do better. These sort of posts quickly get personal, and I sort of want the small but quite diverse community we have here to thrive and grow rather than bicker over politics.

Another thing I try to avoid here is one-link or one-picture posts. I try to put some thought and effort into every post (not that you could tell by looking at my atrocious spelling and grammar) and simply doing a “cheg this out guyz!” posts seems like cheating. Especially since these days I’m under my self imposed 5 posts per week limit. I try to do quality over quantity - it doesn’t always work out but that’s the idea. Same goes for blurting out one liners, or commenting on mundane shit that I’m dealing with at the moment.

I still have an urge to post that type of stuff and in most cases I have found different outlets for them. For example, I tend to post crazy links, silly pictures and interesting quotes up at /dev/random tumbleblog. Some of you probably know about it, some probably don’t. That’s where all the silly stuff and links/quotes which don’t warrant a full blown article go.

As a side note, have you noticed how Web 2.0 takes old concepts and transforms them into brand new things? In the past, link blogging had a more or less negative connotation - it was re-blogging, recycling and rehashing stuff that was not original. Web 2.0 took that, renamed it as tumble blogging and all of a sudden it is acceptable and cool to have a tumblr account and regurgitate content aggregated from various places. That said, I try to put fun stuff at /dev/random - you won’t see links to stories from the front page of slashdot or digg there but rather various visual memes, and random quotes that I found either funny, or insightful. Also, no LOLCats (cause they are stupid) and I try to keep it SFW.

Speaking of Web 2.0 and social media - my primary medium for blurting out stupid shit throughout the day is twitter. Some of you already follow me there, and there is a flash widget somewhere on the sidebar here but my profile is here in case you want to check it out. I don’t think I need to explain to you what Twitter is - unless of course you have been sitting under a rock for the last year or so.

I still do not have a place where I could openly wax poetic about politics - which of course may actually be a good thing. Perhaps I should just refrain from commenting on these things unless they are related to my area of interest (ie. silliness like software patents, IP laws and etc). If I ever set something up for purely political and jaded rants I will let you know but it will definitely be separate from this blog though.

Then there is of course my Flickr photostream which doesn’t get updated that often, but it’s there if you want to stalk me. And of course there is facebook and myspace linked in the sidebar but I really don’t use these to post any content of sorts. These are the tools for interacting with my technologically underdeveloped real life friends and family who do not blog, do not understand twitter and reject email as communication medium as a personal rule.

So this blog, /dev/random, twitter and flickr are the places where I’m most active and sort of encompass the full spectrum of my public online activities. Just to put it all together I created a friendfeed account (cause that’s the latest cool thing, I hear) and simply dumped feeds from various services I use into it creating a life-stream sort of thing. It is like a big feed of feeds - so for example if you don’t use Twitter but want to be updated when I tweet you can subscribe to it.

How does your online life break down? I know some of you use twitter - and have blogs. I tend to subscribe to the blogs of my frequent commenters and I follow them on twitter if they link to it. How does your online life split up into various services? Do you usually dump everything into a single blog/journal or do you try to compartmentalize it across various blogs and services?

I’m Giving Blizzard One More Chance

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

I know that said I will not play WoW, but the game was simply calling to me. So I decided to give it one more chance. I’m still not happy with how Blizzard handled my case, but my previous post resulted in an interesting discussion both here and on Shamus’ blog which has shed some light on why things turned out the way they did. It appears that my case is not unique - quite a few people in both threads said this was exactly their experience with the trial account upgrade. Few commenters reacted as harshly as I did though.

I think the comment by Tim Keating sums it up the best:

The reason they want you to go buy retail is that if you get to day 89 and do a chargeback (a common gold farmer tactic… so they don’t even end up paying for the service), the cost of the box gets charged back to the retailer instead of Blizzard, who would otherwise have to eat that money in addition to the extra 2 months of service fees.

Apparently chargebacks are gold farmers bread and butter these days. I’m not sure how much actual farming can be done with a trial level 1-20 characters or how efficient it would be. The mobs you can actually take on at that level do not really drop anything expensive - but I guess an intensive grind could yield some moderate profits. I guess these characters could be used as mules for moving contraband gold and items between servers. If they get the axe from Blizzard for illicit activities, then who cares.

