Al Gore’s address at NYC, May 26, 2004 – can I just print of a million of these, visit the States and start handing them out?
Author: chuma
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Contact Sheet – 1940s pamphlet on how to use… the phone. Great line drawings in this one.
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jsUI Collection – My friend Jon, who knows more about JavaScript and Microsoft MMC than any human should, is writing some really cool and nice-looking JavaScript UI components.
I can run rings around him in PHP though
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Adventures in electronics disassembly
I’ve got microelectronics to fix. Camera’s done, next will be a pair of eMates…
Last night, I replaced the rear case cover on Sandy’s Kodak DX4530 digital camera. It must have taken a nasty bounce at some point a few weeks ago, because the clear plastic overtop of the LCD was cracked. It wasn’t in the middle of the screen (and thank goodness the LCD was OK!) but she wanted it fixed.
Amazingly, Kodak will actually send you service parts! Yay! They sent me the rear case piece (part 3f2130 I believe), which includes all of the buttons on the back and the dial and shutter on the top. Disassembly was basicially like this (following instructions from memory, standard disclaimers apply):
- Remove the battery and SD card.
- Remove all the screws on the bottom of the camera plus the one under the rubber cable cover, carefully pry up the bottom piece, the rubber cable cover (which is now loose), and the EasyShare dock cover. There’s two red and black wires underneath there – take note of how they are routed and make sure you put them back where they came from! They power the LCD backlight. Theoretically you could carefully unplug the cable with some tweezers but I didn’t.
- Be careful with the battery compartment lid – it’s not part of the bottom cover but it can now be easily dislodged and fall out. Once it’s out it’s a little difficult to put back, so just make sure it’s closed and locked at all times.
- Look on the bottom and notice the flexible cable that’s peeking out… that connects the LCD to the camera. The LCD is attached to the rear case, so be careful in the next step…
- BE CAREFUL HERE. Remove all the screws on the rear case cover (look at the new one to figure out where they are) and carefully pry it up from the non-card-slot side. Carefully put the camera lens-down and open the rear case up like a book, since it is still attached via the LCD cable!
- You should be looking at a PCB on the back of the camera. There’s a connector with a wide flexible cable attached to it. There’s also the backlight cable that we talked about before. Take note of how the backlight cable is routed again, it goes behind a metal tab to ensure that it doesn’t get squished.
- On either side of the big connector are some black locking clips. Take a very small jeweler’s screwdriver or a toothpick and carefully push these clips towards the cable. This will unlock the display cable and it should slide out easily. Don’t touch the contacts!
- Now, on the inside of the rear case is the LCD, behind a metal shield. Peel back the piece of black tape to reveal a hidden screw. Remove it and the other two screws, then remove the metal shield.
- Take your new rear case, remove the plastic insert inside. Pop the SD card slot cover out of the old rear case and put it into the new rear case.
- Slide the LCD into the new rear case. Take care with the backlight cable. Replace the metal shield, screw it in as before.
- CAREFULLY slide the display cable back into the connector until it won’t go any farther. While holding the two halves of your camera down so the cable doesn’t wiggle, push those locking tabs back so that the cable locks into place. Ensure that they’re locked all the way otherwise the cable won’t make contact and your display won’t work properly or at all.
- Now you can put the rear case back on. Fold it back over the camera, and pop it over the video out connector first. Once that side is on it should easily snap into place. Don’t force anything!
- Don’t screw the rear case on yet. Flip the camera over and look at the bottom. Re-route the backlight cable the way it was. Take the bottom cover and ensure that the cable fill fit properly and not be squished!
- Replace the EasyDock connector cover, and rubber port cover, put the bottom cover on, and screw into place EXCEPT for the screw next to the rubber port cover. You might have to squeeze the two camera halves together to get a good fit. If it won’t go together easily then you’re probably crushing the backlight cable. STOP and check – it’s rather fragile and I almost severed mine.
- Once the bottom cover is on, you can put batteries in and make sure the camera still works and (importantly) the display works. Try all of the buttons to make sure they work and are aligned.
- If it’s all good then put the screws back into the rear cover… and you’re done!
Yeah, that took me a good hour and a half last night to figure out.
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Adventures in Babysitting
Not that one. Sandy and I took Raven off of Mike and Nicole’s hands for a night, to give them some time off. Here are some photos – cute little bugger, ain’t she? Sandy kept on saying that she is an extremely well-behaved baby, and at only two months she’s already making lots of trying-to-talk noises. We even got a semi-decent amount of sleep, for watching a baby at least. And yes, I did change a diaper.
Still, it’s nice to be able to return the rental at the end of the day…
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The Weekend Report
The long weekend was great. We got two more rooms painted, the small bedroom and the upstairs bathroom. Now there’s only the 2nd bedroom/computer room, and the rest of the house to paint. Then it’ll be time for touch-up white on the baseboards and… elsewhere 🙂
Jordan came over and stayed with us for the weekend, after going through some hell in har apartment (1am gas leak, anyone?) After we painted and she worked on her design projects, we partied hard together. Laura also came over to stay for a few days and helped us paint the bathroom.
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slip sliding away…
Boy, time flies and I don’t write anything here!
We painted another room, the downstairs bathroom. It took many coats of paint for some reason. I am not painting this room again.
Our front lawn is all done and sodded! The sod is doing good in most places and a few spots have been filled in with grass seed. I’ll have to cut it this weekend finally, it should be alright.
We have TV! Yipee! Thank you satellite guy! Turns out he would have put it on the roof anyways, so all that time spent up there by Mike and I was not a lost cause after all. And our dish wasn’t faulty either.
Sandy’s eyes are doing great! The first few days were a bit rough, wearing those wrap-around sunglasses and putting drops in every hour. She’s recovering great now and loves her eyes.
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one down, seven to go…
We painted our bedroom on Saturday. I think it turned out quite well… it’s nice to have some colour on the walls finally! And to be able to hang things on the wall (which I have to get to… ulp)
On Sunday was Sandy’s wedding shower! We got a bunch of various stuff for the house and garden… luckily there was not much overlap with what we have, because we already have a lot of stuff.
Oh, I should mention that we did register for the shower/wedding at Sears. In case anyone reading this needs to know.
Tomorrow Sandy gets her Custom LASIK eye surgery. It’s exciting that she won’t have to wear glasses anymore! Personally I’m really used to wearing glasses and I just got new glasses. But we’ll see what time and money permit…
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other crazy little things we’ve noticed
- One of the vertical blinds at the sliding door at the back is broken right off the track. It’s at the end so it’s not very noticeable.
- The lock on the window in the living room is broken (half of it is missing)
- There are huge holes in the drywall everywhere. Patchy, patchy! One of the holes in the bathroom has been stuffed with a tiny little piece of toilet paper.
- Rust stains from some metal-legged piece of furniture are on the carpet in the upstairs hallway. Nothing gets rust out of carpet.
- There’s a lightswitch downstairs that seemed to do nothing at all… I’d flip it on and off and no lights would turn on or off. Well, last night we solved the mystery: this switch controls the fan in the upstairs bathroom. No idea why you’d need to turn that on or off from another floor…
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Newest Sculpture Garden Installation
This is much nicer than the last installation, which was a very scary gloss white baby’s head. This is actually a scale replica of the top 25 feet of the CN Tower. Maybe at lunch I’ll go and take photos of the two information sheets posted there.