Jonathan Puddle

Jonathan Puddle

(45 comments, 645 posts)

Jonathan Puddle is a reader and a gamer, a Technology Director by trade, a house music DJ, a husband, and a father to 2 crazy boys. He currently resides in Finland.

Home page: http://www.jpuddy.net

Posts by Jonathan Puddle
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Getting what you want out of an Elisa Kotiboksi

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We moved into a new home this month, and had to arrange a few Finnish home service providers for the first time. Our last home was university housing, which provided all utilities and internet access, so we hadn’t crossed this barrier before. Our new place didn’t have a land-line phone, and had just missed out on the fiber being rolled out in the area, so we were left with Cable broadband as our only option. Now, conventional wisdom is that Finland is crap, and that one should stick with DSL, but lacking the option (and not being entirely convinced about cable’s suck-ness) we went for a cable package from Saunalahti.

I placed the order online, and on the date that I had requested the service begin, a package arrived containing a broadband router and a few other items. I quickly set up the router, which is Elisa branded and is actually quite a powerful piece of kit. It’s got a cable modem onboard, a DSL modem, 4x gigabit ethernet ports and is packing wireless N. Excellent, thought I. That is until I got the connection up, and ran a speed test, and received dismal results. I was paying for 10Mbps up and 1Mbps down, and I was getting around 2 down and very little up. I ruefully thought of my Finnish friends who had tried to convince me away from cable. But refusing to be beaten, I figured there might be some config settings in the router that I could tweak.

And this is where Elisa has done one of the strangest things I’ve ever come across from an internet provider. All of the settings of this otherwise powerful router are completely locked down, and are only configurable by logging into your account with Elisa/Saunalahti, and going to the “configure my router” page. Here you have a number of settings that are changeable, such as the SSID, the passcode, and a few other core details. Read: very little customisability. They’ve given you this great box, and then forbidden you from touching it.

So I said, screw you Elisa. The only setting that was exposed through the web address of the router was whether it was running as a router, or simply a bridge (connecting the cable to an upstream router). I quickly got out my Netgear router and connected it to the Elisa Kotiboksi in bridge mode, and it worked as expected. At this point, I decided that I had enough routers in the home to risk installing DD-WRT, so I went ahead and did that on the Netgear (3300) and it worked like a charm. I reconnected everything to the Elisa box, and ran another speed test: 11Mpbs down, and 1.1Mbps up. What do you know?!

The skeptics among you will say that cable speeds vary throughout the day based on your neighbourhood’s residents habits. But I ran these tests, from both setups, over a period of 24 hours on a weekday, and saw very little fluctuation.

Our new house has CAT5 cable in the walls, but strangely only one room has the cable outlet beside the CAT5 outlet. This room wouldn’t work for the modem, so I used another and tidily ran the cables under a bed. I was then able to nicely fit my Netgear router into the junction box for the coax and CAT5. The only missing piece was that the stupid Elisa box was still broadcasting a wireless signal. Naturally I could just ignore it… but one doesn’t want to ignore these things. I trolled through every setting I could find, and there was no option to just turn it off. So as anyone in my situation would surely do, I pried the case open and took a look around. Conveniently attached to the main circuit board was an add-in card. I figured it couldn’t hurt to pop it out, and a few seconds later I had the box booted up again minus the add-in card. Low and behold, everything worked as before, but there was no network being broadcast! The Elisa Kotiboksi is now sitting quietly under a bed, not bothering anyone. Least of all me.

The benefits of planning

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I just blogged about this over on the Catch The Fire (my employer) Office blog.

Like many SMBs, we spend a lot of our time fighting fires and running from one project to the next. Taking time out to plan for the future is a luxury not often afforded, or not often pursued. I’ll admit also that in the past our organization has had a bad track record for not sticking to plans in the long term. So I was a little reticent about spending weeks of time last year on a 5 Year Plan… but I did it anyway.