This of course sucks for people like me who just wanted the convenience of upgrading the test account without actually needing to buy the retail box. I’m not sure why Blizzard even offers the online upgrade option if most of the time they flag these upgrades as suspect - just like they did mine. Removing that option on trial accounts that have been inactive - or perhaps even on all accounts would solve this issue and spare customers the frustration. Yes, people would whine that there is no online upgrade option, but the way things are right now that option is not valid anyway - and it makes people like me angry.

But apparently this is just the tip of the iceberg. WoW fraud seems to be rampart and unchecked for the most part. People get their characters stolen robbed and transfered to different servers all the time. Those are established user accounts - not just trials. So the scope of the problem is immense, and Blizzard can only do so much to prevent it. At some point I guess the risk of losing a potential customer is smaller than potential damage that could be done by allowing a malicious person to run away with a hijacked account.

So I decided to give Blizzard some slack, suck it up and do what they told me - which was to buy the retail box. Unfortunately that simple inconvinience turned into a quest itself. When I made a decision to do it, it was Friday afternoon. Of course since it was 4th of July shops closed early (and I left the house late) so there was no place in town that I could actually buy the game. So I said “Screw this game! I’m not playing it!”

On Saturday I was passing by a Wallmart and realized - they have games in there. So I popped in determined to locate the video game isle. It was not difficult to find - you could essentially see the big overhead screens with PlayStation and XBox logos from the other end of the store. Originally they were connected to active consoles running promotional discs or letting people test new games. When I got there both screens were dark. The consoles were removed from their protective enclosures below the monitors. All that was left were a PlayStation controller (firmly attached to the display case) with a broken right thumb stick and a badly broken (to the point of being unusable) Guitar Hero controller. Yay Wallmart!

The PC gaming section consisted of two shelves. One was labeled “PC Games” and the other was labeled “Windows Games”. I’m not sure if the employees knew the difference because there was no logical division as to which games went on which shelf. In fact, half of the games on the “PC” shelf were actually Playstation 2 titles - likely left there by absent minded customers, or equally absent minded employees. It was total chaos.

They did have World of Warcraft in stock. I spotted around 5 boxes of the original game, a dozen or so of the Burning Crusade and 2 or 3 bundles containing both. I grabbed the first one on the original game from the shelf, and noticed the box was ripped open on the bottom. I grabbed another one, and though it was not ripped, the sealing tape was evidently broken. Yep, yet another form of a WoW scam. People simply come to Wallmart, open a WoW box, pull out the CD-Key and then play for free for the first month. Of course the security features are affixed to the box itself and not to the CD sleave with the key itself. So they can safely pop it in their pockets and waltz out of the store without setting any alarms.

I checked every single box, including the bundles and each looked as if every single one was tampered with. Burning Crusade boxes were useless to me at this point - but they were the most numerous, and actually included boxes that looked absolutely intact. That of course didn’t do me any good. Some seals didn’t look all that bad, but I just could not tell for sure whether or not they were carefully peeled and re-glued to the box or did they just look worn. I was not about to rip one open and see if the CD is inside. I was also not about to risk buying a box that someone opened and hope that they didn’t write down the key and activate an account with it yet. So I said: “Screw this game! I was right. I’m not playing it”.

Also, Wallmart sucks.

I finally got the game on Sunday from another place. I tried giving Blizzard a call to see if they can do something about the trial account but of course they don’t work on the weekends. Can you see how this “small inconvenience” is turning into a long arduous journey for me? It’s like there is some force out there that doesn’t want me to play this game at all.

I decided that I don’t give a flying fuck anymore. I created a new account, and rolled up a new character. Say hello to my brand spanking new Troll Huntard:

For the record, Hunter class is actually much easier to play at low levels than than Warrior class. My Tauren warrior had major difficulties taking on mobs even one level above him. My lv. 14 hunter on the other hand can relatively easily deal with lv. 16-18 opponents as long as I fight them one at a time and take a break to recharge and heal/revive my pet in between fights.

