start off with some non-techie stuff first…
I head back to see my surgeon next Monday, where he will tell me that in another week or two I should start putting some weight on my leg (toe touch, or partial weight bearing?) when at my PT. I am also hoping he will tell me it is okay to get my incision wet, as it has been making it very difficult to take showers!
ok, on to the good stuff.
So, I am not at home and do not have my desktop machine available for use for the last week, I have been going through withdrawal… but having to work on someone else’s machine, and my wife’s laptop (I think I mentioned before, I gave her mine, and sold her old one) has taught me one important lesson, why I prefer Linux.
My number one reason for preferring Linux over Windows is system maintenance. What do I mean? well, I mean keeping everything up to date, this latest round of Adobe patching should make this make sense to everyone. I don’t use Acrobat on my Linux machines for this reason. However; back to the point, when I need to check for updates on my Linux machine I open Yakuake with a quick hit of F12 and type “sudo yum update” and it comes back and tells me every single thing installed on my system that has an update available, period, end of statement. On windows, I have to launch 5-8 different apps, find their “check for updates” button/link and wait for the results (I have learned by doing this that OpenOffice.org does not notify you of a new version being released, only if there are updates for your version. example, I have 3.1 installed, and 3.2 is now available. clicking the check for updates menu option tells my “There are no available updates for this version” (maybe not word for word, but that is just about what it says). I run windows update, Acrobat Update, Java update, Picasa update, Chrome update, Firefox update, and on and on… (yes I know there is an Adobe Updater, but I don’t know how to initiate it in Windows, and never cared enough to look it up, but now that I have mentioned it I sure I found instructions and have put a link to them here).
Simple and easy to manage, most distros even let you run their package manager and it has a button to click to check for updates for your system, making it easier and more time consuming all at once to do the same thing. (Yakuake is always running and it takes me about 1.5 seconds to type that line into the terminal, it takes a lot longer to load the package manager from the application menu and then click the check for updates button, but you don’t have to type that way!)
The actual GUI interface for Windows an Linux and even MAC are so similar these days, that I don’t care which I am using as far as that is concerned. I have come to the understanding that there will always be applications/games for an OS, other than the one I am using, that I want to use/play (take iPhone for example, they have the best Air Traffic Controller game I have played, and I’ve hunted those down and played quite a number of them, but I don’t own anything made by Apple, and probably won’t ever, unless the 2nd gen iPad totally rocks… but I will be getting an Android Tablet this year (possibly the Notion Ink Adam, or the HTC Google Chrome OS tablet), so I still probably won’t get an iPad). My concern at this point, as I spend more and more time as a Unix Admin is maintenance. The system I use at home needs to be practically maint free, as most Linux and Unix machines are, they will run for years without being touched by an admin, the best I know of are an AIX Server and a OpenVMS server, the AIX server has been running since 1991 and has never been patched, updated, reconfigured, or messed with in any way. It is setup to contact a NIM server for logins, so no new users have ever been added to it, it has never crashed, never lost power, never been rebooted. That to me is the greatest achievement of humankind (in technology anyways, and some of these companies need to take a look at the AIX OS and learn something from it!!!). The other machine, the OpenVMS machine has been running since before 1994, but has not been patched, never been upgraded, never been rebooted, since 1994. now I know next to nothing about OpenVMS, and have not personally logged into the machine itself, but a friend and co-worker of mine used to be the sole admin for the OpenVMS machines at that company and although that one is the only one like this, it is still running today without interference from humans. I am sure some other machines are out there doing the same, but these are two that I know. The longest Windows Server I have heard of running without rebooting or crashing was about 2.5 – 3 years, after which the hardware components in the server failed and the machine was replaced. Some people have told me about Windows servers being up for 4 years and then being restarted by some new guy, but I have no validation of it and they could not give me a more exact time frame.
