Nov 30

Technology has definitely come a long way. I’m writing this post on board Delta flight DL-2106 from San Jose to Atlanta using an in-flight wifi service called gogowifi. Getting a fairly decent speed as well. It’s a red eye, so I’m going to try and tune out so I can be functinal in the morning.

written by varun \\ tags:

Apr 14

A pretty amazing talk on game changing wearable technology by Patty Maes and Pranav Mistry from the MIT media labs:

written by varun

Jun 24

A quick way to find your ip address – this-ip.com

written by varun

Jun 12

Interesting article on lifehacker that talks about upgrading your routers firmware to boost your wireless signal, prioritize what programs get your precious bandwidth (QOS for VOIP), and do lots of other simple or potentially much more complicated things to improve your computing experience.

The firmware is called DD-WRT. From their website:

DD-WRT is third party firmware for the Linksys WRT54G/GS/GL and various other 802.11g wireless routers based on a similar Broadcom reference design. See Supported Devices. These routers run Linux from the factory, and as such, their source is released under the terms of the GPL.”

I’m currently running an Airlink AR410W Super-G that doesn’t appear in the list of supported devices.

written by varun

May 30

The new toy has arrived – Roku SoundBridge M1000. This nifty little gadget does exactly what I had been looking for. It streams digital music from my PC over the WiFi network to a pair of stereo speakers or the home audio system. It can also stream digital radio stations without having to turn on the PC. Finally, an attractive solution to play digital music in any room.

The Good: Feature rich, nice looking, intuitive, does exactly what it’s supposed to do without any fuss.

The Bad: Only supports 802.11b. I had my router configured to do only ‘g’ – took me a while to figure out why the WiFi connection wasn’t working. Does not support the new WPA standard. I had to switch back to WEP.

The squeezebox is the competing product that doesn’t have any of the above drawbacks but comes with a $299 price tag that’s a $100 more than what I paid for the Roku.

written by varun