ksmith: (shirley)
ksmith ([personal profile] ksmith) wrote2012-05-26 08:56 pm
Entry tags:

I want this day back

At least 3-4 hours of it, which was the time I spent deciding I needed a new external HD, buying one in haste from the local big box, trying to install it, failing miserably, and driving back to big box to return it.

Yes, Dear Reader, it was a Day of Unintended Tech.

I found the right external HD online and ordered it, so sometime next week I may finally be able to use Time Machine as it was intended. I have an external HD currently, but it’s only 80 GB (only 80 gigs ::shakes head::) and is just about full–I can save individual files and folders, but wholesale backup is no longer possible according to said Time Machine. In addition, the 1 TB unit (1. Terabyte.) I ordered is already formatted for a Mac, which the one I struggled with today wasn’t. Yes, there were instructions for reformatting, but something kept accessing the drive even though I was sure I disabled/turned everything off, and I frankly don’t have the patience + know-how to grapple with something like that at the moment. So back to the store it went and left the store I did, return credit in hand.

What started this little rainbow ball spinning merrily down the mountain was the fact that MobileMe is going away next month and with it my access to Backup, its nifty, straightforward online storage application. I liked Backup. I could configure it to save the files/folders I wanted saved when I wanted them saved. Every night at 730pm, a little brollie appears in my Dock, and all my writing files–PC Word, Works, MacWord, Scrivener–all get backed up within an inch of their little virtual lives.

Starting sometime next month, however, MobileMe will be replaced by iCloud. The issue that served as the first warning pebble in this avalanche of WTF was the fact that iCloud only works with Lion, the new OS which I had yet to download because I kept hearing that there were Issues. Supposedly many of those Issues have been resolved and I was running out of time in any case, so today I took a deep breath and downloaded/installed Lion. I then checked Scrivener to make sure it still worked, which it did. Then I set about setting up my iCloud account.

I did believe at first that I would be able to backup my files as I had before. Not so, Dear Reader. iCloud apparently only works with iWorks and other Mac products, none of which I am using, so backing up my files as before was Right Out. This was when I reevaluated Time Machine, learned that my present external HD was no longer up to the task, and set about finding a replacement. And failing. At least until later in the week, when I SHALL SUCCEED, DAMMIT, AND SPIT IN THE FACES OF ALL THOSE *&^%$#@ WHO REPLACE PROGRAMS THAT MEET MY NEEDS WITH PROGRAMS THAT DON’T.

Don’t mention Dropbox to me. I opened an account today. It doesn’t do what I want, unless I am missing something obvious which is totally possible because I tend to intuit applications instead of reading the instructions. This system usually works reasonably well, to tell the truth, if only because a program that I can intuit is one that I will be able to work with. Like Backup. Which is going away next month, did I mention?

Night is falling. Coffee has been brewed. Some days, there isn’t enough coffee in the world.

At least the brownies came out all right. This recipe, courtesy of the folks at Recchiuti, but without the nuts and marshmallows. My batch actually tasted fairly close to the to-die-for brownies that Recchiuti sells on their website, but there were differences due to, I think, the pan and the butter. I used a glass 8×8 baking pan/dish, and did not remember until too late that you need to bake at a lower temp in glass. As for the butter, I used plain ol’ grocery store unsalted, which I doubt met the 82% butterfat requirement specified in the recipe. So, watery butter and too high a heat meant that the brownies came out slightly overbaked–still moist in the center, but dry around the edges and lacking the flourless chocolate cake density they were intended to have. That said, they’re still the best brownies I have ever made and among the best I have ever eaten. It’s a keeper recipe. I just need to tweak. And get hold of a good metal pan and some boutique butter.

And it’s now dark outside. Chilly day, as it turned out. Rainy morning. Tomorrow, however, we are supposed to set records–I am hearing rumors of triple-digit temps, which would be an almost 40-degree upswing from today. Personally I think those of us north of the city will be cooler, but I guess we’ll see.

Mind’s churning a little bit. Tech has that effect on me. If I were a hard drive, I would be racing.

Backup’s going away next month. Fck.

Mirrored from Kristine Smith.

[identity profile] threeoutside.livejournal.com 2012-05-27 03:27 am (UTC)(link)
I hate the tech world. It's a trap, is what it is. And it's one I knew full well when I got into it back in about...1987 when I talked my husband into letting me buy our first PC because I was getting ready to leave my then-job with the UN Med Center and I'd lose the 40% discount I could have as an employee there; I specifically USED the never-ending-wonderland-of-continually-updated-gizmos as a lure because my husband was the World Champion Gizmo-Lover and I knew he'd fall for it.

But now, as I get older, it is increasingly infuriating to me that just about the time I get comfortable with a new hardware or software, they make it obsolete. I am not much of a tech head, if it doesn't plug and play, I'm screwed. And I can foresee the day when it just isn't worth it any more. Not to mention that they'll be out of my budget range. I got along without computers before I met 'em, I can get along without 'em now. Except that now, so much of my interaction with the world is via the internet. Oh well, someday that won't seem so important either, and eventually this old Boomer dinosaur will lumber out of the picture entirely.

Just feeling grumpy. I've known for a long, long time that what the merchants want has nothing to do with what's good for us.

[identity profile] kristine-smith.livejournal.com 2012-05-27 05:45 am (UTC)(link)
I understand a company not being able to continue to support all the old software they've released over the years. But to me, iCloud seems geared toward social media--folks sharing photos, music, communicating. That's still a secondary need for me--primary need is backing up/storing all that virtual paper I've created over the years. Making my work life easier. Not ready to work solely on iPads/iPhones yet, along with the archiving/storage needs. I'm not Apple's primary focus, and it apparently matters more and more with respect to what they create and continue to support.
ext_3634: Ann Panagulias in the Bob Mackie gown I want  (animals - kitty mouth)

[identity profile] trolleypup.livejournal.com 2012-05-27 01:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Dang! Microsoft is evil, but they do allow you to run some damned ancient software. I'm still running utilities that are so old that they don't recognize scroll mice! On the other hand, I don't use many online utilities.

Yay for the brownies, anyway.

[identity profile] kristine-smith.livejournal.com 2012-05-27 02:45 pm (UTC)(link)
The big disconnect came when Apple switched from Power PC to Intel. My 8yo iBook is Power PC. Still runs Tiger b/c that was the last Power PC Apple OS and the last OS that supported serial/parallel port adapters--I use one to run my old HP1100 LaserJet printer. Yesterday, I tried to hook up an older model LaCie external HD to the MacBook, and it wouldn't work b/c the MacBook isn't PowerPC--that's what I get for waiting so long to hook it up. But even peripherals have been affected, which I guess stands to reason. I can still network with the iBook, and I'm not sure if that ability will ever go away. But Tiger is no longer supported. Haven't had any software updates since I don't remember when.

I've been poking around, and my anti-virus suite (Intego) offers a back-up application that I can set up to save things. Not sure how picky I can be--can I choose individual files, etc--but it's something to look into, even if I have to use Dropbox as a destination. Once the external HD arrives, I will have a better idea what to do. I don't want to keep too much on the cloud, but it's nice to have some things out there in case the house burns down.

I am happy about the brownies. Looking forward to playing with the recipe.