Tim Trott's Blog
The weblog of an amateur Astronomer, Photographer, Programmer and car enthusiast.
You are currently browsing the archives for the Computers category.
Enable Remote Desktop Connections on Vista Home
Sunday 29th June 2008
It is very annoying when a Microsoft product does not work, but something even more annoying is the fact that it does not work intentionally. This is the case with Remote Desktop on Windows Vista.
Remote Desktop Connections (RDC) are a tool provided in XP and later versions of Windows that allows a remote user to take control of another machine as if they were sat in front of it.
I have been using Remote Desktop Connections (RDC) for years between two XP computers (one Home and one Pro) they can connect to each other in either direction. Very useful because I have my main XP Pro machine in the home office, and a XP Home laptop connected through wireless. I can lye in bed with the laptop, sit in the garden, in the lounge or anywhere else, and access all my programs, documents and internet through RDC.
That was until I got Vista Home Premium and I found out that Microsoft has intentionally disabled this feature! Citing some security issues that “anybody can connect and take over a pc” they disabled incoming connections. Instead I have to setup a request, save it to a USB stick, go over to the other pc, load the invitation and connect. This must be done each time I want to connect. How annoying is that?
While I accept that it is a possible security risk (you do still have to know a username / password to connect) I would have preferred the option to allow incoming requests anyway. I am on a private network so why can’t I allow incoming connections???
The solution
Browsing the net I found a great solution to this problem on fransblog, a simple patch which allows full connectivity. Just download the zip file, extract and run a batch file as administrator. Job done, it now works perfectly first time.
Thank you Frans!
I am now (a little) happier!
Comments: No responses yet
This post is filed under Windows Vista by Lonewolf at 12:14pm
Alpine iDA-X100 - In Car iPod Radio
Saturday 10th May 2008
Now that I have my iPod all set-up how I want it (no thanks to iTunes!) I set about installing my new Alpine iDA-X100.
I was looking for a solution that didn’t involve 30+ CD’s rattling around in the glove box getting scratched up. I was looking for a solution that meant that I could change what I am listening to quickly without hunting down a particular CD. It was obvious that the solution had to be some kind of digital music management system, either a USB device or a Hard Drive unit, so I set about looking on various websites and forums until I found the Alpine iDA-X100. Looks great and easy to use, I did a bit more research into the unit and everybody is giving it praise. Only one problem - I didn’t have an iPod! After some net trawling I managed to get the Alpine and a new iPod Nano 8GB delivered for around £330.
The radio itself features a large control dial on the front which functions in the same way as the iPod wheel, as well as a few buttons on the front. The right hand side of the unit is dominated with a large colour TFT display used for showing track information and album art.
Once the unit was installed I quickly plugged in my iPod, which the unit found immediately and presented me with a list of the music on it. Using the front wheel (double-action encoder) to scroll and pressing it in to select made changing the albums lightning fast. The unit also sounds amazing, clear and undistorted bass with crisp and sharp trebles.
I also tested the unit with a standard USB memory stick (thumb drive) and the unit functions exactly the same as when the iPod is connected except that you do not get album art through a USB stick. Album/track navigation is just as quick.
So if you are looking for a similar in car media solution then I can fully recommend the Alpine iDA-X100 iPod USB Digital Media Receiver.
Comments: No responses yet
This post is filed under iPod by Lonewolf at 12:36pm
Saturday 3rd May 2008
Well, I finally imported all of my MP3 collection into iTunes after a week of tedious configuration and mind numbing re-tagging of over 4000 files. So after all of this work, was it worth it? Well my new iPod Nano now has over 100 albums on it (1300 tracks) and I can now listen to my favourite music where ever I am.
