Archive for the ‘Software/Hardware’ Category

Looks like I can do Networking now too!

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Just finished up a job in Montreal doing networking for our new office we are setting up.  With the help of a couple of guys (and a few beers), we were able to wire up the new office without too much difficulty.  Check out the pics below:

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Live

Easy integration with Picasa and WordPress

Saturday, July 4th, 2009

While setting up this blog, I needed a quick and easy way to get photos from my computer up onto my website.  I didn’t want to be messing around opening my FTP manager, creating thumbnails and jumping through all those hoops.  I use Picasa to manage all my photos on my computer, so ideally it would hook up to that easily.

What I came up with was using NextGEN Gallery for WordPress.  It seemed like a pretty easy way to manage my albums and galleries without getting too involved.  I was also able to utilize Picasa’s experimental publish to FTP feature.

Heres how to get started:

  1. Install NextGEN Gallery for WordPress.  Once you’ve got that installed, you’ll want to make the following changes:
    In the Options menu -> General Options: Make note of the gallery path.  You’ll need this for Picasa later.
    Options -> Thumbnails: Choose the size of your thumbnails.  150×150 should be perfect.
    Options -> Images: Chose how big you’d like the full-size images to be.  The width here should be less than your overall width of your template.  I’d suggest 800×600.
    gallery-1gallery-3
  2. Find the pictures you want in Picasa.  Hold them in your selection box in the bottom left of your screen (Ctrl+click to get them there)
  3. In Picasa, click Tools->Experimental->Publish to FTP
    gallery-4
  4. Choose an appropriate resolution (again, I reccommend 800×600) and a folder name
    gallery-5
  5. Choose XML Template, Press next
    gallery-6
  6. Now it will ask for the FTP account information.  Click on create new account.
  7. Enter your relevant informaion.  Make sure you set the FTP path as your gallery path from step 1.  Verify the account just to be sure you entered everything properly.
    gallery-7
  8. Once Picasa has finished uploading to your website, log back into WordPress.
  9. In the Gallery Admin, click on Add Gallery / Images -> Import Image Folder.  Type the name of the gallery used in Step 4 and add /imagess/ to the end of it.  eg. /wp-content/gallery/car-tranny/images/  press Import Folder.  This should now grab all the images Picasa put on the server and make your gallery with thumbnails.
    gallery-9
  10. Using the Album section in the Gallery admin, you can create your album page.  Alternativly, you can import your gallery directly into a page using the plugin with NextGEN gallery.
Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Live

How I built my Media Center

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Setting up a Media Center – top to bottom

I’ve been using an old laptop for the past few months to watch divx movies and downloaded TV shows on my TV. Its been working out pretty good, but now I’ve decided it was time to fully integrate a Windows Media Center into my home theatre setup.

I wanted the media center to act as a server for all my media (music, tv, movies, photos).  I want to be able access the media on this computer from anywhere on my network and also outside my home netowrk as well.

I had a few parts leftover from a recent upgrade of my primary desktop, add in a tuner, and I was set to go with the following setup:

The Setup

  • Intel Pentium D Dual core 2.6 GHz
  • ASUS P5K-VM
  • 3 GB RAM
  • Hauppauge Win-TV PVR150 Media Center Tuner
  • 1 80GB Main windows hard drive
  • 2x500GB, 1×360, 1×250 SATA2 hard drives
  • Windows XP Media Center
  • Media Center Remote

Right now everything is in an old case I had laying around with an equally bad power supply – those are next on my upgrade list.  I’ll run down a more detailed building of the media center in another article.

Pre-installation

Just a couple of things before we start

  • Make sure you have your Windows Product key handy
  • Prepare your system for S3 sleep modeGo into your BIOS, Power Management, and set the sleep mode to S3, or enable ‘suspend to RAM’.  See exoid and here for more info on this, and I’ll touch on it more later.  This needs to be done before you start installing Windows.

You will also want some kind of idea of how you want to store everything.  What I recommend is to use your smallest (but also quietest) hard drive as you primary windows drive.  You want it to be its own drive so that your other drives will only hold your media.  It should be quiet because this will be the drive that is used most frequently, you will notice if its a louder drive.  You should use any other drives as storage drives.  I’ve got one drive (80GB) set up as a windows and application drive, a 500gb for movies, a 500gb for tv shows, and the 320 for recorded tv, while the 250 has music, photos, and downloaded programs and other files worth keeping.

