Monday, August 4, 2008

Debian Testing... only with LXDE...

I feel like wiping my Suse partition... KDE4.1 is better than  thought, but still too "heavy" for my taste... 

I feel like (once again) performing a minimal Debian Testing install (32bit of course, despite my amd64 cpu...).

-So what would be the difference ??? I already wrote about that some time ago...

This time, I read here: http://debian-news.net/modules/news/article.php?storyid=4526 that "LXDE has entered Lenny, thanks to Andrew Lee. It is a quite
lightweight desktop environment that is made with the Eee PC in mind."

I don't own an EeePC, but I feel like experimenting with LXDE, and comparing it to a barebone Fluxbox install...

Also from the same blog, a goode news for me and my TVcard: "The
debian-kernel team was prompt to add atl1e to 2.6.26 which has just
been uploaded to sid. We hope 2.6.26 makes it into Lenny."

I have a dumb "Real Angel 330", which according to this site: http://www.linuxtv.org/v4lwiki/index.php/Powercolor_Real_Angel_330 "This board is supported on kernel 2.6.26 and above."

Let me tell you that I am resisting the urge to go for a Sid or Sidux experience, as I just don't feel at ease with Sid... I am more of a "Stable" kind of guy, willing to go to "Testing", when it is well-tested...

Gotta leave you guys, power just went off... will write about it later !

Saturday, August 2, 2008

The Kill A Watt device... usefull... see it here:


Saving power while using your PC...

As some of you might know, I live in a touristic beach-town on the north-east shore of the Dominican Republic. The power company (Luz&Fuerza) is privately run, this is why we are escaping those long black-outs that are common elsewhere in the island.

Of course, there's a price tag to that. Our Kwh is very expensive. It costs us roughly 0.50 US$ per Kwh !

-So what do I do ?

I am one of those guys that enjoys having my PC on all the time. I turn it off at night, because it would be too expensive. I use the "power saving" feature that shuts down the monitor (lcd) after 6 mn of not touching the mouse.

Right now, I have a quad-boot: Ubuntu 8.04(with Gnome/OpenBox mainly), OpenSUSE 11.0 (with KDE4.1), Arch (with Fluxbox only) and Windows XP.

I bought a Kill-a-watt device (see it here: http://www.p3international.com/products/special/P4400/P4400-CE.html ). It is one of those things that you plug in the wall, then plugin your item, and it measures the amount of Watts, amps, and other things that your item sucks...

I was wondering if using a distro vs another one would make any difference... Or possibly a DE vs another one, or even a WM vs another one...

My experience is by no means anything close to scientific, but I now gets precise numbers thanks to the Kill A Watt device.

As you FLOSS people would have guessed, Windows XP is the one that sucks more juice, around 166 Watts.

Disclaimer: here's what's plugged in: a homemade desktop PC (MSI K9N Neo V3 motherboard, AMD Sempron cpu, 1 gig of ddr2 ram, a big 320 gigs sata hdd, a Dell LCD monitor 18" UltraSharp, an Omega 600 UPS, a Speedtouch adsl modem, a Buffalo wireless router, an 8 ports switch, and Labtec speakers). When I measure using the Kill A Watt, I have Pidgin, Skype, Firefox, and a web-radio playing.

So here is it: not only Windows XP (sp3 with Classic looks) is way slower than any Linux distros on that hardware, but it sucks 166 Watts.

Here comes a big fat juice sucking distro as well : OpenSUSE 11.0 with KDE4.1 ! It uses about the same amount that WinXP does, sometimes a bit more... I have seen the meter going to 168 Watts... Maybe the reason is that I had some desktop effects enabled, but the very minimum ones, not the cube or any woobling windows...

Our "middle-ground" contender would be Ubuntu with the Gnome/OpenBox interface... The meter was giving me around 162 or 164 Watts... I would not see it as a big difference...

Then here's our champion of the day: Arch Linux with Fluxbox only. I am using it right now, and the meter shows only 152 Watts. I would say thios is a significant difference.

-Why is that ?

It makes me wonder... Would it be because I performed one of those famous minimal install, with only relatively lightweight apps, such as PCManFM, Fluxbox, Aterm, ePDFview, Exaile, Firefox & Opera, Pidgin & Skype... ???