At this point I don’t really even care if I ever get my Tauren back. It would be nice though. I shot Steve an email as per our conversation but I didn’t hear from him yet. This is Blizzard’s chance to redeem themselves in my eyes. If they give me back my character, I will be happy and forgive them for shafting me in the first place. Either way, I will post an update here and let you know what happened.

Blinking Dash Returns with Vengance

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

Remember my blinking underscore issue from February? It’s back again, and I still have no clue what is causing it.

Quick recap for new readers - I have a peculiar issue with my windows machine. Sometimes I shut it down, and it just won’t boot back up again. The damn thing goes through POST diagnostic at the beginning of the boot sequence and then just displays a blinking underscore/dash/cursor in the upper left corner of the screen. Apparently that indicates “boot failure” of some sort/ The data on the drive is still intact, and can be easily backed.

If you look through the archives here, you will see that I tried just about anything. Every time this happens I disconnect all the shit from this machine with exception of the mouse and keyboard hoping this is one of those odd USB related flukes. I then boot into recovery console, run fixboot and fixmbr commands, recreate my boot.ini with bootcfg /rebuild, run chkdsk and etc. Sadly going these motions usually doesn’t do squat. The only reliable way to get the machine working again is to format the drive and reinstall windows from scratch. But as it appears this is also only a temporary measure. The problem keeps coming back.

I’m beginning to suspect that my disk is faulty but I can’t really prove it (yet). I have ran chkdsk on this volume so many times I think I’m going to wear it out soon. At one occasion it told me the drive had a irrecoverable error on it and wouldn’t even attempt to scan it. Rebooting seemed to solve that issue, and all subsequent scans went through without major problems. On some occasions it said it fixed some errors but there didn’t seem to be any show stoppers in there. Anyone can recommend good hard drive diagnostic tools?

I’m thinking that perhaps something funky is going on in the boot sector, or perhaps the windows boot loader region which is just to subtle or to odd for chkdsk to worry about. This is the only thing that I can think of - I have literally no clue what else could be causing this issue. Then again, my drive is not that old. If I remember correctly I replaced it less than 2 years ago - in fact, it may still be on the warranty. I might still be able to return it back to Seagate and get a replacement. I will have to look into that.

In the meantime I ordered a new larger HD (I was running low on space anyway). This time I went with Western Digital. Once the drive ships (probably Friday although knowing my luck it will probably be Monday) I’m going to plug it into the machine, reinstall windows one last time and see how it goes. If I never have this issue again, then it means it was definitely a faulty drive. If it comes back after a month, I will know it must be something else. In either case I think I should just start putting together a new gaming rig for myself.

Worst of this is that I had some spare time yesterday and was planning to use it to finish KOTOR and then start on the final review post about this game. It seems that I will have to hold off with that until I reinstall windows again. It’s kinda sad that I will have to install the game for mere 20-30 minutes of gameplay I have left in order. But it has to be done. I need closure! (

What if the World Died Tomorrow?

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

On Saturday evening I lost power. I do get a lot of brownouts around here, but this was different. It was around 7pm, and all of a sudden I found myself in total darkness. Fortunately I always keep a LED flashlight on my desk. Most times I use it when I crawl under my desk and try to sort things out in the sprawling jungle of unkempt cables down there. But every once in a while it comes in handy during power outage.

It’s interesting, but once the power is gone the different appliances do not shut down at the same time. It is like a strange sequence of events that lasts a split second, but your brain registers it as a set of well defined stages. First the house lights dimmed down. Then the desk lamp made a short buzzing sound and flickered off. The CRT followed with the characteristic”krrrr-ponk” sound echoing deep within the cathode ray tube behind the display. The video output collapsing down to a single line in the middle of the screen then fading into black. The faint wheezing sound of the desktop fans spinning down to an abrupt halt came next. Behind me I could hear the static swish of the TV and cable box dying in unison - a very different sound than that of the dying monitor, and yet the two use the very same technology to display moving pictures on their screens. After that, there was only a def and mute blackness. As if I was thrown into a black void of nothingness. Both the sense of sight and hearing suddenly went into overdrive trying to overcompensate of the sudden loss of abundant stimuli. The only sound I could hear was creaking of my own chair, and my own breathing. Sometimes, the power would come right back. I sat there waiting for few seconds.

