Nah I think you are quite right about that, and I suspect that's a part of the design of them. When I pump up the volume they still bleed in sounds from the outside, even if it's my usual loud music. Great for my family who can bother me far easier than when I'm using my Philips over-the-ear headphones. :D

Nice thing about getting the source and building on a Raspberry Pi is that I have time to read all the stuff it prints during the process. ;D

I'm itching to use the Earpods when I go for a run, but I need to invest in a pair of proper running shoes first. They seems to sit surprisingly well in my ears. Guess I'm one of the few that has a similar shape to those 3 people Apple scanned.

Time for some Fatboy Slim!

I really like the bass in these Earpods. I keep being surprised at just how good they sound, specially compared to the earphones Apple sent with my iPhone 3G, which I had for 4 years before they started giving up.

I see a market for myself then. I can't stand poorly documented anything. :P

I like open source. It's a great idea. Love the whole concept. All I really want, is for someone to actually check if the bloody documentation is up-to-date when they make a new release.

iTerm is quite nice. I'm sure I don't even use 10% of what it's capable of, but still.

Yep. I'm thinking too much Apache I think. Finally wrapping my brain around the thing, I think. It's the documentation that drives me nuts. Found a third (!) location where the html files are located, and it's not mentioned anywhere in the docs, I found it via the default config file. O_o

Time to pick up where I left off yesterday with configuring this blasted Raspberry Pi.