dannyman.toldme.com


Excerpts, Technology

Japanese Gaming Chic

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/11/13/japanese-gaming-chic/

“Right now Asian fans really like the Japanese products and culture. They want the package in Japanese, manual in Japanese, they want everything to be in Japanese, or Japanese style. Japan is cool and popular in China, and right now it seems like they don’t want anything else.”

Takeshi Kimura
SNK Playmore
Game Devloper Magazine, November 2005

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FreeBSD, Linux, Technical

WARNING: PermitRootLogin defaults to “yes”

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/11/12/permitrootlogin-p4wn3d/

For many yers I have used FreeBSD nearly exclusively. In the BSD tradition, root is pretty well protected — root can not log in from remote unless you put some effort into hooking that up, and local users can only run su if they are members of the wheel group. Because of the nifty sudo tool and my own disinterest in memorizing any more passwords than necessary, I have tended to remain unconcerned with the root password, setting it and storing the thing somewhere, which is a pain, or setting it to something dumb, or just not setting it, depending on the security needs of a given system.

I recently learned a painful lesson from Fedora: not all unices are as protective of the root user. Sure, I knew that in Linux any local user can run su, but OpenSSH isn’t going to allow people to log in as root, right? Wrong! (more…)

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Linux, Technical

Install Red Hat via Serial Console

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/11/09/install-redhat-serial-console/

This is an easy problem, but Googling the answer didn’t immediately return a great solution.

I want to install Red Hat Enterprise Linux via serial console. How to set that up? Red Hat says how. Hook up a keyboard / monitor, and at the boot prompt, enter:

linux text console=ttyS0 (more…)

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About Me, Testimonials

Local Time: Tomorrow

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/11/09/universal-time-dammit/

Yayoi has heard me quote this bit from The Simpsons a dozen times now, but:

“Welcome to Japan, where the local time is tomorrow.”

Today I noticed that my blog timestamps were now one hour off, because WordPress does not support the abomination that is Daylight Saving Time. So I went in and said “stick with Universal Time,” which I think should be the standard time zone for everything anyway. Standard Time zones are an inaccurate fiction, invented as a convenience to schedule trains. Daylight Saving is a silly kludge built on that fiction. When I’m elected dictator, we’ll all use Universal Time for coordinating schedules, and everyone’s time-keeping device will also accomodate local solar time, so you can coordinate pre-industrial activites like eating lunch around noon, or heading home from work some time before sunset.

I am a crackpot who is fifty years ahead of his time, so don’t mind me.

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Technology

Testing Sidekick Upgrade

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/11/09/sidekick-upgrade-nice/

Hello world!

This is a test post from the bus via my Sidekick II. They recently updated the software on this device and things are nice. Timestamps in my AIM logs and the web browser is now noticeably faster, and prettier. There’s support for JavaScript, at least enough that the Flickrbar appears on my web site, which loads up with full color backgrounds and pleasing-to-me fonts.

Nice job, T-Mobile and Danger! Now, if only I could have per-account e-mail ringtones, so I could check my normal e-mail on the device without the loud “system pager” ring that is my default for email sent to my mobile . . .

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Excerpts, Technical

/initrd/

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/11/08/slash-initrd/

Do not taunt Red Hat Enterprise Linux:

Finally, one more directory worth noting is the /initrd/ directory. It is empty, but is used as a critical mount point during the boot process.

Warning Warning

Do not remove the /initrd/ directory for any reason. Removing this directory causes the system to fail to boot with a kernel panic error message.

<doomsey> do not taunt the happy fun directory. (more…)

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Technology, Testimonials

Abovenet Rocks

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/11/08/abovenet-rocks/

I am a picky customer. And I have at least one vendor to bitch about once some of the dust settles, but I have to say, Abovenet has always been great. They are honest, they have good sales support, their data centers are nice enough . . . and any time I file a ticket to take care of network trouble or something like a server reboot, they have always taken care of business. Their networking people in particular do an excellent job of offering to help, to the point of offering to take a look at my BGP configs to offer pointers.

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Good Reads, Politics

Comptroller?

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/11/02/comptroller/

So, I’m not looking at the blogs so much lately, but sometimes after I sublimate the animosity I’m feeling at a vendor into a very polite “but I need you guys to stop screwing me or else” missive I need a little chill.

