Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Strange Weekend

Monday, October 13th, 2008

So this has been a bit of a strange long weekend for me. It’s the first long weekend in several years for which I’ve had absolutely nothing to do. Normally I’m away or (sadly) working for long weekends, but this one just snuck up on me, and I had nothing planned. (That might be why I posted such whiny drivel on Friday night, who knows?)

Eventually I decided to tackle a problem that had been dogging me for a few years. Back in 2001 or so, my friend Ray got paid for some work he’d done with some old Macs. He didn’t really want them so he sold me an old Bondi Blue G3 for a hundred bucks. As soon as I got it home I formatted the thing with Gentoo Linux and voilà, super cheap, super efficient file server.

It’s now 2008. That install of Gentoo was long in the tooth and entirely impossible to upgrade and, to be honest, I really didn’t want to deal with Gentoo’s maintenance crap ever again, so I went on the hunt for a new, easy to maintain PPC Linux distribution.

My first thought was Ubuntu, because I’ve been so happy with their x86 distribution, but I remembered that they’d dropped PPC support so I decided to look at OpenSUSE, because they still offer a supported version of PPC Linux. They don’t have a live cd, though, and my G3 only has a cd drive, so that was a bust.

Next I tried Fedora 9. Since I have a really fast net conection I tried the net install. Fedora 9 didn’t like something in the video setup if my Mac – it refused to fire up X11 - but I figured I’d do a text mode install and configure X myself afterwards. Something like 14 hours later, I had an install of Fedora 9 that wouldn’t boot. It just cycled between stage 1 bootstrap and stage 2 bootstrap. Here’s where I reveal to the world that I’m capable of shocking stupidity: I downloaded all 7 cd images for a full install of Fedora 9 and tried again. Same result. More shocking stupidity: I tried the Fedora 8 live cd. That was actually worse than Fedora 9! The live cd successfully brought up X11, but the machine ran slower than I’d have ever imagined possible – we’re talking minutes between mouse clicks and reaction. If the mouse cursor didn’t respond to mouse motion I’d have thought the machine had locked. Worse, the install program locked hard halfway through the install – right at the drive partition stage.

In desperation, I hit up Google for PPC Linux recommendations and found a community port of Ubuntu 8.04.1 [face palm]. Why the Hell didn’t I just look for that in the first place? Less than two hours after burning the live cd I had, once again, a fully functional G3 running Linux.

The second stage of the weekend quest was to get a UPNP server running so I could stream music to my PS3. (My receiver has an all channel stereo mode that makes listening to music a totally club-like experience – much better than listening from the computer.) I started off with MediaTomb, which seemed to be utterly perfect. It worked exactly the way it claimed to … with a small subset of my music collection. Attempting to import the whole collection resulted in MediaTomb segfaulting. Every subsequent attempt to restart yielded a segfault within 10s. Also, importing into the DB took ages. So, back to the drawing board. Next candidate: GMediaServer. This started off well – simple install, rapid startup, and every file showed up on the PS3 in the media browser. Of course, it couldn’t be that easy. Every file came up as unsupported media. They’d all played when served by MediaTomb, so I decided to blame GMediaServer.

Next up: uShare. Just as easy to set up as GMediaServer, and it worked perfectly on a small subset of my library. Importing the whole library, though, caused uShare to crash. At this point I’m figuring I have some data that neither uShare nor MediaTomb cares for – if I’d realized this earlier I probably would have stick with MediaTomb, but now I’m going to stay with uShare for its simplicity. I need to figure out where the broken data is, but that shouldn’t be too hard, but it will be tedious; I’ve got a couple of hundred gigs of music that I’ve bought or ripped over the years. Yay, something to occupy my evenings for the next week. :/

Maudlin

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Today started off like any other day, and up until 8pm or so it really was. For some reason I can’t grasp, though, I’ve been feeling maudlin all evening. I don’t know what’s going on in my own head sometimes. I think it may be the fact that all my friends seem to have moved onto the Next Stage of their lives – bought houses, got married, had kids, whatever – while I feel like I’m stuck in a rut. I’m feeling kind of like I’ve been doing the same thing in different places for over a decade. And I don’t mean work; I love what I do and wouldn’t change anything in that regard. No, it’s really my life outside of work. For a long time I’ve been letting it pass me by, and I’m so set in my ways that I don’t even know how to shake things up any more.

God, when did I turn into such an emo prat?

Oh yeah!

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

The very first review for the PSP version of n+ (the game I just finished working on) is up. Now, I’d never heard of GamingBits before, so take the review as you will, but it’s nice to see that all the pain and overtime is meeting with positive feedback. n+ for Sony PSP and Nintendo DS hits the stores on August 12th.

Edit: The street date for n+ is actually August 26th.

HAHAHAHAHAHA

Monday, July 21st, 2008

I just saw a TV ad for the new Def Leppard album, and I haven’t laughed so hard in ages. The big draw, the “featuring” line on the ad? “Featuring country superstar Tim McGraw!”

HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

One of the biggest hair metal bands of the 1980s is reduced to having a COUNTRY singer do a cameo to sell their album!

DAMN IT!

Sunday, June 1st, 2008

ARGH! The right hinge on my DS Lite broke. There goes 130 bucks, ‘cuz I really can’t live without one.

Capcomedy

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Anyone who bought Okami for Wii doubtlessly noticed the horrid cover – marred with a baked in “9.5 from Play Magazine!” review blob on the front, and an IGN watermark on the image. Capcom has heard the cries and is, I bet, justifiably embarrassed. Enough so that they’re offering replacement covers for the game. I like them all and wish I could have all three, but I’ll settle for the first one – it’s so nice I might just hang it on my wall instead of slipping inside the Okami case.

A little less magic…

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

Science fiction trailblazer Arthur C. Clarke has died. Despite my mixed feelings about many of his books, Mr. Clarke will always have a place in my heart for saying “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” Such tremendous insight in so few words.

Pathetic

Saturday, July 21st, 2007

Is it just me, or is the fauxhawk the lamest form of “rebellion” ever? I keep seeing kids wearing their hair in fauxhawks, and I think it’s the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever seen. I’m going to sound like a crusty old man here, but I remember the mohawk being about rebellion – you know, make yourself look thoroughly unorthodox and place yourself outside of normal society. Furthermore, shaving the best part of your head meant there was no way out, short of shaving your head bald (which was also a fairly rebellious thing to do – far more so 20 years ago than it is now). The fauxhawk, though, is a joke – there’s no commitment involved. It’s spray-on rebellion. Maybe it’s just me, but I think I’d rather look stupid than look gutless.

Best. Video. Ever.

Wednesday, January 17th, 2007

Monkey Farm Frankenstein vs. The Evil Dead – this is a work of staggering genius.



(thanks, jwz!)

A Sad Day

Thursday, January 11th, 2007

Robert Anton Wilson died today. It’s been years since I’ve read the Illuminatus trilogy, I think I must go reread it.