Aug 03
I need to get myself a new laptop computer. Well to be honest I actually need to get myself any laptop. Surprisingly, as an IT person, it’s been four years since I’ve owned one! In the time since I last had one I’ve been backpacking and in the three plus years I’ve been living in London I have always had a work provided one. While the work one has always been good it’s never been ideal as it’s never felt a safe place to store photos music and other such personal things.
So finally the time has come to bite the bullet and get one. The question I have been trying to answer for a while is what type? I’ve narrowed it down to two classes of machine. The first being a full spec 13 to 14 inch laptop such as the Dell XPS m1330. The second category is a new category as invented by the Asus called a NetBook. They are a smaller, lighter sub notebook in the 7 to 10 inch screen size with lower power processors, smaller solid state storage and come with a memory card slot and a webcam as standard but no CD-ROM. The first real NetBook which invented the category was the Asus eeePC Surf. Its a small white low power NetBook with a 7 inch screen and originally 2Gb solid state storage, and it took the world by storm. The reason why was that it was small, light and cheap. People didn’t seem to care that it didn’t run Windows (did I mention the vast majority of NetBooks run Linux), or even run iTunes. It allowed them to login to facebook, hotmail, gmail as well as upload photos, chat with their friends on MSN Messenger/AIM/Yahoo or what ever instant messenger they wanted as well as video chat or talk on Skype. There are now dozens of NetBooks out there. Asus has a huge amount of eeePCs including the eepc 701 (replacement to the original), eeePC 901 (9 inch screen, 20Gb SSD – the one I’m considering) and the eeePC 1001. There’s also the Acer Aspire One, the HP mininote 2133, Dell is bringing one out sometime this month amoung others (amazon link to category).
So I’ve got as far as deciding that if I go the real laptop I’ll get the Dell XPS m1330 or if I go the NetBook route I’ll get an Asus eeePC 901. I think I’ve got a couple of weeks before I have to make up my mind as the Dell XPS is due for a refresh and the eeePC 901 isn’t due in the UK until later this month. So what are the pros/cons for each type of machine. Well I’ll lay them out:
Full size laptop:
- Large 13.3 inch screen
- Lots of storage – 250Gb HDD
- Inbuilt 3G card
- Full size keyboard
- DVD Drive
Netbook:
- Small and light form factor. Take it anywhere
- No hard disk (12Gb Solid State Disk)
- No moving parts
The both have the following:
- Webcam
- Memory card reader – SD etc
- 802.11 wifi
- Bluetooth
Jul 03
Well like half the world seems to do I’m cleaning out all the excesses of my life onto eBay. I’ve only been in the UK a little over three years and in that time I’ve moved three times so I don’t have an overly large amount of stuff but even so I rarely throw away anything that’s still useful. I give it away or store it away. Being in the technology industry I tend to acquire various bits of equipment and books. Whether that be through stuff I buy, I’m given or receive through training or various other means. Over time you either end up using them regularly, not actually ever needed or they are superseded.
So when I last moved almost six months ago I started putting things aside into a plastic crate that was labelled eBay. Ever since then I’ve been meaning to get around to put the various stuff up on the site. I’ve slowly got myself organised by signing up for an account as well as a paypal account, photo documented all the items and listed them in a file so I knew all the things I had to sell. The list kept growing, the crate filled and started being piled up on top but still I never got around to actually putting things up for sale. I had to get organised! After all tech devices (not that it all was) tend not to appreciate in value while sitting around gathering dust. The next thing on the list was to google how to optimise my returns. More procrastination!
So the week before last I actually did finally get off my proverbial butt and start to put some items onto the site that has been made famous world over. I decided not to put everything on at once but to slowly add things and use some of the items of less value to experiment with. Oh so much stuff to fill in. You have to decide on categories, photos but worst of all postage… how much to charge, what type. First class or second class. Argh!
I eventually got it all sorted, items listed and now just had to sit back and wait and watch the cash flow in. Well over all I didn’t do too badly for first attempt. Some of the items sold, some didn’t but overall it wasn’t too bad. I won’t be giving up the day job though! I do wonder about some people and things at auctions. I got a free prepay mobile phone from when I moved carriers. When I listed it on the site the vendors price was £25, mine sold for £31. I’m not sure if that was the rush of adrenaline of sitting at a computer, the fact it was out of stock or discontinued or something else but you’d think people would do some research (I might prove myself and idiot by being shown up for not doing my research and finding the carrier has replaced the phone since.
Since the first round of sales I’ve discovered and read about some other tips for selling on eBay. The first was list your items on Thursday night between 17:00 and 20:00 for a ten day auction. That way the auction ends between 17:00 and 20:00 on a Sunday night. Apparently when everyone is browsing the net dreading going back to work the following day. Monday is apparently good with everyone at work browsing the net with Mondayitis.
The other sort of similar site that seems to be taking of is FreeCycle. What I don’t sell might well end up on there.
Anyway I have to go and search through the next cupboard and find more things to sell. I’m might just be getting addicted!
Jun 24
I love the BBC, it offers a great service with reporters distributed all over the world and some of their research units are developing leading edge technologies to do with video technologies, music and all sorts of things to do with broadcast, HD TV, DVB as well as IPTV (such as BBC iPlayer and the list goes on. The TV License is one of the few taxes that I don’t actually mind paying. For those that are interested in the new technologies that the BBC is playing with I recommend reading the BBC Internet Blog.
One of the cool new features they are developing a new beta product called Sound Index. Details about exactly what it does can be found on the site here. In very basic terms it takes information from various music sites around the net such as iTunes, Amazon, MySpace, YouTube, Bebo, lastFM, and more, they then apply an algorithm which creates a ranking of the top 1000 songs and artists online. Very cool and very interesting!
Jun 17
Mozilla Firefox 3 has finally been released. It has massive speed and security improvements as well as hundreds of general improvements and new features. The only other thing I need to say is get it now as its much more secure and faster for all your facebook and email stuff!
Apr 16
I noticed Canon
announced a new range of IXUS Digital Cameras. I have a Canon IXUS 800IS. I like it a lot. It’s a 6 mega pixels and has a 4x optical zoom with Canon’s extremely good image stabiliser. The current model is the Canon IXUS 860IS which is 8Mp and has a 3.8 IS zoom. The just announced new Canon IXUS will come with 10Mp and a 5x optical IS zoom, and do a sub 1 inch macro shoot. Wow! Must be almost time for another upgrade
The European model has yet to be announced but it will be in the 800 model range somewhere above 860. They’ll show up on Amazon somewhere here when they finally hit the shelves which I suspect will be before too long.
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