Sean Ellis

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Stories By Sean Ellis

  • Show and Tell, or: I have way too many computers

    ...and that's only a fraction of my portable computers! While at last count I have 16 portable computers and game consoles, most of those are just for show and don't really do anything useful, unless I need my fix of some classic games or need to play the original Quake over the Internet. That's not to say that all of my portable things are useless, as there are four I use quite regularly when on the go. They are: a Surface Pro 2, HP Stream 11, Sony Xperia Z3 Compact and a Nintendo 3DS. As much as I would have liked to have bought a Surface Pro 3, I couldn't afford the $1,000 price tag. Through the magic of Swappa, I instead bought a Surface Pro 2 with the Type Cover. Yes, it's used and yes, there are scratches that prove it's used but it doesn't matter to me. It's an excellent device, even if the kickstand is a bit annoying at times. Why I Bought It To make a long story short, my previous laptop fell off my desk and landed directly onto the power plug which crushed the power jack. Using this as my excuse, I bought a replacement power board to repair it but also went and bought the Surface since I had wanted one since they first came out. I got a nice bonus when not only did I get the original box for the Surface and the keyboard, but also all of the original protective materials and even a handwritten note from the seller. It's these little things that make it all worth it. What I Use it For The big draw for me is the pen. I do a lot of graphics work and having a pen makes the job so much nicer. It's no replacement for a standard mouse or a trackball but it does the job well enough. In addition, the pen makes a great precision pointer for when you need to tap small objects at a fast rate which I also do a lot when I'm presenting game shows at the local library. But as much as Microsoft would have us believe, the Surface is not the tablet that can replace your laptop. It can do a lot of things, but the Type Cover is an expensive accessory that for long typing, isn't that great. That leads us into portable #2: The HP Stream 11 (or as I like to call it, the Barney Laptop) is a nice, low-budget Windows laptop. For being as inexpensive as it is, it's a very nice laptop. Sure, you can't run Photoshop or Sony Vegas but you can do a lot of typing on the very nice keyboard. As an added bonus, it's sturdy enough it probably won't shatter the first time you drop it on the ground. Why I Bought It Me and a friend were working on a Linux project that would require a modern Windows-based laptop with the Secure Boot feature. I still can't give you many details but let's just say it works just fine for the project we were working on. I also got it simply because I wanted a fairly recent computer that I could take with me and do light tasks on and also not feel bad about if something were to break it. What I Use it For Word processing and web browsing. Simple as that. It does get booted into Linux on occasion so we can test a few things but it mostly just stays in Windows and runs WordPad. The two-day battery life is a nice plus too. The Sony Xperia Z3 Compact is my current phone. It's a nice, reasonably-sized flagship phone from Sony that's full of pretty glass and waterproofing awesomeness. Currently running Android 5.0, it has more than enough power to keep up with how little I use the "smart" features of my phone. Why I Bought It My last phone was a Nokia Lumia 521 and it was starting to show its age. After a few updates, it got to a point where I would have to wait for the lock screen to load before I could unlock it, then wait some more before the Start Screen would show up. I got tired of this, so I decided to get a new phone. I'd seen articles about the Xperia Z3 and decided I would like to give it a try, but all that I had heard up to that point was for the 5" model, not the Compact. But then it was pointed out to me that there was a compact variant of the Z3 and it was factory unlocked! I bought one from Swappa and have been rocking it ever since. What I Use it For Honestly? The same tasks I used my Lumia 521 for. A little bit of web browsing, email checking, texting and the occasional jaunt into SSH territory to do some IRC. This phone is more than capable of handling all of that and plenty more. The 20-megapixel camera is a nice thing to have, as well as integrated SteadyShot and 4k video capture. It's no professional video camera but it suits my needs well enough. The majority of my gaming is done on my PC, but sometimes I just want to do something other than taking down Combine soldiers or abusing mods in Skyrim. That's where the 3DS comes in. Pokemon and Smash Bros are what I play most often and I have Fire Emblem: Awakening if I'm feeling like doing level grinding. Why I Bought It I'd been pressured into buying one, actually. A friend had been pushing me towards getting one for Pokemon, so I bought one. Then Smash Bros. for 3DS came out and we both started playing that. I don't really use my 3DS that often to be honest, but it's there when I need to play something different that doesn't take place in a first-person environment. What I Use it For Playing Pokemon? This one is fairly straightforward, as are you really going to use a 3DS to play your MP3 collection or to take pictures on the go? I know I don't; that's what my phone is for. And no, I'm not upgrading to a New 3DS until the regular-sized New 3DS comes over here. There you have it. My four most-used portable gadgets.

