16Jul08
posted by jpf
1 comment
outdoors
Spike has finally given up the ghost and had to be retired. 15 years of service and 3 replacements later, my Karrimor Spike 20ltr rucksac has outlived it’s usefulness, so I’ve swapped it for one of these. Little bit smaller than the previous at 15ltr, but with the modern lightweight gear you don’t need as much room any way. Plus it’s got built in water, not exactly a new innovation I know, but it’s new to me…
The scalpel will be out later as I trim various bits of tat off, redundant labels, unnecessary grab handles and that perennial annoyance of new bags of mine, stupidly long zip pulls. All my bags go thru this process shortly after purchase, not because I’m trying to lighten them, I just hate stuff flapping around in the breeze.
The only other niggle I’ve got with it so far is the bladder is a bit rustly, but that can probably be cured with the purchase of a non rustly version. The only problem with replacing the Spike is it’s made me realise that my aging Osprey Eclipse 32, which was always more of an alpine sports bag, could do with swapping out as well. Could get expensive…
24Apr08
posted by admin
no comments
successes
The combination of using a touch typing tutor and filing the letters off my keyboard must be doing something… According to Stamina I’m now regularly hitting over 200cpm (which is about 40wpm, but 200 sounds much better than 40…)
Other benefits include being able to type in the dark with the lights off, and with my eyes closed. Don’t ask me what use that is, I just can, OK? Quite impressive for just a grand total of 5 hours spent in the tutor I thought…
So you’ll be happy to hear that it means that I’ll be able to churn out this stuff even faster than ever. Yippee!
22Apr08
posted by jpf
no comments
observations
Just noticed a huge leap in the Quantcast ratings, from around 8 million to under 3 million. That means I’ve improved my ranking over 5 million places in a week or so. And that’s all based on your visits to the site, well done you…
Unfortunately this comes on the back of a slight dip in the number of people visiting the site, obviously not enough compelling content at this stage. Must try harder…
20Apr08
posted by jpf
no comments
software
successes
I gave up in the end and knuckled down to some serious tinkering. Found a spare hard disk and loaded up Ubuntu 6.10 linux onto it to see if I could get my music program functioning again.
After updating the whole system over the internet, a mere 1Gb (!) download and a few hours of tinkering later and it lives again! Hoorah! I’m so happy, I’ve got one of the few useful things I’ve ever written up and running again.
Of course nothing is ever that simple round here, that was purely a test… Now I have the fun task of repeating the installation on a headless box with no optical drive attached. Think I’ll wait until I acquire a more up to date disc with Ubuntu on, don’t fancy that monster download again.
Other than that, I was quite impressed with Ubuntu, still not a fan of the Gnome desktop, I’ve always prefered KDE, but the system itself is a breeze to use. I could be converted.
16Apr08
posted by jpf
no comments
disasters
insanity
software
This is driving me insane. About three years ago I wrote a perl script to manage my music collection. Then, after updating Mandrake (as it was back then) it broke. Try as I might to fix the perl installation, grabbing all the modules that made it work, still resulted in a non functioning script.
It’s beginning to piss me off now. I’m even tempted to port the whole thing to another language in order to get it working again. Or changing the distro of the box it used to run on. Neither of which have any guarantee of success.
What’s more annoying than not having access to the dirty little hack I put together, is not having the skills to get it working again. Cue much wailing and gnashing of teeth…