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Monday, 8 November 2004

First motorbike? Buying tips (1) - the crash helmet






I've just acquired my first motorcycle - a scooter (if that counts!). I'm posting some lessons learned, in the hope that these purchasing tips may help someone else.

The most painfully expensive part of the experience involved buying the crash helmet, which by law one has to wear in the UK.

My excuse is that I was in too much of a hurry to get a helmet of my own to use for my CBT (compulsory basic training, a one-day course which is required in most cases before you can ride anything over a 50cc in the UK). So I rushed out and got one the day before the CBT - instead of using a free-loan helmet from the training provider. A bad combination, fastidiousness and over-hastiness.

The result is an expensive helmet which gave me a headache after 15 mins, and so proved unusable. (Unsellable too, I suspect, owing to a very small nick in it caused by a friend taking it off a bit jerkily and touching part of a chair with it - an attempt to help stretch my helmet on a larger head, which sadly went awry.)

The duh points I should have known are these. Yes, I should have thought about them before I rashly rushed out to buy - but I didn't.

1. Is the helmet shaped like your head?

Believe it or not, people have differently shaped heads. And different helmets are differently shaped, even ones by the same manufacturer. Some will press on certain parts of your head (say if the top of your head is broad and the helmet is narrower there) - and that can hurt like hell after a bit.

Try lots and lots of different helmets until you find one that you feel very comfortable with, or at worst the least uncomfortable with (and ideally it shouldn't be uncomfortable at all, for safety too - you don't want to be focusing on the discomfort rather than the traffic), even after wearing it for a while. Which leads to point 2.

2. Take your time

You won't know how well or badly a helmet fits you until you've had it on for at least 15 minutes. 1 or 2 minutes is just not enough. Any retailer worth their salt will be willing to let you keep their demo helmets on for that long. Don't worry about looking silly standing around with different helmets for ages. Try as many different helmets as it takes, for as long as it takes. It's worth it.

Consider the retailer's advice as to whether a helmet is too big (and would slip and endanger you), but take it with a slight pinch of salt; if you think it's too big, don't necessarily take their word for it that it isn't. I had different sales representatives say different things about the same helmet and the second one was right, a helmet which the previous one said was fine was in fact too big for me. Taking your time is important for safety too - if your helmet is uncomfortable, you're going to be distracted while riding.

3. Ventilation, ventilation, ventilation!

If you have very thick hair, pick a helmet with more vents - ventilation makes a huge difference, or you risk headaches and heat exhaustion. I've rarely felt worse than with a too-small helmet which was so hot I could barely breathe, I felt literally sick.

Usually more expensive helmets will have more vents, including ones that you can open and close. Interestingly the helmet I eventually bought (the second helmet, I should say!) cost a bit less than the first one (the mistake), yet had more vents.

4. Glasses, alas

For those with poor eyesight, tough luck. You'll have to switch to contact lenses, or if you're one of the unlucky few who can't take contacts, get a pair of plastic framed glasses. Wire framed ones simply will not do. It's impossible to get them on over the helmet. Believe me, I tried (the retailer told me I wouldn't succeed, but I had to have a go for myself. They were right, of course).

And don't just get plastic frames, but (if you can manage a spare pair just for biking) get your friendly optician to straighten the arms so that they don't curl over your ears. This makes it much easier to get them on, in fact it's virtually impossible otherwise (if you're me, anyway). Plus you can pretend they're cool Oakleys, which also have the straight arms.

Finally, take them with you and try them on over your short-listed helmets. Some makes are more glasses-friendly than others.

5. Avoid false economy

As it's your head and your life at risk, if you can afford it, buy a more expensive rather than cheapo helmet. You do get what you pay for here - not just in terms of comfort (like vents, adjustable inner padding etc), but solidity and safety. Arai also offer to test the helmet for free if you've been in an accident, to check if it's still safe to use it. A full face one is also safer than a half-face, and I did manage to get over the slight claustrophobia.

So, that's what I learned. I certainly hope someone else will benefit from my £200 over mistake! And - I have one Shoei helmet for sale, black, only used once, with a small ding (barely noticeable dent in the paintwork). Going cheap. Anyone..?

