Internet Man Finds a Bug

Today was pretty stressful because I found out that some of the machines accessing the tools I’m upgrading are still running IE5.

This is pretty much the worst thing you can possibly imagine when to the best of anyone else’s knowledge we’re working in a standardised IE8 environment. Finding all of a sudden that you have to start playing with a decade obsolete browser kind of tickles your anxiety gland.

Fortunately after further examination I’ve found a solution to the problem, but it’s not going to be slower, more complex, and no fun for anyone involved. But at least I won’t have to support IE5.

So today was pretty stressful, but it was also pretty rewarding and I’ve come out of it with a hell of a lot more knowledge about the way this company and its IT infrastructure works. Tomorrow I’m going to send out a matrix and probe some queries to aggregate data and collate resources in order work out how to proceed to the next phase synergy.

Nobody at work actually talks like that too, it’s great.

  1. Posted March 29, 2010
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Ubuntu 10.04

Things I’m liking about Ubuntu 10.04:

  1. Dark themes work now, and they work deliciously.
  2. The lack of browns is refreshing. Orange and Purple sounds weird, but it’s quite well done.
  3. The inconsistencies between Compiz and Metacity have finally been ironed out, so well I’m not even sure if Compiz is still there.
  4. The Ubuntu Software Centre while still a little confused interface-wise, is starting to look a lot more useful. PPAs appear as browseable providers so third parties can join in the fun, and Adobe Flash is available through the “Canonical Partners” repo.
  5. There’s an Ubuntu flavoured Gwibber theme.

Things I’m not liking about Ubuntu 10.04:

  1. The new themes are distracting and seem incomplete. Fact, I’d probably go so far as to say they’re appalling. Politics now dictate the window buttons appear on the left hand side of the screen and some irritating-as-fuck quirk sees them swapping from the left to the right seemingly at random.
  2. There’s now two system trays. I don’t know what’s going on, but the “Indicator Applet” can apparently be used to show things other than email and notifications now. In particular LottaNZB uses it in the most irritating way possible to show a drop-down menu when you click the icon.
  3. The crash reporter is crash-happy itself and will pop up to let you know applications have crashed, whether or not they’ve done so.
  4. The default Nouveau driver for nVidia graphics is incredibly, gratingly slow. The proprietary nVidia driver works fine, but it’s ugly as sin and doesn’t have all that much benefit over integrated Intel graphics for what I’m doing. (I have a slight case of buyers remorse because this card  takes up two of three slots in my PC and I’m not using it for anything.)
  5. I can’t hibernate (although I’ve never got this machine it to hibernate, ever). Whenever I try, the entire process goes without a hitch, except for the fact that the computer turns itself straight back on and resumes whatever it was doing. Really annoying.

Verdict: I like Ubuntu. But damn the new window decorations are campy and irritating.

New Computer

So I know Owen at least was wondering what was in my PC, so here’s the general idea.

I’ve an Intel E2140 system which I inherited from Tatey some time ago as a games machine. I bought an extra two gig of RAM to take it to 3 total, and upgraded the video card a while back to a GeForce 9600 GT which I noted previously has such a massive fan, it obfuscates my PCI slots so I’ve only got one usable.

I got myself two disks to make the machine usable: The first is a Western Digital “green” 1TB disk which I’m using as a backup system, and I’ve also got an OCZ 60G Agility SSD which I’m perfectly aware is blisteringly slower than the offerings from Intel, but has made an incredible difference in my system performance anyway.

I originally bought it because I wanted something quiet and more efficient, and didn’t pay that much mind to the speed benefits so I was blown away at how much faster it makes a system. The rest of my hardware may be meagre but it performs gloriously and is very fast and all that.

I’m eventually hoping to upgrade the rest of the machine as well, but I’m not that concerned considering how well the damn thing’s running.

  1. Posted March 27, 2010
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Ashley has a Geeky Weekend

Saturday night was Jeremy’s board game party, and it was a smash hit. There were six of us, and we played a bunch of games from Cluedo to Guess Who. I didn’t drink because I’m still on antibiotics to clear up my long-running not-quite chest infection, but everyone else did and it was loads of fun owing I’m sure to the extravagant supply of party pies.