Sharing What I Learned
While tagging, converting and generally taking a long time to use a horrible piece of software to perform what should be an easy task, I learned quite a bit, including how to solve some very annoying problems.
iTunes will not import an MP3 track(s) - Firstly make sure you can play the track(s) using Quicktime player, if you can then iTunes does not like the MP3 header or tags. I used a tool called MP3 Repair Tool and removed the first 1 frame as well as everything after the last frame. iTunes would then import the file and you can set the tags manually.
iTunes will not import an album - As above, MP3 Repair Tool can work in batch mode. You can then use Windows Explorer to batch tag the files with album/artist by selecting the files, right click and select properties. On the summary tab select advanced and give the files album and artist. This will group the files in iTunes where you can further name and tag.
Adding Album art in iTunes - Not as intuitive as Windows Media Player, it took me a while to find how to do this. Select and right click on the files to have art associated with them. Click on Get Details, and drag a jpeg image onto the artwork box. When you click on ok, iTunes will add the artwork to the files. Don’t use a high resolution (I found 100×100 a good size) image as it will be added to each file. Large images will a) take ages to process and b) increase file size and album size meaning less can be stored on iPod.
iTunes splits albums up into separate albums of the same artist/title - You need to make sure that the artist and album are EXACTLY the same for all tracks. Select all the tracks that are within the same album, right click and select Get Info. Make sure that the album/album artist/artist is correct and tick the check boxes next to them. This will tell iTunes to apply these settings to all selected files. If that still does not group them together then select them all, Get Info and change Compilation to Yes and apply the changes. They should now be together on one album.
iTunes takes ages to load - Still waiting to find a fix for this one. Each time I load iTunes it takes around 5 minutes for the program to show, even though I only have around 5000 tracks. I know people with twice this in iTunes which loads instantly.
Got any iTunes or iPod tips to share? Please share by leaving a comment on this post. Thanks!
Comments: 2 responses so far
This post is filed under iPod by Lonewolf at 7:42pm
iTunes - The Worst Software Ever Written?
Sunday 27th April 2008
Well, I finally succumbed to peer pressure and joined the digital media bandwagon by buying the latest Apple iPod Nano. I have already ripped all of my legally purchased CD’s onto my hard drive for a more convenient catalogue and playback through Windows Media Centre (which does a fantastic job BTW) so I just needed a portable device - and why not go for the king of MP3 players?
Upon arival, the small, neat, packaging presented a shiny new iPod in a well made perspex display case with everything packed in tidy and efficiently - the sign of things to come? The first thing I did was to turn the iPod on. Having never used an iPod before I was a little uncertain about the location of the on/off switch but when I pressed the menu button the screen lit up with a welcome sign prompting me to select my language. With that done I set about navigating the menus using the touch wheel - it took some getting used to! I find it a bit too sensitive and often move off the intended item while pressing enter.
Now I need some music on my iPod, so I headed over to Apple.com to download the latest software (my iPod Nano did not come with any) so when that finally downloaded (~60mb) I installed it and started it running, choosing a folder for my existing mp3’s and let it go away and locate everything.
At this point I must say that I was expecting it to search through the folders finding mp3’s and cataloguing them in the same manner as Windows Media Center (WMC), that is it reads the MP3 tags for album/artist/genre and shows the album art.
Boy was I mistaken! I don’t know what it did, but after half hour of disk thrashing I had over 2500 “albums” each with 2-5 tracks in them, some duplicates, most of the cover art was missing and everything filled under the “Other” genre. Most of the tracks had the wrong titles and albums were split up into multiple sections. The whole thing was a mess, then the program crashed.
After a bit of new scouring, I found that iTunes is very finicky about the tags in the mp3’s and that it isn’t intelligent enough to spot an extra space in an album title for example (unlike WMC), so I set about going through each and every mp3 with Windows Explorer and verifying the tags. With that done, I went back into iTunes, cleared out the library and started again. It processed most of the items correctly this time, but around 800 songs were not assigned to an album or artist, so I went through and re-assigned every one from within iTunes.
Feeling good, now that I had sorted this out (after two days of playing files) I started coping the files onto the iPod, but I noticed that there were a few albums missing, and I had only got to ‘C’. A quick glance at the stats showed 2453 tracks listed - a little short of the 6825 mp3 files reported by Windows Explorer.
