The $1799 Glass Of Water

Last Sunday, March 6, was my first anniversary with my lovely wife, Steffanie. We had just gotten back from sending a relaxing weekend at the 1804 Inn at Barboursville Vineyards just outside of Charlottesville VA. Steffanie was suffering from one of her headaches (which will hopefully be gone soon) and I was crawling around on the living room floor assembling a new coffee table that we had purchased from IKEA on the way back from our trip. Steffanie was lying on the couch napping with a fresh glass of ice water resting on a coaster on the old coffee table. The lights were off in the room, with only the shades open (the lighting was dim) because it was raining outside. While I was putting together this piece of furniture, I was simultaneously installing Snow Leopard on the media center Mac Mini (I had installed thew OS X Lion Developer Preview on it to test it out, but due to it breaking a few important 3rd party apps, I needed to reinstall 10.6). While going through the Snow Leopard install screen, I did something very stupid. I attempted to sit on the edge of the old coffee table while holding my combo Apple bluetooth wireless keyboard & Magic trackpad (with Twelve South's Magic Wand to attach them). When I did this, I leaned back slightly and tipped this glass of ice water over causing its cold, and very wet, contents to spill across the coffee table. The water spread fast, sloshing up against the closed lid of Steff's MacBook Pro and a bit went into the rear exhaust vent. At the time, I had no idea that water had gotten inside the case, which I will figure out later on - after it was too late. Panicking, I leapt to my seat, setting aside the keyboard/trackpad combo and grabbing the MacBook Pro. I immediately turned it so that the side facing the water was towards the ground and rushed to grab paper towels to absorb any water. The first thing I did was to check any cracks or crevices for water, running the thin edge of a paper towel in all I could find. After searching and drying, for several minutes, I thought I had gotten it all. Me, being an idiot, neglected to unscrew the bottom cover and check the inside for water before attempting to turn it on. Instead, I decided to put it on the kitchen counter and turn it on. Bad move. The screen flickered to life and the Mac began to try to wake from sleep. About half-way into lighting up, the screen flickered and the computer powered down. Uh oh. Pressing the power button again...nothing happened. At this point I flipped it over and grabbed my Torx multi-screwdriver made specifically for servicing Macs. After removing the bottom cover, I found a few small flecks of water here and there around the case. I carefully dried all of these off, and fetched a can of air, to blow air in every crack or crevice I could towards the exhaust vent. After several more minutes of thorough checking, I was sure I had gotten any remaining water out. I quickly put the case-cover back on, flipped the machine over, and tried to turn it on once more. Nothing. I then plugged in the MacBook Pro into the Magsafe and, to my surprise, it booted just fine. Once in OS X, a cursory check of the Battery menubar UI showed that OS X reported the batter as "Not Charging" (later reboots would have it also randomly display "No Battery). To skip several more paragraphs of detailed trial and error, I can say that at this point the MacBook Pro only works when plugged in. If you unplug it, it will die. No battery capability what-so-ever. If you put it to sleep, unplug it, move it to another location, and then plug it back in, it will boot up as if it was completely off. Needless to say, Steffanie was not happy with me at this point. I made a Genius Bar appointment at our closest Apple Store for the next day after work. The Genius was very nice, helpful and sympathetic. He attempted to switch out the battery, but no luck. Apple's estimated cost to service/replace the logic board (the next most likely culprit of the problem) comes in at around $1250.00. Well, there went my plans to have acquired an iPad 2 on launch day. I feel incredibly guilty for what I did to my wife's one and only Mac. She uses this computer for everything - it's her main workstation. I can't just go out and buy myself a new iPad 2 given that I currently have a 27" iMac, iPhone 4, iPad 1, and Mac Mini, while she is stuck with, what I now jokingly call, a DeskBook Pro. Also to further pour salt in the wound (as if the $1799 replacement cost for a new MBP wasn't enough), by my having missed the launch day, it will now likely be 3-4 weeks before I can now even buy an iPad 2 due to stock shortages. As some of you may have previously seen from my tweets or her blog post, she is set to have brain surgery in 9 days. I was looking forward to being able to use the iPad 2 to take my mind off of worrying as I undoubtedly will be spending a lot of time in waiting rooms, hospital rooms, or at her bed side while she is recovering. I do have an idea though. One that she doesn't get to know about. And yes, honey, I know you'll read this so don't bother asking me.

Photo: President Obama meets with Tech Luminaries

President Barack Obama joins a toast with Technology Business Leaders at a dinner in Woodside, California, Feb. 17, 2011.