Wednesday, 3 November 2004

Google Desktop Search review and top tips






[Edit: Privacy section updated as Google have since put up an explanation (not entirely complete) of why GDS keeps trying to contact their servers.]

I've been using Google Desktop Search Beta for about 2 weeks now, and I find the ability to search the contents of my hard drive at lightning Google speed, rather than Word or Windows Explorer crawl, invaluable. You can even search your hard drive while searching the Net on Google. GDS works by indexing the contents of your hard drive, which can take several hours the first time, and then it's supposed to update the index continuously while you work, after that. GDS then searches this index, via your browser.

It doesn't index everything - just the main types of things most people would need to search, like text files and common Microsoft documents (Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Outlook and Outlook Express emails - but not files attached to emails). Not Acrobat PDFs yet, sadly (but you can vote for it on their Contact pages and hopefully if enough people ask for it, Google will add it). It even searches your history of Web pages viewed using Internet Explorer, and AIM chats.

Here are my main thoughts so far, plus some GDS top tips.

Installation

Outlook/Outlook Express has to be closed before it installs.
Tip: open Outlook/OE again immediately after the installation, before it starts indexing your files - or it won't index your email.
Security Issues

There's already been publicity about possible security issues with GDS. It searches your cache of Web pages visited - including any pages on secure sites (https), complete with username and password information etc. Which means that anyone using the same computer could find confidential info with GDS. This includes public computers e.g. in Internet cafes.There have already been reports about people being able to use GDS to read the private emails and password details of others who have previously used the same computer.

Fortunately there is an option to disable indexing of secure pages. Personally, I feel searching of secure pages should be turned off by default given the security risk and how unlikely it is that you would need to search secure pages anyway (except maybe secure email - but then I'd rather my Webmail was private than searchable).
Tip: right after installing GDS, go to Preferences (rightclick the system tray GDS icon) and untick the "Include secure pages (HTTPS) in web history" box if you want to improve security.
Tip: if you use a public computer, check to see if GDS is installed on it. If it is, uninstall it or change the Preferences to disable searching of https pages before using it to view secure email or login to secure sites (non-https Webmail will still be searchable unless you disable searching of that particular site first too, see below).
Privacy Issues - Google

With all the fuss made about the privacy implications of Google's free Gmail and software searching the contents of your email to serve up relevant ads, it won't be surprising if there is focus on what GDS means for privacy.

Personally I have turned off the option in Preferences to "Send non-personal usage data and crash reports to Google". I'd like to help test the product, but by giving feedback on what I choose, when I choose; I've never been happy with "non-" information being sent to a company, as I don't know how non-identifying it really is.

But beyond that, I've noticed one odd thing about GDS. It's supposed to search your hard drive, and according to the GDS FAQ the index is kept only on your hard drive, not on Google's servers. Now I've turned off "Send non-personal usage data and crash reports to Google", so GDS shouldn't need to communicate with Google to send them anything.

Yet whenever I turn on my computer, even when I've not yet done anything on it, my firewall says that the GDS program (to be precise GoogleDesktopIndex.exe, rather than GoogleDesktop.exe) is trying to access the Net on port 80. More specifically, it tries to communicate with different addresses on different occasions but they're always Google-related. I let GDS through once just to see if it would open up some helpful Google page in my browser - but it didn't, it did nothing that I could see.

Google did acknowledge (e.g. in a FAQ about Zonealarm) that GDS will try to access the Net and advised that the firewall should be configured to let it, in order to stop firewall alerts recurring in future. But what I wondered about was, exactly why should GDS be trying to contact Google?

[Edit: for new Google FAQ answer] At first, I suspected Google were perhaps testing the potential for adding ads. Now Google have added an explanation to their Help pages: it seems GDS regularly "phones home" for updates. What still worries me is that their Help says my firewall alerts should show this as "autoupdate.exe", and now I know to let that through when I see it try to go out to Google, but why should GoogleDesktopIndex.exe be trying to contact Google? I'm still puzzled as to what's up...

On the whole, I've decided I can live with software reading my Gmail for the sake of 1GB storage and Google-reliable searching of my email, but somehow I feel a lot less comfortable about software reading my personal files not to mention my Web history too, especially when it's contacting Google. However I'd be quite happy however to pay for Google searching of my hard drive if it was fairly priced and designed to be secure and private. Sure, I may be wrong about future ads - but I'll certainly watch with interest how things develop.