I set about manually adding these files into iTunes without luck. Apple have a policy of graceful erroring, so that if an error does occur - you don’t know about it. At least windows tells you that there was a problem importing a file!
After more net browsing I found a tip about stripping all tags from an mp3 then importing it, which does seem to work, but I now have to retag nearly 4500 files! And worse still - WMC is now totally screwed up because the tags have been changed by iTunes!
iTunes has just crashed again, and now it takes around 3 minutes after clicking on the icon to load up.
Four days of editing tags, assigning albums/artists/cover art and I still have not put anything on my iPod! Worst software ever!
Comments: No responses yet
This post is filed under iPod by Lonewolf at 10:00am
Folding Category Plugin 0.4.3 Released
Sunday 30th December 2007
After a few hiccups with 0.4, version 0.4.3 is released which fixed a lot of bugs people may have experienced.
The latest 0.4 version introduced a much faster XML recursion based algorithm, rather than four foreach loops, the code is now much faster to execute and does not iterate unless it needs to.
Unfortunately, there were a few problems with the initial 0.4 release, much of the base code had been changed and it reacted differently on every combination of server/php versions. There has been a report of incompatibility with PHP 4.2, however I am unable to verify this. If anybody is running the plugin on PHP less than 5.2 I would like to hear from you, or if its not working for you. There were also a number of minor bugs, all of which have been resolved in this version.
0.4 is also the first version added to WP-Extend, so you can download and receive notifications through wordpress.org.
You can download the latest version from the folding category list page, or from the Wordpress plugin site.
Comments: 2 responses so far
This post is filed under Wordpress Plugins by Lonewolf at 3:01am
Wordpress Folding Category Plugin 0.3 Released
Wednesday 12th December 2007
My Wordpress Folding Category Plug-in received a minor bug fix today when I transpired that the table prefix wasn’t coded properly in some installations. This has now been fixed along with a few other minor bugs including the use of the before_widget and after_widget variables.
Version 0.3 also adds a new feature where you can assign a page a category using a custom field, which will expand the navigation list to a given category.
Full update, features and download are available on the plug-in page: http://lonewolf-online.net/computers/web-development/wordpress-folding-category-widget/
Comments: One response so far
This post is filed under Wordpress Plugins by Lonewolf at 9:52pm
Folding Category Plugin 0.2 Released
Tuesday 20th November 2007
I am pleased to announce the release of version 0.2 of the Folding Category List Widget for Wordpress 2.3+. This version fixes a few bugs and introduces new features:
- Full configuration via Widget Control Panel - no more editing the plugin source.
- Option to cache navigation structure to further reduce server load (experimental)
- Added unique ID for each category to enable CSS styling per id.
The plugin is available for download on the plugin homepage: Wordpress Folding Category Widget
Comments: No responses yet
This post is filed under Wordpress Plugins by Lonewolf at 10:44pm
Folding Category List widget for Wordpress 2.3
Monday 5th November 2007
As your blog gets more and more posts, inevitably you will create more categories to cope. Eventually your categories will take up more room on your screen, and scroll across many pages. I have a blog, which has around 300 categories, and with this number the standard Wordpress category list expands the page and pushes the content below navigation to three or four pages down.
In order to solve this problem, categories can be made ‘children’ of ‘parent’ categories, and a tree like structure is created similar to the folder view in Windows Explorer.
This plug-in provides a Folding Category Plugin widget for Wordpress version 2.3 and above. It is still in a relatively early phase of development, however it is being run on this website and my paranormal website (Your Paranormal).
Quick Features
- Only uses one SQL query so it does not put strain on server (except when post count is enabled)
- Priority based category selection where multiple categories are available (e.g. single post view)
- Wordpress 2.3 support
Please see the plugin homepage for further details and downloads: Wordpress Folding Category Widget
Comments: No responses yet
This post is filed under Wordpress Plugins by Lonewolf at 10:27pm