-Would a "netinst" of another distro performs just the same with the same choice of apps ?

Too bad I wiped my Debian Testing partition !!!

But for me, a difference of 15 Watts is important enough to take into consideration... 

That's it for mow, but this subject is a fundamental one for me, so feel free to post your insight on the "save a watt" distro...

Monday, July 28, 2008

A good sources.list for Debian Testing:

As of playing mp3's, installing Picasa, Flash, Opera, Skype, and codecs, here's my sources.list:

(you need to open a terminal, log in as toot, edit (with Leafpad or Gedit) /etc/apt/sources.list)

-My sources.list: 

#################### 
## Debian Testing ## 
#################### 
 
# Testing 
deb ftp://bigmirror.crossbowproject.net/pub/debian/ testing main contrib non-free  
deb-src ftp://bigmirror.crossbowproject.net/pub/debian/ testing main contrib non-free

 
#Testing Security updates 
deb http://security.debian.org/ testing/updates main contrib 
deb-src http://security.debian.org/ testing/updates main contrib 
 
#debian multimedia repository (http://lxer.com/module/forums/t/24283/) 
deb ftp://linorg.usp.br/debian-marillat/ testing main 
deb-src ftp://linorg.usp.br/debian-marillat/ testing main 
 
# Official site for latest version of skype. 
deb http://download.skype.com/linux/repos/debian/ stable non-free 
 
# Google picasa  
#(wget -q -O - https://dl-ssl.google.com/linux/linux_signing_key.pub | sudo apt-key add - ) 
# or (gpg --keyserver subkeys.pgp.net --recv A040830F7FAC5991 && gpg --export --armor A040830F7FAC5991 | sudo apt-key add - ) 
deb http://dl.google.com/linux/deb/ stable non-free 
 
### Opera Browser (http://deb.opera.com/) ### 
deb http://deb.opera.com/opera/ testing non-free 

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Back here....

Ok, I haven't been writing for over a month now... But those who know me can understand why. I moved !
I finally left downtown Las Terrenas, its dusty & noisy streets, for a paradise-like atmosphere in Playa Bonita...
Fantastic change, I am very happy with it ! (my family too...)
But I was busy setlling down, getting things to work in my new place, like having my ADSL internet transfered, for instance, and installing my workshop in a smaller space...
It's done now. Well, almost...
I shall be here more often, sharing thoughts, asking myself questions, or simply ranting, if it is not too wildly incorrect...

Monday, May 26, 2008

An "Arch-like" Debian Testing !

Well, I finally made my own cooking, thanks to all people whom advices I have read here and there in the world wide web...

I decided to keep my working Ubuntu Hardy and Arch partition, and use the 3rd partition available to setup a minimal install of Debian Testing, following this guide: http://www.debian-administration.org/articles/432

But I didn't install any GDM or XDM... Stciked to startx...

Only OpenBox (with PyPanel...)

Enjoyed reading this gentleman's choice of apps: http://kmandla.wordpress.com/software/

That gave me some good tips, so I installed Mirage (to view photos), ePDFView (instead of xPDF), Leafpad (instead of Mousepad)...

Aterm for a terminal, Exaile for music, radio & podcasts, Claws-mail, Emesene for MSN messenger Alsamixergui for sound control,  and for the rest, very classical apps such as Iceweasel, Opera, Skype, Abiword/Gnumeric, PCManFM, TVtime, Brasero, Transission, aMule, Picasa, Gimp...

I must say I am not yet very used to OpenBox (I have always used Fluxbox for lightweight...), but it seems a dynamic community of users, and I have been reading those guides: http://urukrama.wordpress.com/openbox-guide/ as well as the one from the Arch wiki...

Very informative !

Needless to say the PC boots in no time !!!

One thing, I kept a 32bit Debian, despite having this 64bit amd Sempron... I just don't want to mix any libs... I am on a 486 kernel, might upgrade to 686... Not sure yet...

So the whole concept of this install was to do it "the Arch way", but with a Debian Testing base, since it is my area of choice...

