Posted in Life on 03/19/2009 07:10 am by Dorian
Tonight I met up with one of my friends from my professional writing course, Andrei. Since I could meet him in the early evening, that meant I could get some extra sleep and start work later. Extra sleep is always a welcome change in my schedule. Commuting to work by bus not so much. Work turned out busy as usual with training and work on particularly sticky issue (read issue as a bug, enhancement, change request or combination of the former).
Meeting up with Andrei is always a pleasure. We ate dinner at Prince, the Japanese eatry near work. I highly recommend that place if you are up for some Japanese food. We talked a lot about writing, university, the economy (everyone and his pet dog’s obsessively favourite topic it seems nowadays) and philosophy in general. I even got into a rant about why technologies such as Linux, KDE 4 and Maemo excite me. Hehehe… I had a lot of fun.
Interestingly it seems that nowadays my weeks are jam packed with meeting interesting people and having fun in general. I don’t know if it just a bit coincidental luck. Or is it because I’ve tried to take a more positive and active approach to life. Or is it a combination of both? I wonder…
Posted in Computing on 02/10/2009 07:24 am by Dorian
Dual-booting on a Vista machine turned out to be a really, really bad idea. At least when you are trying NOT to kill Vista in the process. Now cleaning out GRUB, reinstalling Vista’s MBR and re-extending all the partitions is in order. The number of hoops one needs to jump through, especially if you don’t have Vista install media is incredible. I personally tried deleting my GNU/Linux partition, then installing it again. Then I tried running Super Grub Disk to get my Vista MBR back. But that failed. So instead I downloaded and ran EasyBCD and rewrote my MBR that way. EasyBCD unfortunately is not libre software, but it does a wonderful job of making the Vista experience less painful.
After that could I remove the GNU/Linux partition via my Wubied installed of Kubuntu. All that is left is for me to re-extend the main partition when I get around to it. I’m NOT going to do that again.
So advice to anyone wanting to run Ubuntu GNU/Linux and NOT kill your Vista install for whatever reason, go the Wubi route. Always go the Wubi installer route, it will save you a lot of hassle. You the additional advantage that you can always uninstall Ubuntu GNU/Linux if you need to.
Posted in Future Trends on 01/06/2009 05:18 am by Dorian
I just read this article on Phoronix on the Phoenix HyperSpace quick boot Linux. So a quick boot Linux partition installed side-by-side with Windows is nothing new. It happened early last year.
Rather what this article shows is the increased awareness of Linux in the vendor space. It also shows that vendors will ditch their loyalty toward Microsoft and the Windows platform, if it suits the vendor. And Phoenix is not a sole rogue vendor. Nokia does it with Maemo on its internet tablets. Dell on select machines and its Mini 9 netbook. Asus and Acer, again two Linux netbook vendors. And a number of other vendors do the side-by-side install too.
Microsoft should be worried. The Vista debacle caused more than just users to get upset for a slow, bloated OS. Vendors got upset, when Microsoft promised a feature and then didn’t deliver half of what they promised. And vendors trying to stay ahead of the curve got burned when a vital feature didn’t appear. Don’t be surprised that vendors will happily pull a Julius Caesar on Microsoft.
Vendors and user both got tired of Microsoft telling them how they should do their computing. The basic beauty of computing is the flexibility and freedom of workflow that it allows for. Imposing limits of the technology for “historical” and business reason is folly in the long run. Also today’s state of the art technology is past the desktop. The desktop has to interact seamlessly mobile handhelds, web applications and cloud computing offerings. Making everything into a desktop paradigm as Microsoft sees things, doesn’t work. It doesn’t cut it anymore. And vendors know this.
Vendors now look to Linux and free/libre/open source software (FLOSS) as a way to simplify development, cut costs and ultimately as a way to go forward. That is the beauty of FLOSS, you have the freedom to take technology where you want it to go. The only constraints on computing technology should be the laws physical universe and your own imagination.
Posted in Linux on 12/19/2008 07:07 am by Dorian
So Jono Bacon, Ubuntu community leader (and mister communitizing the community using community tools
) asks why Ubuntu is important to me. In my case this would be why is Kubuntu important to me, but then we will be arguing over semantics.
Yes, the freedom Ubuntu brings into my life is one reason why Ubuntu is important to me. In general I value things free in nature: free will, free markets, freedom of speech, freedom of association, et cetera. Ubuntu brings me freedom in the software that I use. The obvious freedoms stem from the free software that makes the Ubuntu ecosystem: the freedom to use as I see fit, the freedom to study and enhance my knowledge of computing, the freedom to modify to my needs, and the freedom to distribute my modifications. But heck almost every Linux distribution gives me the same freedoms.
What differentiates Ubuntu Linux from other Linux distributions, are the more subtle freedoms. I have the freedom to setup technology to work the way I want it to work. Yet I also have the freedom of having the technology actually work. I have the freedom to choose between free and *gasp* non-free software. I have the freedom to access and install applications from one of the largest package repositories, aside from Debian. I have the freedom to choose where I get excellent support, from the community or from Canonical. I have the freedom of which architecture I want to run on. In essence, I have the freedom to use my computing resources as I see fit. You can’t get this on a Windows PC or a Mac.
The other reason Ubuntu is important is the reason why Ubuntu is so successful: the people involved. Without the strong, friendly community, the responsive developers and enlightened leaders in and around Ubuntu, this distribution would not exist. So thank you, all of you involved with Ubuntu. Thank you for your time, your effort, your contributions and your sense of humanity.