One… Two… Three… Was it going to come back?

Five… Six… Seven… I guess not. I fumbled for my flashlight which was standing between an empty soda can a stack of letters and a coffee mug full of old pens and markers.

I climbed up the stairs from my underground lair, through the kitchen into the living room only to be greeted by a distant howling sound. A bit like sirens - maybe it was a passing ambulance, or a police car… But the pitch was wrong. It didn’t oscillate the way emergency signals do. It didn’t move closer or farther away as it’s the case with the a moving vehicle signaling it’s passage. Perhaps these were distant fire sirens? But my town doesn’t have them - we have a professional fire department, not volunteers. Besides, these sirens rise and fall in pitch. The howling sound I heard did not - it was fairly constant. What was it then? It took me a minute or two to identify the sound. It was the wind! A high pitched distant howl, and my house was creaking as the violent gusts sweep over it. I could hear it so well, because of the deathly silence in the house. There was no radio, no TV, no noise from the spinning fans on my desktop. Nothing to down out the sounds of nature.

I peeked outside through the glass deck door. I saw only darkness - as if someone coated the glass with a thick layer of black paint. I could hardly make out the outline of my deck, as my eyes adjusted to the sharp contrasts around me. The bright LED flashlight was wreaking havoc to my night vision. Judging from the absence of light outside I summarized that the whole neighborhood got hit. The nearby houses were just dark silhouettes far beyond the range of my flashlight. Not a single window was lit in any of them. They were like black, cardboard cutouts backdropped against the sky - two dimensional outlines devoid of detail. The only sources of light were glimmering high up above me the night sky. The stars and the moon - they were incredibly clear. Clearer than I have seen them in years. No wonder - suddenly all the reflected light feedback that usually obscures them was gone in the area. Now the only thing trying to obscure them were the naked winter crowns of the trees swaying violently in the wind. Like withered claws of some strange primordial Lovercaftian beast born of darkness, clawing madly at the sky.

I made my way to the front of the house, and peered outside the front door. The streetlights were off, but the headlights of a passing car bathed everything in bleak artificial white. The house across the street was dark as well. In this sudden brightness it’s windows appeared to me as dark gaping voids - bizarre black holes which collapsed upon themselves and opened passages to strange dark dimension. But illusion only lasted for a brief second. As the car passed, the house became a dark shadowy silhouette again. The red tail lights didn’t really give off much light - not enough to see the details of the house across the street. Instead they made the shadows of the trees and streetlights come alive. They seemed to dance and move in the cars wake as some unsettling procession of twirling stick figures. Soon all I could see were two red dots going of into distance, heading for a shiny green beckon!

The traffic lights! They were still on. I watched them turn amber, red, then green again. At least part of the infrastructure had to be working if they were on. If they have power at the intersection, then it shouldn’t take them that long to fix this outage. Perhaps it’s just my street that went down.

I went back inside, chilled to the core by the cold wind and decided to check the view outside the deck door again. This time I saw a faint, shaky flickering in the distance. It was almost like a mysterious swamp light. It would appear for few seconds, in one spot dim down into nothing and flare up somewhere else. My neighbor must have found a flashlight, or a candle at last and I could see it through the windows as he wandered from one room to another.

As I was sweeping the flashlight back and forward over the deck and the garden the shadows were moving eerily following and scattering away from the beam of light. The trees were still clawing at the sky. The whole world seemed to be moving to the tune of some strange music my ears could not hear. An idea about what must have happened started coalescing in my mind. The crazy wind must have downed a tree which in turn damaged a power line. That had to be it. They would just have to find it, and reroute the power. It shouldn’t take that long. Maybe 20-30 minutes tops.