not sure if I made a compelling argument or not, but I need some medication and to go prop my leg up, so I am done here. Also expecting UPS sooner or later for an over night supersave shipment… and it takes me 5 mins to get downstairs… :)
First, I went with Occam’s razor on my ATI driver issue. after reading close to 20 web pages (mostly forum posts, but some blogs too) and came up with
First, I went with Occam’s razor on my ATI driver issue. after reading close to 20 web pages (mostly forum posts, but some blogs too) and came up with renaming the xorg.conf file and rebooting… This got me up and working again, now I just need to check and find out if it is still using the ATI drivers (I think not, but I’ll get there sooner or later… not on the top of my list of things to do, considering my leg). So, I’ll get back to that later. Now, on to a very popular topic, the Apple iPad, I love the jokes, made many of my own, but all things considered, I won’t be buying one unless the price drops significantly. Else maybe when the gen 2 comes out. My main complaints are the same as most everyone else. No flash support pretty much kills it, I mean that covers nearly 50% of the web, and closer to 70% of the websites I frequent. Not that I like having to deal with flash on websites, but there are just too many web pages that will not function at all without flash that I find it to be a major FAIL on any business to not support flash at this point in time. The multitasking issue is another big one for me, as on my computer I frequently have 20 or so different windows open (mostly web pages) sometimes as many as 30 web pages plus 3 or 4 other programs. Now I understand this allows the system to devote 100% of it’s processing power to the app you are currently using, but most of the things I leave open need constant, even if its once every 10 seconds, attention from the OS/CPU. Last complaint… NO E-INK!!!
Now for some good things, I think the price is great for what you get, the storage sizes are fantastic at those prices, they included bluetooth which although I use it semi-regularly with my current devices I find it to be one of those Boy Scout things you need, in order to “be prepared” at all times. The battery life, well I’ll believe it when I see it. a 1 GHz processor is also fantastic, although not unheard of, nor top of the line. I like the fact they kept the iphone’s compass, accelerometer, it auto detects the ambient light to auto-adjust the back lighting (I hope), it supports 720p and can output 576p via component cables. So there are a lot more good things than bad, but for a WEB and ebook reader (the things I see as it’s main purpose) I think it just plain fails by not supporting flash. Now if Google can get it’s chrome browser on it, then I may just be tempted to get one. Else I am holding out for a Android/Chrome OS tablet that’ll rock my socks off…
not too much content this time (unless I get carried away again). couple of neat articles I read today (not the most trusted sources for news, but you have to make your own decisions… (both the things I started this post to talk about came from blogs.zdnet.com [...]
not too much content this time (unless I get carried away again). couple of neat articles I read today (not the most trusted sources for news, but you have to make your own decisions… (both the things I started this post to talk about came from blogs.zdnet.com ) (another note, all links on my site “SHOULD” open in new windows, for some reason they never implemented “open link in a new tab” feature to HTML, or I just haven’t found it yet)
VirtualBox 3.1 - has been released with it’s new “big” feature… “teleport”. some people might recognize this as being extremely similar to IBM’s Power System’s Live Partition Mobility. in a nutshell this means:
Partition mobility provides the ability to move a logical partition from one system to another. Live (or active) partition mobility allows you to move a running logical partition, including its operating system and applications, from one system to another. The applications do not need to be shut down. Inactive partition mobility allows you to move a powered off (or deactivated) logical partition from one system to another.
Live Partition Mobility
Live partition mobility allows you to migrate running AIX and Linux partitions and their hosted applications from one physical server to another without disrupting the infrastructured services. The migration operation, which takes just a few seconds, maintains complete transactional integrity. The migration transfers the entire system environment, including processor state, memory, attached virtual devices, and connected users.
(actually quoted from the IBM training manual for IBM course AU78 “System p LPAR and Virtualization II: Implementing Advanced Configurations” a training class I took in July of this year) and so it goes on… (I guess I just killed the “no long post” part at the beginning…) This has to be the coolest thing I have ever seen/witnessed/done in my life. I setup an LPAR (logical partition) on a System p server, installed AIX 6.1 on it, then while another person in the training class was logged in and doing something in the server, I migrated it to another physical machine in less than 15 minutes with less than 5 seconds of down time (monitored with a CPU and HDD activity monitors running on the virtual server and a custom script that basically played the worm game and changed colors when the host system changed so we knew when it had actually made the switch)
Words cannot describe watching a multi-gigabyte installation of a server migrate to another physical box and keep working with less than 5 seconds of down time over the course of 12-15 minutes. I am guilty of not having checked the total used size of the data drive, so I do not know how large the transfer was). now to have this option in a freeware app that I can run on my Quad-core at home is very cool. Especially since VirtualBox is currently my VM-app of choice. Don’t get me wrong, I do/have used Virtual PC from Microsoft quite a good bit, but the configuration options and multiple VHD file format compatibility make VirtualBox the winner in that contest hands down. Also, I have nothing against VMWare personally; however it is intensely confusing to go from Virtual PC to a VMWare workstation application and figure out what is going on and how to set it up without going back to “what already works… and is simple to use.” Press release for VirtualBox 3.1
ok, after over 550 words, lets move on to the second half of my post (definitely not going to be a quick post… but then I always have a lot to say about stuff…)
OS and Web Browser share reports… Windows XP and Vista and MAC OS X are down, Win7 and Linux are up. Firefox and IE8 usage are up, IE6 and IE7 are down, and everybody else, well no comment was made… original article is here on ZDNet - FYI how/where this info came from is sited on the ZDNet page.
