Looking for recommendations on big external USB drives

I’ve had a series of bad experiences with cheap-ass external USB drives. I’ve bought some that sucked right away, and some that look like they’re working right at first but which get slower and slower and slower. One I have now that I’ve had for years is working perfectly, and another transfers a few files quickly and then bogs down hugely and gets slower than USB 1. I’ve also got a couple of Seagate Free-Agents that are working perfectly (after I discovered how to turn off sleep mode).

So I’m thinking that from now on I should stick to the known brands. Also, my backup needs are getting bigger, so I’m thinking of getting a 1Tb disk. Does anybody have any specific recommendations in that size range? Stick with Seagate? Right now the price leaders seem to be Iomega (the company that brought you the term “click death”) and LaCie. Any experience with them, especially as TimeMachine drives or doing hourly rsync backups on Linux?

The best advice you’ve been given in your life

I host a bunch of mailing lists that use the absolutely excellent mailing list software called “Mailman”. Some I run myself, others I just host for others and somebody else does the actual list membership management and stuff. Every month, on the first of the month, Mailman sends out an email to each member of each list with the names of the lists they’re on, the passwords they’re using for that list, and how to unsubscribe or update their memberships if they want or need to. Since some of the mailing lists are low traffic, and since list traffic which bounces often doesn’t indicate the actual subscriber’s address (because they’ve forwarded it from one address to another or because the bounce message doesn’t clearly indicate who it was sent to), the monthly reminders are a good way to weed out invalid addresses, as well as helping remind people that they’re on the list and what to do if they don’t want to be on the list any more. So I always see a small flurry of people unsubscribing or modifying their subscriptions right after that reminder comes out, which I see as a good thing.

But inevitably, some idiot gets the email, and rather than actually reading the instructions contained within, they hit “Reply” and tell me to unsubscribe them. I reply back and say that they were emailed detailed instruction on how to unsubscribe just yesterday, and they should try reading those instructions and following them. And if they’re like the idiot today, they say that they tried but it wanted a password, and bemoan the fact that I’m being unhelpful. To which I reply pointing out that the email whose instructions they supposedly followed included that password.

I also point out that “when you’re given instructions, you should read them and follow them” are the most helpful anybody has ever been in their entire lives, because this doesn’t just help them in this case, but for everything they might want to do or accomplish for the rest of their lives. How many other people have given them help today that will change them from needy whiners with an overdeveloped sense of entitlement incapable of doing anything on their own without hand-holding into bold, confident go-getters who can meet any challenge with aplomb and vivacity?

And do you think they thank me? Never!

Ethical dilemma

I’m in the middle of a big refactoring job for my work project. I’m basically restructuring all the classes that make database calls so that they use connection pooling with a per-thread “DatabaseHandle” that caches PreparedStatements. It’s a big job, and it’s going to take a LOT of time and concentration, which means that home is a far better environment to work on it than at work. The problem and dilemma comes because I was on a roll when I hit 40 hours for the week. I’m not allowed to bill more than 40 hours, and I’m sure as hell not going to do it for free. Nor can I work from home without prior approval and that’s not easy to get.

So my question is, do I quit now and hope I can quickly get back in the groove on Monday morning, or do I work on it this weekend and then when I’m done spend an equivalent amount of time at my desk at work working on personal projects, like my photoshop stuff? I’m thinking it’s probably safest, although nowhere near as productive, to shut down Eclipse right now and don’t look at it until Monday morning.

Anticipation

My new computer skinIn anticipation of today’s announcement of the new MacBook Pro, I ordered the computer skin a few days ago from iToppers.com. Today the guy producing it sent me this image of what it’s going to look like.

I can hardly wait. I hope there is an airshow nearby where I can get the team to sign it.

I guess you can call me a convert, then

A few hours ago I was complaining to a bunch of friends how annoying it was to do Photoshop with a ball mouse. My optical mouse broke (the first button went down and didn’t come back up) a few weeks ago so I’m using this old ball mouse, and no matter how carefully I clean the rollers, it seems that when I click and drag to the left, the mouse will stop. If I just move the mouse without with the button down, no problem, it follows it all over the place. But it takes multiple attempts to drag anything to the left.

One of my friends, Harry, is an extremely experienced graphic artist, and he said “forget the mouse, buy a Wacom Bamboo tablet”. At first, I was reluctant, because the logo for this thing looks like the word “Bamboo” drawn on an Etch-a-Sketch, which doesn’t say much for its drawing ability. Also, the Wacom promo stuff talks only about it as a device for mouse-replacement and handwriting, with absolutely nothing about using it for drawing or other artistic work. But I found a couple of user reviews where they pointed out it has force sensitivity, which is not something you need for handwriting and mouse-replacement. They said it was an excellent tablet for amateur artists, as well as something professionals might want to put in their laptop bag for use on the road. So on the way home from lunch we stopped off and bought one.

I’ve been using it continually since then, and as far as I’m concerned I should throw away all my mice and buy one of these things for every computer I use. I’m using it for general mouse-replacement and it’s great. The only thing I reach for my mouse for is for the scroll wheel, and that’s mostly force of habit since the tablet has scroll buttons on the top. This thing is extremely great.