The Banterist delivered giggles. You don’t have to live in New York City, I certainly don’t, to deeply appreciate and giggle heartily at this:

Superficial Voter’s Guide – NYC 2005

It’s fricking hilarious because . . . well, at least my mind works that way, especially when you ask yourself “Comptroller? What’s that? I have to pick one?”

Frazz induced a grin a well.

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Technology, Testimonials

Civilization IV

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/11/01/civ4/

As posted on Skirv’s blog:

Overall, I think it is an excellent game.

I tried one game on easy level … quit after an hour or so … too easy.
In my second game I’m in 1902 on the almost-balanced level, but still feeling a little too easy to be interesting. But I want to use my panzers . . . and I just trained a spy, which sounds a lot more useful and intresting than in the older games. (more…)

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Sundry

Fear

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/11/01/fear/

So, I spent last week in a hotel near Dulles Airport in Virginia setting up a new network. Most things went great, but we had a vendor, whom we are paying a lot of money, crash and burn on a support call. In a fantastical way. I mean, it was like dealing with a telco. We managed to complete everything on time, I even got to visit the Air and Space Museum before my flight back. But the bad experience shook our confidence in the vendor. Badly.

I spent a lot of time upset over this . . . actually lost sleep in my disillusionment. I wrote up a list of stuff I was upset about, and on Monday I took some time at my own office to re-write a more professional list of things that I want addressed. I sent this off to the responsible parties, and immediately got calls back, which I did not want to take. We have established that they have until Wednesday to answer my concerns and restore confidence.

But the thing that sticks in my mind was when I checked my voicemail last night, was that shortly after I had sent my list of concerns off, was that the guy who called back, his voice had fear in it. Like I’d caught him in the cross-hairs. Granted, he probably has the most riding on this . . . but I want him to succeed, and this is something I tried to convey in my message, though I made it clear that we were entirely prepared to cut our ties with the vendor if I were not impressed . . .

There is a little gratification to be had in the knowledge that you have scared someone, because fear is a powerful motivator. But, things happen . . . support and communications screw up from time to time . . . I don’t want to hear from someone who is working from a place of fear, I want people who have the confidence that they can see a way out of the problem . . . fear has its place, I suppose.

Well, I hope things work out. While giving the vendor time to get their story straight, I have also lined up some alternatives.

Fear?

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Religion, Technology

smashmyipod.com

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/10/21/smashmyipodcom/

A couple weeks back I was walking behind some grammar school kids, and as we passed the Apple Store, one of them started going on at length about how much various iPods cost for various features, and which, in his opinion, was the best buy, and the girl he was talking to pointed out that they were somewhat cheaper at Target.

And I had this cranky old man moment.

Like . . . grammar school kids should not be expert consumers.

http://smashmyipod.com/

God Bless Canadians.

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Linux, Technical

Resize NTFS: Knoppix!

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/10/20/shrink-ntfs-knoppix/

It took a few days of struggle, but ultimately I found a great way to shrink an NTFS partition on a notebook computer to make room for a Linux-Windows dual-boot.

Although I am trying out Fedora Core 4 . . . just to, you know, learn Red Hat? Well, if you download the Knoppix CD, you can boot into a KDE environment which makes available a vaguely intuitive point-and-click interface to ntfsresize called QTParted. (more…)

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Technical

SysAdmin Solves Perl Mystery

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/10/20/sysadmin-solves-perl-mystery/

The developers came. “We have a mystery wrapped inside an enigma?”

I told them if it was further wrapped in bacon, they had my interest.

Perl:

  my $foo = sprintf("sseq_%012d_%012d",2153059002,2153059068);
  print STDERR "$foo\n";

(more…)

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Excerpts, Good Reads, Politics, Technology

Martin Luther King Quotes

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/10/19/martin-luther-king-quotes/

We happened by the Yerba Buena Gardens in San Francisco this weekend, visited the Zeum, which was cool, and caught the Wallace and Gromit movie, which rocked, and also checked out this cool monument to Martin Luther King, and brought back some good words that seem to apply to the present day: (more…)

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Jokes

Workin Hard?

Link: https://dannyman.toldme.com/2005/10/13/workin-hard/

Hardly workin.

Well, this guy . . . different story: (more…)

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