right few comments about the above, first interesting how Firefox #’s are combined for all versions, does that mean Mozilla does a better job getting people to upgrade? or that Firefox users are less likely to fall very far behind on versions? same thing goes for the Safari #’s. yes Safari and Chrome are mentioned in the #’s, but no comments were made as to their rise or fall.
(completely unrelated, but I am listening to Pandora right now on my Sprint HTC Touch and they just played “Coloured Rain” by Slade, whom I have never heard before, at least not knowingly. They are a British Rock band from the 70′s and I could have sworn it was The Beatles when it started playing…) (a note on that note, I Bing’d “wikipedia the beatles” and on the first page I got the Wikipedia page on the Beatles in the following languages, but not English… in order: sco, simple, nl, fr, ro, it. I know what all of those are, except ro (Russian? it doesn’t look Russian)… there were other results, including 2 Beatles albums’ pages on Wikipedia in English…)
I have updated about 6 or 7 plugins so there may be some changed/new functionality…
I added a background image for the redirect page, so you don’t have to look at a white page when coming to visit…
fixed the login page.
fixed the mobile browser version, the old one looked like a plain text document, now it has some remenants of the full version’s theme.
deleted the links page, and added them on as a widget instead
still cannot get the widget spacing to look good. I feel like they are all crunched together like that weird piece in any cereal called “bunches”, and they need… something to visually change between them, so you can tell where one starts and the other ends… tried editing the theme’s .php files, but there is one line that calls “dynamic_sidebar” and I do not have a “dynamic_sidebar” file to edit. they all load from that 1 line of code. I even tried putting a “text” widget between each other widget, but if they are blank it does not display anything (even tried spacing down a few lines and adding a row of dashes, it still does not display the blank spaces…)
I also still cannot get into Hotmail via IE8, works fine in chrome, and all other microsoft websites are working as normal. it continues to bounce between http://login.live.com….. and https://login.live.com….. over and over again
Twitter: finndo77
- New blog post... Diablo III closed Beta http://t.co/dKC2ChWm 01:36:32 PM December 07, 2011 from joelperryproductions.com ReplyRetweetFavorite
- New blog post... resolving video problems with K-L-Ubuntu and XFX Radeon 6850 http://t.co/H6bXuMqi 06:59:18 AM October 22, 2011 from joelperryproductions.com ReplyRetweetFavorite
- New blog post... Computer upgrades http://t.co/6PWVNy4m 01:39:35 PM October 20, 2011 from joelperryproductions.com ReplyRetweetFavorite
- $7 for $15 Worth of Hand-Tossed Pizza, Calzones, and Drinks at Andolini's Pizza Charleston, SC http://t.co/QnKwPwB 11:49:26 AM August 29, 2011 from Tweet Button ReplyRetweetFavorite
- New blog post... is zdnet.com/news down http://t.co/DThuI4r 07:57:28 AM August 17, 2011 from joelperryproductions.com ReplyRetweetFavorite
- New blog post... Netflix Down? http://bit.ly/q74Svu 07:39:30 PM August 08, 2011 from joelperryproductions.com ReplyRetweetFavorite
Blogroll
programming
Tech Websites
- a good coder I found on CodeProject
- Barebones HTML coding chart
- Code Project
- Extreme Overclocking
- FreeBSD blog
- Legit Reviews – Tech Hardware Review
- Linuxtopia
- Notion Ink – homepage
- Plug Computing web site and forums
- Tablet Roms – used to be – Notion Ink Hacks
- Ubuntu Forums post on the mount command and fstab file
- VMWare ESX blogger
- Wikipedia.org main page
- ZDNet's blog pages

