Caveat: Contemplating Blue Screens of Death

I had some computer problems over the weekend.  Or rather, on Friday… I experienced the notorious blue-screen-of-death on my little Asus EeePC netbook, which runs Windows 7.  It's the first time I had one on this machine – I had, in fact, come to believe that Microsoft had done away with the infamous crash-o-matic indicator with the new operating system, because I'd never seen it before.  But lo, there it was.

This made me worried.  I managed to recover the little netbook, but I felt a dilemma.  I rely on having a computer a lot.  More than just for going online – in fact, I spend a lot of time on my netbook off line, and I'm pretty OK with having to cope with lack of internet at home, as I learned the hard way during my struggles with internetlessness in Yeonggwang last year (although obviously I ranted about it quite a bit).  I do writing on my computer.  Not good writing.  Not writing-to-be-happy about, but it's a compulsive exercise.

Until last year, I've always had two computers.  Well, not always, but at least in the most recent milennium.    The idea being, that if I had a crash, I'd go to the backup.  Well, last year, my "main" laptop, an old Sony Vaio that I bought the month before coming to Korea in 2007, suffered an ignoble retirement.  It has 3 operating systems installed on it – Windows Vista, Ubuntu Linux, and Windows Server 2003.  I dropped it, and I guess I scrambled the Vista boot sector somehow.  I can still boot it up, even now, but using Linux is virtually useless for surfing the Korean internet (although that's changing rapidly, with the unexpected – to me – success of the iPhone and iPad and the various Android-running clones of those products, because Android is, after all, just Linux).  The linux boot has got some other minor issues, too, involving the Korean-language input thingy, which I've been too lazy to resolve.  The Server 2003 boot still works (and I use it when I'm searching for some old file I've misplaced, sometimes), but it never played well with the graphics card in the laptop, with the consequence being that it is only capable of presenting a bare-bones 800×600 half-size window on the already non-huge laptop screen.  The upshot of all this, I consider the old "main" laptop to be dead.

So my backup computer, since my hiatus in the US in the fall of 2009, has been this $295 Asus netbook that I bought at Best Buy with a gift certificate.  It became my new main computer.  It's very low-grade, but perfectly adequate for my writing and for doing things on the internet, if rather pokey running multiple applications, etc.   I had to abandon my computer games habit, but that's hardly been detrimental, in most respects.

Anyway, getting the blue screen of death, last Friday, set me to thinking… if this netbook fails, I'll be in a world of hurt.  I'll be able to boot up "old main" if I'm desperate to write something, but it's hardly convenient, and I can forget comfortably surfing the internet.  And besides, I've been missing having a computer that can have more than 2 windows open at the same time without slowing to a crawl.

So Saturday morning, I tromped off to Costco and spent 800 bucks.  I bought a desktop.  Which seems ridiculous, but I've considered that one of the main things I do recreationally with my computer, these days, is watch movies or TV serious, and my netbooks 7 inch screen is pretty pathetic, that way.  Those 24 inch flat screen monitors looked tempting.  So basically I bought a fancy screen with a cheapo Jooyontech (a Korean discount brand) desktop PC attached to it. 

I decided to make my life difficult for myself.  Not on purpose, exactly:  I somehow managed to click just the wrong set of initial choices on the "first boot up" of the Windows 7 Home Premium K (for Korea) operating system, such that the operating system knows I prefer English, but nevertheless refuses to use it with me about 80% of the time.  As if that even makes sense.  Haha.  Let's just say the remainder of the configuration process involved a lot of recourse to the dictionary.  And I'm the proud owner of a semi-bilingual computer. 

I decided that, well, wow, I had a desktop with an actual graphics chip set and a big screen, I should put a fun game on it.  I have always had an inordinate and unhealthy love for the game called Civilization, in its various incarnations.  I went to buy it and try to download it – only to be disallowed from buying by the download store thing (called Steam).  I felt annoyed.  I hate it when online vendors discriminate against me because of my IP address.  They're telling me they don't want my money.  Well, my reaction to being told by a product vendor that they don't want my money is to not give them my money.  It took me about 20 minutes to torrent and install Civilization 4 (not the latest version, but what do I care?  I like the old version just fine) on the new machine.  No money required.  The internet's like that, right?  Probably, it's a bit stupid of me to tell everyone this on a blog, but I feel pretty safe from the copyright police, because of the aforementioned discriminated-against IP address.  Korean copyright police only care about Korean content.

Well, I played Civilization for part of Sunday, and then, in a long-unfelt rush of self-disgust at wasting such a vast amount of time on a virtual empire, I went on a walk.  Such was my weekend.  The picture below shows the new computer.  It represents a certain degree of investment in my intention to stay in Korea, doesn't it?  I suppose if I end up leaving, I'll sell it or give it away to a lucky friend.

[broken link! FIXME] Bonk 003

What I'm listening to right now.

David Bowie, "Changes."  The video someone made for it in the youtube, above, is clever, too. It's an appropriate way to ring in the new computer, though Bowie always makes me think of freshman year at Macalaster College in St Paul.  Life has changes.

 

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