eftychia: My face, wearing black beret, with guitar neck in corner of frame (pw34)
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Yesterday I never did make it out of the house. Today I'm feeling better than I did when I woke up yesterday, but no better than most of yesterday afternoon, so I'm rearranging my plans. I'll do research (and maybe force myself to make phone calls) for the out-of-the-house tasks and try to conserve my strength for rehearsal tonight, then plan on going out and doing things Thursday or Friday. We'll see. Last night I was pretty migrainey by the time I would have had to leave for rehearsal if last night were tonight; I'm hoping my body cooperates better now that today is actually today. Not that the way that sentence came out is all that encouraging.

A Win98 box that worked just fine but I considered unuseable anyhow because it couldn't mount shares from my fileserver is now a fully-fledged participant in my LAN. *whew* All the web sites I found about how to make Win98 and Samba cooperate (a problem I was sure I'd had to solve at some point in the past already but couldn't remember the details of) failed to help me. They said to either enable encrypted passwords in the configuration file on my server (already done -- I think I had to do that when I added the WinNT machine a long time ago) or to disable encrypted passwords in the registry on the client machine (a: made Win98 very unhappy at first; b: didn't help -- so I put it back). Finally I got the bright idea that maybe this machine that wasn't asking me for a password wasn't actually a single-user config after all, and just had a default user to log in as. So I asked Google about Win98 passwords (wanted to be safe before I hit the "log off" button), and discovered that all I had to do was delete any *.pwl file I found in C:\WINDOWS ... Did that, rebooted, logged in as "dglenn" and told it a new password, and gee, all of a sudden "Map Network Drive" works Just Fine. The four volumes I wanted from my file server are all visible, it took my Samba password, the wallpaper has been set to some freaky clouds I got with my cell phone on the way home from Pennsic, and this machine is ready to contribute its resources to my various projects. Or be one more place to lose track of web pages I opened and got distracted from ...

I'm two weeks behind on my LiveJournal reading except for a few spot-checks here and there. I'm also working on a script to make it easier for me to catch up when I get behind.

A few nights ago the power went out for a few minutes. Just long enough to crash everything and leave me facing the longer-than-it-ought-to-be process of restarting my network. Machines want to come up in a certain order, and some of them have rather lengthy fsck runs, and on one of them I need to start some tasks under 'chroot' and for some reason it's unhappy if I try to do that from the console so I need to have another box running to telnet to it from ... and an even larger factor is that a whole lot of parts of this that really should be automated have been sitting on my to-do list for two years and I still haven't gotten around to taking care of that. (Putting the main disk for the file server into a box that will actually boot from it will help. When the machine it had been in died, I made it the second disk in a computer that wouldn't boot it. So that's where 'chroot' comes in: "chroot /mnt/bigdisk login root" and then start the various daemons there. Getting it into a box where it can be the boot drive will mean several steps no longer needing to be done by hand.)

During the process of restarting things, I found the KVM switch (a recent addition) extremely helpful. Now that I've used one in my own computer room, I really want an eight-port one. (I know, not likely to arrive as a hand-me-down; I'm lucky to have the two-port switch.) I've had two other two-port KVM switches lying around for ages, but have never managed to get the cables I need for them. (Why are they so expensive?) The one I'm using can be activated by special keystrokes, as well as by the switch on the unit itself, and it has a mode in which it will alternate between the two computers every few seconds. I could see that being very useful in a larger switch hooked up to five or six servers.

Parking restrictions for street cleaning here are 11:30 to 15:30. I went and moved the car just before then, and just as I completed my U-turn, the street sweeper swooped past ... and 11:19. Okay, the driver wants to make up time and finish early, I guess, but if he's coming by before everyone's moved their cars out of the way -- and thus not making a pass when the curb lane is clear -- doesn't it defeat the purpose of the signs and the parking tickets and all that?

There are 10 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] whc.livejournal.com at 05:43pm on 2005-11-15
>doesn't it defeat the purpose of the signs and the parking tickets and all that?

No. Their main purpose is revenue generation!
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 05:58pm on 2005-11-15
Point.

Still kind of bends the excuse though.
 
posted by [identity profile] madbodger.livejournal.com at 08:17pm on 2005-11-16
Actually, parking meters were originally to keep people from using parking
spaces too long, freeing up spaces near shops for paying customers.


Didn't stay that way.


BTW, I happen to have a 1940s era NYC parking meter.

 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 06:59pm on 2005-11-17
Actually, in several places I still hear about them being used that way. at least at the "deciding whether we want to put meters here" stage. And in a few jurisdictions they actually try to enforce the "don't just feed the meter, move when it times out" rule, though most places seem to be lazy about that as long as the quarters and dimes keep coming in.

I don't know how common that concept is these days compared to "ooh, free money for the city", but it hasn't entirely died out.
 
posted by [identity profile] blumindy.livejournal.com at 03:11am on 2005-11-16
Jeez, will you just move in with me until I am fluent instead of halting (and godawful tired, too) in that lingo?

1- No parking tickets
2- Heat
3- Food
4- Cable...TV & modem
5- GD
6- Familial support w/ fibro understanding
7- Love
8- Non-scary neighborhood
9- Everything and *2* kitchen sinks!

I realize that there are drawbacks too but I'm not going to list them 0_o.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 06:56pm on 2005-11-17
Figuring out scheduling ...
 
posted by [identity profile] blumindy.livejournal.com at 10:00pm on 2005-11-17
:-)))
 
posted by [identity profile] madbodger.livejournal.com at 08:16pm on 2005-11-16
I have an 8-port KVM for you. 13W3 video. Minidin-8 keyboard and mouse.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 06:54pm on 2005-11-17
;;drool;;

[goes to Google "13W3"]

Ah. Well there is the stack of three Sparcstation 2 boxes with only one monitor/mouse/keyboard between them ... this would be useful, yes.
 
posted by [identity profile] madbodger.livejournal.com at 09:19pm on 2005-11-25
I brought it (and some other goodies) to Darkover for you, on the assumption that
you'd be here at least part of the con.

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