Geek-Chic Power Houses 185
nakhla writes "Wired.com is running a lengthy article on wired houses of celebrities. The article describes some of the tech that has gone into the houses of actors, businessmen, and professional athletes, outlining the steps they've gone to in order to obtain techno-nirvana. Included in the article is a profile of JAG's Catherine Bell (my vote for sexiest geek), and her use of a wireless network to connect her to her TiBook, Gateway Laptop, and...get this...Sharp Zaurus Linux PDA. For those of you who are just dying to string fiber around your entire house, this article will have you making a run to your favorite networking hardware store."
FTPed games (Score:1, Funny)
Re:FTPed games (Score:4, Informative)
No, you just need a mod chip [google.com] and some warez sitez [isonews.com].
Re:FTPed games (Score:2)
Re:FTPed games (Score:2)
Yay, partially tested games! What fun!
Re:FTPed games (Score:2, Funny)
Dang (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Dang (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Dang (Score:1, Offtopic)
For real, talk about a let-down.
Catherine Bell (Score:5, Funny)
and give her some good RAM.
Bite me if it's cliche, but you know you're thinking this.
Re:Catherine Bell (Score:2, Funny)
A linux mag should do a photoshoot of her in something almost-not-there and all the geektoys. That could quite possibly cause the /. community to explode.
[That is the queue for some politically correct and/or sensitive people to chime in with: "not all /.ers are men and/or like women and/or like porn and/or like linux and/or like foo]
Re:Catherine Bell (Score:1)
Far more... tasteful imo
Re:Catherine Bell (Score:3, Funny)
Catherine Bell (Score:1, Funny)
Imagine a Beowulf cluster of those!
Geek-Chic? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Geek-Chic? (Score:5, Funny)
Oh this is not a troll.
--
[McP]KAAOS
Re:Geek-Chic? (Score:1)
Re:Geek-Chic? (Score:1, Offtopic)
The other side of the spectrum: The girlfriend's of geeks. 95% of the time they are balls to the wall hot. Cute chicks love dorks. Some guy in my LUG group took this girl he barely knew to ComicCon. Super fine chick. He walked around with a shirt on that said 'pedophile' while she wore one that said 'underage' and she was down with it. She also seemed very comfortable with making out with strange girls, something he and his camera didn't mind one bit. Remember: the hotties love the geeks, provided you know when to shut up about the geek shit.
Money (Score:2, Interesting)
a low-rent 15 minutes (Score:4, Funny)
FYI (Score:4, Interesting)
Catherine Bell is a Scientologist. (Score:4, Informative)
(She is hardcore into Dianetics, and at least somewhat under "church" control... This is from radio interviews I heard with her, so I wasn't distracted by her looks.
Re:Catherine Bell is a Scientologist. (Score:3, Funny)
All non-believers will be converted or silenced forever!
Re:Catherine Bell is a Scientologist. (Score:4, Funny)
If what you say is correct, I wouldn't do her with PhysicsScholar's dick and someone else pushing.
I`m a scientologist too!! (Score:1, Troll)
does that not allow me to be a slashdot geek?
Excuse me but the fact that some slashdot readers disagree with scientology or it`s policies and that i happen to BE a scientologist does NOT make me a non "slashdot kind geek".
I am a
Re:I`m a scientologist too!! (Score:2)
But you might not want to tell anyone that... (Score:3, Insightful)
does that not allow me to be a slashdot geek?
Excuse me but the fact that some slashdot readers disagree with scientology or it`s policies and that i happen to BE a scientologist does NOT make me a non "slashdot kind geek"
I think that you'll find that there is very very little love lost for scientology (I refuse to capitalize it; churches and religions don't have "trade secrets", IMO) on Slashdot. The people involved with the running of the "church" of scientology have been heavy handed [skeptic.com] in the extreme when it comes to things near and dear to the Slashdot readership [siliconvalley.com]. It is a hot-button topic, to be sure. Your "church" is not seen in a very positive light by those that come here. One could therefore argue that, by extension, this means that a healthy percentage of the online "geek" community harbors negative feelings towards your "church". So it's likely that you might get a little heat if you bring up scientology on Slashdot.
