ten percent market share

Sony

If these numbers are acurate then PS3 is holding 10% of the next generation gaming market.

uss san juan and DST

free of any reason technology

A billion dollar submarine that missed the Dailight Savings patch?
Emerging one hour off would do it.

y2k7

politics technology

All my servers moved into the new DST successfully. Which makes it easy to postulate the following:

If your computer or software shows the wrong date next week then your technology install sucks.
Either the people / company you pay to maintain it are stupid, incompetence, lazy etc, or you don’t
have support in the first place.

Oh, and it was the stupid Bush administration that caused this. Not OBL or anybody else. It’s a selfmade problem.
Born out of stupidity.

Next week will show how stupid / smart America really is.

12:00

update: the register calls the panic off and the register is always there when panic can be created

not that easy

Apple technology

March 11, and the spring-forward Daylight Savings Times goes into effect earlier. Right now (0:11am pacific) my properly updated OS X 10.4.8 dashboard is showing the time for central europe 1 hour to early. Which is amusing since Apple did indeed update it’s operating system. The change in DST was initiated in the Energy Policy Act of 2005. Four weeks more time shift. It might be that the upcoming confusion next week is more costly for the economy than those hours of sunlight during peoples waking hours save resources and therfor money.

The underlying systems, servers and services will do just fine with the change. We still have 31 years left to fix all the equipment that has a sense of time.

Looking in my crystal ball after it’s DST confusion has cleared up, I see allot of bad software working oddly. Millions of people shrugging their shoulder because their computers time is now off by one hour. Corporate support desks will have a busy monday. It’s really bad software and the interaction with human readable time where the change might cause troubles.

As crazy as it is, some people just buy a new computer next week, one that shows the time correctly. And of course there will be poster child snafus that the media will be all over. Some big corporation loosing millions because of a weird cascade of events, triggered by a pointless law.

I would be very surprised if this years DST change would go as smooth and seamless as the last ten did.

php5 without myql for fc4 php version and pcre library 6.6

linux

For historical reasons I run a Fedora core 4. It turns out that php5 is configured NOT to use mysql in this default install. Which is stupid, but what can you do?
Well, for starters you could follow: helpful howto.
The php source Version that it uses is 5.1.2. And it turns out that this is needed: Trying the current 5.2.1 resulted in

configure: error: The PCRE extension requires PCRE library version >= 6.6

In other words php 5.2.1 insists on having perl compatible regular expressions with a version number higher than 6.6. We ignore the fact that Perl Regular Expressions probably have not changed in the last ten years. So I am not sure why, -o- why, php 5.2 should now be insisting on a new Version.
Over at Centos there is a how to to get pcre 6.6 installed. Only problem is, that it does not fly on fedora core 4. To new for it I suppose.

So in the end I got php 5.1.2 from here and the beforementioned how to worked like a charm. Here my mirror of that specific php Version.

distro history

history linux technology

I am not a sysadmin. Ok, I adminstrate machine, but mostly so that I can go back and write some more horrible code. Coding for unix system is the most fun. I still remember when the Sun spark pizzabox showed up in the adjacent office and it came with a huge box of documentation: “They want you to know all this? Awesome!” On DOS PCs I was used to an environment where equipement makers would not share any knowledge.
After working on Intergraph work stations I then spent years with Irix. Which was nice at the time, since SGI had lots of money and even used some of it wisely. Of course the writing was on the wall. And running a web server on basically free hardware (except for electricity) was intruiging enough to try to deal with Linux. I am still trying to do that. Redhat was what came my way first. It worked ok, but at some point I got sick of rpm dependency stacks. Debian looked good with apt-get. So I built two boxes running that, and they drive me crazy. No chkconfig, ‘just’ use ‘sysv-rc-conf’. Once in a while I have to deal with Suse, but new machines I build with Fedora. Yum is pretty much making me happy these days. I simply don’t understand why somebody thought it would be a great idea to rename httpd to apache (or vice versa). And there are lots and lots of these differences. You don’t notice them when you stay with one system. But switching back and forth makes this annoying. Comes with the concept of free and open software I guess. But somebody I would like to have the cake and eat it too.

The quality of software is quiet interesting: the core of things seems to work really well for linux. Not so much ‘core’ as in ‘kernel’ but rather functionalities. The fringes, the configurations, the interface to adminstrate these things is pretty horrible. The babylonic /etc/init.d/ confusion is only one example. Another one would be that sar is by default off after you installed it on debian. You have to go into /etc/default/sysstat and enable it. Trickier to find than it should be.

fanta in 30 seconds

confessions of a pixel pusher

Many spots feel long and lost @ 30 seconds. this one does not

crossing the atlantic on cogent wire is like traveling on a Zeppelin

internet

traceroute.

sad traceroute:
5 pos2-0.core01.ham01.atlas.cogentco.com (212.20.158.38) 375.207 ms 375.056 ms 377.128 ms
6 p4-0.core01.dus01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.1.177) 429.681 ms 481.387 ms 481.802 ms
7 p13-0.core01.ams03.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.1.125) 57.307 ms 56.128 ms 55.016 ms
8 p1-0.core01.lon01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.1.225) 61.937 ms 59.841 ms 56.989 ms
9 p3-0.core02.jfk02.atlas.cogentco.com (66.28.4.189) 230.387 ms * 247.512 ms
10 t3-3.mpd03.jfk02.atlas.cogentco.com (154.54.5.234) 234.125 ms 230.982 ms 230.780 ms
11 t9-4.mpd01.dca01.atlas.cogentco.com (154.54.6.138) 237.025 ms 239.146 ms 237.933 ms
12 pc13.mpd01.iah01.atlas.cogentco.com (154.54.2.146) 315.621 ms 315.980 ms 316.001 ms
13 t2-1.mpd01.lax01.atlas.cogentco.com (154.54.3.38) 319.648 ms 316.373 ms 316.045 ms
14 g9-0-0.core01.lax01.atlas.cogentco.com (154.54.1.101) 314.054 ms 317.387 ms 315.319 ms

Dear Cogent, if you don’t have the connections to do things, then please don’t pretent that you can.

tourism

free of any reason

If I would be in charge of tourism for a city I would spend as much money as possible to make the restrooms of the local airport as nice as possible. Sitting in a A330 waiting to take off to Amsterdam, the restroom is pretty much all I remember from Memphis. Those 15 minutes I had on the ground could have been better used to the advantage of the town.

Speaking of travel restrooms: On the first leg the flight attendants had put a bag of coffee on the coat hanger in the bath room. The smell of the room was better than usual. Funny how those bags are usually not more than 5 feet away from the bath room. But it took years before some smart flight attendant had that idea. It was probably that cute deadhead sitting one row behind me.

looks like what it is

technology

drive that looks like a drive