Read the full article here: http://blogs.catchthefire.com/office/2010/08/20/the-benefits-of-planning/

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The story so far…

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What Microsoft needs to do to with phones

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Ars Technica has a fantastic write-up on why Microsoft is irrelevant in the phone market, and what they need to do to fix that.

…if the company wants to achieve any relevance in this market, it needs to stop acting like a software company, and start acting like a consumer electronics company. It learned that lesson with Zune. It knew it was the only option with Xbox. It needs to do the same for phones.

The forest makes you healthy

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Since moving to Finland, where our city is nestled amongst pine and birch forests, we’ve found ourselves feeling healthier and more energetic than ever before (Maija being pregnant, notwithstanding). Turns out… the forest is the one making us healthy! http://science.slashdot.org/story/10/07/07/0115240/Forest-Bathing-Considered-Healthful

I love that people are studying this stuff.

New options for tablets and e-readers

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Matt Mitchell shared this fantastic link with me, from Wired. Hahaha, check it out.

There was a time when your choice of book told people who you were, or at least who you wanted to be. Or, barring that, who you wanted people to think you wanted to be. Having an e-reader doesn’t say anything but “I read books and have power outlets in my home.” (Both admirable qualities, to be sure.)

Luckily for venture capitalists, I have ideas. It’s time for the world of e-readers to diversify so people can make a statement with their choice of electronic word-delivery device.

Read More http://www.wired.com/underwire/2010/06/alt-text-e-readers/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+wired/index+(Wired:+Index+3+(Top+Stories+2))#ixzz0sR1723u6

Ruuben Levi Eelis

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Was born on Monday! What an awesome little dude he is. Maija has written a story about it already, though she’s still in the hospital.

Read it here.

Help me Obiwan Kenobi, you’re my only hope

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Remember the 3D holograms that Star Wars popularized… and no one has been able to make work in real life yet? Well, it’s getting closer. Prepare to have your mind thoroughly blown, thanks to some researchers at the University of Southern California.

Flipping awesome.

A hunger to write

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Over the last few months I’ve been developing a hunger to write again. Having a young family hugely impacts the time you have available for hobbies and personal fulfillment, so I’ve been trying (and generally failing) to make wise choices with the time I do have. God has provided for us in 3 awesome ways with a specific project that is consuming almost all of our evenings, at present.

The back story, is that our good friend Dave was approached to have his master’s thesis published as a book. A thesis and a book are two different things, and significant editing of the original would be required to make it more approachable, and slightly shorter. Having just moved to a recently earthquake ravaged country, he asked Maija and I if we would consider taking on the editing of his thesis. We were very honoured to be asked, and graciously accepted. We’re now a couple of days away from completion, so I’m taking a moment of repose.

Here are the 3 ways that God has blessed us through this:

  1. We had recently been impressed by some friends who lent their personal expertise to some other friends for a project. Maija and I agreed that we wanted to be the same kind of people, and asked God for an opportunity. He provided!
  2. I’ve been itching to write, and this provides me with an excellent opportunity. In the division of work, Maija tackles the high level concepts and ensures that we’re tossing out and keeping the right things. She’s the Masters student who studied discourse analysis, so this is exactly her speciality. That then leaves the rewording and paraphrasing to me, which is exactly what I want. God is good.
  3. This is a paid gig, so it provides a nice little bonus for our work. We would honestly have done it without pay, due to the above 2 factors, but I’m not going to deny that this is a blessing also.

Once this project is done I really want to start a new writing project myself. I feel there is some momentum behind me… and I really don’t want that to die. Editing existing material is really a great way to get going though… a blank slate can be a terrifying thing. If anyone else has some interesting in collaboration writing, let’s do something!

Also… I’m reading Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. It’s great!

New website design

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I’ve been meaning to update my site design for a while, but haven’t found the chance or the right templates. I was installing the new WordPress 3 at work this week, and it reminded me that I needed to refresh my site. So thanks to the wonders of WordPress, here it is. This is roughly 1 hour of work by me, but lots of hard work by the wonderful people who created this theme and the plugins. Cheers!

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