Here’s the full list of attendees according to the NY Times, LA Times and SF Chronicle:

  • John Doerr, partner, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers
  • Carol Bartz, president and CEO, Yahoo!
  • John Chambers, CEO and chairman, Cisco Systems
  • Dick Costolo, CEO, Twitter
  • Larry Ellison, co-founder and CEO, Oracle
  • Reed Hastings, CEO, NetFlix
  • John Hennessy, president, Stanford University
  • Steve Jobs, chairman and CEO, Apple
  • Art Levinson, chairman and former CEO, Genentech
  • Eric Schmidt, chairman and CEO, Google
  • Steve Westly, managing partner and founder, Westly Group
  • Mark Zuckerberg, founder, president and CEO, Facebook

Going around the circle, starting from the President's right: Mark Zuckerberg, Unknown, Dick Costolo, Carol Bartz , John Hennessy, Reed Hastings, Larry Ellison, John Doerr, John Chambers, Art Levinson, Eric Schmidt, Unknown, Steve Westly, and Steve Jobs.

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Also posted to the official White House Flickr account, a photo of the President speaking with Mark Zuckerberg.

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Music on Glee is Horrible

My wife loves the show Glee. I dislike the show. I don't hate it. I just don't like it. This probably wont surprise anyone who knows me given that I hate soap operas, and lets be honest here, Glee is just a high school soap opera with music. Some of the characters are entertaining, such as the cheerleader coach, but I feel those are not sufficient redeeming qualities. But those reasons are not why I severely dislike the show. It's the music.

Many naive people do not realize that all of the music on the show is lip-synched. When I point this out to Steffanie, she retorts that she knows this and fires back that all of the music a viewer hears on the show is really sung by the actors/actresses in a recording studio, so they're really lip-synching to themselves which makes it okay.

Okay, fine...but they do an absolutely HORRIBLE job at lip-syncing for themselves. The next time you watch an episode, pay close attention to their mouthes. The actors are running all about the room, performing stunts yet their voices have the same perfect level of pitch and they never seem to tire, despite that they're leaping from desks or jumping from objects while they belt out long-high notes.

The worst might be when they pretend to be playing instruments. The drummer is the worst. It's unbelievably obvious that it's an electronic drum track, so don't have shots of him playing on a drum set and hitting cymbals when there is no cymbal in the actual track.

But again, that's not really what bothers me. Up until this point, I could excuse all of these things if the music was good. But...it's not. It's horrible.

Disney auto-tunes all of the music on Glee so much that it's laughable. Oh, you don't think that's a big deal? It is. I am a HORRIBLE singer but if you put me in a professional recording studio with someone who is an expert at auto-tuning software/editing, you can make me sound phenomenal. Take a few minutes and check out this PBS story. After you listen to that story, you'll be able to hear the auto-tuning in Glee songs from a mile away. And its not just Glee, its 50% or more of all music you hear on the radio these days. It allows mediocre to okay singers sound like Luciano Pavarotti. The sound of a large group of people singing together in absolutely perfect pitch is so unnatural it's almost creepy; it's like the audio equivalent of paint-by-numbers.

I guess it's okay for you to like the show for the writing, the teenybopper drama, or the fact that this show is trying something new & different that other shows haven't had the balls to do in a long time. But please keep in mind, the music is terrible.

You may all commence flaming me on Twitter now.

Playing Tour Guide

Steffanie's mom is visiting us here in DC and I decided to take a good many pictures as we walked around DC today using an excellent new HDR iPhone program that Merlin Man recommended. I was surprised at how well the application and the iPhone 4 performed as a point and shoot digital camera.



The Whitehouse, HDR

Smithsonian Castle, HDR

The Washington Memorial, HDR

Julia Childs' Kitchen, HDR

Smithsonian Castle's Back Garden/Courtyard

Interior of the Smithsonian Castle

Oh, and I had to throw this last one in there even though it is not HDR. This is the original costume used for C-3PO in Return of the Jedi. I met C-3PO, in person!

C-3PO

Web Analytics For The Past Year

I've decided to publish my past year's statistics for public consumption. Note that my site doesn't get a ton of traffic. A few things I took note of:

  1. February was my biggest month of traffic until the end of September/October. We had two Blizzards in February which I blogged and photographed extensively. Capital Weather Gang here in DC linked to me several times which brought in a ton (for me) of traffic . September/October was when I launched HowToUseAnEscalatorInDC.com & HowToUseMetro.com.
  2. I get a metric shitton of robots hits whether from search engine crawlers or spambot scrapers. Google is #1. Spammers are #2. Yahoo is #3. Baidu is #4. Bing is #5.
  3. Chrome has almost caught up to Firefox.
  4. If you are one of the 19% who browse my website using IE6, please stop. Get off the Internet. You do not deserve to own a computer.
  5. Safari beats both IE7 and 8.
  6. More people use iPhones than Linux (haha).
  7. Nintendo Wii? Who was that? Someone I know, no doubt.
  8. OSX is almost up to 30%.