Of course, I will miss my good ol' Nautilus, but the whole point of that is not to install Gnome... And if I really need to connect to other PC's (which I will !), that mean I'll have to reboot into either Ubuntu or Arch :(

Or learn how to better handle ssh and smb without Nautilus... But I am so used to the easy gui thing... We'll see...

Thursday, May 22, 2008

bored... (but lots of swimming !!!)... Making my distros to go faster...

Ok, day off today, Corpus Cristi... Sunny days, went to the beach, and swam my @$$ off :)

Been arguing about Arch in the Ubuntu forum... (it's here: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=773260&page=3 ), and finally admited that it did boot faster indeed... So that made me want to improve my 'Buntu !

I read that guide: http://news.softpedia.com/news/Optimize-Ubuntu-Feisty-Fawn-for-Speed-53836.shtml

...and it worked... I gain (...only...) 8 seconds at boot time, but overall my Gnome desktop seems faster...

-Is it only a feeling ???

What else... I wiped Slackware for Sidux, but I still am not happy... I guess I am simply allergic to KDE... Or is it the overly complicated version of the apt-get system that disoriented me ?

I might stick some Slack derivative or maybe Mandriva... Don't know... But I'll stick to 32bit...

I know now: I would use a 64bit distro if I needed no 32bit apps... And I still need just one: Skype !

I just dislike mixing 64 & 32...

Bottom line, this Debianista here is still happy with his 'Buntu, despite all of what's online about it... I downloaded a snapshot of Debian Testing netinst i386, but I feel lazy...

I gotta swim more... much more !

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Strange impressions about Arch...

Ok, so I managed to instal Arch Linux on my main box... I now have a multi-boot with Ubuntu 8.04, Slackware 12.1 and Arch... All are 32 bit version, despite my cpu being a 64bit Sempron... So far I feel better with a 32bit distro...

So I made it... I basically followed the Arch Beginners Guide...

It wasn't that hard since the guide is well done. I understood that I had to set my eth0 to DHCP to connect. That was the mistake that stopped me last week, when I first tried... (and failed).

So now I have a nice Gnome desktop, with mostly exactly the same apps that I use in Debian and Ubuntu... I only changed 2 of my usual regulars: Thunderbird instead of Evolution, and Exaile instead of Rhythmbox... But that was only a fantasy...

It seems to work well... I must admit that I cheated for one thing during the install: Since my xorg.conf file didn't seem to give me the proper res' at my first gui boot, I booted back in Slackware, and copied my Slack's xorg.conf to Arch... Booted back to Arch, and it worked great ! That is one of the beauty of the multiboot...

Also I need to precise that each distro has its own /home partition... I didn't try to have them all share the same one... Easier...

But now, here comes my greatest impression: I don't really see any difference in speed between Arch, Slackware and Ubuntu ! Now, I must tell you that I have been performing any type of exact measure... But the "human" feeling is that they all "work" at the same rhythm...

Furthermore, I would say that (it seems to me...) Ubuntu boots much faster than both Slack & Arch... Strange... I was expecting a "Ferrari" after all those years reading comments on how fast Arch was...

At the end of the day, I am only a "soho user", but apart from the educational factor and the "rolling release" factor, I don't see the big advantage of using Arch over Debian (or Ubuntu)...

I will however keep both Arch & Slack partition and update them often, to see if I missed something, to learn more...

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

My feelings, after all...

Ok, it's only been 2 days with Slackware, but it keeps on being a "PITA"...

I mean, there's no internationalization! Apart from KDE, everything is in English, plain and simple !

I found some stuff in Italian, but that doesn't really help me, as I need French & Spanish...

Also, I managed to get my usb drives to "automount" following this guide:

http://www.mutaku.com/geeklog/article.php?story=20071218003749377

But it didn't help when I plugged in a friend's Ipod (I don't own any of those...).

Anyway, I just happened to boot back in Hardy, and everything looks nicer, more polished, easier... I am definitely one of those "lazy users", as I tend to enjoy when things "just work"...

I'll keep this Slackware partition, to keep on experimenting, and implementing tips that I am sure I will learn along the way, but I am such a Debianista, and tonight, I know why...