The reason you might not be terribly welcome here in most people's minds is because, for good or ill, they cannot separate what your "church" does with what you say -- when you mention scientology. If you don't bother mentioning it, it's probable that nobody will like or dislike you anymore than they would any other person here. It's not a First Amendment issue so much as a "cultural" thing. I certainly wouldn't start yelling about my PETA membership at the annual Meat Packers Association convention meeting unless I wanted to start a shouting match. Perhaps you feel differently. I don't know. It's a free country.
Whatever my personal feelings are about scientology, I really don't care one way or the other about your religious beliefs (especially if they have no bearing on the conversation at hand). To each his own, I say; I certainly don't bother mentioning that I'm an agnostic Libertarian every time I post here. I'm just trying to give out a little friendly, free advice: you'd do well to not bring up your religion in this forum unless you're participating in a discussion about religion. Assuming you don't want your conversation degenerating into a flamefest, that is.
-B
Re:I`m a scientologist too!! (Score:3, Informative)
Scientology is, frankly, a company/cult. It is not even remotely close to being a religion. It was founded by a science fiction author who had been quoted earlier as saying "If a man truly wished to become wealthy, the best thing he could do would be to start a religion."
Techies have a legitimate beef with the Church of Scientology -- the CoS went on a series of attacks on USENET against people that had escaped Scientology. These people had been posting information about Scientology (the stuff that you aren't *supposed* to find out about until you're deep in debt and will believe anything that makes it look like you haven't been suckered.)
Being a real, tech loving geek and being a Scientologist may not be completely incompatible, but it's damn near.
Having a wireless network makes you wired? (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, I think the doorbell webcam/image pusher is the most interersting aspect, not that she has a Zaurus (more than likely she gets these gadgets as promo items so they are seem by the 'cool crowd')
Re:Having a wireless network makes you wired? (Score:2)
Must be tough (Score:3, Funny)
I guess semi-celebrities like those on *snicker* JAG have the time.
iTunes (Score:5, Informative)
Pretty cool.
Re:iTunes (Score:4, Interesting)
With VNC, you can remote control your home jukebox from anywhere in the world, but I do prefer the couch. Total cost: Not much! The server is an old 200MHz box, that's all it takes. Wireless lan cost a bit, but it has other uses.
With the addition of a cable modem, streaming files anywhere in the world is great. I could be in work or a hotel miles from home with full access to my music collection. Bliss!
iTunes/Home Theater& Wireless AV (Score:4, Informative)
In a pinch, just use your iPod to drive the house system...
Re:iTunes (Score:1)
The saccharine opening of the Eagles' "Hotel California" erupts from a pair of 180-watt M&K-powered studio monitors.
"Man! I've had a really bad day and I f****** hate the Eagles."
"You don't like my music get yo own f****** home network."
hmm must be nice to be rich... (Score:5, Insightful)
This is nice and all... but it remains toys. I dont think anyone really need a plasma screen instead of a regular mirror for shaving, but hey, its cool.
We're like mechanics looking at a movie star's custom ferrari.
What about reusability? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What about reusability? (Score:1)
Re:What about reusability? (Score:2)
What carries light today'll carry the same light much faster next week, as fast as you can transmit it.
Definition of SAD (Score:2)
To think I could have got the bathroom done, an extension, new windows (which my new SO dreams about) and all I have is Web / WAP DSL X10 WiFi Multimedia mp3 DVD Divx Video-on-Demand VOIP 100 Mbps heaven. Oh, plus a further $$$ on a few credit cards.
Hold on a moment..... None of those so-called chic-geeks didn't even mention VOIP
I WIN !!
I did it for $150 (Score:2)
My favorite stores are.. (Score:5, Funny)
Some suggested stores:
Networking Hardware USA
Networking Hardware Emporium
Hardware Networking Only, Inc.
No We don't have any Computers, Just Networking Shit, Asshole! LLC
Determining the right infrastructure... (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh what a dream. Reading this article makes it all seem so joyous and wonderful. Especially when you don't have budget limitations and have the monetary freedom to completely scrap something that becomes obsolete in a couple of years and replace it with the latest and greatest thing out there. *Drool*
Speaking from the experience of going through the ups and downs of building a new house this year - trying to determine what technologies to use now and how to leave room for future upgrades/changes with such obstacles as:
1. A realistic budget
2. An uninformed contractor
3. Conflicting opinions from all directions
It is tough to know where to jump in and what is cost effective and useful technology that can be expanded and upgraded without costing an arm and a leg.
