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Friday, 18 April 2008

Procrastination - geek motivation.

It's approaching deadline season, that time of year where every lecturer at University wants something from you.
This also means that it's the time of the year when I spend 70% of my time procrastinating, and avoiding doing the 'something' that the lecturers want, often with interesting results.
I seem to have outdone myself this year. In order to avoid writing a 4-page report, I've switched from KDE to Gnome *again*, extensively compared Linux's alternatives to Quicksilver (namely Katapult and Gnome-Do), searched for (without success) a new phone that will integrate nicely with my laptop, finished securing my Debian media server, drank 8 (I think) cups of coffee, and two bacon sandwiches.
Not only does that mean I have to rush my report, and probably won't get any sleep before work, but it means I have a good week or two of blog-fodder.
Watch this space. (or rather, the space above this, where the new posts go. Yeah, I'm picky when I'm tired).

Tuesday, 8 April 2008

If anybody needs to get hold of me this summer, I'll be preparing for, attending, or recovering from, both Leeds Festival and Give It A Name. :-D
If you're lucky enough to be attending, say hi - it shouldn't be hard to spot the computer geek at the front of the Silverstein and Billy Talent crowds :)

Saturday, 29 March 2008

Different distro, just as hilarious.

I feel my geeky ability has improved since I began using Ubuntu, sometime in June of 2007.
I've abandoned GUI settings windows in favour of nano-ing my way through /etc.
I can get all the settings right.
I just can't do them in the right order.
Allow me to elaborate...

After a sudden urge to go distro-shopping, I installed Debian 4.0 on my Media Centre/File Server/Spare-box-I-mess with.
CLI-only, headless, configured through SSH. I was feeling all very happy and geeky.

At the moment, this box has 3 functions.
  1. Sit there and hum.
  2. Serve up my music over Samba.
  3. Serve up my files over SSH.

Being a paid-up, card-carrying member of the tinfoil hat club, I began editing /etc/ssh/sshd_config, even though it was approaching the time that most folk wake up.
I'm nocturnal, what can I say?

Protocol 2 only, yup. RSA-based authentication, course. Disable root login, naturally.
Once I'd saved that, I decided it would be a good idea to add my laptop's RSA key to the authorized_keys file. *After* I set it to use RSA authentication...

And so, with a sense of tedious inevitability, I find myself dragging an old CRT monitor over to the machine, to undo the series of (perfectly sensible) steps I took.

Coming soon! More blog posts of my incompetance.

Sunday, 23 March 2008

Let's talk about feelings.

I'd hate to give the wrong impression.
Reading my last post, some may have formed the impression that the blog is to become dark and gloomy. Quite the contrary, the last post was simply the product of a couple of days without sleep. Dark and gloomy has it's place - my music collection - only sporadically will it spill over into blog posts.

For the sake of capriciousness (which may or may not be a real word) - a shiny, happy, blog post.

It's been snowing overnight in England. At least, that's what the thick blanket of snow on the ground would lead me to believe. (any other theories for how the snow got there in the comments please).

I was fortunate enough to wake up early and see *real* snow. That is, snow of the white variety, before the inevitable onslaught of traffic and small children transform it into a grey, mushy substance. I'm also fortunate that's it's Sunday, so I may be lucky enough to avoid venturing outside, into the aforementioned mushy substance. Given the nature of the area in which I live, pedestrians are almost obliged to be pelted with snow, or, later today, pelted with mush.

Which seems to be a great excuse to stay in and attempt to fix my laptop - concurrent upgrades to Ubuntu Hardy and KDE4 havn't been kind.

So there you have it - a *nice* post. There was snow, there's a definite geek angle towards the end, and not a hint of sarcasm.
I'm going to go listen to something gloomy.

***Bonus points to anyone who spotted the Lagwagon reference in the title. Your prize is in the mail. ***

Saturday, 22 March 2008

Been a while...

In one of the darkest corners of rainy England, a light appears in a window, at the top of a tower.
A little past six in the morning, and Capricorication Towers has seen it's first visitor in a couple of months.

As I write (type?) this, a dozen or more excuses for my lack of posting spring to mind, some quite convincing, but I'm using none of them.
My little blog has been downright neglected. To explain why would be to reveal details of my recent life that have no place on the internet, or indeed, outside of my head.

Suffice to say, my recent change of circumstances afford me a lot more time, some of which I intend to spend reviving my fledgling blog.

The same circumstances also appear to have changed the way I'm writing. This post already appears more dark, sarcastic, and wordy, than my previous efforts. I may yet decide to delete some of the more jovial posts here, for the sake of consistancy.

I'm not sure what all this means in terms of the style and direction of the blog, but at the very least, it won't become another of the dead, forgotton, corners of the internet.
Watch...this...space.

Thursday, 10 January 2008

iPod Touch - The Good, the Bad, and the Pretty

A friend of mine just bought an iPod Touch (1), and despite my usual dismissal of anything made by Apple, I took a look at it anyways...

Savour the moment, because I won't say this often...
Apple. Did. Good.

The Good
I'm really impressed with the motion-sensitive features. If you hold it the right way up, you get the 'Now Playing' view. But tilt it on it's side, and you get the cover browser, where you can flick through albums by album artwork. My friend doesn't share my music collection OCD - most of the covers were missing, but I'll bet it looks awesome when they're all there.

I'm also impressed by the on-screen keyboard. As someone with chubby fingers, handheld devices and touch screens have always been something of a challenge for me - the only phone that I've never had trouble with was my old Nokia 3510i with it's huge buttons.
However, the on-screen keyboard on the iPod Touch just seemed to work for me, and even browsing the web and clicking on links was easy.

The iPod managed to connect to my home wireless network without a problem, even with the WPA2-PSK encryption that has tripped up a number of other devices I've tried, and with a particular third-party tool (ommm, don't tell Apple), the iPod can even ssh into my Media Server-type thing (2).

The Bad
So... the iPod Touch left me pretty impressed, but I'm not about to become a fully paid-up, card carrying Apple fanboy just yet - there are still a couple of downsides that are stopping me from running and parting with £200 of my hard-earned student loan: :)
1 - Would cost £200 of my hard-earned student loan.
Yeah, it's pretty, but a music player would spend most of it's life in my pocket. £200? I could pick up an Asus Eee PC for not a lot more.
2 - No surprises here, but playing OGG Vorbis files isn't happening on the iPod Touch, and it's unlikely to happen in the future.
Apple, take note - the actual music is *always* more important than the music player. So if I like my music in the (open, free, better quality) OGG Vorbis format, and your player doesn't support it - that's one less customer for you. And the FOSS community is growing all the time...

The Pretty


Conclusion
Despite some predictable downsides (proprietary and expensive), the iPod Touch is a bit good :)
But I'll be sticking to my Rockbox'ed Video iPod (coming soon), and my oggy musical goodness :D


(1) - I've heard a lot of people call it an 'iTouch'... It's supposed to be called 'iPod Touch'... but anyone who can say 'iTouch' without giggling like a schoolgirl has my infinite respect - I'm still laughing now.

(2) - As promised in a previous post, I'll write a little something about my Media-server type thing in the near future.