I was watching the shadows scatter in front of the circle of light, only to jump out on the other side, elongate and then join the darkness which has spawned them with a strange sense of fascination. This phantom movement was both mesmerizing and unsettling. The hedges and bushes below the deck and along the fence in the back of the yard were shaking violently in the wind. It was as if there was something that was hiding in them and now decided to stumble out rushing towards the light - or perhaps away from it. On the left side there was no fence at all. On the right, it is only a symbolic waist high chain-link. Only the back of the property is somewhat shielded. Shielded from what? The neighbors? They were all good people. But suddenly it worried me that, someone could come from either direction, waltz straight onto my deck and I would never see them. Not just tonight - on any night. My back yard is never really lit up very well. Anyone could just walk across the lawn unseen almost all the way to to the deck stairs. From there, it would only take five quick steps, and they would be right in my face. And the only thing that protected me from potential intruders was a thin sheet of glass. I felt vulnerable.

I’d have to board it up. That was what popped into my head. If the power never comes back, there would be looting, and the deck door would need to be barricaded to keep people outside and hide the activity in the house.

Why was I thinking about this? Who would come here? This was a small, local power outage and I was in a nice suburban town, which would be the last place on earth you would expect to see the post apocalyptic looting war bands I suddenly imagined. Still, the thought made me uneasy. I made sure the deck door was fastened shut, and was about to shut down the vertical blinds. I figured that not having to look at the gloomy scenery out there will make me feel safer. Ironically, I wouldn’t even be able to see the potential intruders with the blinds shut. But there were no intruders to see around here.

That’s when I saw a shadow darting into the circle of the moving light made by my flashlight. Black as night, elongated and shapless it was moving on it’s own, dancing along the whole length of the deck and moving from left to right until it filled out all available space. This was not the normal shadow dance that I produced by moving the flashlight back and forward. This shadow was attached to something that seemed alive.

The owner of the shadow suddenly appeared right against the glass of the deck. Two charcoal black in black eyes peered at me from the darkness. They were darker than the night, and much deeper than those of a human being. Huge pupils, almost no retina visible - these were the eyes of a nocturnal predator. He looked inside, surveyed the room and finally affixed his gaze upon me crooking his head expectantly. Inquisitive and curious beast - he was hungry. My uneasiness evaporated, and I swung the door open letting him inside. This cat still doesn’t trust me, but he is pretty comfortable eating inside of the house. He has his bowl right by the deck door. Such an odd relationship we have - a man and a wild animal. Domesticating this little guy is an ongoing project, and there is no end in sight yet. This is no lazy house cat - he is proud, individualistic hunter. I suspect he didn’t mind the wind much, and naturally was completely unaffected by the power outage.

I often wondered how he perceives us, humans. He was born out in the suburban wilderness and has never known a human touch. Never lived inside of a house. How strange we must be to him. Awkward towering giants with booming voices, always hoarding food and are curiously willing to share it. What we have is a fragile truce - and he reminds me of it by hissing and baring his fangs as I pass by him to fetch him something to eat. To close for comfort. Sorry pal, didn’t mean to startle you…

As my feline friend was getting his evening meal the family assembled at the kitchen table, speculating about the power outage and fiddling with different battery powered light sources and candles. We sat there for several hours chit-chatting and gathering field reports from friends and relatives in the area. For some time the cell phones were in constant use - calling ringing, connecting. Then it all died down, as we got the low down on everyone’s situation. It seems that the outage affected more than just my town but rather a larger area comprised of 2-3 towns. It seemed serious, but nothing that could not be fixed in few hours. I called the power company, only to get re-routed the automated power outage reporting system every time.

As we sat together the wind dropped off and picked up several times. It’s low pitched howling mixed with actual emergency siren sounds fading in and out from all directions. My brother works at a restaurant 10 minutes away from the house. You cross the bridge, and jump on the highway, make a U turn and you are there. He had power all evening so obviously the damage was local. But sitting in that dark house, and listening to the howling wind, and counting the passing ambulance/police sirens it almost seemed like we were are in some post apocalyptic movie in which the civilization just came crushing but no one has noticed yet.