However you decide to do it, plan it out before you start installing windows.

Installing Windows Media Center

To begin, start off by installing your flavour of Windows.  I used XP Media Center instead of the Vista media center for a few reasons.  For whatever reason, XP is somewhat faster than Vista, and since I’ll be using this as a gaming console as well as media center, the extra speed will be important.

During installation, I set up two users – one is the standard one with no passwords, the other is one with a password which will be used to administer the computer remotely without having to sit in front of the TV and run windows updates and such.

Once you get Media Center installed, get some drivers for your motherboard installed.  Dont forget things like SATA, RAID, network, audio, video card, and the like.  I’d recommend getting the latest drivers from the manufacturers website especially if you chose to run Vista.  Install the drivers for your TV Tuner now, plus any other drivers you will need.

Configure Windows & Media Center

Once you get windows installed, you’ll want to get some basic housekeeping things done.  Set windows to grab updates and install them automatically, that way you wont have to worry about doing it yourself.  Do this by going through Control Panel -> System, Automatic Updates tab and just make sure Automatic Updates is turned on.

You’ll also want to run through the system settings in Control Panel -> System.  Hit the Remote Desktop tab and allow for users to log in remotely.

Installing Other Applications

Opening ports on your router/firewall

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Live

Configuring Remote Desktop for Media Centers

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

Remote desktop configuration

Ok, so now that you have a Media Center computer set up, there are many more things we can do with it.  If your Media Center is hooked up to your TV, you probably don’t want to have to be sitting in front of that system to do all your housekeeping, such as installing updates, programs, or moving files around.  I’ve got two tips here to help make your life easier on remotely managing your Media Center.  These only work in XP Media Center, don’t know about Vista.

Allowing multiple logins

Server guys already know and love this feature.  It allows you to have multiple people logged in to the same machine.  For example you can log in remotely to your system to move some folders around, or to update Windows while somebody else is watching TV, and you will not interrupt their session.  You can do these steps while logged in remotely to your machine.

Heres how to go about it:

  1. Download this file – termserv.dll – Its the Windows Server 2003 which we’ll use to replace the stripped down version we find in Windows Media Center.
  2. Type the following into Windows Explorer: C:\Windows\system32\dllcache.  Rename the termserv.dll that is already there to something else.
  3. Copy the termserv.dll that you downloaded into that folder.
  4. Navigate to C:\Windows\system32, and do the same steps above – rename the existing one, and copy the new one in.  We have to do it in this order because Windows filesystem will try to protect these dlls by replacing the one from the cache if the one in use is changed or removed accidentally.
  5. Now Windows has the functionality required for what we want, we need to update the registry to make it work.  Hit up the registry editor at Start->Run-> type ‘regedit‘ and press Enter.
  6. Navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Terminal Server\Licensing Core

    and create a new DWORD entry called ‘EnableConcurrentSessions‘ and give it a value of 1.

  7. Close the registry editor.
  8. Open up the Group Policy Window; Start->Run type in ‘gpedit.msc‘ and hit Enter.
  9. Head on down the menu tree until you get to Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Terminal Services.  Click on Limit Number of Connections to modify it.  Check the ‘enable’ box, and enter the number you would like (3 is good).
  10. Now all that is left is to create another user in the user management section in the control panel, and make sure they have a password, you need it or else you wont be able to log in remotely, which brings us to the next section…

Logging in remotely without a password

This is a tricky one to recommend – on one hand I have to say you should never allow a login without a password for remote connections, but on the other hand, it makes life a whole lot easier in the MCE world.  For instance, you need to install a program that the media center user (when you turn on the computer, the account it automatically logs into) requires access to.  Either you physically install it on the MCE machine – on the TV, or if you could log in remotely it would be easier.  The only problem is that by default, you require a password to use remote desktop.  You can get around this by using TwakUI to automatically log in with a username and password, but as soon as a screensaver comes on, or the system goes to sleep, then you need to enter in a password on the TV, and thats not fun using a remote.

Long story short, we can get around this limitation very easily by following the simple steps below:

  1. Goto your computer’s administrative tools (Start->Control Panel->Administrative Tools) and click on Local Security Policy
  2. On the left Navigation pane, click on Local Policies, then Security Options.
  3. Double click on the right side Accounts: Limit local account….. and change to disabled.

Thats it for that one, now you can log into your MCE box (or any XP machine) remotely without a password.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Live