Untitled

January 5th, 2009
by ian

The proverbial bird has been released
And the missing has since begun…
I pass by her street and all I can sense is my missing her even more.

I hope all the bards were correct in their assertion that the bird to whom I gave my heart might perchance return.
Soundtracks are best played to a great Hollywood production: to the one you cherish the most.

As for all the things I have told her, all I know is that they will somehow always be true.
Even though the sun orbits light years away from my perch on Earth, I still manage to feel her warmth;
but truth be told, I would much rather burn up with her than barely float alone.

Ah, to be blinded by the lights of a picture show;
the pleasure of wanting to see more and more…

Alas, I hope I will be able to once again.

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A Prime Example of Patriotism…

September 21st, 2008
by ian

I will admit that I am somewhat of an anglophile… I love many things about Great Britain: its food, traditions, military history, and to an extent its politics.  I have always wanted to go during the summer to attend the Last Night of the Proms and be part of the massive audience enjoying and perhaps even singing along with the BBC Orchestra and Chorus…

Anyhow, today I was looking for music to listen to while I was working on my latest venture when all of a sudden I bumped into this golden nugget:

Isn’t it amazing how the fervour of the audience is transmitted through the video?  The beauty of it is that I assure you that there are all sorts of people there with there different views on a plethora of issues, yet they still get together and sing… It’s beautiful!  And Sir Roger Norrington is on point about what music is.  It’s why I joined a musical fraternity; its why I had little reservations about joining a marching band at age 27.  Music is a universal language and truly the greatest of the arts.  That sounds awfully familiar…

There’s nothing like an organ surge on the last musical phrases of a wonderful piece!  I always wanted to see a graduation here in the States where the complete last portion of Pomp and Circumstances

Just in case you enjoyed Elgar’s Pomp and Circumstance, here’s the rest of that final segment of the Last Night of the Proms, 2008.

Who knows, perhaps the BBC might still have a fighting chance as the jewel of culture I remember it being ages ago :)
Rule Brittania! (Bryn Terfel was especially awesome singing in Welsh!)

God Save the Queen!

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Returning to the Haberdasher

September 15th, 2008
by ian

I am a big fan of the open source community. I’ve been enthusiastic about its growth and implementation in the real world since 1995 when two acquaintances invited me to check out a tradeshow at a convention center in Panama (where I was living at the time). At the show, I saw a lot of stuff that I was already playing with, primarily networking technologies, Novell Netware services, and some great gaming hardware when all of a sudden we bumped into a stand for GNU-Linux. I had heard about *nix, and in particular, Slackware, which a former co-worker had been fiddling around with (he had arrived from the States when I met him at PCC, so he had an advantage over me when it came to having the coolest and newest geek toys…) That day I purchased my first copy of a Linux Distribution, and yes, it was Slackware. I tried to install it on my kick ass Packard (B|H)ell 486 and well, I had some struggles, but I got it to work, but there wasn’t much I could do, and since I really had to focus on other stuff like, work and my IT chores at home, my initial dabblings in Slackware were limited. Yes, parents do take advantage of us geeks, don’t they… It’s okay, dad… Honest!

A year and a half later, I moved to Miami and one of the first things I did after I set up my bedroom and rebuilt my PC (because I had shipped it disassembled for fear of damage) was to go check out CompUSA (for the first time ever) and buy a copy of book on Red Hat 5, which included two discs with the (in)famous fedora on their covers. By that time I had two hard discs and I had purchased a better motherboard for my computer so I could choose which boot device I wanted to use without messing with boot.ini or whatever boot manager RH5 had back then. It was a more pleasant experience, and for a while, I’d experiment with it, and leave all the heavy work to Windows 95.

The years passed, and before you knew it, I needed storage space for my MP3s. Good bye, RH5; hello fdisk.

