CAT | General
Lately I’ve started playing violin with the praise band at church. It’s been a really rewarding experience getting a chance to help lead the congregation in worship. As part of my preparation for each Sunday, I’ve taken the time to transcribe melody lines from the songs we’re set to play. I created these files originally just for my own use, but now figure… “hey, I’ve taken the time to do this, why not throw the files on the web for fellow musicians to use”. So… here you go… I hope someone, somewhere finds these useful.
You Are Holy (Prince of Peace)
PS: In case it’s not evident by the religious nature of this music, do me a favor and don’t pirate the actual songs. I’m providing basic melody lines here to aid the praise-band musician in leading worship with pieces they have previously obtained licenses to.
Wow, it’s now been 1 year and 8 months since I last updated this particular portion of the website. So, here’s a stab at re-instituting a more regular update schedule. That said, the last 1.5+ years have certainly not been devoid of projects, so I’m going to systematically start sharing those (in chronological order) over the next few days / weeks / months / years / whatever.
Oh yeah, I’m also trying a new Facebook cross-post script to automatically share what I post here on my Facebook account. We’ll see how that goes.
As you might imagine, I’ve been spending a lot of time working with Microsoft Office 2007 lately. I really love the new interface and I’m a huge fan of the new font “Calibri“. I noticed, however, that the default document now uses “Calibri Body 11pt” rather than “Times New Roman 12pt”. I was curious why the font size shrank, so I wrote up a sample document to compare the two. Here it is.
As you can see, Calibri 11pt is a bit smaller than Times 12pt, but it feels just as readable. I think it’s the difference between a serif and sans serif font. Anyhoo… I just found this comparison interesting and thought I’d share my findings with the world.
Since I’m going to be taking a long road trip from VA to TX next week, I decided I wanted to add a new audio source to my car. Rather than buying a whole new sound system, I decided to do things the “fun” way.
- I soldered a new DC plug to the inside of my console, taping into the pre-existing, externally-accessible DC plug.
- I ran a USB power cable from the DC plug through a small hole drilled in the open shelf in my console.
- I also ran power to an FM transmitter, housed in the slide-out ashtray in the dash.
- I ran the auxilarily input of the FM transmitter through the back of the console and out through another hole in the console shelf.
- Now, from a user perspective, there are aux & power connectors inside my console shelf, and an FM transmitter controller in the repurposed ashtray. The original DC power outlet still works unchanged.
This little project was waaay too much fun… how often do you get to solder wires on the inside of your car’s dash?
MS Office 2007 has a very good reference manager, but changing the inline citation style is absurdly complicated. Standard practice for citations in an engineering paper is “[#]” where # is the reference number. Unfortunately, the default citation option in Word 2007 is “(#)”… so I needed to change it. If you need to do the same thing, just download this file, move it to the “C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office12\Bibliography\Style\” directory. You should then see a new “Style” option under the “References” tab called “ISO 690 – Numerical with Square Brackets”. Bingo… that’s all you need to do.
Seriously, these out-of-control “anti-monopoly” lawsuits HAVE to stop. Not long ago the EU ruled that Microsoft’s inclusion of IE8 in their upcoming Windows 7 product is “anti-competitive behavior”. As a result, copies of Windows 7 sold in the EU will be shipped without a web browser. Let me explain why this is a MAJOR problem.
If you choose to not use Internet Explorer as your primary web browser, you must install an alternative (like Firefox or Chrome). However, what’s the most basic way of installing them? By downloading them from the internet! If you don’t have an internet browser to begin with, you have to jump through all sorts of hoops to get one… hoops that the VAST majority of computer users have no idea how to jump through. Additionally, they can’t just Google how to do this because they don’t have a web browser to get to Google in the first place! It’s a HUGE disaster!
Why do you think Mac OS X has become such an enticing alternative to Windows? I’ll give you a hint. It has nothing to do with it being “the most advanced OS ever” (which I strongly contest). It’s not that it’s any faster or more powerful than Windows. The biggest thing OS X has going for it is that it’s an entire ecosystem that just works out-of-box. It includes a web browser, an email client, a photo manager, etc… and all of these applications play very nicely together.
Now, when Microsoft is finally getting their act together and releasing a not-horrible web browser, the technologically illiterate anti-trust lawyers come out and completely screw over the consumer by claiming that bundled software is anti-competitive. It’s disgusting, and a perfect example of our out-of-control sue-happy legal systems.
Source: CNet
I had my Masters Defense yesterday and to my great delight, I passed! It involved a 30 minute presentation followed by an hour of questions from a panel of 3 professors. Now I just need to make a few edits to my thesis and I’ll have completed my MS degree!
Oh yeah, and I posted the slides from my defense presentation here.
I hate optical media. I hate its sensitivity to scratches, I hate its loud loading noises, I hate sorting through stacks of discs.
I’ve now found an excellent (albeit somewhat complicated) hack that allows me to save/load my Wii games to/from an external USB hard drive! The final results look a little something like this. I’ve worked off of the guides found here and here and am using a WD Passport hard drive. This was especially difficult for me because, despite the fact I already had the Homebrew Channel installed, I had the Wii system menu 4.0 installed (latest as of the time of this post). Alright, enough yapping… here’s how you can duplicate my results.