My next experiment will be with Arch (2nd try...)

It's Slack time again !

-So what happened to my Debian Talibanism ???

Nothing... Debian is still my fav' distro... But that doesn't mean I can multiboot to enjoy other distros...

My main desktop is now multibooting Ubuntu 8.04 (works fine for me) and Slackware 12.1 (the new one).

I am mainly a Gnome guy, used to apt-get... So it feels really exotic to boot into KDE (3.5.9), in a Slackware environment...

I can't believe I only found out about "xorgsetup" now... I tried Slackware often, and always complained about issues with the lack of scroll mouse, and the wrong screen resolution... Until yesterday, when I happened to find that useful command !

It fixes all the above mentioned issues, automatically ! Good !

Now, I am not (yet) a Slackware guru, so I did the "newb" thing to install slapt-get and gslapt... I even added the Slacky.eu repos, to get all the goodies. I read on Planète Béranger that it isn't supposed to be the best way, but it was so easy to do, I guess you can blame that on the fact that I am a Debianista at heart... Add a repo, and install all the stuff... That simple...

According to Luis, a gentleman who comments on Planète Béranger, I really have to try Arch as well...

Actually I did, the other day, but I could manage to configure the Pacman repos correctly... However, just for fun, I might add a partition to my spanking new sata hdd (320 gigs !!!), and sweat a bit more...

Too hot !!!

It's a bit of a heat-wave down here...

I have been quite busy last week. The weather is simply gorgeous, blue sky, transparent water, but the heat is unbearable.

Good news, I went swimming a lot last week-end. It felt like a giant swimming-pool, and I have the "good resolution" to get back in shape...

Swimming really helps break the "computer geek" habit of sitting 14 hours a day in front of a monitor... Great for my back, and actually great for my mind too !

So it takes Speedo briefs and Aquasphere goggles, and I feel like an amphibian !

This is the real beauty of living here in Las Terrenas... See the pics on the side to understand...

Friday, May 2, 2008

A quick look to Xubuntu Hardy...

Ok, no fuss, as I only ran the live-cd.

-What was my motivation ?
-Well, I still have that (very old) Toshiba laptop with Xubuntu Dpper. Kept it all the way, instead of my all-time favorite Debian Stable, simply because the PCMCIA wifi card (RTL8180) works out of the box in Dapper, but was "kicked out" of the kernel for some technical reason...

So I still carress the idea of being able to install anything else... No stress, as I still have a bit more than a year of support for Dapper, but Gaim 1.5 and FF 1.5 make me feel like living in the 1960's ;o)

Anyway, back to this Hardy live-cd. Nice boot-splash, beautiful wallpaper (I have to find it for my own use on Gnome). I am ok with the choice of app... Mainly because I am a "Gnome guy", so I am not disturbed by all the "Gnomification" of the Xfce desktop...

That makes me wonder if Xubuntu is really any lighter than Ubuntu... Feel free to post your feedback on that one...

Now, the real question is this one: Can a Xfce desktop be as functional as "good ol' " Gnome ?

I guess it depends on the level of tweaks... I have more homework to do about that...

It's raining today in LT... I have a long long week-end ahead, with departures & arrivals... I'll be kept well busy. Don't be surprised if I don't post for a couple of days...

J'ai des doutes...

I am wondering if any of you readers have troubles reading my blog. By that I mean if the text doesn't appear the way it should. What triggered this is the comment from my good cyber-friend Monsieur Béranger de la Planète du même nom. You can read it under "comments" from the post underneath...
Feel free to post here, it will help me better understand that issue...

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Mono etc...

Just another political statement:

Today, I removed all Mono related stuff (TomBoy, F-Spot, Mono etc...) from my Hardy desktop.
I am not sure which one is ethically better, but I installed, just like I usually do in my Debian boxes, Google Picasa. It is closed sources, it uses Wine, but it works well enough, and it is cross-platform, so I can easily support all those Windows-customers of mine by using that same app...
Mono seems vicious... I do understand however the validity of the research, same thing applies for Moonlight, the FLOSS Silverlight clone...

