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My future with OSes

My history with operating systems is fairly simple. When home computers
were new I started out with an Epson computer(!!) that had its own
operating system which was quirky by today’s standards but was quite
nice in its simplicity. I then moved to an intel-driven DOS machine and
had a love-hate relationship with it. I moved to UNIX/Linux in work and
home life sometime later and obviously concentrated fairly heavily on
that until OS X came along.

I got my first Apple mainly to accommodate my photography obsession
because (even still) using a linux machine with photos absolutely
blows. I enjoy OS X but I also enjoy linux/gnome. However, I have
noticed in the last few years that I have slowly moved away from
OS-dependence. Call it what you will – the Cloud, SAAS, whatev. All I
know is that it is incredibly convenient to be able to sit at any
computer and do all the things I would normally do at my home
computer. In fact, about the only apps I use that aren’t cloud-centric
are emacs and my photo-software. Even still, with emacs I mostly use
org-mode for my work and I keep all my org files online. As long as I
have emacs on a machine, I can do my work. But in a pinch, I could use
another editor on those files since they are simply text-files.

That still leaves photos. The only non-standard,
not-practical-in-the-cloud thing I do. I’ve seen the attempts at photo
editors online, I know that one can use online tools to store and
categorize their photos – but none of those services come close to how I
can do it at home with old-fashioned, closed-source, non-standard,
key-on-the-back-of-the package software. Maybe this means there is an
opportunity in the market or maybe it means that camera manufacturers
are behind-the-times… or maybe it means I am particular with my
photos – I’m not really sure.

I’m not sure what this means for Operating Systems – at least, OSes that
aren’t powering “the Cloud” – but it does feel like a trend that would
lend itself to devices that start quickly and get me online. I see this
progress in the direction the iPad has taken us. Whatever your opinion
is on the particular of that one device – the idea that I can have
a small, “instant-on” device that can get me online is incredibly
appealing. I think the future of such devices in grand.

How many Rwandan Francs is that?

mah points out a headline in today’s New Times here in Rwanda: Frw44b goes to consultancy each year. That’s $80 million in money asking other people (mostly Westerners) to provide answers. That’s $80 million going to countries other than Rwanda… the country that needs the economic stimulus.

This goes right back to what I mentioned the other day about being asked point-blank about developing in open source. The reasoning there is that someone locally can learn to continue developing the system if the code is available. Of course we are taking it that one step further by hiring a local developer to join the team. Still, you get the point I hope.

Now in almost completely separate news, today I read about a solar cell phone charger that only costs $20! That’s only 10,000frw. Not much at all. The other day when I met the volunteer health workers who are going to use our systems to collect data I asked specifically where they charged their phones (all three had phones already) when they don’t have power. They told me they go to friends houses who have power. Sometimes they would charge them there at the health center too since they were affiliated with it now. Hell, for $20 we could hook them up!

Luna-graph

Friend and raconteur, Malcolm, sent me an email asking about some recent photos on my Flickr stream of the Moon. The how, the why, etc. So sure – here goes. Last year for my birthday, my lovely wife bought me a very decent telescope. Its one-a-them fancy ones that is easily aligned and from then on will find objects in the sky for you. Very slick. Its just big enough to see deep-space objects too – nebulae, galaxies, and clusters. Planets are the real show though as it is not the biggest or most expensive… and the Moon? forget about it – brilliant.

So I would have to say that my main interest is really just looking at stuff in the night-sky, but I do love photography too. Taking photos with a telescope is a whole new world – so many things to get just right. It tends to work better with dedicated CCDs instead of regular shuttered cameras – still, I went ahead and bought a cheap adapter for my Nikon D200. Just after I bought that adapter though, the motorized mount for my telescope broke – d’oh! No worries, I also have a small and cheap (though good quality) telescope that can mount to my photo tripod so I started taking shots of the moon with it. The other day, (after a few weeks of free repairs by Celestron) my mount came back in and I took some shots of the moon again last night but haven’t had time to do a *real* shot – that being, timed exposure while tracking the object as our own planet spins. That’s where the real work will come in.

Luckily for me, I have my old friend Dr. Mike to give me some tips. As of yet, we haven’t gone out and done any imaging, but he’s told me a lot already just in email. If you wanna see some good images, just head over to his site. I’m not sure I will ever get to his level, but I figure there is a lot of fun in trying.

For what its worth, so far my moon photos are a little soft on focus (though they look pretty good as small images). Dr. Mike pointed me to this howto on making a “Hartmann Mask” which would allow me to focus the telescope as if it were a rangefinder. Very cool.

OLPC a hit

You know, a lot has been said about the OLPC – good and bad. Many folks have tried to make some controversy out of the project (most expectedly, Microsoft but also some non-MS techy folks). But when you see the photos of the first kids to get the computers I find it baffling that anyone could be against such a thing.

Kindle

Look, I gotta admit. The Kindle thing is really intriguing to me. I read… a lot. I mean.. a whole lot. One of my problems is that I can’t seem to bring myself to remove books from my house. Ask my wife, she’ll tell you. So its pretty desirable to have a bunch of books in one small package. I mean, I could still get an old 1st edition, hardback Amis for the shelf, but I could read that biography of Tom Waits on an electronic device – right? As long as it looks something like paper – doesn’t make my eyes hurt – isn’t too heavy to hold – etc, etc, etc.

