Archive for September, 2008

iPod shuffle killed my PC

Monday, September 15th, 2008

I’ve had my amazingly tiny iPod shuffle for a few months now and it’s been great for clipping onto my shirt collar while cycling etc. I love it and it’s never given me any trouble.

Until last Tuesday…

I plugged it into my PC to update its playlist and give the battery a charge but the PC refused to recognise it all of a sudden. Windows gave the little sound it does when a USB device is plugged in or unplugged but iTunes wouldn’t pop up like it normally does and I eventually got a Windows message saying something to the effect of “One of the USB devices attached to this computer has malfunctioned, and Windows does not recognize it”.

So I try it in a few other PCs and get the same response. Now the iPod works fine otherwise, if I plug the earphones in I can listen to tunes just fine, so I figure maybe it needs a reset or something. So I go to plug it back into my main PC but before the USB plug reaches the plug, there’s a spark to the case, the PC switches off and there’s a burning smell.

Oh crap!

I turn the PC back on and get a warning that the processor has changed, press F2 to continue or F1 to enter setup (or something like that), but it’s frozen and that’s the closest that PC will ever get to booting up again. The motherboard is fried. :(

After replacing the motherboard after not even two months since I fried the last one, I then learn that the boot sectors on both my hard drives have been lost and no amount of chkdsk or replacing the hive and so on will get things happening.

So I’m back to formatting.

Oh joy oh joy. At least this time I was adequately backed up but my PC is still a nightmare to reinstall with lots of specialised applications and takes a good 20 hours of solid work to get back to operating the way I need it to.

D’oh! D’oh! D’oh!

Lessons learned:
1. Get a USB hub if hot swapping USB devices
2. Don’t use important PCs for non-essential tasks if you can help it.
3. Ghost complex installations using DriveImage XML or similar.

Many thanks to my old mate Rustty for losing almost as much sleep as I did to get me up and running again and for having the most amazing collection of spares around his house that I’ve ever known anyone to have. I swear there’s enough around that place to put a lot of PC shops to shame… ;)

BTW, I took the iPod back to the place I bought it from and after trying it on another USB cable it appeared to be fine, so they swapped my cable for theirs and away I went and all’s been good with it since. For some strange reason they seemed reluctant to try my cable in one of their PCs though…

Billion 7402NX receives PC User magazine’s best buy award.

Friday, September 12th, 2008
Great to see the 7402NX win the Best Buy awards amongst 12 routers in October issue of PC User Mag. Well done Billion!

Click here to check out my 7402NX review.

New FAQ: Connecting a router to BigPond or Optus Cable

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

I decided to put together a new FAQ covering Routers and Cable ISPs. Most of the information was already on the website but scattered around and I thought it was time to group it all into one page.
I also wanted to draw attention to the two different types of cable modems now being issued by ISPs.

One type of Cable modem, usually wireless, is already a router. However, I get lots of enquiries from people wanting features that these don’t provide such as better wireless capabilities, better security features or better configuration options for more advanced applications.

The other type of Cable modem is a plain (bridged) modem that can’t share the Internet by itself. These are the ones you want if you want to plug them into other Routers.

The next issue was how to find compatible routers to suit Cable modems. (I don’t know how many times people have purchased ADSL modem-routers from me with the expectation they would work on Cable, even though I have suitability warnings on every router & modem on the OzTechnologies website).

I also wanted to point out that Cable modems can only be sourced from the Cable ISPs and aren’t available for general retail in Australia.

And finally the trick to getting it all going is to turn the power off to the modem for a few seconds and not just via the standby button on the top of the modem.

Hopefully it saves a few headaches and frisbeed routers. ;)

Click here to check it out.

Billion 7402 series and BigPond/Maxon BP3-EXT 3G modems

Monday, September 1st, 2008

For anyone having troubles with BigPond/Maxon BP3-EXT 3G modems on the Billion 7402 series routers try the beta firmware available here.

For a list of currently supported 3G modems for Billion products click here.

For other 3G capable routers see the list at the bottom of my 3G FAQ here.