This is the blog of AlanJC, aka ChimeraX. Probably mumblings of a random nature, but there may be the rare useful post.

Tuesday 9 June 2009

ZTE MF 627 and Windows 7

I spent a while trying to get my new ZTE MF 627 modem working on Windows 7, as each time I restarted, it would no longer work, and it was a very long winded process to uninstall, reboot, reinstall, update, reboot, then use it every single time.

Then I stumbled upon this link after much searching http://www.tomlodge.co.uk/blog/?tag=mf627-driver-with-windows-7

Basically Tom says "3 MTE627 USB with Windows7
Wednesday, April 8th, 2009
Real problems making this work.
Finally - installed “normally” and found that the drivers weren’t installing.
Within the installation folder look for DriverInstaller.exe and run it in Compatibilty Mode of Windows 2000 - it still wouldnt close the dialog box (a restart got rid of it) but now it seems to connect at least - the device is recognised… I don’t seem to have a very good signal here - so can’t verify that all is as it should be - but it definitely connected which is a step forward"

My only comment to add is that the DriverInstaller.exe should be in c:\Program Files\3\3Connect\

Sunday 7 June 2009

Social overload

Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, Bebo, Plurk, the list goes on. It goes on a very long way!

As someone who looks upon these things with both a personal and professional interest, where do you start, and more importantly, where do you stop?

For me, I mainly use Twitter, Facebook is a secondary concern for me. I don’t post updates regularly, but I use it for the esoteric comments that wouldn’t fit in with the statements and banter I get on Twitter. I think most people use a very small subset of tools of those available for their social media needs.

Now Google is making waves with Google Wave (see what I did there?), which will combine IM, Email, and collaborative working to a certain extent but have they missed the boat?

Hardly anyone I know use email for much nowadays. It’s become a medium to share a private comment, photo, joke etc that they don’t post in public. Everyone I know who communicates online does so via Facebook, Twitter, or IM. Even getting people to move from MSN/WLM to Google Talk was impossible, so will people make the move to this new tool, there are already too many ways of communicating.

I know I will use Google Wave. It’s new, I will have to use it as I can’t resist the lure of playing with new tools. The problem I will face is finding people to make use of it with. If it’s “what email would be like if it was invented today”, then why not make it part of Gmail? Why make a new tool? C’mon Google, you have so many applications now, many of them could be integrated into one solution. iGoogle, Reader, Talk, Gmail, Calendar, Documents, Contacts, and many more, I would be happy to have these all on one dashboard app, it would be easier to see what I had, what I was sharing, my contacts etc. Is this where Wave is headed? Who knows?

Can we have some consolidation? Microsoft and Yahoo merged IM networks so that people could chat to each other, why can’t we have some more open standards and get people on Facebook chatting to people on Windows Live Messenger/Yahoo/MySpace/ICQ and so on. Yes, I know you can use clients such as Digsby, but that still requires an account on each, and you couldn’t have a conference chat between people on other networks.

While it’s good to have choice, and competition, there’s simply too much out there now, so what incentives are there for the average Joe to try something new, and persuade all of his friends to join in?

I agree that some communities benefit from having their own thing, something that caters for them more than another solution, but I have been part of these smaller groups, and they tend to stagnate faster, and become more cliquey, therefore alienating anyone else who wants to join very quickly.

Perhaps instead of spending so much time and resource in developing new social networks, we should find out how to make best use of the tools we already have, and improve upon them.