Typically a contractor is very informed about housing issues (plumbing, electrical, etc.) and can be a great source of information and recommendations but when it came to the tech infrastructure it was hard to find someone knowledgeable in the small town that I live in.
I pretty much had to do all the research myself and inform him on what I thought would be best. It was all a little odd considering I'm not a builder by any stretch of the imagination.
Ugh, makes my head hurt. We ended up going cat-5 with pre-wiring and space for wireless access points in the attic and conduit in the walls to pull fiber (or something else) later when it becomes feasible. It seemed best for us at the current time, hopefully it will continue to be a good decision a few years down the line.
Re:Determining the right infrastructure... (Score:5, Interesting)
There is always a place for cat-5, cheap and reliable. Even if you have wireless, hooking up two desktop PCs is a waste of RF bandwidth. If you are confident with a drill, go for it. In a few years, a home network might make a desireable selling point for a home.
Like the idea about running conduit, very forward thinking.
Re:Determining the right infrastructure... (Score:2)
That way when a new tech comes out i just need to replace the faceplates on the walls and drop new cable down from the attic
yes, watching TV is a quite a lot of effort (Score:2, Interesting)
"The hi-def screen spoils you," says Cuban. "I can't watch regular TV anymore. It just isn't worth the effort."
Quotes like that make me question the right-wing wisdom that concentrated wealth is good for the economy...
Time... (Score:2)
Assuming it took only 15 minutes to rip a CD, not counting time to switch CD's, set up the tracks, etc, it would take over 250 hours, or what amounts to a little over 10 days , non-stop, (Yeah... no eating, drinking, sleeping, whatever...) to rip those mp3 tracks...
I'm frightened... do people seriously have that much time??? And where can I get some?
Re:Time... (Score:1)
It's pretty easy to do 20-30 CD's in a night when you're just sitting around watching TV or playing with the computer. I't snot like you have to be there for the whole entire rip, just to insert/eject CDs and make sure that EAC gets the right FreeDB entry. Can't say I've done 1000 CDs, but I've certainly done 100s, and it hasn't been a problem.
Re:Time... (Score:1)
No excuses now; surely your sexual frustrations can't be a result time constraints.
Re:Time... (Score:1)
Having ripped 400 or so CDs over the space of about a week without even trying very hard I think your estimates are somewhat off, because:
Sounds to me that you don't need more time, you need better organisation :-)
Ubiquity of celebrity (Score:5, Funny)
Sexiest geek? (Score:2)
I'm sorry; everyone knows that the sexiest geek is currently Stevie Case, aka 'Killcreek'.
Re:Sexiest geek? (Score:2)
Anyway, the sexiest geek is Asia Carrera.
D
Roomba (Score:1)
Direct link (Score:2)
here she is [wired.com]
I can't see what the fuss is about myself....
Tracey Needham was so much hotter :-) (Score:2)
To the rescue (Score:1, Informative)
Digital video as easy as MP3? (Score:1)
PC-based PVRs
Soon all digital video will be as easy to download and play as MP3s are today."
Wow! Gosh! I am so looking forward to that day! That sounds so awesome and futuristic! Will there really come a day when digital video is as easy to download as an MP3 is today? Wow! I'm so amazed, shocked even! The future is such an exciting place!
graspee
Realistic budget??? (Score:2, Informative)
(Back to Reality Now) I wired my house recently (not a fun thing to do in Arizona mind you, at least when it is warm out). I put in two lines of CAT5, two lines of RG6, and one line of CAT3 for voice. Each of the bedrooms got a set, the living room got one, and the kitchen is next. Everything goes to my office (which used to be the family room before I walled it off) down from the attic to a structured media center box (whatever you call them) that I got for $10 from a surplus building supplier. It came with one telephone distribution module and I also got some extra 5 jack network modules from them too. So my Sprint MMDS internet connection goes into the room to my Linksys router, which then is plugged into the panel so the other rooms have internet connectivity. My phone line also runs into the panel and gets distributed to the other rooms. The panel can handle 4 pairs, so when my daughter gets old enough and assuming we are still using copper phone lines I can just punch down her phone line from the main house phone to her new line.