Posted in Linux on 12/15/2008 04:49 am by Dorian
Eugene and I decided to start up a Brampton BSD-Linux User Group (BBLUG!). This will hopefully grow into a community of open source enthusiasts in the Brampton and Mississauga region. While we are competing in theory with the folks at GTALUG and WGTALUG, this is more of bring something to Brampton. I know there is a Brampton LUG group on Facebook. However I tried contacting them, but it doesn’t look like they are all that active.
So tomorrow @ 8PM, we plan on meeting up in the Coffee Culture for 2 hours. If you are an enthusiast of Linux or BSD and live in the Brampton area, feel free to drop by.
OK, I should of announced this meeting much earlier. I’ll try to do a better job of advertising the meetings next time. I planned on putting up ads for this but… I kept putting it off. Sorry.
Posted in Free Software, Linux on 11/06/2008 08:28 am by Dorian
Last, last weekend (October 25) I attended my first conference, Ontario Linux Fest 2008. And what an awesome event it was! The event turned out be a somewhat low key event. Not a huge number of exhibitor booths, but the Eclipse, Fedora, FOSSology, FSF, OpenStreetMap and Drupal people had setup shop there. The event featured 4 tracks, and a number of great speakers. Got to meet Jorge Castro from Canonical, Ross Turk and Daniel Hinojosa from SourceForge, Jon “maddog” Hall, Jeremy Allison from Samba, Ian Darwin and Bradley Kuhn from the Software Freedom Law Centre (SFLC). It is always an amazing thing to meet the people “in the flesh”, who make a difference in the FOSS community, and read from blogs. The seminars were fantastic and inspire me to further my own open source/free software involvement.
One of the organizers, Richard Weait tried to convince me to start up a Brampton LUG. I might try it out, once I have a little bit more time. Nothing fancy mind you, just one night a month at the Coffee Culture, a few ads and a mailing list. We will see how it will go.
Also I got to go out to dinner with Bradley, the Red Hat and FoSSology folks. And thanks to Google for providing yet another free service in life, in the form of free drinks at the reception/ after-party.
So thanks guys for the awesome time. Sorry for not blogging earlier. Life keeps me busy as always. And lets make the 2009 event even larger!
Posted in Life, Mobile on 07/16/2008 08:59 pm by Dorian
Ok, I’m just gonna post a quick update as part of my resolution, to post daily. I reckon that my life is not as half boring as I make it out to be…
I surprised my system admin at work that my N810, is in fact a Linux device. It is true that there isn’t too many Linux of such a small form factor. Updating to the newest version was a great idea.
Also we played a round of soccer (European football). I played a fantastic game. Maybe a bit aggressive, but thats just my intense focus when I game. I would love to do this on a weekly basis.
These past few days, I’ve a bit panicky. So many new adjustments and things happening to me. I am still adjusting. Please bare with me.
Posted in Mobile on 07/14/2008 05:03 am by Dorian
Last Thursday I got the chance to play with a Nokia N810 at the TigerDirect store in Mississauga. A pretty nifty device, but the price was not so nifty. So I ordered one via the Web. And hopefully it’ll arrive sometime today. Yay!
My initial review (after using for a few minutes) is that the N810 is a nice little device. I love the fact that I can carry an Internet-capable device in my pocket, without paying gigantic data transfer. Definitely useful to keep connected with people. And having a computing device that I don’t have to share is very useful.
A few negative points: the N810 loads slower than I thought. Faster than most Linux workstations, but slower than my Palm Pilot Tungsten E. The GPS doesn’t lock quickly. And tablet comes with a plastic stylus, instead of a nice rugged metal, rubber tipped stylus.
Getting to run on a Linux environment, means I’m familiar with the applications. Screen resolution is decent enough to handle the majority of sites. The slide-out keyboard is way more convenient than the infrared wireless one I have to tug along with my Palm. And there are a lot of apps already ported to it.
Overall I looking to playing on, working with and developing for the Nokia N810 Internet Tablet. I can hardly wait to get mine.
Posted in Linux on 06/19/2008 05:40 pm by Dorian
Humanity has a love-hate relationship with technology. Geeks like to take it to the extreme. Take the recent hub-bub in the blogosphere about the aptly named: Linux Hater’s Blog. In that blog, the anonymous blogger (or bloggers) rants about how BAD Linux is. Its entertaining and educational! Entertaining because rants and rabble-raising is fun… in a perverse sort of fashion.
This is not just a simply a rehash of Microsoftian propaganda; a machination of an ingenious marketing machine feeding FUD to an ignorant public. Rather the Linux Hater’s Blog (LHB) looks at the issues that Linux suffers from. Just like the Unix Hater’s Guide (thanks LH) before it, LHB satires the attitudes of the community, developers and companies in the Linux landscape. And hopeful as satire has done before, maybe better the Linux, Open Source and Software Libre ecosystem as a whole. Don’t be fooled. The Linux Hater is most likely an experience developer in the Linux world, and knows damn well what he is talking err… ranting about. And deep down inside he loves it.
I read both of the Linux Hater’s Blog and Unix Hater’s Guide in their entirety. It changed my perspective. Linux and UNIX are not perfect. The design and implementation of both of them aren’t the shining gems of computer science. And for historical reasons, and laziness on the part of Linux/FOSS developers, just doesn’t cut it anymore.
I admit it. I still prefer Linux. I’ll continue using Linux with all its wrinkles and weirdness because it’s still the best OS out there. I’ll still think freedom in software is paramount. I’ll still advocate open source as the most ethical and efficient way of doing business in the software industry. And I’ll still write in C, C++ and its spawn Java. Cause Lisp is way too hard to do in my head.
Thanks Linux Hater.