Day: April 24, 2002

  • Zero Plays Television

    At long last, I have audio and visual cable TV on my computer. Again. This time around, though, it’s the new ATI Radeon All-in-Wonder card that’s providing the TV tuning. It took some hoop-jumping to get working, including a switch to the Alsa sound drivers. Turns out that yes, Virginia, the internal audio cables on the AiW Radeon are just like those on earlier AiW models.

    In other news, I’ve stocked my Mozilla 1.0.0-rc1 install with the usual slate of plugins; Acrobat Reader, RealPlayer and the Java Runtime Environment 1.4.0 are all installed on the box; Evolution is working perfectly. It kind of balances out the parts of my workday that were totally crappy…

  • Enco, Win2K, Digigram, Tyan. Bastards, all of ’em.

    Today’s project was to get the new Newsroom 1 Enco workstation online. Piece of cake, right?

    (James Burke voice:) Wrong!

    (If you don’t get that bit, I insist that you find a copy of The Day The Universe Changed, all of it, and watch the series through. Then you will.)

    Thanks to Win2k’s ACPI and the damned Tyan motherboard’s inability to set IRQs by slot, I swapped cards around in that chassis for hours. Oh yes, and until some genius realized that we needed to tell the motherboard that IRQ 10 needed to be reserved for the ISA sound card, we couldn’t get the Digigram drivers to recognize said card. Duh.

    As it stands, there’s still two cards with shared interrupts… the PCI Digigram sound card and the NIC. This is not a good thing. Eventually both devices will see simultaneous load, which will probably crash the machine. When it’s a machine running live broadcast programming, this is the kind of thing you try to avoid. The problem, of course, is that no matter where I place either of the two conflicting cards they both come up on IRQ 11. Gah!

    And we get to hammer on it some more tomorrow morning. Joy to us all.