Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Music Streaming Update 29Jan19

I upgraded my JRiver Media Center v23 to v25 today, for ~$20, and for an extra $6 I got a Master License (vs Win only) allowing me to install it on as many machines as I own, whatever their location. I used the Library Server capability to migrate my internal streaming service to my main Win7 server (now co-located on the same device as the media). I then set my Win10 notebook  to client MC25 and installed MC25 on my MBPro - again I set it to client. I now can stream HD quality, mainly FLAC at ~1Mbps, from my Blodgett server to my headphone systems, with independent DACs, both @ Blodgett and @ the Nest. Very cool. I can stream to iOS and Android devices too but I'll limit that to 320Kbps in case I am doing it on LTE; I don't wanna overdo the data charges - plus, the iDevice reproduction systems aren't really of sufficient fidelity to warrant FLAC. I've been looking to test this capability for a while - today I took the time to wring it all out. Meanwhile, I cancelled recent trials of Amazon Unlimited and Pandora Premium - they just aren't worth the monthly $ to me.
UPDATE 12Feb19 - The full remote testing of streaming FLAC is complete. It's awesome. Here I show streaming The Killers into Summit from my server in COS at >1Mbps.

Saturday, January 26, 2019

Another Super-Cold One & New Music 25Jan19

Wow. Breck grabbed another 5" while Vail had 9" but snow was forecast all day so I went Summit-side. It was super cold and windy. I skied over to Pk 6 from 7 and skied there mostly but it was frigid and super windy - Imperial didn't open. I floated from 18" of new through 2" of crusted terror. The pic is from the top of the steeps at Wonderland bowls - whew; navigation required.
We were fortunate to find a pair of Kala's chosen BC boots, Fischer BCX6s, online for less than half off MSRP $220 for $104 - remarkable for mid-season. I think they didn't really know they had modern NNN-BC boots as they were not described as such so I was dubious on the buy but knew I could return them... woohoo.
Vampire Weekend just dropped a couple of singles from an upcoming album; it's been six years. The Harmony Hall is cool - deferential to the Dead Shades of Grey and more - Ezra is tickling some cool stuff and doing his keen lyrics thing. I look forward to the full album but its release date is not announced.
Vampire Weekend - Harmony Hall
And, also recently, a big Icelandic festival was held and KEXP was there to introduce and record a Nordic princess, Aurora. I'm listening 'cause she/they are pretty cool synthpop, ala CVRCHES. Worth a listen.
Aurora @ Iceland Airwaves
In closing, I made a heirloom tomato and burrata salad tonight... I varied what I learned from a close friend in Napa Valley... yum.

Thursday, January 24, 2019

Heating, Freezing, Watching And Fishing 24Jan19

The radiant heating system failed again... it was 45° in some parts of the Nest upon awaking... this time a pump seized and needed to be replaced. I called Countywide and Mike was quick and efficient to replace it. I prior identified the fail but nonetheless, with a system full of glycol under pressure, I was happy to pay for the repair. I also identified a suspect relay during debug... my Magnecraft 750XBXM4L in the control circuit seemed blown (likely from the overdraw from the seized pump). It was. I found a currently manufactured equivalent, the Tekmar 003, and even found it in inventory at a local wholesale electrical & plumbing supply. I replaced that and we are back and toasty again.
With 9" of new in Vail, I "passed" due to the drive over there and likely nightmare returning. I hit the local haunt with just 5" windblown in ~40mph winds and 15° temps. Keystone Summit chair stopped twice on wind and ran 1/2 speed for a third of it. I was undaunted and headed to North Pk via Diamondback. Outback held the best stashes due to wind directions and I enjoyed a decent, if not cold, morning grabbing a quick 15K through the trees (to avoid the wind).
 Cory shared a tasty dubl red laced with raspberry and chili during lunch.
I watch movies via streaming services and typically enjoy higher quality offers from writers, directors and actors. I used to "google" "best movies on Netflix now" and the like to assess what to watch next. IMDB is a great database to aid in quality assessment once the current list was determined (Google & Collider shown). Yet, I recently discovered ReelGood, offered as an app and a website. This app is perfect for me despite its flaws - I can set which streaming services to search, I can set genre (sci-fi often for me), I can set release date, I can set Rotten Tomatoes or IMDB rating, etc. - and the app sorts the stuff and tells me what's on and even allows me to set up a watchlist. Perfect function - UI just OK. I still use IMDB to dive in but I bet I'll no longer issue searches for "best TV...".
ReelGood
IMDB
Google - "Best Movies"
Collider
I'm still planning the post-runoff (~Jul19) Rocky Mtn fishing trip and I expect it'll follow the "Fly Highway," Route #20 through WY, MT, ID and OR...


Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Soon, A Has-Been 18Jan19-22Jan19

Probably not but the juxtaposition of the timed notions in tight verse strikes me. I was fortunate to enjoy a day of a fresh 6" at Breck with DD before MLK WE. So cool we turned it into a dubl date at Aurum that night - so fun, so tasty... DD & I sampled nearly the entire happy hour of 1/2 price totties as we dined fine in one of the coolest new spots in Summit. No team pics.
Kala & I hit the trails on a nice Sat AM but soon encountered overcast and snowy conditions up on Peru Ck. NP... what a great outing on a somewhat clear trail given MLK. Remarkable electric buzz conducting the snow on the way back down on power line. Though, one of Kala's Atlas 825 snowshoes failed (bad design anyway) on the way back to the car and we spent a couple hours on the next day grabbing some of the best mtn shoes in the offing, 2018 Atlas Elektra Serrates. Yeah, 2019 colors were better for Kala ~ but not $100 better.
Sunday was a day inside avoiding the crowds on the slopes, and enjoying two gr8 OT NFL games. Bummer about the PI mis-call resulting in a Saints loss - and the inability of Andy Reed to clear the hurdle against the GOAT. Mon we had appointments and fun together inside but Tue, I got back out there and partook of a weak 5" in at Keystone. Super freakin' cold this day but good enough for another 15Kft of vert. I tried Citrus Mistress and a spa soak with both pumps running.

Tuesday, January 15, 2019

New Wild Reeds Drop 15Jan19

New "Official Video" drop (so not the cool live, high production, I like, yet) of new tune from the Wild Reeds...
The Wild Reeds - Don't Pretend

IT Faces Fail Convergence @ Blodgett 15Jan19

On top of confirmed WiFi failures (previously reported and diagnosed) I faced more "fun" recently. Kala & I have commissioned an update of some lower level rooms at Blodgett. This is one of the only spots in this home that we have not touched; there and the kitchen (for obvious $$$ reasons)... it's just 3 rooms plus stairway but held a lot of our computer gear. Big workstations (including MLC's game setup), and my server (Win7) for images, other media, DVR system with remote access, terrestrial broadcast TV packet grabbing, IoT central, automated backup systems, local & remote FLAC music streaming, whole house printing services from any device, and much more, was in the basement and needed relocation during construction. With some trepidation, but forever technically brave, I tore down the lower level systems and networks and furniture and moved the 20TB raided server and associated peripherals to my study. To my glee it all came back up without error; I tested at a cursory depth before heading to the Nest for a weekend with friends. All good... hear you 5 X 5.
Yet, the next day, I installed KB4480970 security update from MS and all secured network file access began to fail. It is only this clear now as the server updates tend to come in massive Windows blobs of stuff. Given the near simultaneity of the move, the update, and the WiFi configuration bullshit, I thought it was me in some way. I dove again for a night or more on Win security settings and regained access to some files from some platforms, but not my Win10 audio station driving my primary headphone audio system! I took a breath and left for the mountains without full access and repair. Returning and diving again on forums, blogs and the like I discovered a similar problem described by folks installing the above-named update. WTF... how can MS crash their own security mechanisms in an update. I rolled back from the subject update today and all is recovered - yet, I need to mitigate the security damage I wrought (setting file level accesses to Everyone/Guest) to regain access before the shit-storm. MLC suggests Linux for the media server but what a day that would bring... I'm getting closer to that - or cloud services replacing everything, but that would be expensive in the LT. How can a non-tech person handle any of this shit is beyond me... why we need to put up with this is also beyond me.

