Ten Things Minus 5

Posted by Jim Jagielski on Monday, December 18. 2006 in Junk Drawer

Seems that I was tagged by Sam, so... 5 Things you didn't know about me:
  1. I initially studied to be an Astrophysicist.
  2. I have never lived more than 25 miles from where I grew up.
  3. I don't like heights. Not at all.
  4. As a child, I had pretty severe asthma and allergies. I had to get shots twice a week for years to get de-sensitized.
  5. If I had to pick one regret, it's that I didn't have a daughter.
You're it: Yoav, Garrett, Debbie, Alex, Ben
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Heresy

Posted by Jim Jagielski on Thursday, December 14. 2006 in Junk Drawer

For all true Ren and Stimpy fans, this is heresy. *sob*
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A painless G5 migration

Posted by Jim Jagielski on Friday, October 20. 2006 in Junk Drawer

As noted earlier, I received my new Quad G5 just a handful of days ago, in fact much earlier than I expected. I fired it up and let it run for about 8 hours as a quick burn in test. I then later on rec'd the additional RAM I had ordered, so I shut it down, installed the 2 chips, and then started it back up again. I again let it run for several hours, just in case. No problems at all. So yesterday I set aside a few hours to actually migrate over to it. I restarted the G5 in Target mode and then attached it to the firewire chain on my G4. The 2 serial-ata drives popped up on the desktop just fine. My plan was to copy over all the files on my "file storage" disk to one of the G5 drives and then the full OS X disk to the other G5 drive last. Using the super cool SuperDuper! application, I cloned both G4 disks to the G5, renamed them and then shut down both systems. It was then time to switch out the actual hardware. I had to do some rearranging of my firewire chain since the G5 only has 1 400Mbps firewire port on the back, and the G4 had 2. Luckily, I had a firewire hub around the office, so I used that to make the number of cable changes minimal. After maybe 10-15 minutes, I was ready, and powered up the G5. And it booted up perfectly, and after a minute or so, my desktop appeared exactly as it had been. I then spent some time firing up apps, checking programs, etc ensuring that all was well. Yep, not a hitch at all. This was one reason why I decided to go with the G5 rather than a newer Intel Mac: I knew that the migration would be easier. Plus, I still use Photoshop quite a bit, and needed the extra speed (Photoshop isn't Intel native yet). First impressions are pretty good. First of all, it's *quiet*. Much quieter than my old G4. And it's fast, as one would expect from going from a Dual 1.33 machine to a Quad 2.5 one. For normal operations, the increase really isn't all that impressive, but for the things that I needed the extra speed for (compilations, digital encoding, etc...) the new machine cooks. One con is that it doesn't have a built-in modem, and I did occasionally use my system for sending out faxes directly. What I may do it use the old G4 as a fax server and get rid of the HP AllInOne unit I'm using now. Should save a bunch on paper and ink. Oh yeah, in the process of cloning the drives, I lost the Spotlight indexing for both disks (as expected) so the system has been spending quite a bit of time re-indexing my system. But the machine is fast enough I don't even notice it. Nice!
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G5 Arrived

Posted by Jim Jagielski on Tuesday, October 17. 2006 in Junk Drawer

My Quad G5 just arrived, so I know what I'll be doing tomorrow. Thank You Apple for firewire Target Mode! Will make moving my stuff from the G4 to the G5 much easier.
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The gullible consumer

Posted by Jim Jagielski on Friday, September 29. 2006 in Junk Drawer

I have more than a passing interest in web hosting, but I am constantly amazed at what some web hosts try (and succeed) to get away with. What I really love are those mega web hosts that provide dozens of gigs of local storage, "unlimited" bandwidth and a whole laundry list of "technologies" provided with each account. Oh, yes, and the accounts are some incredibly low price like $5 a month. And when they describe their network center it's as if they were hosted in the US Pentagon; I especially like the ones that provide pictures which invariably show barbed wire fences and canine patrols. Yep, all for $5 a month. And yet, if you do just a tiny bit of research you see that on the areas that should make the most difference, they are almost amazingly out of date: super old versions of Apache (usually 1.3.25), PHP, OpenSSL, MySQL, etc... Where the rubber meets the road, they are incredibly incompetent. And yet, they are signing up people like it's going out of style. Just goes to show you; even though he never said it, P. T. Barnum was right.
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