Around 11pm, I went back downstairs with a big battery powered lamp, and a plastic yellow radio/cassette player we used to take to the beach. I hooked the lamp above my bed, propped the radio on my night stand, and tuned into some music station. Compared to the howling, and creaking I heard upstairs, my room was quiet as some ancient tomb. Initially I wanted to play some mp3’s from the desktop, but naturally this wouldn’t work without electricity - and I don’t have any music on my work laptop. So the radio had to do for the time being. I desperately needed some background noise in this deathly silence. Next to the radio I placed my cell phone which was both my life line to the outside world, and also the only watch I owned that still worked. All of the other time keeping devices in the room, require running power. Next to the cell phone, I placed my trusty LED flashlight. Thus armed I hopped into bed with a book and decided to use this time to catch up on my reading.

It’s funny how even during this blackout I was desperately clinging to technology. My cell phone, the radio, the electric lamp. They were all my crutches. What it this was it, though? What if the power never came back up? What if the world died that night for whatever reason? My cell phone would die unless I found some way to recharge it that didn’t involve plugging it into the power socket. My lamp, my flashlight and my radio would only work as long as I would keep feeding them DD batteries. And then what?

Even worse, was that all of my lives work - everything that I have created, and learned so far would suddenly become irrelevant, and absolutely useless. My MS in Computer Science and sysadmin/software developer background would mean nothing in a world where computers were just a distant memory. I was ill prepared for living in a post apocalyptic world. My professional skill set was narrow and useless - the only useful bits of knowledge would be the stuff I have learned in the science classes. Chemistry would probably be useful if I had to Robinson Crusoe by myself for the rest of my life in the urban jungle. So was math, engineering and biology. But computer science would be all but irrelevant.

I did not really posses any survival skills to speak off - I’d usually just google up just look up stuff like that as needed. I think that if the civilization ended tomorrow, and I was one of the few survivors, one of my priorities would be to loot a library searching for useful urban survival knowledge. But my mind balked at the prospect of searching for knowledge this way. That would be so slow and inefficient - and there would be no guarantees I’d find what I was looking for.

What would I do in this new world? How I would the rest of my life play out? Would I be a drain on my family, and the local society possessing few useful skills? How would I deal with all my hopes, dreams and hobbies being blinked out of existence. How about you? Do you think you would survive in such scenario? Do you think you would be ready?

I must have dozed off with the book, and my dark thoughts about the end of the world. I woke up way past midnight. All the lights in the room were on, and the blaring TV was trying to compete with the radio over who can assault my ears with a louder and harsher cacophony of sounds. I smiled to myself, I switched the radio off, turned the volume down on the TV, shut off the lights and went to check my email. I really needed to finally buy that damn UPS for the desktop.

Blinking Dash: The Video

Saturday, February 23rd, 2008

I still have no solution to this problem. Will Sheldon had some useful suggestions for me yesterday, but messing around with boot.ini did not do anything. The /sos option did not display anything. I also tried stuff like /safeboot, /safeboot:minimal, /basevideo and etc. It seems that the problem happens before NT loader even gets to parse the ini file soo none of these instructions really do much.

Ben on the other hand seems to think it might be a power supply problem. It could be but I have full access to the hard drive when I boot off the CD. It just doesn’t boot. As far as I can tell my problem is somewhat unique. I have yet to find someone having exactly the same problem. There are a lot of documented issues out there that are somewhat similar (ie share the blinking dash thing) but most actually make sense and are some sort of easily solvable driver problems.

Either way, I figured out that I take a vid of what is happening so that you guys can see the what is this thing all about. This was taken at approximately 3am in a dark room with my Nikon Coolpix S50 so sorry for the quality. Also, don’t mind the mess on my desk.

The computer usually doesn’t sit on the floor like that. It’s actually tucked in the nifty little “computer shelf” of my desk but I moved it out when I was ripping out all the USB cables from the back hoping this will fix the issue.

And yes, that is a Think Geek binary clock on top of the monitor. mrgreen

I wiped the drive clean and reinstalled Windows on it today. My machine boots once again. I already transfered my firefox profile from the backup drive so I’m 80% back to normal. Now I will need to slowly install all the little pieces of software that I will need. I’ll probably keep it light this time - this is bound to happen again. I just wonder when - I got 2 months out of it last time around. Let’s see how long can I go this time…