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  • Kitty Help!

    My friend Ellen just got a new kitty and is looking for any advice people can offer. Drop her a line if you’ve got any recommendations.

    News news and more…um…news.

    …Now, on a totally different front, we got a kitty cat for Katie’s birthday! Our first cat, so advice from cat owners is appreciated until I get tired of you all. 😉 Here’s a bunch of bad pictures, but at least a start. [Lumpy Gravy]

    Update: Had to fix some links. Oops.

  • IT Department in a Box

    I like the idea of this a lot. It would be so handy to have a CD I could bring with me for setting up a machine with this stuff in one step.

    Commentary: Project Idea: “IT Department In A Box”

    It’s dawned on me that a great many small sites (and possibly big sites too) would be greatly helped if someone made a single box that included:

    • RequestTracker
    • Some kind of up/down monitoring system like Nagios or BigBrother
    • Some kind of capacity planning monitor like Cricket or MRTG
    • TWiki or other Wiki, with a pre-built set of pages
    • A serial console system like Conserver.com
    • Bacula or other free backup system

    While none of those are difficult to install for an experienced Linux person, the goal would be a system that the common “Mr. Fixit” kind of sysadmin that serves small sites would be able to load a CD-ROM and have the entire machine working very quickly. Each application would be pre-installed, and pre-customized. For example, the install procedure would ask for the IP address of a few key servers, and Nagios would default to monitoring it. The Wiki would have pre-configured pages that include add/remove/change procedures the above items (how to add/remove/change a server that Nagios monitors, add/remove/change a file system that Bacula is backing up, etc.). [Everything Sysadmin]<./p>

    The thing I’d add to this is that the whole thing would come with a good set of docs on paper on how to use everything. While you can always go and print something like that off. I just like the feel of a real book for docs at times (I hate reading things on screen). I’d also even expand this idea some. How about a series of CDs for different purposes (firewall?). Tools like this would be really handy for people who are maybe doing part time sysadmin work for a small company (and as the post says, even big ones).

  • Echos of Childhood

    I had this game as a kid and loved it. It’s one of those things that I wish was still floating around my parent’s house somewhere. But here’s a flash version of it. Now they need to make it networked and I’ll be in heaven. Oh yeah, and it’s loud.

    dark tower

    Flash Fun: Dark Tower

    It’s flash! It’s fun! It’s a game. Dark Tower.

    I actually have no idea what is going on in this game at all. At least, I didn’t until I read the help a little bit. Oops. I liked all the noises and such, though, and I’m sure someone that got more sleep last night than me will like this game quite a bit! I would make up a better description, but I started a new job today and am sort of out of words at the moment. (I mean, there’s only so many times one can say “Hi. Nice to meet you!” without completely losing some conversational power for the day. And trust me, I said it quite a bit. And I only remember approximately three names.) [#!/usr/bin/girl]

  • AAAAAAAAAAA

    Someone stole The Scream.

    scream

    Scream stolen from Norway museum

    Armed robbers have stolen the iconic Edvard Munch painting, The Scream, from the Munch Museum in Norway.

    Two masked thieves pulled the work and another painting, Madonna, off the wall as stunned visitors watched.

    One robber threatened staff with a gun before the pair escaped in a waiting car, a museum officer told the BBC.

    The Munch Museum says the two stolen paintings were among its most valuable – worth an estimated $19m together, according to the BBC’s Lars Bevanger. [BBC News]

  • Using Google as a Research Tool

    A LiveJournal user has used Google to figure out some stats about LJ users.

    21% of people who hate their lives use Livejournal
    [via
    [Waxy.org Links]

  • Insane Flash Game

    From over at Waxy.org Links, one of the more maddening flash games I’ve ever tried.

    Flash: The Invisibility Game
    don’t miss the ending to level 12 [via
    [Waxy.org Links]

  • Mac Office 2004 NitPick

    I’ve been trying out the trial version of Office 2004 for the Mac (and should have a real copy of it on the way very soon now). I have to say Microsoft has really done some cool things here. The project manager in Entourage rocks. It’s the kind of thing that would be insanely useful to my ADDness. But there are a few things about it that I have to rant about. The first is that some kind of syncing between Entourage and Apple Address Book isn’t in there. I read a nice post on this over at blogs.msdn.com by Dan Crevier that explains the reasoning, but it still annoys me. Thankfully there’s a nice shareware app out there that does it called Sync Entourage – Address Book by Paul Berkowitz.