But if I can avoid those things on my personal box, I would feel much better.
I am heading towards a "Gnu certified" desktop ;o) ... Well not really, since I have all the bad & ugly plugins, and the Nvidia drivers that I don't even use for my graphic card and a bunch of shameful codecs !...

I also installed the Java JRE 1.6... Heck, it's almost free ! But the Mozilla plugin seems to work better than both OpenJDK and Iced-Tea...

I must admit having the msttcorefonts also, mainly for my wife's account, as she does a lot of office work for university students, and they come with .doc from thumbdrives... It needs coherence...

Hey, thanks to the various devs, it's all possible today... Good job !

Swfdec, Gnash and Flash in Hardy...

I have read here and there that Firefox 3 crashes often (yes, Fernand, I am refering to you).

So I grew curious to see that mine had not yet experiment the first crash. I strongly suspected it was an Adobe Flash issue. And I have not installed that plugin, but instead the swfdec one.

You can read more about swfdec here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swfdec

I noticed that I could do most of my regular "Flash needs", such as watching a YouTube video, or regular web-browsing without the annoying warning that one needs to download a plugin. Of course, I don't get to see most Flash banners, as I am extensely using AdBlock Plus, in order to avoid those annoyances... I happily use Opera without any Flash plugin, for a change, and mostly don't notice the difference.

One thing I noticed is my favorite podcast (http://www.europe1.fr/podcast/index.jsp) wouldn't play with sound with swfdec... So it is not "perfect".

It gave me the idea to uninstall Swfdec, and to install Gnash (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnash) instead. Indeed, Gnash works fine in my Debian Testing PPC Mac iBook G3.

So I did get Gnash up and running on my Ubuntu 8.04 desktop. I fired up FF3, headed up too Youtube, and watched the video playing, but... no sound... Problem...

I thought, what the heck ? headed to Synaptic, uninstalled Gnash and went for the "Flash-nonfree", which is the proprietary Adobe Flash.

...Rebooted FF3... Headed to Youtube... Crash... Tried again... Crash...

...Went back to Synaptic, uninstalled  "Flash-nonfree" and went back to Swfdec... It seems it is the "best" of the Flash player available right now for FF3, at least until further updates from Mozilla & Adobe...

I also makes me feel nice to use some Free Software when I can... Maybe I'll end up running Gnewsense ;)   (just kidding..)

Anyway, I wish some readers can pass this info along when it comes to FF3 users complaining about random crashes... Use Swfdec, get rid of Adobe Flash !

Monday, April 28, 2008

Rain, politics, Hardy etc...

Down here in Las Terrenas, we have had some heavy rain... Big showers, for about 40 mn, and then humid sunshine...

Yesterday afternoon, there was a rock-concert on the beach. What a change from the "boring" merengue music :)

Here in Dominican Republic, we will have the presidential elections in less than 3 weeks. The campaign has been idiotic, no debate whatsoever about anything, just finger-pointing towards each other's corruption... Leonel will have another 4 years, as most are not too keen to see PRD back in the Palace...

The week-end has passed and I still enjoy my spanking new Hardy desktop... I feel a bit of a traitor to my newfound love, Debian, but for the time being, this Ubuntu release wors for me.

As stated before, there are annoyances, such as the inability to give a static IP... Or the crashing Nvidia drivers (closed source...) but I trust those issues will gradually be reduced through the updates from now until july, when Canonical issue the "stable" 8.04.1 iso...

I am very glad I came back to a 32bit OS (on my amd64 Sempron cpu)... No exotic 32bits stuff in a 64bit environment... Sounds healthier... I was so disapointed when I had to finally gave up my Debian Testing amd64 system after upgrading from Debian Etch, because of those funny libs needed to run Skype 32bit in amd64... Even when I eventually go back to Debian Lenny, I'll happily go for an i386 iso, unless Skype releases a 64bit Skype !

Fernand was telling me about downgrading Firefox to 2.x from 3.x. Actually, much to my surprise, I haven't encountered any unstability with FF3... I guess it is because I didn't installed Adobe Flash, but SWFDEC... So far it seems to be working ok, I have to give it some time. I would have gone for Gnash otherwise, as it performs just fine on y Mac iBook G3 PPC, with Debian Testing on it...