I go to local auctions a lot, so I paid minimal prices for the cables and stuff, probably $10-$15 for the the CAT5 and CAT3 total, and $5 for the RG6 per spool (I have about a mile of coax now, don't know what the heck to do with it). I used Snap-N-Seal connectors for the cable, with connectors I got from Ebay, and the RJ stuff with a professional crimper set from Ebay as well (Sargent tools). So my total cost to wire my house myself? Less than $150.
I have a friend who neglected to tell me he wanted to have his house done and it cost him over $500 for 3 or 4 ports with a hub. I would have done it for cost of parts and free food. Oh well, his loss.
ngoy
(Remember to wear a dust mask if you have an older house. That blown in insulation is nasty sh!t!)
Not flamebait .. I really want to know (Score:1)
The CDs are ripped into MP3s to play at Mr. Perlman's place? I thought MP3s are lossy and are scoffed at by audiophiles; the de riguer (in my mind) is SACDs or better instead of 192/256K sampled MP3s.
And he ripped 1000 CDs to 15000 songs: that works to 15 songs per CD. So he likes all songs on all the CDs he owns. I want that CD list !!!
Shriram
Re:Not flamebait .. I really want to know (Score:1)
And while even 320K Mp3s may not be acoustically "perfect", having them indexed on a hard drive is sure a heck of a lot faster than running a playlist through a network of CD changers (and cheaper too).
They conveniently forgot Asia Carrera (Score:5, Informative)
Re:They conveniently forgot Asia Carrera (Score:1)
Re:They conveniently forgot Asia Carrera (Score:1)
That was Tea Leoni.
Or was it Telly Savalas? That Telly is such a hottie.
Re:They conveniently forgot Asia Carrera (Score:2)
You mean Tia Carrere, Tia Leoni is David Duchovny's wife (and star of one of those crappy SitComs that I have forgotten about...)
Apologies if spelling is wrong....
Asia Carrera does kick butt though.....
Re:They conveniently forgot Asia Carrera (Score:1)
I did think the Telly Savalas reference would make it a bit more obvious. I knew I should have gone with the easy Porsche Joke...
Re:They conveniently forgot Asia Carrera (Score:2)
I should go home.....my sarcasm detector has exploded....
Re: They conveniently forgot Asia Carrera (Score:2)
Meh! Uninteresting article. (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd rather read about systems people put together themselves, consisting of parts attainable by someone who makes a modest salary.
And yeah, Catherine Bell is a hottie, but she loses points for being married and a Scientologist.
~Philly
Wired is the Cosmopolitan of the Geek World (Score:5, Funny)
Every once in a while I'll pick up a wIrEd at an airport or whatever. This is shortly followed by memories of why I canceled my subscription years ago. In the same way that fashion mags set up these unreasonable (and arbitrary) expectations of what it means to be a woman, wired has set up this buy-buy-buy wannabe geek culture. Example:
Sure, you might have DSL and Wi-Fi, an Xbox and a TiVo, maybe a Bang & Olufsen stereo with 5-foot speakers and a six-CD changer, but you're still an amateur in the world of extreme home networking
Extreme home networking? Is that like extreme programming [hackles.org]? I had this burrito last night then I hunkered down for an evening of Extreme defecation
The ad:article ratio in wired has to be as high as Cosmo's, not to mention the high number of thinly veiled ads in the fetish section. But, we do get insights like:
Stored as 1s and 0s, music, video, and even television can share the same network.
What insight! What's worse is that these freaks at the forefront of graphic design somehow manage to obscure deep insights like the above with layouts and graphics that make the articles unreadable. I had to hold this one article at an angle because the paper was reflective silver before finally giving up. I guess I'm not an extreme reader! Form over function in all they do.
The preceding was an extreme /. post
Spleen vented. whew.
I used to subscribe to Wired... (Score:2)
But over time that attitude degenerated into "Ohh look at us - we are so tragicly hip we cannot see over our pelvis".
So I let my subscription lapse - a fact that to this day Wired seems unwilling to let me forget ("Come on! Resubscribe! Please?")
So, to sum it up:
Tired: Wired.