Since then, and until 2003, I had pretty much lived a Microsoft life. I played with Windows NT, Windows 2000, and finally Windows XP. I thank God till this day that I was flat broke to buy Windows ME (snicker snicker snicker). And then one day, the bug bit me again. This time it hit me with a tornado. Since that moment, I started spending a lot more time with the Debian distribution, and I enjoyed almost every moment of it. The only times I cringed was when I wanted to make a device work and well, I’d have to find a way to do it… A little frustrating at first, but I learned to like it and now its one of my favorite things to do if it crawls up to me unannounced. At work, I’d implement a Fedora based solution for both our client laptops and servers, just to make sure I could “keep my hat on”, so to speak… That, and well, FIU had a mirror available within its network :D
Then came this friendly Debian fork called “Ubuntu”. I started playing with Hoary Hedgehog (5.04) and I fell in love with it. I actually almost succeeded in converting one of my best friends to it until she decided that she really didn’t have the time to check it out. She’s still a geek tho, event her official job description calls her a Chorus Director . Wassup, Lupita!

Two jobs later, I was still preferring Ubuntu for my Linux needs, and to an extent I still do; but after having to use a Mac every day for web development/design and publishing, I decided earlier this year to get a Mac. I’m glad someone over in Cupertino had the vision to scrap System 9 and start with a solid *nix foundation, even if its BSD. I got my Mac about 2 weeks ago, and boy was I impressed. I didn’t’ buy the latest or greatest, but I did buy a barely-used, awesome Intel iMac from a friend (which made it even better because I’d rather help him than a company make ends meet - not that there’s anything wrong with capitalism ;) )

What does this have to do with haberdashery? Lots,  in a non-vestment kind of way.

Since I started at my new job, I decided to grow with the experience… I’m currently studying for my Linux Professional certification, and while we’re an open source shop at work… a RH enterprise shop to be exact. Sure, I’m familiar with RPMs and how RH folks prefers to launch things with service daemon [start|stop|status|whatever] versus /etc/init.d/daemon [start|stop|status|whatever] and how there’s always the yum versus apt-get debate. I live in the best of both worlds: I build mission critical daemons. Binaries are okay, but sometimes you want that extra “ummph”.

Two weekends ago, I decided to backup my /home folders and install CentOS on boh, my AMD x64_86. The hat is now back on. It was an interesting experiment… I settled initially on CentOS 4.6 because that was the version we were using at the office, but a few days later, after it took me about 2 hours to get my nvidia on board Ethernet adapter to work, I installed CentOS 5.2. So far, so great. I finished building my development server (on boh) for my various web projects… On Saturday, I finally implemented bind for localized DNS… happiness! As Moni would say, “gosh, you’re a geek”. Yes I am.

As for Ubuntu: it hasn’t gone too far, yet. I use Sun’s VirtualBox on my Mac to run things I can only find in the Linux world.

If I had to recommend a Linux-based end-user desktop solution to a bunch of people right now, I’d defer immediately to Ubuntu. The fact alone that Mark Shuttleworth is about to fund the further development of Linux into the mainstream, makes it even more well-positioned for it to become a standard. As for servers, yes, you can (and should) use Debian or Ubuntu Server Edition… But CentOS isn’t such a bad option either, and its starting to grow on me.

Wow, time flies, its been 13 years already, but it never gets tiring :)

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The nth time is the charm…

September 3rd, 2008
by ian

Okay, yet again I’ve decided to reboot the blog.  The last time I posted on it, unkonventional was leasing its hosting assets with a certain provider, I was working in Coral Gables, and life was okay…

Four Five months later, some things haven’t changed (much);  I still do web development for a living and I can’t seem to get away from good music, great movies, and whatnot.  Other things have;  obviously I’ve moved unkonventional to a great hosting provider, I now work in Doral, my phone has changed, and I’ve become more aggressive about managing my hypertension.  Whatelse?  I still love GNU-Linux, but I’ve decided to let it take charge of my servers;  my workstation is (as of last night) a kickass iMac.  I still pinch myself at the thought that I wouldn’t have even caught myself thinking jokingly of regularly using — much less owning  — an Apple computer.  Oh the wonders of the *nix world.

Anyhow, there are things I do want to blog about… I’m excited about many things, personal, professional, and political (the three “Ps”, go figure…)  I’ll add more later, but for now, I better get back to setting up my workstation and finalizing this blog.

ian!

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