hendrikch.com – Hendrik Christian Blog on Daily Life

April 15, 2010

Buying a graphic card

Filed under: Technology — hendrikch @ 4:14 pm

If you’d like to buy a good value for money graphic card to upgrade your PC, a good place to start is Tom’s Hardware Best Graphic Cards for the Money articles. These articles are updated monthly, categorized depending on your budget. You may also take a look at Graphics Card Hierarchy Chart to know where your current graphic card lies in the tiers of graphic cards.

As for the prices in Simlim Singapore, a good start will be pricelists from Fuwell and Bizgram.

One thing I learned during my recent search for graphic card was to understand ATI Radeon naming convention. Generally, the graphic card has four digits model number, e.g. HD4650. The first digit says about the “generation”, so HD5xxx models are newer than HD4xxx. The second digit says about the graphic capabilities of the card, so HDx8xx models are better than HDx6xx. The third digit is simply to differentiate different products between the same family and capabilities.

As such, for example, HD4850 is actually a better card (and more expensive) than HD5670, but HD5670 has newer support for Windows 7 and DisplayPort, but it won’t be as capable as HD4850 when it comes to gaming.

Also, beware when buying HDx8xx or HDx9xx cards, as generally these cards will require power supply which is at least 450W+, so make sure your power supply can handle it before buying.

So, that’s it, happy buying :)

December 28, 2009

My gadgets in review 2009

Filed under: Personal Ramblings, Technology — hendrikch @ 9:34 pm

Year 2009 is coming to an end, and it’s that time of the year again to evaluate if I have been stopping myself enough from excessive spending on gadgets.

I will end year 2009 at $3,023 spent on electronics. Are they excessive? Let’s review.

For myself totalling $2,301.

  1. Canon EOS 450D + 18-200mm lens – $1,835.
  2. Sandisk 16GB SDHC card – $62.
  3. Holux M-1000C GPS logger – $104.
  4. Canon EF-S 17-55mm lens – $1,100.
  5. Sold Canon EF-S 18-200mm lens – ($800).

For families totalling $722.

  1. Kington 4GB microSD card – $14.
  2. Creative Live! Cam for notebook – $29.
  3. K-World DVD Maker 2 – $110.
  4. Sony earphone – $49.
  5. HP Mini 5101 netbook – $520.

Come to think of it, the only spending I did for myself this year were all camera-related, and here hoping all those investments actually produced great shots this year and beyond.

So, what do you think? Excessive? Or not?

August 31, 2009

Upgrade to Snow Leopard

Filed under: Mac OS — hendrikch @ 12:51 am

I pre-ordered Snow Leopard last week, and on Friday, DHL delivered the DVD to my office.

As planned, I upgraded my Macbook to Snow Leopard on Friday evening without any issue. However, I like things clean, and in the past year, I have dumped so many rubbish into it, and so I thought it’s a good time to do some house cleaning.

Saturday morning, I backed up everything I have, erased my disk, and install Snow Leopard fresh. 30 minutes later, I have Snow Leopard clean-installed, and few hours later, I have all my usual apps installed as well. Restoring backup took a few more hours, as I have ~70GB of videos and ~115GB of photos.

So far, I am impressed, everything ran fast. Launching Safari is something like a second, shutting down a mere 3 seconds, not more than four.

March 4, 2009

Too many icons

Filed under: Windows — hendrikch @ 10:41 pm

Too many icons

For the first time in a month, the icon in my taskbar gets SO full that it overflows to the second row. I actually don’t feel that I have installed A LOT of stuffs to my machine, let’s see from left-to-right: Internet Explorer, Chrome, Safari (just to try out, to be removed soon), Windows Explorer, Windows Live Mail, Windows Live Writer, Windows Media Player, Windows Live Messenger, Word, Excel, Skype, Calculator, Notepad, Mozy, TweetDeck, Windows Mobile Device Center, Services.

With the exception of Word and Excel, all of the software I have in my machines are freeware. And they’re pretty common too. I wonder how many icons can a 12” or 15” laptop fit when my 17” monitor can only fit so few (17 to be precise)? To Microsoft credit, they’re changing the space between icons in a more recent build to fit 20 icons in my 1280×1024 screen resolution.

February 25, 2009

Enormous Phone Bill – part 2

Filed under: Personal Ramblings, Portables — hendrikch @ 11:03 pm

Yesterday, I went to Starhub service centre to get more details about my data usage that amount to that HUGE charges in my bill. I talked to a nice guy who showed me a detailed log file containing every single site that I accessed, complete with its file size, time stamp, and all minute details you can think of.

The person showed me a column that he said containing the page size that I accessed (in Excel). We summed up that column, came out 226000, which according to him was in KB. 226,000 KB is close to 237 MB shown in my bill. Fair enough.

