My nice-but-cumbersome lapdog decided some time ago that
being asked to suspend is insulting or something, and now goes catatonic
instead: the suspend works fine, but absolutelly nothing, ever, wakes
it up again.
"Roses are red and my SO-DIMMs still hot,
you asked me to sleep but I'll let you rot."
A lot of debugging (and swearing) later, I now know that the
culprit (at least for kernel 2.6.35.14) is the module lpc_sch, which
isn't needed for normal operations anyway. blam!
Bye-bye, module.
[ published on Wed 30.05.2012 21:19
| filed in
interests/debian
|
]
Wikipedia is lovely. Today I learned that Kurt Gödel
(a pretty well-known mathematical genius) also was a paranoiac and
starved to death while his wife was hospitalized because he refused
to eat anything not prepared by her.
[ published on Mon 21.05.2012 22:46
| filed in
interests/humour
|
]
For some reason I simply love to RTFM, if the M(anual) really is F(ine).
This collection of locomotive manuals is an especially lovely trove of interesting
(but essentially useless, to me) information.
For example, the service manual for 7FDL diesels lists all kinds of things that you need a pry
bar for on this engine, like speeding up the engine (beyond the governor's
limits).
Even cooler, though, are two-stroke diesels. Have a look at this
clip of an EMD 645 starting up. A cold start and with the exhaust manifold disconnected,
to me this thing sounds very much like a cat purring once warmed up.
According to the manual that would be a 2300+ hp, 13 ton cat...
Plus, an engine where you need a hoist to lift a single piston must be good.
Should reincarnation really be an option, then I'd like to deposit that
I want to come back as a diesel engineer next time round :-)
[ published on Wed 16.05.2012 11:39
| filed in
brainfarts
|
]
Conny completed her pre-learners rider training in Kingscliff
this weekend and in a few days she'll be old enough to take her
theoretical exam (=16 years and 9 months). After that she can
ride the Ninja by herself (in NSW) or with somebody with an open
licence accompanying her (in QLD).
That's the bike she is sharing with her mum (for now, I suppose),
a 2011 Kawasaki Ninja 250.
[ published on Tue 15.05.2012 11:09
| filed in
brainfarts
|
]
I thoroughly detest udev: large, ugly, inflexible, disgusting,
recently started to insist on DEVTMPFS and /usr being on / (or having
an initramdisk, neither of which I accept) and so on.
For the few situations where there are dynamic changes on my boxes (e.g.
usb sticks, radio killswitch and so on) I've made do with hotplug until now, but that set of shell scripts has simply grown
too annoying to maintain. But recently I found out about mdev, a small
component of busybox, and I took
to it instantly.
Mdev was designed to be a micro-udev for all kinds of embedded systems where
busybox is playing the vital role of providing most (if not all) classic
unix tools.
To me mdev is the embodiment of the unix mindset: do one thing, and do it well.
And that's what it does: if given the -s
switch, it trawls
/sys
for things that look like devices and creates them in
/dev
. When run without args as hotplug helper, it creates the
device the kernel tells it about, or loads firmware if that's asked for,
or removes a device if the kernel says it is going away.
These operations are adjustable via a straightforward, simple configuration
file which also lets you tell it to run commands of your choice (and load
modules), and that's all there is to it. mdev consists of about 650
lines of C, and it works very well.
What it is/was lacking, is support for kernel uevents with action=change,
which some subsystems use (e.g. the rfkill subsystem signals changes to
any radio kill switches that way). So I wrote
this tiny patch to add that capability (I
hope upstream includes it in the next version of busybox), and mdev now
runs *-tagged commands on add, remove and change.
The other lacking thing is documentation - in the debian packages, that is.
mdev is decently explained in docs/mdev.txt
and examples/mdev*.conf
in the source tarball, but the
debian maintainer chose not to ship any of that. I'd recommend getting and
reading those documents first if you ponder playing with mdev.
So, to help others along a bit, here is my own setup as an example:
I do have a few extra bits and pieces (e.g. startup scripts, small
rfkill and bluetooth agents), but they're somewhat idiosyncratic and
likely not very useful to others (but just ask if you do want them).
[ published on Mon 07.05.2012 21:23
| filed in
interests/debian
|
]
- Socialism:
- You have 2 cows. You give one to your neighbour.
- Communism:
- You have 2 cows. The state takes both and gives you some milk.
- Fascism:
- You have 2 cows. The state takes both and sells you some milk.
- Nazism:
- You have 2 cows. The state takes both and shoots you.
- Bureaucratism:
- You have 2 cows. The state takes both, shoots one,
milks the other and then throws the milk away.
- Traditional Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. You sell one and buy a bull. Your herd multiples and
the economy grows. You sell them and retire on the income.
- American Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. You sell one, and force the other to produce the milk
of four cows. Later, you hire a consultant to analyse why the cow
has dropped dead.
- Enron Venture Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. You sell 3 of them to your publicly listed company using
letters of credit opened by your brother-in-law at the bank, then execute
a debt/equity swap with an associated general offer so that you get all four
cows back, with tax exemption for five cows. The milk rights of the six cows
are transferred via an intermediary to a Cayman Island Company secretly
owned by the majority shareholder who sells the rights to all seven cows
back to your listed company. The annual report says the company owns eight
cows, with an option on one more. You sell one cow to buy a new president
of the United States, leaving you with nine cows. No balance sheet provided
with the release. The public then buys your bull.
- Accenture Model Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. You shred them.
- French Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. You go on strike, organise a riot and block the roads
because you want 3 cows.