    My next nitpick is one that I have with a few apps on OS X. In text fields, Cocoa uses emacs control characters for navigation. ^n, ^p, ^a, etc. Even ^k/^y. It’s very handy for those of us who sometimes use those out of habit. The problem with Entourage is that it doesn’t use these, and in fact those commands do other things altogether. I’d love to have a preference setting to turn that on if I wanted. I just find them much easier to use than the arrow keys. From a typing standpoint it doesn’t require me to move my hand to another position at all.

    Once I have the full version of Office I’ll write up a bit more of a review, but so far it’s pretty damn slick.

  • More On The Cult of Mac

    John Dodds of the Independent writes the first of two articles about switching from Windows to Mac. He’s got some good to say, and some bad. The good:

    A different issue emerged in setting up my Wi-Fi connection. (Apple calls it Airport). The absence of a confirmation message left me thinking I’d done something wrong, but all I needed was to unplug the Ethernet link: it switched over automatically. I had expected a Windows-style confirmation of success, but Apples don’t prompt you when something’s gone right, such as plugging in a disk or setting up a wireless router. They just silently incorporate it. That’s a major difference in approach: Windows thinks it’s a surprise worth telling you about when something works. Apple doesn’t.

    And some of the bad.

    Also, when working with multiple windows it is sometimes difficult to find what you want, and the thinness of the side sliders of any window demands very accurate cursor control. I have often found myself working on the wrong documents or applications because they were already open or lying dormant on the desktop beneath.

    Other annoyances include trying to get both time and date displayed, and the single-button mouse – no doubt there’s an internal Apple logic, but it’s still irksome. Much more annoying is the lack of a forward delete key. You can use a combination of keys, but I’ve still deleted the wrong text many times. Also, files downloaded from the web are all dropped into a separate folder, rather than one you specify. But these are minor quibbles. [The Independent] [via MacMerc]

    I definitely agree with him on the mouse. It still kind of blows my mind that Apple doesn’t use other mice. Almost everyone I know has bought a wheel mouse for their mac. I even have one that I use on my laptop when I’m at my desk. I’m curious to hear what hear what else he’ll have to say in the second article.

  • Damn Those Cobblestick Shuttlerunners

    Adam Felber gives us a transcript of an obscure event from the olympics. Here’s a snip of the beginning.

    Olympic Transcript [Obscure Event Edition]

    TOM: Welcome back, and we’re just in time for the 800 meter sideways cobblestick shuttlerun. With me, I have 1976 bronze medalist, Lucy Pinker. Lucy, what are we looking for today?

    LUCY: Well, Tom, Hungary’s Bidrai Malouva is the favorite in this event, having taken gold in Sydney.

    TOM: He’s more machine than man!

    LUCY: Uh, well, sure…

    TOM: But don’t count out the plucky American, Morgan Hurren. He gave Malouva a real run for his money in Sydney, finishing a very close 7th, and he’s been training exceptionally hard for this year’s games.

    [Cut to exciting video package about Hurren and his various trials and tribulations as he trained to rival the preeminent sideways cobblestick shuttlerunner in the world. Morgan turns out to be a startlingly down-to-earth kid, and you get the sense that maybe, just maybe, he’s got a shot here. He’s plucky.]

    TOM: And there he is, the Kansas kid who has the whole cobblestick shuttlerun world abuzz. [Fanatical Apathy]

  • I’m really not sure what I think of this

    #!/usr/bin/girl once again alerts me to important news:

    Freddy and Jason…and?
    I’m not sure if I want to laugh or cry about Freddy vs. Jason vs…Ash.
    [#!/usr/bin/girl]

    My personal feeling? I will only allow this if Ash gets to kill them off for good. Or at least send them out to another dimension or something.