Windows WiFi

This was actually driving me crazy to the point where I had to plug a cable in here at my desk… WiFi is definitely finicky regardless of position relative to my Airport when my Macs have no issue at any time.

Here are the symptoms of the problem: A Wi-Fi-enabled computer running Windows XP is working fine one minute, pulling up Web pages and processing e-mail. Then, for no reason, the connection drops, websites fail to come up and the e-mail flow stops. The small wireless connection icon in the taskbar says the signal from the access point is strong, so the problem isn’t that the user wandered out of radio range. The icon even shows that the computer’s Wi-Fi hardware is sending information to the access point — it’s just not getting anything back. And manual attempts to re-establish the connection through XP’s built-in wireless configuration tool won’t do the trick. Even more bizarre, the connection sometimes comes back on its own. [Wired News]

Download the Windows XP Service Pack 2

Don’t feel like waiting for the CD to arrive or Windows Update to have magically downloaded … here’s your chance to get the XP SP2 update now.

In case you haven’t noticed, we at Downhill Battle big fans of BitTorrent– a filesharing technology that decentralizes the distribution of large files from websites. Last week we launched p2pcongress.org to distribute video from Congress’s hearing on the INDUCE Act. And today, we’re announcing:

http://www.sp2torrent.com

It’s a site that links to BitTorrent files of the Windows XP Service Pack that Microsoft has announced. Microsoft is limiting their release of this update due to bandwidth concerns, and we’re taking this chance to show that p2p technology can get the file out to anyone who wants it, without massive server requirements. We’re not doing this to help Microsoft (believe me), but rather as a demonstration of why p2p is valuable. [Download the Windows XP Service Pack 2]

Drive Failure (not!)

I just resolved what I thought was going to be a serious drive issue here at atmaspheric HQ. Yesterday, one of my external FireWire drives shut down killing my chain and delivering a blow to my backup system — not to mention my entire digital music library.

As I disconnected everything today to check it out, I discovered the drive would not start-up at all when connected to my powerbook by itself… That’s when I realized I should check the plug in the cable chaos below the desk… It’s all good. Turns out one of our cats must have nestled a bit too close to the plugs and disconnected it at the mid-section where the brick connects to the extension.

Seems the simplest answer was the reason for the failure. Power is after all a critical element in getting electronics to work.