fun with technology

By anders pearson 20 Apr 2002

some days i just love technology.

<p>i got my tax return a while ago and my first instinct was to buy a new computer; put together something top of the line and expensive. my current machine is an old celeron 400 that i&#8217;ve had for almost 3 years now. unfortunately, i have student loans and credit card payments and stuff so i knew i couldn&#8217;t really justify spending all that money on a new computer. but if i didn&#8217;t do something to make my machine faster, i&#8217;d be more and more tempted to go blow a wad of cash on new hardware. </p>

<p>so i spent some time digging around through all the specs of the hardware i&#8217;ve got trying to figure out what i could do to improve performance the most for the least amount of money. i filled it up with <span class="caps">RAM</span> last summer when prices fell through the floor so memory wasn&#8217;t the problem. anything more than a trivial processor upgrade would probably require a new motherboard (which would probably require new <span class="caps">RAM</span>). speeding up my hard-drive would require either moving to <span class="caps">SCSI</span> (expensive) or <span class="caps">ATA</span>-100 (requiring a new mobo or at least a controller card).</p>

<p>really, what was killing my system the most was the graphics. my computer came with one of those evil onboard <span class="caps">ATI</span> Mach64&#8217;s. turning on 3d acceleration for that card actually makes things slower. so i picked up a cheap ($50) GeForce2 MX 400 card.</p>

<p>wow. what a difference. before, i couldn&#8217;t even load tuxracer; it would seriously take several minutes just to render the title screen; 3d graphics were out of the question. now it smokes. X windows even loads almost instantaneously now.</p>

<p>it&#8217;s probably a pretty sad commentary on the age of my computer that a $50 upgrade can just about double the performance. it&#8217;s also not exaggerating much to say that the graphics card has just about as much processing power as the rest of my system. on the positive side, i&#8217;ve now extended the lifespan of my computer for quite a bit longer.</p>

<p>while i was at it i picked up a wireless keyboard and mouse so i can take full advantage of my projector. i can now relax on the couch and work on the computer (or play tuxracer). </p>

<p>the keyboard i got is a logitech itouch keyboard. it&#8217;s a pretty standard black keyboard with a nice feel to it and about a dozen assorted buttons and controls on it. it comes with windows software that&#8217;s supposed to make all the buttons do simple things like take you to a web site with just one keystroke. most interestingly, it has a volume knob and play/stop/ff/rew keys which look like they might actually be useful.</p>

<p>after some experimentation with <tt>xev</tt>, i confirmed that the extra keys were just sending keycodes in the undefined range. with some <tt>xmodmap</tt> tweaking and help from <a href="http://216.239.51.100/search?q=cache:tdeheWhqpvoC:xmms-shell.sourceforge.net/">xmms-shell</a> and i now have all the buttons working in linux and bound to things that i find useful. i&#8217;ve even got a &#8220;thraxil&#8221; button that takes me directly to this site. :)</p>