- Japanese Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. You redesign them so they are 1/10 the size of an ordinary
cow and produce twenty times the milk. You then create a clever cow cartoon
image called "Cowkimon" and market it worldwide.
- German Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. You re-engineer them so they live for 100 years,
eat once a month and milk themselves.
- Italian Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows, but you don't know where they are. You decide to have lunch.
- Russian Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. You count them and learn that you have 5 cows. You count
again and learn you have 42 cows. You count again and learn you
have 2 cows. You open another bottle of vodka.
- Swiss Capitalism:
- You have 5000 cows. None of them belong to you. You charge the owners
for storing them.
- Chinese Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. You have 300 people milking them. You claim that you
have a full employment and and high bovine productivity. You arrest
the journalist who reports otherwise.
- Indian Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. You worship them.
- British Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. Both are mad.
- Iraqi Capitalism:
- Everyone thinks you have many cows. You tell them you have none but
they don't believe you and bomb the shit out of your farm. You still
have no cows, but at least you are part of a democracy.
- New Zealand Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. The one on the left is looking pretty sexy...
- Australian Capitalism:
- You have 2 cows. Business seems good. You close the office and go for
a few celebratory beers.
[ published on Wed 02.05.2012 21:48
| filed in
interests/humour
|
]
[ published on Sat 21.04.2012 20:26
| filed in
interests/humour
|
]
And here we go again: behind closed doors They are negotiating the
rules of TPP, the Trans Pacific Partnership=next-generation ACTA.
Then there is, of course, the new CISPA bill (=SOPA/PIPA regurgitated and made worse).
And there is Austri^WAbsurdistan's VDS (= preemptive wholesale surveillance of the whole
population).
Repeat ad nauseam.
Looks like humanity needs more Tor relays (and bridges), more services like
Tor Mail, DDG (with its Tor hidden service), and ideas like the
Telex Project - oh, and would somebody
please cook up some gene-engineered plague that takes
out politicians? Those pests are really annoying...
[ published on Thu 12.04.2012 01:56
| filed in
interests/anti
|
]
possibly educated but precisely zero practical relevance.
i'm serious - which of the above would you consider to be practically
useful bits of knowledge and which not?
('impact the course of history'?!?....bwuahahaa)
source: pleated-jeans
[ published on Fri 06.04.2012 01:25
| filed in
interests/humour
|
]
There are people who pull off pretty amazing stunts, like getting
lost for three days/four nights in a fairly small national park just
inland from the Gold Coast.
Somehow I can see only one explanation: she must have been wearing her bikini
over her eyes :-)
[ published on Sun 18.03.2012 17:03
| filed in
interests/au
|
]
that's the way i read this company name:
'your health and safety is unintentional and purely accidental, as you
wouldn't need to buy our services if you were safe and healthy.'
[ published on Sun 18.03.2012 15:03
| filed in
interests/humour
|
]
Recently I had to get a replacement music player (primarily for walking
and cycling), and I settled on a cheap secondhand Sansa Clip+.
When I'm on my bicycle I want to
have the player out of the way, under my shirt - it's on random anyway,
and I never look at it. But I sweat a lot, and the clip+ has some
unprotected openings (a mini-usb socket and a micro-sd slot).
My solution: cut a finger from a rubber glove and, well, roll it on :-)
And now for some Totally Unimportant Facts: The
French wikipedia page on condoms has substantially more instructional pictures
than the german
or english ones.
the german page at least prominently links to usage instructions on wikibooks.
[ published on Sun 18.03.2012 15:01
| filed in
brainfarts
|
]
I've been asked if I could update my growatt inverter status reader
to also upload the live data to pvoutput.org
for graphing and trend analysis.
This being perl it's a simple modification; here is
the new version of read-growatt which does the submission
if you hand it your pvoutput site id and api key. It also displays the
readings in a slightly more human-friendly format.
[ published on Wed 14.03.2012 14:11
| filed in
mystuff
|
]
(pic snarfed from the demotivator company)
Researchers have found that going to meetings makes people stupid.
(The whole paper can be found here - a candidate for an IG Nobel
Price?)
If only the apparatchiks in my place of ork knew that - or even better,
read this Harvard Business review article...
[ published on Fri 02.03.2012 23:53
| filed in
interests/humour
|
]
One of the nasty coercive laws of the last few years has just taken a beating:
A Yank federal appeals court has ruled that
being forced to decrypt your stuff
is unconstitutional. Good for the J. Doe
in question, who relied on TrueCrypt
which is a pretty nice tool (open-source - but badly licenced, multi-platform,
and it does plausible deniability).
The actual text of the ruling is also pretty interesting in its argumentation.
Now if only the powers that be in this place would scrap the
Cybercrime Act 2001 No. 161, items 12 and 28...
[ published on Fri 02.03.2012 23:24
| filed in
interests/anti
|
]
Last week Aldi OZ had an especially odd item on special:
blood stain removers, 8 units per pack.
Just how did I survive for 39 years without such highly crucial, essential
stuff that you need every single day?
(Maybe it's because I have a spade. Then, maybe not.)
[ published on Tue 31.01.2012 23:02
| filed in
interests/au
|
]
Nope - I'm in the wrong movie...or more likely: I work for the wrong
gang.
Maybe they 'award' us these things so as to properly weigh us down
here in the trenches, to make sure that no dreams or hopes escape
and fly away.
Well then, back to work in my usual 'first week of the semester'
work clothing...
[ published on Tue 24.01.2012 20:55
| filed in
interests/anti
|
]
newer...
older...