Thursday, December 22, 2011

Dan Erwin Tribute


Since the BMW CCA redesigned their website, the tributes written after Dan Erwin's death have been lost to the internet, which I find very sad. So here is what I wrote in memory of Dan, which was also published in the Roundel, the BMW CCA magazine:

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If Dan Erwin had lived in the days of the Wild West, he would have been a cowboy who could make his horse dance and a fearsome gunslinger who preferred to shoot whiskey over his fellow man. I can imagine him as a fighter pilot in World War I, a cigar clamped in his jaw, laughing in his open air cockpit as he buzzed over the local farmer’s daughter on his way to strike fear into the enemy.


In his way, the Dan Erwin I knew was just as iconic a figure, but in these modern days his steed was invariably some BMW or other, and he lived a lot of his life out on the edge, those bone-white teeth bared to the world in a crooked grin capped by that outrageous mustache. His eyes were often hidden by big black sunglasses that were years ahead of fashion, so as often as not you were greeted by that grill, a wry salutation and a laugh. His worn, leathery skin came from years outside among the beasts he tamed and immortalized in words. Dan always seemed comfortable, whether in a triple-digit trail braking turn, exhorting the lukewarm tires for grip or striding amongst the cars he loved so much, looking for inspiration.


But at the end of the day, Dan was about people and the adventure of life. He drew stories out of people, not because it was his job, but because he knew experience is the paint applied to the canvas of life. He was a connoisseur of that art and took slivers of it to make his living, offering his rich narratives to the many who weren’t lucky enough to be wherever Dan was. He’d make them feel like they were. And when you were fortunate enough to be in his company, you’d find yourself sharing stories and re-living experiences you might not have appreciated as much at the time. Dan made everyone around him more of an enthusiast. When you could get him to share his yarns, you got the same experience as his writing – vivid and seen from a slightly different perspective than the typical.


For those of us in the SouthEast SharkFest clan, Dan was one of the original members, and was in fact the first to declare it a family in his article in 2003. He saw it really before anyone else did. He was the brother who cast away the boundaries of the mundane corporate world and seized life by those trademark teeth, chased what he loved and made a living at it. And yet for all his zeal for adventure, he always seemed to draw other people in, make them feel important and leave them feeling a little richer. He shared his wealth of knowledge and experiences freely, and one never got the sense that Dan had anywhere else to be other than with you, as often as not with a beer in hand, carefree.


I said once that my biggest problem at SouthEast SharkFest was a wealth of good company. Dan was a big part of that, and I'm very, very sad to lose him. Vaya con Dios Dan.
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Wednesday, March 24, 2010

If you travel a lot, you probably have several things in your bag that pretty much do the same thing: Let you listen, let you talk or both. Not too long ago, I emptied my carrying case, and came up with these:

The buds that came with my iPod, the corded earpiece with a microphone for my phone and the two-prong headset I used for VOIP calls and WebEx sessions.

Not only were all of these confusing, but they created chaos inside my bag - they were constantly tangled, I could never seem to get my hands on the right one and they took up a lot of space - something that is at a premium when I'm mobile. Like many of you I'm sure, I am mobile more and more these days.

Lenovo recently introduced a new product that not only allows me to carry a single set of buds for all those things, but gives me terrific sound quality and an attractive price. They are called the "ThinkPad In-Ear Headphones" and you not only get a great companion for your ThinkPad for VOIP calls or a WebEx (using either dual 3.5mm jacks or the 2.5mm standard that is now appearing on PC's), you get a terrific set of in-ear headphones that fit the same 2.5mm industry standard jack for your MP3 player. Lastly, these same ear phones work in my cell phone, too. The microphone is well-placed and the in-ear design gives high quality sound and blocks out much of the noise of the coffee shop, the plane or my kids.

The best part is the price - all that flexibility comes for less than $20 (USD) and in a handy little pouch that takes up very little room in my bag and makes a little order of the chaos. I'm a fan of anything that can accomplish that.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Amazon Broadens eBook footprint to iPhone

Crazy, you say? Nay.

Death of the Kindle? Hardly.

In announcing support for iPhone, Amazon has done something really smart. First, they've made their product available to a far larger base of customers, which should translate to higher sales of the content. Second, these are customers who are the perfect target for something like the Kindle - tech savvy, living in the connected world and with means enough to afford an iPhone, so presumably a Kindle wouldn't be out of reach.

But if they're reading books on an iPhone, you say, why would they want a Kindle?

I'm thinking that Amazon is counting on getting iPhone users hooked on the content while giving those customers the ability to see the value in the richer experience provided by the Kindle.

Make no mistake, I'll likely get some of the content on my iPhone, but I'm guessing it will be better "convenience reading" - quick reads between meetings or in airports - rather than a good long hour with a cup of coffee, which is what a Kindle is made for, and once you've got the bug for the content...

The fact that the software will keep track of the books between both devices and keep them in sync makes me thing Amazon had this in mind, too. Clever.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Cutting edges can be sharp...

So, it has been a week or so since getting all this new technology going, so it is time for some updates.

X301 - I'm trying really hard to think of something critical to say about it, but I can't find it. It is simply the best ThinkPad ever, and that puts it on a pinnacle above every notebook in the universe. Seriously.

Windows 7 - I'm missing some of the ThinkVantage Technologies that are available for XP and Vista, but with the exception of the issue with tdx.sys discussed below, it is stable, fast and easy. Winner.

ReadyNAS Duo - you don't see a review of the Duo for a reason. If you're running Win7 and an antivirus program, you're likely to have an issue with bluescreens faulting a file called "tdx.sys" when you try to access a remote share or mapped netword drive...

like a ReadyNAS...
