Monday, January 14, 2019

Blown Radiant & Wilkes @ The Nest 13Jan19-14Jan19

Yikes, I got an alert from one of my flood sensors that it was wet in the water heater & radiant heating closet. Fortunately we were already in Summit and I immediately went down to find a leaking PEX connector and water indeed on the floor. I went to Lowe's and bought too much stuff (as insurance) to repair what I thought was wrong. The fix was completed within a couple of hours by simply replacing the 3/4" male threaded to 3/4 PEX press fit connector. Woohoo.
Once back online and again heating the Nest, Kala and I settled in to watch some of the NFL playoff games and await arrival of our good friends Tom & Leslie. We had an invent-a-cocktail I dubbed the Partysian (gin, dry vermouth, creme d' cassis, and blackberry Izze) before heading to Aurum for another gr8 meal there. Tom & Dave whipped the ladies in CodeNames upon return. Monday we hiked into the Eagles Nest Wilderness on snowshoes. Fun hike on a chilly but nice day. We went through the burn area on the way and Tom and I went to the NE side of Buffalo Mtn below the cliff, which is a 300 ft loss we had to regain (and then trod the road back to the Nest).
I also finally mounted five Joseph Tomelleri limited edition trout prints I bought a while ago. I mounted them in the "office & tying room" at the Nest. Pic is a bit dark but the mountings and prints are very cool.

Thursday, January 10, 2019

WiFi Sucks In Peregrine... And Probably Elsewhere 10Jan19

Ok; we are pretty technically savvy, and Matt, Kala & I have begun experiencing some significant WiFi lags on our network in Peregrine. We embarked on analysis... a net code jock, an old net mgmt exec and a net tech prof united in pursuit of clean WiFi. It's especially bad (more frequent and more severe) on 2.4GHz but I've even experienced unacceptable delays/latency/ping times on 5GHz. We have ~40MB down & ~12MB up from CenturyLink - but here I am completely focussed on and isolating the local WiFi network... and I know that's where the problem is as my wired router connections are "full on always" and deliver only <.5msec delays and 40Mbps uploads. That is what I expect between my wired MBPro and my server on the same (bridged) net.
Wired Network Latency
At first I dove on the Nighthawk R7000 forum and found similar problem descriptions related to firmware releases - I down-revved the image and it fixed it for a bit but I was not thorough in re-experimenting. Throughput and latency were great for some time on both 2.4GHz and 5Ghz but it didn't sustain there for >10min. Debug led us all the way to taking down all our client devices and building various new networks in an attempt to assess via a one-client (on AP: either ours or a mac in ad-hoc mode) - one AP network... to isolate the cause of the intermittent "outages." Here I dedicated a 5GHz WiFi net between my AP and my MBP and saw a 90msec ping! That's acceptable maybe if I'm round trip to Himalaya... but not my own local dedicated net without other traffic on it.
Dedicated 5GHz Net Latency
On a dedicated 2.4GHz one-client net I did much worse... WTF!
Dedicated 2.4GHz Latency
Someone should make a tool or monitor for this stuff :)...  but the AirCheck, while informative, could not help us isolate. We even experienced the "bad WiFi" when re-locating our test networks to the park or the open space somewhat nearby. The 2.4GHz channels are packed and interferers must exist in great scale. The 5MHz band is better but the AFA must be beaming blockage our way. :0.
The S/N rations are ok actually... though signal drops have occurred. If my net could sustain an exclusive move to 5GHz and strictly .ac that'd maybe be OK (for a time) but so many devices are 2.4GHz only that it can't. My current working theory is, after perusing the neighborhood and diving for 2 days with many techniques including WiFi AirSniffers, many experiments and the like, is that the proliferation of devices over the last several years, especially mesh WiFi like Google's in our area, is that the air is very dirty/noisy and "clogged"... one house in our area had 8 APs and usurped the entire 2.4GHz channel 1 band with their 40MHz wide-channel settings alone. Plus, continuous monitoring of behavior has extended from cellular to WiFi by law enforcement - doubling the traffic on the air.

I've attached to several local WiFi nets of friendlies in Peregrine (names and nets withheld for obvious reasons) and am seeing the same remarkable shift from regular ~2msec latency on WiFi ~3yrs ago to sketchy +20msec or even +100msec measures. No one is playing intense games here on WiFi here as a result.

WiFi is absolutely great, but it is seemingly dying under its own success. I'm sure a more collaborative WiFi net is in the offing from Silicon Valley - one which collaborates with other nets in proximity to optimize for mutual benefit. Beware. The best would be more allocation of frequency to innovation IMO, not sales of frequency to Verizon, et. al. or access to monitored bandwidth by my government.

Please do some of your own dedicated net (best is one client to one AP but just some simple pings between phone or PC and AP as above are fine) experiments and send the anonymous results to me as Comments here or via private email - I can't tell crap[ from IP addresses!