My new favourite games include Pictionary, Cluedo, and Taboo. We also played a terrible movie-trivia-knowledge game which I didn’t really enjoy that much because I know almost nothing about films, and I got the majority of the questions wrong.

I didn’t leave until 2 AM with old school friend Sarah, who kindly drove me to my door. This was lucky because my original plan involved a fifteen minute trudge home and in a depressing turn for the worse it had started raining.

Now it’s Sunday and I’ve got a hangover which  I’m coming to think must be an entirely psychological phenomenon. I spent most of the day in bed, only to get up at about two and do some minimal housework.

Now I’m setting up my spare computer with the intent of using it as my new desktop machine. I figure it’s high time I started relying less on my laptop considering it’s a Dell, the screen is fucked and prone to flickering and turning off at utterly random times, the CMOS battery and now the chassis are rusting, and it gets extremely hot whenever I try to do anything with it.

Despite all this it’s not as completely unusable as you might think, and in fact I’ve been using it in this state for the last six months or so. That said, there’s rust creeping up and out of one of the grilles and into my line of sight next to the keyboard, so there’s now a permanent reminder that I should really consider moving on to something a little more reliable.

Hopefully I will be able to buy some upgrades tomorrow to get my desktop up to speed. My Dell has served me well over the last couple of years, but I think it’s about time to relegate it to thinner duties.

  1. Posted March 14, 2010
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Ashley Susses Web Services

It’s actually unbelievably tricky to set up a web site anonymously. From all accounts the “anonymous” registrars will roll over and divulge your details at the drop of a telephone, and the only truly anonymous dns service that everyone seems to recommend has possibly the worst interface in the entire history of terrible things.

I ended up registering myself a brand new and somewhat anonymous domain through Namecheap.com, as recommended by Micheil who is incidentally working on music journal OnTheTune.com. The domain was cheaper than Godaddy and came with the privacy service for free, so basically when the rest of my domains come up for renewal I’m quite possibly going to transfer them to Namecheap as well.

So while I have no doubt that the whois privacy feature is a flimsy facade, all I really want to do is obfuscate my details. It’s not like I’m going to be breaking the law or anything, I’m just paranoid and want to keep this my new site under wraps. A tantalising secret.

The week’s been good so far. I finally went to the doctor about my coughy phlegmy thing on Monday and he gave me antibiotics which I’m not sure have actually done anything. I’m feeling better, but I also haven’t been able to shake this thing for the last month so feeling better isn’t necessarily synonymous with being better. I’m musing over the possibility of riding to work tomorrow regardless, but considering how late it is now, I’m not sure I’ll even wake up in time.

Tate also clued me in on the Bike Week festivities held over the weekend, and I was kind of keen to head on the ride through the new tunnel. A culmination of factors got in my way though; the registration web site is ugly, it’s asking me for way too much information, I need to get out of bed to get my credit card to pay the $40 or so bike toll. Apparently there’s an arbitrary registration deadline of today, and right now I can’t be arsed moving so I’ll go to Jeremy’s evening of board games on Saturday instead.

I kid you not, board games. It’s going to be so rad grown men will weep.

  1. Posted March 11, 2010
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Bad Apple

I’m really pissed off with Apple. It’s one thing for Microsoft to corrupt and sue businesses into oblivion, but Apple? The “greener” pasture? The one who wants to strangle the mobile computing industry and be the sole distributor of content and software alike?

In hindsight it’s little wonder they’ve sued HTC, claiming infringement on everything from CPU throttling to drawing gradients. HTC being the largest dealer in open handsets, this suit is a square attack on the Android mobile OS. Unlike Microsoft’s relentless FUD attack on Linux, Apple has actually rallied its lawyers and stuck its money behind its effort into quashing its competitors.

The system needs an overhaul to prevent massive corporations bullying the rest of the world (and unfortunately it’s not looking good). This kind of stuff is indecent, despicable, and utterly wrong. Shame on Apple.

  1. Posted March 4, 2010
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