Tad's IT Blog
Posts tagged photo
One sure-fire way to crash an iPhone 3G
Jun 5th
Well, I’ve just found a sure-fire, always-works way to crash an iPhone 3G: use a picture for a contact that’s taken at a higher resolution than the iPhone 3G’s internal 2-megapixel camera.
Seemed like innocent entertainment for me when I used a picture of my 7-month-pregnant wife which I had taken on a recent cross-country trip as the contact image for her in my iPhone 3G. The image was a 4-megapixel image taken with my Minolta DiMage Z2, and I selected it as her contact photo in Windows Contacts, which are synchronized to my iPhone.
Then, the next time my wife called me, my phone refused to pick up, and locked up when trying to answer. I rebooted it.
Then, she called again, and my phone immediately locked up. I rebooted it.
Then, after leaving me voicemail, she called again, and the phone sloowwwwwly allowed me to slide and unlock it, but wouldn’t answer. I had to reboot it again.
I finally realized it was the fact that it was trying to pull up a 4-megapixel image as the contact photo when answering it, and that was what was crashing the phone. Switching to a small image handled the problem.
So, if any of you run into the same thing, there’s your lame answer.
Sounds like my little iPhone needs some more RAM!
Sleeper Car on the Amtrak Coast Starlight
Apr 29th
One thing I wanted to catalog while it’s still fresh in my head is my outstanding train trip on the Amtrak “Coast Starlight” train, a trip I took from Los Angeles, CA to Portland OR this month.
Thankfully, due to Obama’s insistence that we get some high-speed rail happening in the U.S., rail travel is starting to get a bit more exposure, but not nearly enough as far as I’m concerned. Most anyone looking to transport themselves from L.A. to Portland would automatically start looking for the cheapest flights, and would overlook the train altogether. Well, before I even hit my photo tour, let me explain my main reasoning one would want to take a train:
- It’s comfortable: Regular coach-class seats have significantly more room than on an airplane or a bus, and when you’re 6’4″ like me, that matters. Never mind how comfortable it is when you’ve got a sleeper car.
- Power Outlets: Most of the coach-class, and all of the sleeper cars, come with 110v power outlets, so you can just sit down and work on your laptop almost the entire journey if you so desire. Or, there is a Lounge Car and a Parlour Car, also outfitted with 110v power, where you can hang out, eat and drink coffee and look at the scenery through the windows that go all the way up into the roof.
- Scenery: The trains go past some of the most breathtaking scenery that you just do NOT see when you’re in a car. I’ve driven the I-5 from Portland down to L.A. a number of times, and that is a boring, boring drive. But the Amtrak train manages to hit all of the most stunning country, from the California coastline near Vandenberg Air Force Base, to Mt. Shasta in Northern California, and the Oregon Cascades. Really just stunning stuff.
-
National Park Guided Tour: From Santa Barbara up through San Luis Obispo, there was a representative from the National Park Service who gave a great guided tour of the scenery from the Lounge Car of the train. That part was great, as he pointed out the nifty rocket-launch and missile-launch gantries at Vandenberg AFB, and a host of other cool factoids that made the California leg of the trip more interesting.
- Bring your Bike: Another big plus, was I was able to just box up my bike and take it on the train, along with about 2x the luggage that any plane would let me take.
- Sleeper Car: We got a “Roomette” for our trip up to Portland, which is Amtrak-speak for a small room that has two fold-down beds, but doesn’t have it’s own in-room shower. More expensive rooms have their own showers. Ours worked just fine, even for 6’4″ me, and my 6-m0s-pregnant wife. It had nice, big windows, really comfortable seats, places for all kinds of storage for goodies, a little table for working on my laptop, and best of all — free meals. The train has a diner car and a parlour car, both of which serve meals, and we could just show up and get a full lunch/dinner/etc whenever they were serving. And the meals were absolutely not bad either.
And there are more plusses as well, but I’ll just hit those by way of photograph.
Easiest way for me to give you the photo tour, as well, is to just check this out on my Flickr map.
Or, you can get a visual tour on a Flickr slideshow here.
Live: Broadcasting from Oregon
Apr 28th
I’m firing up now my first self-hosted WordPress blog — broadcasting live from my temporary abode in Beaverton, Oregon. This first post is really just a test of my new server, analytics and hosting settings, as all of my other WordPress blogs have been on wordpress.com, and not using the WordPress.org blogging software.
I must say, as a web developer and search engine tweaker, it is an infinitely better and more rewarding experience to host it yourself, as there are so many more tools you can put to use and ways to manage and monitor what’s going on. Hope to have quite a bit of fun with this in the near future.













Recent Comments