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  • A Tale of Two Pentiums

    Pictured: a Toshiba Satellite Pro 400CDT. Unexplained: a pear. I've always been around computers since I was born, and I was always getting into trouble with them. From repeatedly pressing the reset button to using up an entire colour inkjet cartridge by printing one picture repeatedly, it wasn't too long before my parents broke down and let me have a computer of my own - but the one rule was that if I messed it up, I would have to take responsibility for getting it fixed. And so the tale begins with a Toshiba Satellite and memories of eBay. When my parents decided to get me a computer, I only had $20 to work with. I was only allowed one hour of computer usage a day, so I would fill that entire hour by looking on eBay for a computer of my own and by going to IBM's website and drooling over the ThinkPad T40, all on a 56k dial-up connection. I had decided that I wanted a laptop because it was portable and I could take it anywhere I wanted to. I remember those days of one-hour eBay searches quite well, and they were also back in the day when a Pentium computer would sell anywhere from $10 to $50 instead of the $200 minimum they now fetch. I looked at all different brands of laptops and I even thought about getting an early ThinkPad but decided against it because it had no CD-ROM drive. Eventually, I settled on a Toshiba Satellite 200CDT which was very similar to the Satellite Pro pictured above. It was cheap and it had a CD-ROM drive, so what did I have to lose? A couple weeks later, it came in the mail. Here it was: A computer all for me, that I didn't have to share with anyone and could change the settings however I wanted. It was an exciting time and I tore into it, doing every little thing I could think of doing and trying out everything that was in my copies of Windows 95 Bible and More Windows 95 for Dummies, including trying out the famous credits screen easter egg. Seeing what had been left behind was fun too, as it was upgraded to Windows 95 from MS-DOS and Windows 3.1. The install of Windows 3.1 was long gone, even though its boot option still remained on the boot screen but all of the MS-DOS tools were still there and I would spend as much time as I could in QBASIC and the DOS Shell. If that wasn't enough, I would sometimes set it on top of my dresser and give lectures on computing to my army of plushies. Alas, all good things must come to an end. When my dad brought home some CDs marked "Windows NT Workstation 4.0," I had to try them out. And so I put in the CD, deleted Windows 95 and promptly got stuck because it was asking for "Boot 1" and I didn't know what it wanted at the time. Not long after that, the computer went completely cold and never turned on again. I later learned that the motherboard had cracked and it was impossible to repair, so naturally I tore the whole thing down to bits to see what was inside. Fortunately, my father had gotten a Dell Optiplex from work that he was using as his computer, so he gave me his old PC: a Pentium 166 that his brother had built. I set about making it my own, but this time I had Windows 98 and many more cool things to do with it. Even more fun was when my father let me play a game called MechWarrior 3, a game where you pilot a giant robot and blow up other giant robots. The computer was barely able to run it and it had no 3D accelerator so the game ran pretty poorly, but I was able to complete the entire game on it. Later, my father drilled holes in the ceiling and ran a network cable from my room to the living room so we could play deathmatch games, and I got so good on my underpowered Pentium that I could consistently beat him. That computer also suffered a similar fate to the Satellite. One day, I was playing around with some parts my grandfather gave to me and when I went to turn the computer back on, it no longer came up or gave any beep codes. I can only assume that in my youthful carelessness, I zapped the motherboard with some static electricity. But all was well as I got another old computer to play with; a story for another time. I wish I still had the hard drives to those computers. I think they got lost when we moved.

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  • Growing Up Geek: Sean Ellis

    (Alas, this picture from about 2003 is the earliest picture I have of myself - everything else is still at the bottom of my parent's closet.) I've always been fascinated with technology; I can't remember a time when I wasn't messing around in the Windows Control Panel or making lights and motors do neat things or when I wasn't ripping apart things and trying to put things back together (and often failing). I've been told that when I was 3 or 4, my parents had to put a piece of cardboard in front of the family computer because I would always hit the reset or power button and cause lots of data loss and weird errors in DOS or Windows 3.1. And when I got my own computer, a Toshiba Satellite 200CDS, I was all over it doing everything from experimenting with the Windows 95 disk compression tool to giving mock lectures on how to use DOS. The earliest thing I can remember wanting to be was an electrician, and so my parents bought me a few lights and sockets from Radio Shack and my dad would bring home junk pieces of electronics to tear apart and play with. We made a literal circuit board, which was a small sheet of plywood with terminal strips and wood screws to tie things down with and we learned just what LEDs do when you put too much power into them. Unfortunately, at the time my parents were pretty poor and while I had a couple books, they were the most basic books you could get and didn't really tell you how to do anything or tell you how to read schematics, something I now really wish I had learned back then. When I got my first computer, my interests shifted. No longer did I have to obey the rules of the family computer; this was my own laptop that I could do whatever I wanted to with it. My interests in computers further solidified when one day, my father gave me an old copy of the A+ Certification manual. I read that entire book cover-to-cover, reading about everything from Pentium CPUs to dot-matrix printers. I read it so much and so often that the binding fell apart and I lost several sections out of it. Not too long after that, the Satellite I had developed a crack in the motherboard and no longer worked. All was not lost, however. Soon after, I was given enough computers to fill the workshop we had behind our house at the time. Most of them my dad gave out to other people, but I was allowed to keep a few. Some worked, most didn't. I still enjoyed trying to make the non-working ones work or just looking at them and admiring how pretty they looked. As for the working ones, I set up one for myself as a personal computer and the others I experimented with Linux on. My dad had been given a copy of something called "Ubuntu" and I was given a complete boxed copy of SuSE Linux 9.3. Those Linux experiments ended up with one of my computers dying but that's a story for another time. The most recent step was when I got into high school. I was told about a program called BEST Robotics where we could build a robot and compete with other schools playing a game. I had been doing some little programs in QuickBASIC and Visual Basic, I had just gotten a copy of C for Dummies and the team I was with needed a programmer. So why not? Ever since then, I've been enjoying writing code and that's where I've decided to go. You could argue that I haven't completely grown up yet as I only just started college this year. However you define being grown up, I've had a lot of fun in years past developing my skills. I'm excited to have the chance to do something that I've enjoyed as a hobby for so many years as a profession. I can't wait to see what the future holds in store.

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