Posts Tagged ‘hardware’

Samizdat

August 23, 2008

Ninjalicious’s Access All Areas is a surprisingly well-written bundle of guidelines, warnings, and stories having to do with Urban Exploration.  Urban Explorers pursue hidden and off-limits areas with the goal of appreciating the spaces (habitable or otherwise) that humans have created.  Destinations include drains, abandoned/construction sites, hotels, and—this was the coolest one by far—ghost ships.  I was saddened to hear that Ninjalicious (Jeff Chapman) died recently due to lung cancer, but his contributions are everywhere (q.v. the Infiltration and Yip e-zines).  8/10 on the enjoy-o-meter.

"A User's Guide to the Art of Urban Exploration" "How to own The Box"

Stealing the Network is a collection of short stories by various authors involving present-day hardware and software.  On the whole, they aren’t very well-written (clearly the authors’ strengths lie elsewhere) but til I discovered this gem I was finding it hard to stomach books on computer crime that had no basis in reality.  These stories feature real software, real hardware, and believable trickery that made me a little nervous about how we exchange data in the real-world.  That, and the overall theme of the collection is that bad guys always win.  6/10.

The Buckaroo Box

February 5, 2008

Compaq SLT/286As a humongous nerd, I can cite machines and people as influences. This is the (brief) story of the Buckaroo Box.

Back in ‘95 or ‘96, I, a young nerd, posted a WTB for a cheap desktop in the local alt.forsale. Buckaroo replied. Mid-30s, lived in his parents’ garage, sweatpants-clad, hadn’t shaved in days; but when I went to meet Buckaroo (Dad prudently accompanying me) I saw a grown-up computer nerd and honestly thought that he was the coolest person I had ever met.

The Buckaroo Box was a gynormous 286 with a 10″ monochrome-orange monitor. This monitor “featured” an anti-glare mesh that reduced reflecting light (and readability). Most of the time, I’d use this setup to dial up a plaintext public access ISP called the Edmonton FreeNet at 9600 baud (this may explain my current preoccupation with mouseless interfaces).

Thanks to the Buckaroo Box, I am a nerd for life.