Wednesday

How to get to the "press F2" bios screen in Windows 10 - on a Dell


With latest Windows versions, the way to enter the BIOS has changed:

If you need to change some BIOS hardware or hardware setting, the instructions say to 'press F2' as the blue Dell logo appears. The timing they say is critical but you can do this till you are blue in the face.

In Windows 8 and 10 the procedure is different:

In the taskbar search box, type 'Advanced start-up options'

Alternatively, go to Settings / Update / Security / Recovery

Choose Advanced start up / Restart now

Look for the option to enter the UEFI BIOS.

My best apps for the Pebble smartwatch

I was not the first to buy a smartwatch though my gadget habit might have driven me to get one. The smartwatch idea made me realise that while I needed something, I did not need a watch to do everything. Nor do I need another object to charge each day.

A half-price Pebble Steel on ebay was the motivator. But what did I really need to do with one? Several months on, here are the watch apps I found essential.

The Pebble allows eight apps to be in use, but you can keep other useful apps handy on the phone it syncs with.

On the watch

Pebble app: Alarm 

Although Pebble picks up Notifications from your Apple or Google calendar, I still find great use for the Alarm app. For example each summer I do some work where I oversee the university exams. I set loads of alarms during the exam. I get the watch to vibrate when the exam has 30 minutes to run or has to finish. An unusual bonus is that you don't need to keep looking at the clock. (Repeated looking at the clock has the unreal effect of making the minutes pass painfully slowly!).  

Pebble app: TripAdvisor

Perhaps it's a cliché but quick access to restaurants and attractions where I happen to be is a want. Some people would prefer info from Yelp, but whatever the choice, the idea is the same. On the Pebble Tripadvisor information is in simple text but nevertheless useful. It may remind you of the days when we browsed the web using WAP.

Pebble app: Get back


The Get back app is controlled by one button which records the exact location where you are. Perhaps you leave your hotel in a new town and go exploring the area. Perhaps you parked the car in a sprawling car park or go for a walk in the woods. Either way the app records your initial spot and shows you a compass pointing back to the recorded spot and a measure of your distance as the crow flies. What's more you don't have to be running the app all the time. It stores your origin indefinitely so you launch Get Back at the start and again when you want to return to it.  

Pebble app: UK Transport (US apps exist)

Whether you're out and about or at home, choose 'bus' or 'train' and this app will provide a list of nearby bus stops or train stations. With one more press it'll provide the next few buses or trains. UK Transport offer a very simple design to provide the next train or bus with the least number of button presses. Comparted to everything else such as websites offering train, coach or bus information, it sets a model way to be useful, and especially when you haven't a clue about what's available nearby. The next time I play with this I will urge myself to donate as thanks for such a wonderful app.

Pebble app: Pebble Bike (Ventoo) with tracking to Mapmytracks

Formerly called Pebble Bike, Ventoo displays speed, time and distance travelled as I run, bike, drive or, as now, move at zero mph at my desk. A second screen tracks your position as you travel and you see the shape of the road travelled so far. (A further screen shows altitude, ascent rate, slope and ascent). As we'll see in a moment, most importantly you can start and stop tracking your journey on the watch without touching the phone at all. The trip data is uploaded to a choice of services. If you chose Map My Tracks you'd find your journeys being saved on the web and find maps and graphs wonderfully presented to keep or replay them. If you ever asked where did we walk or what route did we take through London this provides the answer. Amusingly, if you asked what strategy you took to mow the lawn or plough a field, the answer is here too. Upgrading your Map My Tracks to a paid version also allows you to share your progress live with others, should they wish to follow you.

The point to note is that you could probably do all this with your phone alone. Google Tracks and Map My Tracks are two phone apps that you can launch, start monitoring your journey and see this recorded on a map. The key aspects of the Pebble are the live speed display on the watch and being able to initiate this on your wrist whenever the need occurs.

First install Ventoo on your Pebble watch and then install the Ventoo Android app on your phone. Next set up an account at Map My Tracks. On the watch go to Settings and choose integration and then enter your Map My Tracks login and you're pretty much done.

Map My Tracks itself doesn't even require a phone app so you could simply install Map My Tracks on the phone. Then when you start Map My Tracks the phone display switches to Pebble's built-in display of time, distance and speed. The downside is that once you stop this display to say, read a notification, the recording stops too. So that's less good even though Map My Tracks offers pretty awesome records of your journeys. Combined with Ventoo, it's awesome indeed.

Ventoo also allows you to export your journey to a GPX file which after a clunky conversion on the web, can be imported into Google Maps. Ventoo also integrates with JayPS, Canvas and OruxMaps.

Timer+

Of numerous kitchen timer apps I chose this. While I often ask SIRI or Google to set alarms quickly on the phone, the Pebble watch is the device I'm likely to have on my person. You might think of more life enhancing apps, but a timer is handy for single alarms.