Privacy Issues - Other People

If other people search your computer using GDS they could find your private documents. However you can tell GDS not to index certain files or folders on your hard drive, or certain websites (e.g. some Webmail sites where you want to keep your email private- remember, it searches all Web pages you've visited using Internet Explorer unless you tell it otherwise).
Tip: immediately after installing GDS, in the Preferences "Don't Search These Items" section consider entering the paths of the folders, files and Websites you don't want GDS to search, e.g. with a shared computer. You can also untick boxes to tell GDS not to index not only https pages but also the different types of content it searches, e.g. AOL IM chats.
One immediate area of uncertainty is how soon GDS updates its index after you've excluded certain file types, folders, files or URLs in the Preferences. What if you've forgotten to do this soon after installation? For how long could you be exposed to others possibly viewing your secure Web pages? That's not clear from the GDS FAQs. If it automatically eliminates those file types or URLs etc from the results of any Desktop search carried out after that, even a split second after you've changed your Preferences, that would be ideal, particularly given the security concerns - but it would be reassuring if the FAQs said so. If it doesn't do that, then personally I'd like to have the option to force GDS to re-index whenever I choose, e.g. immediately after I tell it not to index something. I'd certainly feel more secure if I could do that.

I've also unticked "Show Desktop Search results on Google Web Search result pages" in the Preferences. Again, I don't want anyone doing a standard Google search on my computer to find my personal files inadvertently. Of course, this ought to be supplemented by excluding certain folders or sites, as already mentioned.

Conclusions

Overall I'm very happy with GDS, despite the security and privacy issues. It seems the key point is to ensure that it is set up carefully as soon as possible. My main remaining concern is why GoogleDesktopIndex.exe keeps trying to communicate with Google. But no doubt one day all will become clear...

Sunday, 31 October 2004

Radio-controlled atomic watches/clocks rule!






Summer time livin's easy - with self-setting timepieces. Accurate to milliseconds or better, adjusting themselves to the right time daily as set by an atomic clock by picking up a radio signal - why aren't they used by everyone?

Come summer time, or winter, the way they automatically change themselves to deal with daylight savings time is a huge timesaver. No more putting clocks back or forward laboriously. If only my boiler timer and other timers did the same.

I have had an Oregon Scientific radio-controlled alarm clock for years and couldn't live without it (there are now newer versions available). Like today, for instance. An extra hour's snooze without having to do a thing to my alarm clock - bliss! I have several radio-controlled clocks too.

So why aren't radio-controlled watches more popular? One possible reason: there aren't any on sale anymore which show the day and the date on the face all the time, without you having to push any buttons (an essential for any watch, as far as I'm concerned; I can just about remember the day of the week, well mostly anyway, but the only way I know what date it is is by looking at my watch. Really.)

The very first radio-controlled watch ever made, the Junghans Mega One, did show the day and date - but they seem fragile things. I've had two and they both died on me one way or another (including refusing to recognise the radio signal to set the time after a battery change). Plus, there was no way you could backlight the face temporarily, e.g. if you were checking the time in a darkened cinema.

I've also heard that many people want watches with hands, not a digital display - but frankly, these days so many watches have them, and they seem to sell fine.

So, one of my top wish list items is a radio-controlled wristwatch which shows the date (day and month both) constantly, and can be backlit with one button press (if anyone knows of one on sale like that, I'd be eternally grateful!). Even better if the band can be shortened for those with slim wrists without damaging the antenna (yes, the Mega One has the antenna in the wristband), and if the battery can be changed by a normal watch battery seller without specialist knowledge without scuppering the mechanism, not that a mere battery change ought to do that.

Then, maybe sales of radio-controlled watches will take off.

[Edit: Found a great radio-controlled atomic wristwatch now! See this post.]

Sunday, 24 October 2004

Internet banking security? Pants password policy






Internet banking. Security is supposed to be crucial, right? Banks lecture us never, ever to give our passwords out to anyone, not even their staff.

So what do Egg do?

To change your password, you can't log in to their secure site and then do it online.

Nope, you have to - wait for it - call Egg, and ask their staff over the phone to change it to the new password.

No doubt their staff are sworn to secrecy but me, I'm sticking with my old password.