$400! yikes. Using EV-DO and not charging for it – innovative. Are the books DRM’d? does it matter.. does the thing even have a USB port? If I delete a book to make room for another, do I still have access to that purchased book later?

I should probably wait till the launch event is actually complete.

Parabol

Big Ears

I can’t remember where I first saw this photo. Its been sitting on my hard drive for a long time. It is something I can look at over and over again and I cannot explain it.

Update: Right after I posted that I remembered a small nugget of information which lead me to the site I originally found this on. Its from a Dutch museum of military equipment. Its a smaller version of equipment which was used to listen for approaching aircraft in the 1930s. I am sure my unexplained interest in World War One took me on the path to discovering this at some point.

iphone sdk – how did I miss that?

How did I miss that Steve Jobs wants an iphone SDK by February? I find that to be much better news from Apple in regards to the iphone. I am still amazed that they intentionally tried to brick the phones (and you won’t convince me that they didn’t) but if this thing comes, it does take back one of the two issues I have regarding the device.

The other issue, of course, is the lock into AT&T. Funny thing is… I’m a customer of AT&T. A happy owner of an unlocked phone too.

I’m not the only one who thinks that network locking is wrong – the Consumers Union (folks behind Consumer Reports Magazine) started a campaign against the practice quite a while ago. More recently, the Wall Street Journal’s Walt Mossberg went on another rampage against it. I don’t always agree with Walt – but this is dead-on-target. Honestly, it is tiring to be so far behind Europe on mobile technologies!

Meanwhile, I have now received my second SpaSMS. Another disturbing trend.

ilocked

I only know one person with a “hacked” iphone – unlocked to work on a network other than AT&T. I haven’t heard from him since the Apple “update”. However, I do want to say that the American system of having the mobile phone linked to network via locking is amazingly broken. Apple caring as much as they seem to be about the very, very few people who have unlocked their iphone is simply lame. However, I must agree with the writer on Salon’s Machinist when it comes to the iphone: while its a technological marvel, “if you care about your rights, don’t buy an iphone.”

SpaSMS

Today I received my very first Text Message spam on my mobile phone. According to the Wikipedia entry on the subject it is sometimes called “SpaSMS” – I like that.

Still, I am a bit surprised that either a) I got one at all b) I’ve never gotten one before. I’m just not sure which surprise choice is the correct one.

System76 Darter Ultra review

I’ve been meaning to post this for a while but for some reason never hit the “publish” button.

At work we support the fine folks at System76. Why? Well, we use Ubuntu and its easier to get some hardware in which you know it will work than trying to coax it to. Personally I use the Darter Ultra which is their ultra-portable model. First impressions tell me that this thing could be far more “ultra” in its “portable”. I also have an HP NC2400 on my desk and that redefines the category coming in at 2lbs – nice. The Darter is bigger and heavier than I expected but its still very manageable (I’ll try to remember to revisit that after my trip to Rwanda).

Out of the box the Darter looked good, felt a little cheap but not too cheap, and there was a rattle…. hmmm. Flipping it over and looking through one of the vents I saw that the rattle was a memory card flopping around inside…. not good. I fixed that, would everyone be comfortable doing so? I am not sure if that is the fault of the manufacturer (they are built in Taiwan or somewhere similar, contracted out from System76) or the folks at System76 as I don’t know where they apply the chosen specs the customer wants. Nonetheless, I fired it up after reinstalling the memory and all worked well.

Until, I put a disc in the DVD drive. The drive ate it. Literally. An email to System76 got a very prompt reply apologizing and informing me of the new drive being sent. Cool. It arrived a week or so later, works great.

The other problems I’m having are GNOME/BIOS/Other:

First, the battery applet in GNOME was telling me lies. You’re plugged in (no I wasnt), Your battery is dead (no its not). I have seen reference on the System76 forums that this is a BIOS problem and they are working on it. I have to say that while I have received a great amount of support, questions, and suggestions from one particular guy at System76, I have never been told that personally. Who knows. Its not a deal breaker.

Second, the network applet is screwy – and this might just be a GNOME problem. Nonetheless, I cannot simply select a wireless network and join it. Sometimes I can, sometimes I can’t. Sometimes I have to select manual configuration and set it up as it would have set it up automatically and it works. I don’t know why. Also, once I’ve gone wireless, I can never go back wired with the network applet until I’ve logged out. I have to use another tool (ifup) to go wired. Annoying. Again, I think this might be a GNOME – or perhaps an Ubuntu problem.

Finally, when headphones are plugged in, the speakers still output sound. D’oh! I’ve read on the forums again that this is about to be fixed in an update.

OK – so whats the tally? 5 problems. Some serious, some not. Still, not the most pleasant experience with a laptop that I’ve had – but also not the worst (Dell still shatters the record there). The wireless problems I can kinda live with and I see windows users having equal or worse trouble (I’ve not seen OS X users having trouble though). The battery thing is annoying and I can’t tell how much charge I have left, but its no big deal. The speakers are funny and the network is lame.

I will reiterate that the support guy has been super nice and responsive – but I think he is very overworked. System76 seems to be a very small company and that’s great to support but they could use a little bit better manufacturer.

I am going to give this laptop a grade of B- at least for now. If those last few problems are resolved that could rise, though it will never rank at the top.

  • A+: Apple Powerbook ti
  • A: IBM Thinkpad 330(I think that was the number).
  • B+: Apple Macbook, IBM Thinkpad 600
  • B-: System76 Darter Ultra
  • F: Dell (forgot the devil spawns model number)

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