Other uses for Pebble

Last but best is the feature that Pebble sends notifications to your wrist - you could be in a meeting, a lecture or driving and the notification arrives silently, safely and is quick to read.
Perhaps I'll find a use for the Music app that launches a track on the phone. Perhaps I'll find an interest in knowing how much I sleep. Overall though, Pebble's long battery life provides less hassle for these several quite useful enhancements for owning a phone. 

Casting from Android Youtube app to Humax Freesat


... and no Chromecast or special TV appears to be needed.

A funny thing happened as I clicked to 'screencast' from my Android phone (running Lollipop). I had simply wanted to watch a YouTube video by pushing it to my Chromecast dongle plugged into the TV.

I had launched the YouTube app, clicked the Cast Screen icon at the top of the app and expected to see my Chromecast listed and then choose it to cast YouTube to the TV.
My 'funny thing' was that in addition I saw a second device labelled FS-HMX-01A-0000-****. That label I guessed was not the Chromecast but more likely my Freesat Humax HDR 1000S set-top box. So I chose this and hey presto, a Chromecast is not required to cast YouTube to the TV.

But it's only available in YouTube. This extra device, with the Humax box device ID, does not appear in any other apps when you press the cast icon. So the device doesn't appear when you use the drawer shade shortcut 'Cast Screen' nor in 'Netflix' and not even in the actual Chromecast app itself.

An explanation has yet to appear but I can surmise that YouTube may be unusually compliant. For example, if you have a Playstation 3, and run the YouTube app both on the PS3 and the phone, it's possible to pair them with a code and control the PS3 YouTube app with the phone. That's a slight gain in usefulness.

There is casting and then there's Chromecasting

'Casting' or 'mirroring' your phone on a big screen is quite the feature for social or family gatherings but you can also imagine its uses in meetings and school lessons. The industry standard called 'Miracast' has been in place for ages - it uses a wireless connection to send a copy of a phone or laptop screen (and sounds) to a TV. Of course and sadly, the sender and receivers need to be pre-registered which creates a Bluetooth-like hurdle. (Hec it's my TV.) Following this the paired devices rely on a wireless signal to send what may be a lot of data.

Most TV makers have given Miracast their own spin and branded names, possibly for self promotion but no doubt to the detriment of it 'taking off' in the public mind. Those who have tried to send from one device to another will have had success moderated by the 'standard' not being the best of standards. More a 'it might work' kind of standard.

Google's Chromecast (and possibly Apple's AirPlay too) work a bit differently. Instead of say, your phone downloading media from the Internet only to immediately send it to the TV, the Chromecast simply picks up the media from the Internet and displays it on the TV. Your phone essentially tells the Chromecast what to show and where to get it. The result by removing a hop from phone to TV provides a better experience by many accounts. The process is made possible by apps, such as iPlayer and ITV equivalents.

Playing with your phone will find a 'cast screen' command in the notification pull down shade and 'cast full screen' in some apps. Use this and you'll have mixed results because, like Miracast, you're needing to send a lot of data to the Chromecast and TV.





Sunday

Sony MICROMV / Micro MV format - erasing and copying


Copying MICROMV tapes to a computer

Initially, in the late 1990's you almost had to have a Mac to do video easily, but doing video has always been possible using the PC.

I used to have three different Firewire cables and have needed each of them for various transfers to a Mac; a PC and a laptop. Do industry standards like Firewire, USB, HDMI make a standard? Anyway, there's a small Firewire to small Firewire or iLink cable; a large, long D-shaped plug to large long D-shaped plug cable and finally a small to large Firewire plug.

To read Micromv on the Mac I would use iMovie 9 running in OSX Yosemite. Plug in the MicroMv camera using a Firewire cable (the plug is the long D Firewire plug on the old iMac going to a small Firewire socket on the Sony IP7 camera). Then use the iMovie camera button to control the camera to import your footage. (By iMovie 10 this no longer worked for me unless there's a tweak to find). But iMovie is good enough here. 

Using the PC it may be simpler to get a copy service to transfer your stuff. There were at least a few services on ebay charging £4 per tape (2015).

Otherwise the software that works on an old PC machine includes Sony Movieshaker software or Pinnacle Studio 9. Sony Vegas video editing software also worked for me and it was by far the most featured package.

Erasing MICROMV tapes

In the absence of a bulk tape eraser, I've simply recorded a view of the wall over old tapes. After that's done, go to the camera menu, look for Title and Erase All, press Execute and the tape memory, which stores what's been recorded and when it is erased.

Playing MICROMV video

Use VLC player for the easiest ride. MICROMV transfer to the PC produces .MMV files which is a variant of the MPEG2 / DVD format. Before I found VLC player I used a command-line program that could convert MMV to MPG.
Otherwise try uploading what you have to Youtube and see what that makes of it.