While it works on the Mac, the setup wasn't happy, and I didn't have much time to work with it. I'll try again, but the Win7 bug is was pretty much 100% - every time I tried to access it, it was an invitation to the BSOD party.

I'll try to get it running in the next week or two, but time is a little limited.

DIR-655 - My ThinkPad likes it and my iPhone likes it, but my wife's iMac isn't as happy. She's complaining of very slow running, so I have a little more debugging to do. Everything else seems OK, so I'm wondering if the security and how it is implemented with OS-X. Will be interesting to see if it works out OK.

I'm a little bummed that the 655 and the ReadyNAS aren't running without hitches, but I'm still optimistic about them both.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

N Marks the Spot



To really leverage the wireless speed of the ThinkPad X301 as well as provide a high-performance backbone for the NetGear ReadyNAS Duo, selected D-Link's DIR-655. The reviews have been excellent on this router, and the combination of 802.11n and a gigabit ethernet switch really offers a lot of capability.

Since I'm running Win7, I had to launch the setup wizard in "Compatibility Mode" and I'm unsure how much impact that had on the setup. The wizard itself is pretty simple, though I don't think the instructions make it clear enough that they want you attached to the router via the included Ethernet cable to complete the setup.

The steps were clear enough - it took a while sometimes for the setup to move to the next step, but I'm not sure if that was due to the fact that I wasn't connected via ethernet. When setting up the wireless configuration and activating WPA2 security, the browser would occasionally error out as if it couldn't connect. Powering off the router and all the goodies attached and restarting the ThinkPad seemed to fix that issue.

WPA2 wireless security generates a huge key. Anyone who can hack into this thing should be working on Madoff's Swiss accounts instead of messing with me. You can choose a passphrase that generates the key to make it easier to remember.

Everything seemed OK getting the ThinkPad and iPhone connected (though I hate typing that long key, especially on the iPhone - shoulda used the passphrase). My wife's iMax doesn't seem to see the gigabit connection I'm offering it. Wireless works great, and was just as easy as the reast, but I really don't want it running to the ReadyNAS over wireless. Something to figure out for later.

Wireless speed on the X301is noticably faster than the 802.11g router it replaced. It even seems faster on the iPhone and iMac. I'll give it an "A-" for the setup experience, even allowing for the fact that Win7 might have been throwing it a curveball. Initial performance is an "A" even though I haven't really positioned it in the closet yet for best signal. I'll reserve the manageability grade once I've installed the ReadyNAS, configured everything and started doing backus and remote access. That will have to wait - the Carolina vs. Duke game is tonight

The First Step...two at a time...

The ThinkPad X301 is simply an amazing machine - quiet (SSD hard drive and if there is a fan I haven't heard it), fast, solid, light, terrific keyboard and screen and all the touches that make a ThinkPad the best notebook PC on the market. If you are measuring for anything more than sheer specs, the ThinkPad trounces everything. The attention to detail in the design borders on obsessive, and the X301 is everything I wanted in a notebook: a great LED-backlit screen, a full-size keyboard with terrific feel, ~3 pounds, an optical (no I don't use it much, yes I want it anyway) and built like you could throw it at a brick wall and it would work (and pretty much it would).

So I took the leap of running Win7 on it out of the gate. I am running Win7 as my daily machine, with Notes, Office 2008, the VPN and all the other things I run standard. Everything works perfectly, though I've had to set several things to "compatibility mode" which is simple. I'm running and working fine.

What impresses me is how amazingly fast it all is: boot, resume from sleep, shut down, connecting, everything seems to just happen. I've had no lockups or blue screens at all.

I really like the new task bar - it is a far cry from the Vista Sidebar in terms of style and function. Connectivity seems a little limited and but is very simple, somtimes to the point of confusion if you want to do some advanced setup. There are many things (including Lenovo's Access Connections which will be available for Win7 I'm sure) to help on that in any case. Also, I'm guessing I'll look back at the new arrangement in Win7 and wonder why they didn't do it that way before.

I like the "preview" feature when you hover over icons on the task bar - really useful and inuitive. I could go on, but Gizmodo's writeup on Win7 covers the bases well.

I was early to Vista as well, and went back to XP, tired of all the battles I had to fight to run my PC. I tried again later with the same result. Couldn't solve the performance, the compatibility or the ease of use well enough to be worth it. And it ran like a pig.

Win7 is putting the "Win" back in "winner" - I expect Microsoft to be running downhill with consumer customers as well as enterprise looking for a way out of XP without having to do Vista.

Win7 appears to have it all, and it will be interesting to see how things play out. It won't be dull...

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Much to do...



Wow - it has been a long time since I've picked up the...er...keyboard, and I'm on the technology side of things for the moment (though Sharkfest is coming up...)

Several new things coming up: I've upgraded to a ThinkPad X301, and to net it out, this is the best notebook I've ever seen. Truly a work of art.

Next up: Win7 Beta, currently running on the X301 and the quick word on that s Win7 is going to be a huge winner.

The house is getting some new gear, too.

My new D-Link DIR-655 arrives tomorrow to match the 802.11N capability of the ThinkPad as well as provide the Gigabit backbone for the last (but not least) interesting piece of technology - the Netgear ReadyNAS Duo.


The ReadyNAS gives me 500GB of mirrored, Web-accessible storage that can host folders, backups, song and picture libraries and more.

All of this promises to be an interesting journey, and I'm really looking forward to getting it all running together. I'll get to the ThinkPad and Win7 first (and soon).