I asked the person to sort based on that column. The largest page I accessed was in http://m.google.com/ domain. The size column showed around 14000. I’m sure that column was in bytes, therefore the page size was about 14KB. The person insisted it was in KB, making that page size 14MB!! We’re talking about 1000 times difference here.

Singapore Rain Locations

Singapore Rain Locations

Scroll up a few lines, we could see this line: http://www.nea.gov.sg/cms/mss/gif/rainloc0.gif (shown above) amounted to 8579 in size. It makes perfect sense that it’s 8579 bytes, therefore 8.5KB. The person, again, still insists it’s 8.5MB!! Now, try loading that image in your browser, right click, look at its properties, and tell me how on earth that image can be 8.5MB? Even the photos from my digital camera were only half of that size. Moreover I said, if I could load that image in my phone in 2 seconds, does that mean Starhub network speed can go 4.25MB/sec? Heck, even my broadband at home can’t do that.

The person continued to give lame answers that would be passable to other non-IT-savvy users, but I eat bytes, KB, and MB for lunch, I know the differences. The person probably gave up trying to convince me with those lame answers, he promised to call me back later. I went back to my office, and about 6.30pm, he called me again, saying that he has checked and confirmed with the IT department, it was in KB, to which I replied “Check again, and call me back after you get more reasonable answer.”

About 8pm, he called me again, he told me, he has tried to load NEA website, clocking up 100KB from loading the page, and would need to get a few pages before he can hit the page where I could get that image. Well, I replied: “First, I bookmarked that image, so I don’t need to go through few pages to see if it’s raining in Singapore or not. Second, if the home page was 100KB, in order to hit 8.5MB, I would have need to visit 85 pages just to know if it’s raining or not??!!”

He gave up and offered to waive all the extra data charges this month, and will monitor again for my next bill. Good. Unless you can prove how I clocked up 237MB in a month when I have used less than 10MB each month for the past year, you should not try to charge enormous phone bill. Yeah, I know there’s a cap at $36, but still, that extra $30 is enough for my 6 months subscriptions. I’m not letting go easily, especially knowing that Starhub log file didn’t show that I did anything extra (like Youtube) in that month.

To be fair to that guy who helped me, besides the lame excuses, he actually did a good job, trying to cover up what I think was an accounting mistake on Starhub part.

Tonight, I came home, surprised to see a tweet from Starhub, offering help to check for me. I’m surprised to know that Starhub actually checks Twitter and address issues of its customers who complains in Twitter. Excellent job I would say. That Starhub Twitter account was created in 15 Feb 2009, so I think they’re only starting to use this popular online medium to reach out to customers.

Tweet from Starhub

Tweet from Starhub

February 23, 2009

Enormous phone bill

Filed under: Personal Ramblings, Portables — hendrikch @ 8:50 pm

My phone bill charges record so far was around $130, and that’s when I went overseas and uses did some roaming. With that in mind, I was shocked when I received this bill from Starhub today. $729.63 total data usage? What the heck did I do in two weeks so use up so much? I was in Indonesia for the other two weeks.

So, last week I called Starhub to ask for the details, and this afternoon, a lady from Starhub called me to tell me that she has checked with their IT department and confirmed I really have used that much. Puzzling. Especially if the counter on my phone shows only 8MB of usage.

I’m going to drop by Starhub tomorrow to get the details, see if I can spot something “strange” with my data usage.

February 16, 2009

Backing up contacts in your phone

Filed under: Online Service, Portables, Technology — hendrikch @ 11:00 pm

Recently, a friend of mine dropped his phone and spoilt it. With the drop, gone are all his contacts stored in the phone. Another one lost her phone a couple of weeks back, and since she hardly comes online, I was wondering why no news at all from her after so many weeks. Apparently, she lost her phone and with it, all her contact numbers.

That made me realize, in this time and age, when people are so dependent on storing contact numbers in their phone, it is more important than ever that our connection with friends should not be severed by a single point of failure, our phone. People should be backing up their contacts somewhere else, such that when disaster strikes their phone (fingers crossed don’t happen), it should be a simple task of restoring their latest contacts, rather than trying to ask their friends one-by-one via email or facebook for their contact numbers.

I periodically (as much as daily, or a few times a week) syncs my contacts, calendars, and tasks from my Nokia E90 to Mac’s iCal and Address Book via iSync. Sync-ing is done via Bluetooth, so I just need to have my phone within 5-7 metres of my Macbook, launch iSync, and click on “Sync Devices”. As simple as that. Calendar entries from iCal are then synced in the background to Google Calendar. I don’t sync any contacts to online services. Maybe I should, but in the mean time, I trust Time Machine backup that keeps me safe up to the last hour of my data. Good enough for me.

There are TONS of online services, most of them are free, that allows you to sync your contacts (and possibly calendars) from your phone to that online service. Check out Windows Live Contacts and Windows Live Calendar for you Microsoft and MSN users out there or Google Sync for Gmail fans.

Do you backup the data in your phone? How, and where?

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