UPDATE From Silverthorne
Even in Silverthorne, on the edge of the Arapahoe NF, the 2.4GHz band is littered with networks and Zigbee IoT, and yields highly varying latency times.
The 5Hz band is much cleaner and the response times show it in much greater consistency.
UPDATE From San Fransisco [bg]
Here in my flat, I see >100 networks available on 2.4GHz. At any location in my flat, there are always at least 3 strong signals on each of the 3 non-overlapping bands. See attached for a scan in a typical location.

As I understand it, with current protocols, the weak signals cause just as much problem as the strong ones. If your receiver can hear an interfering message, it will delay using the channel.

These folks who position their traffic at channels other than 1/6/11 are just managing to interfere with MORE traffic. And of course the 80MHz options are a disaster. They're supposed to shut themselves down when they see conflicts, but it's obvious they don't (see attached again).

To make things worse, here in SF (and many other places I think), Comcast has implemented a system where the routers they distribute to their customers include a second AP network which they use to create "public" hotspots available to their customers. This means that anywhere in SF, you will always see 5-10 Xfinity networks. Thanks Comcast for completely saturating the entire wifi spectrum. It's not quite as bad as it sounds since these networks probably aren't used much.

I'm pretty sure you know this, but there are a zillion other things that use the 2.4GHz band which could be interfering with you. Baby monitors, microwave ovens and garage door openers are notorious. And now that every freakin' piece of electronics in your house thinks it should be on the internet, there are probably lots of transmitters you don't know about or can't control.

A year ago, I decided that the only way to have decent wifi was to use a bunch of 5GHz APs. In that scenario, the low penetration is a benefit. Sadly, several key devices I use still don't have 5GHz radios.
UPDATE From Peregrine [02Feb19]
I rallied more gear and monitored for a longer time. I "tamed" or eliminated some of the hidden networks that were my fault but I can not get rid of Roku's hidden network - and it strangely follows my network as to channel. The biggest offenders in the area I see now are the Orbi77 (Logitech) with multiple APs and added hidden networks, 40MHz channels, and bad channel assignments and the Goblin (Google) with similar attributes... sheesh.

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

First 10th Mtn Hut Trip Of The Year 07JJan19

A hearty band set out of Crane Pk parking for the 10th Mtn Div Hut. It was gonna be a 4.4mi and 1400ft skin and shoe into the hut in cold and snowy weather. Assembled for the effort were Mitch Yohanan, Jim Yohanan, Tom Wilke, Craig Vosburgh and me. The first mile was up a road which we later learned could have mostly been avoided by driving up further (and not heeding the National Forest sign which said "Skiers Park Here"). Spirits were strong at the turnoff onto single track and jeep trails.
Right after that we lost the ~300 feet we'd gained on the road and understood the 1450 elevation gain needed for the hike - as the starting and ending elevations were only ~1200 feet different. The weather turned from cool & overcast with light snow to very cold with heavy snow, high winds and minimal visibility over the skin in...
We were fortunate to have mighty Jim at the helm as we drew near the hut but could see little from the blaze-marked trail. We were all tired and cold and Jim rocketed ahead with vigor and passion and led us right to the hut despite our having wavered a bit from rational trail choices. It was brutally cold to even verify GPS location on the last pitches. Ultimately we scored >10" on that day and evening... and slept comfortably through howling winds after chowing down and actually streaming the thumping of Alabama by Clemson.

What a difference a day makes. We awoke to a gorgeous sunrise and completely still, bluebird skies. The views of Homestake Pk and the Continental Divide were great and the snow was expected to be so as well... we planned and prepared for our morning of skiing as sun landed on the hut. We did a brief refresher training on avy beacons and finding down mates before setting out for some earned turns in the serious freshies.
We made a first lap through the trees and a second one down a cliffed area. It was a blast as Wilke went on up above Slide Lk. Real entertainment was provided by the "down to clown" youngster Mitch as he face-planted when hucking his second boulder pillow on his cliff run.
Ultimately it was time to head home and we were thankful for a beauteous day on which to descend. See ya' at the bottom.
The "descent" was more rolling than thought and I needed five changeovers to get out, along with a 45 minute crawl out of a deep creek powder stash after a bad decision. We got there and enjoyed some cold brews before hitting the nearby breweries on the way home... Periodic Brewery in Leadville and Outer Range Brewing in Frisco.
GR8 fun with great friends - thanks for coming out boys!