Wired:
Life's no fair (Score:1)
PitViper401
I've got one! (Score:2)
Temperature and moisture sensor with wireless capabilities embedded into your clothes. They monitor your skins reactions to the temperature of the room and automatically adjust the room temperature so you feel comfortable
Side effect : Geeks fighting over who gets a higher priority in a multi-user environment
Catherine Bell? (Score:4, Informative)
How can a woman so tech savy get duped by them?
Missing Verse to Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous (Score:1)
even /. eh? (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, "celebrity" in America has really been pissing me off of late, with all the goddam "reality tv" shows trying to make "normal" people into "celebrities", American Idol(gag!), "star" after "star" on Good Morning America, tabloids having nothing but celebrity rumors(what the fuck ever happened to good ol' Pres. Bush meets Aliens stuff?), etc.?
I refuse to believe that Americans really care so much about goddam celebrities; IMO, this is all just Hollywood pressure to keep themselves feeling like they're better than the average "joe", considering iMacs, free video editing tools, etc., becoming accessible to your average computer user must be making them piss their pants about their impending irrelevancy.
Anyone else in the states notice this trend, or am I imaging things; I realize "celebrities" have always been pretentious fucks, but it seems even more so lately.
Sorry, way OT I guess...
Re:even /. eh? (Score:1)
T
I've been watching _less_ (Score:1)
I just got started... (Score:1)
I had the summer off, and decided to set up an 802.11b net in my house as a project. It was swimmingly simple. Today, I received my $125 P90 Toshiba notebook and my Orinoco card, and now I have a cheap remote control for all my A/V needs. I'm gonna figure out a mounting scheme for a microphone stand (etc.) to set this beside my favorite chair in the crib.
-oZ
Sad Sad Waste (Score:1)
Nobody deserves this much.
As the saying goes.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Did it appear than anyone profiled in the article no longer thought about either?
Amazing! Not really... (Score:4, Insightful)
192 is the best sounding system? (Score:5, Funny)
"Hello? Did I win?"
Yes! What's your name, lucky c-
"You're in my damn living room. You know my name."
two more things (Score:1)
If you're throwing around $?0,000, why not get your very own T1? Cable is as high-end as the rich folks get soaked for?
Euphenism (Score:2)
That's one masturbation euphinism I've not heard before. Slashdot sure gets +1 for originality, I'll say.
missing from the article (Score:4, Insightful)
What's wrong with this picture?
Does anybody here think that a static IP owned by Catherine Bell or Tony Hawk is any less likely to wind up designating a network 0wn3d by any number of people than one connected to an AOL broadband user with the usual level of home security?
While I'd be very surprised to find that Larry Ellison's home network wasn't designed for security first by the smartest bunch of paranoids he can hire, from what I saw in the article, I'd be equally surprised to find that the opposite isn't true for most of these systems.
The results of this article's posting to /. should be very, very interesting. I wonder how many of these networks have already been r00ted and how many people are heading for Beverly Hills with wireless laptops checking things out since the article was posted?
Any hardcore security types who know the high-end installers in this business probably should give them an e-mail very, very soon... there's some serious money to be made here.
And anyone who's got the kind of money who's reading this should think of how to secure their networks before ordering their home T-3.
At least one sign of bad planning (Score:2)
Considering that there only 3 non-overlapping 802.11b channels, this means that her APs will most likely be interfering with each other. In a house like that, probably at least 3 APs on each channel in close proximity to each other.
The problems won't be as much if she's using 11a - More nonoverlapping channels and shorter range. But in many cases so short as to cause room coverage issues in a larger room...
Re:At least one sign of bad planning (Score:2)
Take, for example, 9 rooms. (I'm sure the house has far more than this, which makes the problem far worse). 1 AP per room means that each nonoverlapping channel (1,6,11) will have 3 APs on it. Each of these groups of 3 will interfere with each other.
Put em' all on one channel, and you have 9 APs all interfering with each other.
Bell's house probably has 20-30 or more rooms. The problem gets even worse.
Where I work, we have a total of 4 APs for a medium-sized office building.
Re:missing from the article (Score:2)
So if you find some, catch me in e-mail. :-) Of course, my interests are only for legitimate security and research purposes.
what annoyies me is (Score:3, Funny)
Woo-hoo, I just paid a guy 10 grand to install a system! I'm a geek!
