techie

Whoosh! There goes 2010.. Bring on 2011 I'm ready for you!!!

My blog is still here! With the upturn in Facebook and Twitter over the last 12 months I've not posted much as I guess l've become a bit of a FB'aholic and am fascinated by it from a professional point of view. The introduction of AJAX powered chat in a browser has seen a lot of my friends contacting me via FB chat and the private message system provides more personal messages than I get through email. From a cynical standpoint, FB is potentially very sinister as they've got too big but the same could have been said about Google a few years ago but their star has waned slightly. Twitter was also meant to take over the World but within my group of friends it's been eclipsed by FB too. It's going to be interesting to see what comes next and in the meantime I'm very interested in L7 firewall appliances... Getting geeky now so I'll move on!

2010 brought us the iPad.. No surprise that I have one and I'm sat in Starbucks typing this on it. I'm trying hard to justify having an iPad. It's a gorgeous piece of kit but I think I could have happily managed without it, using a combination of my smart phone and my laptop. I don't need a middle device. The iPad is useful in the office on my own 3G connection though. Sometimes there's something I'd like to do on my own kit and my own net connection but feel once again that it's overkill.

I mentioned smart phones. This year I've been rocking an iPhone 3GS as my main phone and have had a few different work phones. A Vodafone 360 handset was the least useful during an eat my own dogfood phase. No surprises that Vodafone have stopped developing their own handsets. I had a HTC Desire - that was a highlight. The functionality and feature set is much richer than the iPhone but it doesn't have the same polished user experience as the iPhone. I did like the portable wifi hotspot feature though; something I'd consider jail breaking my iPhone for.. My latest work phone is an iPhone 4. Nice upgrade to the 3GS. Finally a camera flash! The battery life is better and the screen is good but it's not worth paying for an upgrade. I'm eligible for an upgrade at the moment but that would reset the timer on my 24 month contract. No thanks! The future is SIM free, maybe Google Nexus S shaped and powered by giffgaff.

2010 saw me finally get rid of the Beemer. I'm running around in a Golf and whilst it's nice with a hefty punch and gokart handing I miss the comfort of the old girl, especially on long motorway runs. I also miss getting the back end out around roundabouts plus VW traction control doesn't understand that I want lift off oversteer!

I've still got the R3. Thinking about an upgrade but will have to see how finances are looking when Spring approaches. I know what I'd like but it depends what sort of part-ex I can get for the yellow beast.

So 2011... What will it bring? I dunno! But I do know that I'm in charge and I'm going to make it a good one! Please join me for the ride!!

Snipping Tool on Vista

I wanted to take a screen shot of part of a website that I'm building at the moment. Googled around for 'Vista screenshot' and discovered the Vista Snipping Tool. Type snipping tool into the Command Bar on the Start Menu and away you go. The only thing I don't seem to be able to grab is the Command Bar on the Start Menu. Ha ha ha.

Yes Yes Yes Yes!

I've been doing this unix lark for a pretty long time now but I'm never afraid to learn something new. Today's lesson.. the 'yes' command.

Part of the gnu coreutils, it echos a 'y' into your script (you can alter the string to a different character or a word too). So you want to install 500 packages and it's asking you to say yes to them all? Try something like this:
yes | pkgadd -d /cdrom/Solaris_10/Product `cat pkg_list`

Data centre cabling

I'm always amazed at the nests of cables that are created in switch rooms. People start off with the best intentions in the world but eventually it ends up in a big tangle. I've had to bend tempered glass cabinet doors to get them closed in the past. Came across this example that made me go 'wow':

This is how you do it properly:

Photos were borrowed from this article:

http://royal.pingdom.com/2008/01/24/when-data-center-cabling-becomes-art/

Check out the Android!

Google have taken another step towards total world domination through the introduction of their new mobile phone OS. With the recent spate of Apple's lack of consistency with regard to what is and what isn't allowed on the App Store swiftly followed by extension of the developer non-disclosure agreement to stop folk publishing their rejection letters, maybe Android is the way to go?

Whilst I mull this over I think I'll have a play with the HTC Android emulator:

http://tmobile.modeaondemand.com/htc/g1/

App Store Rejections:

http://www.macrumors.com/2008/09/13/apples-app-store-rejection-policies-...

App Store Rejection Letter NDA:

http://www.macrumors.com/2008/09/23/apple-extends-non-disclosure-to-app-...

Google Reader

I've been using Google's RSS Reader recently to organise some of the stuff that I regularly look at on the wubbleyou wubbleyou wubbleyou. I'm using Google Reader to manage my subscriptions but exporting the OPML file so that I can use the Newsstand iPhone app to read when I've got a few minutes to spare. It seems to be working well.

I've exported some of my 'blogrolls' over there on the right. I can change what appears on this site by simply changing the tags on the Google Reader app.

I've exported the blogrolls with no title and no formatting so that I can control the look and feel myself by creating drupal blocks for each of the rolls. The only thing that I'm not able to control is the order. It's alphabetical.

Steam Locomotive

Just come across a great package on Ubuntu. sl stands for Steam Locomotive and if you type sl instead of ls you get an animated steam train flying across your screen.

Some people have too much time on their hands and long may it last!!

Package details can be found here:

http://packages.ubuntu.com/hardy/sl

Screen and irssi

I'm using Screen a lot these days. It's something that I used to use at Aber all those years ago to create virtual tty's when we only had a single screen to use. These days I use it to "background" my sessions so that things can run in the background and I can easily re-connect to my session at a later date.

I've recently switched from using the bitchx irc client to using irssi. I've found a great resource for using screen and irssi together. The hilight window is really good when you've got many connections open.

Here's the guide: A Guide to Efficiently Using Irssi and Screen

Bitlbee

Several places I've worked have, for various reasons, blocked access to Microsoft Messenger and other chat protocols. For various reasons of my own I want to use Messenger and therefore have various methods for accessing the service.

My latest way of doing things is to run a Bitlbee daemon that presents various chat protocols, including Messenger, as irc channels. This means that I can connect using a terminal irc client, accessible via ssh.

Bitlbee has a limitation that it doesn't currently support file transfers for the Messenger protocol (it does support file transfers via DCC for several other protocols) and obviously smileys, winks and nudges don't work.

Overall it means that I can communicate with people and that's the key.

Oh and I nearly forgot - Mark there's an Amiga port so there's another use for that old kit!

iPod touch

My neighbour's just bought himself an iPod touch. Wow! It's a lovely piece of kit. Paired up with a wireless connection it does a lovely job of displaying the BBC's iPlayer content. Very impressive. One day when the iPhone has 3G+ data speeds I may be tempted..

Syndicate content