First, we need to trick your Wii into thinking it’s running an older version of the Nintendo software. This overcomes the fact that we’re running system version 4.0! We’ll also install “The Homebrew Channel” at the same time.
- Copy the contents of SD1.zip to a FAT formated SD card.
- Insert the SD card into your Wii and click on the system icon (lower left corner).
- Navigate to “Data Management” –> “Channels” –> “SD Card” and wait a moment.
- Agree to load “boot.dol” to execute the LoadMii environment.
- Select “DowngraderIOS35.dol” and run it by pressing “A” on the WiiMote. Choose “Downgrade IOS35″ and then let it go. After it’s done, select “exit”.
- Now select “WAD Manager.dol” and, using default settings (e.g. run as IOS250), install “IOS35.wad”. When it’s finished, hit the “Home” button to exit.
- Run “WAD Manager.dol” again, but this time select “IOS35″ when prompted and install “CIOSv7.wad”. After that’s installed, hit the “Home” button to quit.
- Next, run “WAD Manager.dol” one last time. This time, select “IOS249″ for the IOS version and install both “IOS36.wad” and “HBC.wad”.
- Finally, restart your Wii and you’ll see a new link to “The Homebrew Channel”!
Now that we have “The Homebrew Channel” and the necessary IOS files, we can install the USB loader.
- Delete everything from your SD card and extract the contents of SD2.zip to it.
- Insert the SD card into your Wii and launch “The Homebrew Channel”.
- Execute the “cIOS36″ application and follow the installation instructions.
- Be sure to use the “Internet Installation” option to get the very latest custom IOS files.
- If you have any problems with this step, it’s probably because you’re using the Nintendo System Menu 3.4 or later. Make sure you’ve successfully completed phase one of this tutorial!
- Restart “The Homebrew Channel” and execute the “WADman” program. Using this tool, install the “USB Loader-USBF VForwarder.wad” file.
- You should now have a “USB Loader” channel in your Wii System Menu. This is how you save/load game discs.
Alrighty… we’re done hacking the Wii! Now we just need to get the USB hard drive ready for use.
- Install the Wii Backup File System manager from here.
- Plug the hard drive into your PC.
- Right click on “My Computer” and select “Manage”.
- Click on the “Disk Management” option on the left
- When your disk drives have loaded, right click on the drive to be read by the Wii and choose “Delete Volume”.
- Now right click on the disk drive to be used and click “New”.
- Be sure to assign a drive letter to your drive, and to choose NOT TO FORMAT the drive when you create your new partition.
- Using “WBFS Manager”, select the correct drive and click “Format”.
- Now plug the USB drive into your Wii and start playing around with the “USB Loader”!
I hope you find this tutorial useful! I’ve been waiting for a good Wii game saver/loader for a while now, so I’m really excited about this tool. If you have any questions or problems, just leave a comment!
PS: I’m providing this information so you can run games that you OWN from a hard drive. If I find out that any of you are using this to pirate games, I’ll personally find where you live and leave a sack of flaming dog poop on your doorstep!
Now for a bit of useless information:
- Go to facebook.com
- Type the following characters:
↑ ↑ ↓ ↓ ← → ← → B A ENTER - Now click or type anywhere, useless eh? (but still strangely amusing)
- Refresh the page to disable Konami Mode
I was doing some random internet reading earlier this weekend (as I’m often prone to do) and stumbled upon an interesting technique that model car hobbyist use to dye plastic components. It occurred to me, if one can permanently dye plastic car pieces… what else might he be able to color-ify? My answer… a Wiimote! Here’s what I did.
- Remove the four screws from under the Wii remote battery cover.
- Carefully unsnap the front and back plates, being sure not to break off the tabs on the top.
- Set aside the Wii controller mainboard, rubber button stoppers, and metal battery contacts.
- In a large pot (that you DON’T use for cooking) heat 8 cups of water to a boil.
- Mix in 8 fl oz of Rit liquid t-shirt dye (color of your choice).
- Turn heat source down to medium and mix liquid dye thoroughly.
- Add plastic Wii controller pieces to dye and allow to simmer for 5 minutes.
- Be careful not to splash… the dye will stain everything it touches!
- Continue to mix non-stop… don’t let the pieces settle or you’ll get uneven colors.
- Always wear rubber gloves when working with the dye… it’s not good for your skin and will make you multi-colored for a long time.
- After the five minutes are up, remove the plastic pieces and wash them thoroughly in cold water.
- Don’t forget all of the pieces!
- 6 buttons, 1 trigger, 1 d-pad, 3 large shell pieces, 1 wrist-strap.
- Dry all the components and reassemble the wiimote.
- Enjoy your new, uniquely colored controller!
The above photos are of a Wii Remote Controller I dyed earlier this evening. What do you think?
Note: The various wiimote pieces are made of different types of plastic that take on different shades of color. The front plate will be the lightest, followed by the back plate and batter cover. The buttons and trigger will be slightly darker than the back plate. The D-pad will be the darkest by far.