Fortunately for me, I'm a nerd, so I have to get by on my brains.
medium and message (Score:2)
I can't watch regular TV anymore because the content (mostly) sucks.
These people confuse the medium with the message. A scratchy mono recording of Casals playing the Bach Suites beats pretty much all of that over-processed digital entertainment that this gear is designed for.
Overpriced.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Without spending nearly so much, especially in a smaller home, you can get a lot. The key thing here is they suggest buying lots of small, dedicated pieces of equipment, and only two computers, and not even fully utilizing them!
Take that 'dedicated server' and make it a bit beefier. I built a fairly cheap (~1100 USD) server with 4 120 GB drives in RAID-5 config about a year ago. Up that a bit and your server can hold oggs and video like crazy, are even go FLAC if you are extreme audiophile. Put it next to your Entertainment system, and it can do PVR/Video/Progressive Scan functions. Eliminate the need for a lot of things. Run your internet connection through it, no more need for a separate router. Buy a cheaper USB wireless adapter and make it an Access Point with more control (why settle for mere WEP, when you can enforce IPSEC?). With all this functionality, a decent soundcard can dump anything you want to any receiver, so a lot of the digital-to-stereo equipment goes bye-bye. If concerned about control, buy a cheap-o lirc-compatible device.
The display is pretty decent, though I would think an entry-level projector might offer a better deal. The home automation stuff I have no experience with, though I would opt for an IP based camera and have my computer doing motion sensing when I leave the house (sending shots via VPN to a friends house in case the system is stolen).
The network solutions they suggest seem to hover around 11 mbps, same rate as wireless, why bother? If you want better than that, wire your house with some cat5 or better cable. 100 mbps is much more livable for streaming video than 11, and if you are really big on it, gigabit is *doable* at great expense.
Why would any house need a *rack* of servers? My household has a laptop per person, a desktop per person, and a single server handling routing/nfs/samba/apache/icecast/etc.... I plan to add one system to do multimedia stuff in the entertainment system, but that's it. The laptops+desktops are extravagant, but nice...
not enough novelty (Score:2)
The vacuum-cleaner robot from a couple days ago is novel, plus it's useful. Popular-Mechanics-style home automation (dimming the windows, opening and closing drapes in response to weather or sun position) would be interesting.
In the early 70s there was a magazine article about a guy whose two dogs couldn't stand each other. He built a system that automatically opened and closed doors in the house, keeping track of where the dogs were, and never allowing them into the same room simultaneously. No microprocessors back then.
Catherine Bell Scientology Front?? (Score:1, Informative)
"to achieving your goals"
"this program has the solution."
The description has a lot of scientology cult buzzwords. Be afraid, very afriad!
Re:Catherine Bell Scientology Front?? (Score:4, Informative)
Study and learning skills. The Study Technology, a breakthrough which eradicates barriers to study and learning, developed by humanitarian and educator L. Ron Hubbard, is utilized to enable the youth to learn any subject. The student is able to overcome the primary barriers to learning. He learns how to learn. Effective communication skills are also part of this procedure.
The Program [helplearn.org]
The Goals [helplearn.org]
RUN CHILDREN RUN!
Re:Catherine Bell Scientology Front?? (Score:1, Interesting)
They even have that wierd background which I seem to remember from the cover of Dianetics or something, probably to 'restimulate' the "memories" of being obliterated by atomic weapons on an atoll that wasn't there at the time (Hawaii, millions of years before it formed).
Only memory it stimulates in me is that of L. Ron who married his second wife before divorcing the first, then turned in the second one to the FBI as a "communist" before leaving her for a very young (either 18 or 21, I forget which) woman (he was ~50 now, IIRC) who later was one of the high-ranking Scientologists indicted in "Operation Snow White" wherein they conspired to steal all the documents the govt. had by now that made them look like a wacky cult...
Why yes, I am a flaming SP...
Re:Catherine Bell Scientology Front?? (Score:2)
Oh, did you hear about the death associated with Narconon in Italy [google.com]?
Re:Geek chick eh ?? (Score:2)
Re:two things ... (Score:1)
2) Are you BLIND???
Re:two things ... (Score:1)
Re:two things ... (Score:1)
I never said I was PC (politically constrained)...