directions to juarez

Google Search:

Someone dropped into the questions@freebsd.org list and wanted to get a registration number for Opera: here’s the help he got . . . . .

On Sat, 22 Nov 2003, Kris Kennaway wrote:
>> ftp://2130706433/pub/juarez/FreeBSD
>> and look in that directory. This FTP site is very busy, so if you
> can’t get in straight away then just keep trying! I’ve setup a mirror site at ftp://warez.jvds.com as well for you just incase

Hee hee . . . . those addresses direct warez hunters to their own loopback (127.0.0.1) interface . . . . too funny

POLA violation: snmp renumbering stuff

For some reason, my locally installed snmp daemon decided to renumber the elements in the hrStorageTable, meaning all the attached disks were being either misreported or just plain dropped from my graphs (/mrtg/blue/index.html). Not that the new numbering doesn’t make sense but I didn’t know this was going to happen.

How to discover and fix it? snmptable is your friend. Any MIB element that is included in a table can be displayed with the entire table, making it easy to see what’s available for monitoring.
Continue reading “POLA violation: snmp renumbering stuff”

on curmudgeons

AARP Magazine : A Few Good Grumps

Curmudgeons aren’t just funny or just mean. Part of what makes a curmudgeon is an almost allergic reaction to injustice. When confronted with it, he responds with two powerful weapons: disgust and sarcasm.

At the dentist yesterday, I found myself reading the AARP magazine (hey, I had exhausted Nick Jr and I wasn’t going near Seventeen) and found this great article on identifying and understanding the domesticated curmudgeon.

What happened to personal responsibility?

Overlawyered.com — Personal responsibility links

If you ever find yourself wondering if things are worse than you thought, this site will erase all doubt. The linked page cites many instances of people blaming, variously, soft drink distributors (whose machines fall on people without warning as they try to steal from them), sporting goods makers (hey, if the batter hits me with a my own pitched ball, it must be the bat maker’s fault), tire companies (we, like, smoked a whole bag of dope, but that wasn’t why the van rolled over: musta been the tires, dude) . . . . .

You get the idea. Read it and weep.

This takes the idea of “ubi jus ibi remedium –where there is a right there is a remedy” to new lows . . . .

more than one way to define speed

stevenberlinjohnson.com: Apple On Speed

I’d been thinking a little recently about Apple and speed, though not speed in the sense of window redrawing, but speed in the sense of upgrade cycles. It seems to me that Apple has managed to release a prodigious amount of new software in the past two years: two significant upgrades to OS X, each with hundreds of new features (along with the performance increases.) But also think of all the new applications. Start with the iLife package — major upgrades to iTunes including the Apple Music Store; upgrades to iMovie and iDVD; entirely new applications in iPhoto and iChat AV. And then somehow they’ve managed to produce what basically amounts to a complete productivity suite, built from scratch: iCal, Address Book, Mail, Keynote, iSync. And on top of that, in a year they’ve managed to assemble what a lot of people seem to think is the best browser on the market — Safari.

Am I missing something, or is this a significantly faster development cycle than Microsoft’s?

What makes Steve run? I commented on the above-referenced post, so I won’t repeat it here. I think the rest of the post is worth reading, as well.

review of a review of Panther

Daring Fireball: Siracusa on Panther

It’s gotten to the point where I don’t know what I look forward to more: Apple’s annual Mac OS X update, or Siracusa’s review of it.

I read the Jaguar review and thought it was reasonable: I’m sure this one is, too. But what really matters to me is that it’s better than what I was using, and I am satisfied with that so far.

I should go read it to see how he feels about Safari, which I have found disappointing so far: I’m using Firebird more and more . . . .

britain != england

Listening to the coverage of King George’s state visit to London, I keep finding my teeth on edge as I hear the commentators use Britain and England interchangeably. Britain is a shorthand expression for Great Britain which is, in my view, outmoded, a reference to the days of Empire, when the sun never set on it . . . . historically, it includes Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, not all of which would have extended that invitation.

He is in *England*, of which London is the capitol.