Lots of work and things to do this week for me in my "regular life".... We'll se how it shall go...

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Sarko on TV...

I was watching Nicolas Sarkozy, a couple of days ago...

Interesting from the Dominican Republic, where politic is only a big playground for corruption !

Actually, I felt like the guy was good... Not perfect, but who´s perfect anyway ?

In France, they are too harsh on him... I wish they could live in a corrupted nation, to see how it really is...

The Hardy controversy

As I read in Planète Béranger about Hardy´s shortcoming, it makes me wonder...

I am (as you could realise) a Debianista at heart.

But I gave Hardy a try (still use it now), because the opportunity came, and I had no sound with the 2.6.18 kernel from Debian Stable.

As stated before, we Gnu/Linux users should know first hand the Ubunut world, as regular folks, Mac & Windows users have a tendency to believe that Linux IS Ubuntu. As of me, I still believe there´s no such thing as Debian Stable.

Anyway, here´s what I wrote @ Béranger´s:

"Caraibes - Today at 11:40:50 GMT

Actually, I also was surprised by that "root" free access (!!!!!)

After a great day with a fancy "desktop effects" Hardy, I shut down the PC. When I came back, it simply would not log in. GDM, and nothing more... In cli, it would not startx...

So I did the recovery mode. I am glad it exists. There's a "fix X" option, which worked well. It basically made back to a functional desktop, without the proprietary Nvidia drivers, which seems to have been the cause of the bug... I plan to stick with the free drivers for a while, until some updates fix this disturbing issue.

As of the root access... Bad... -Maybe there's a way to make it ask for a password ? Feel free to post ideas here :)

Anyway, overall, not that bad... I plan to write a bit more in my blog:

"cough" (shameless announcement) "cough"

http://free-las-terrenas.blogspot.com/"

And also:

"Caraibes - Today at 11:56:14 GMT

All those bugs are annoying... I would definitely have kept Debian Stable on my "new" main box, if it wasn't for that "fancier" Nvidia integrated sound card that doesn't work with a 2.6.18 kernel...

For some reason, I was experimenting many Iceweasel and Gtk apps crashes in Debian Testing... Wondering if it was because of the proprietary Nvidia video drivers on an amd64 system.

I am sticking to 32bits distro now (on my amd64 cpu...)... If Hardy really sucks that bad after a week (I have to give a chance to potential updates to fix issues...), I'll go back to Debian Testing, but 32 bits...

Anyway, experimenting is good. We are talking about the "poster child" of the Gnu/Linux universe, whether we like it or not... We better know first hand how it works..."

I am reproducing those here, as it gives an idea of my state of mind...

Anyway, the bottom line is to give some time to this spanking new release, I might set up a dual-boot with Debian Testing... More later, or tomorrow...

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Yet another Ubuntu-related post !!!

My readers would think after all those "hardline" Debian statements I would snob the Ubuntu 8.04 release, and go on, business as usual, right ?

I've been reading catastrophic comments about Hardy on Planète Béranger... I was expecting the worst.

But first, let's find out why I arrived to the point of re-installing my OS.

As posted previously, I now have that fancy motherboard, with an AMD64 cpu. I had Debian Etch amd64 on it, but the Nvidia sound chipset was too new for the 2.6.18 kernel. So I did what any faithful Debianista would do, and upgraded to Lenny. All went relatively well, if it wasn't for those damn 32 bits apps that I had to install because Skype doesn't yet produce a native Skype for amd64 !

I just could fix that dependency hell caused by some libc6 something, after a bunch of googling hours...

In the mean time, I had made up my mind to go for a 32 bits distro. I had 2 cd's in front of me: a DebianTesting netinst and the spanking new Ubuntu 8.04. I knew it would take a while to set up my Debian box (being a netinst, I have to download everything...) So, out of "distro-hopper" curiousity, I went straight for the Ubuntu.

It installed in about 10mn (or less), I could not believe it. Everything seemed to "just work"...

That was yesterday... This morning, I tweaked it to my taste, and I must say I am very impressed !

Don't misunderstand me here, this is not a Fanboy speaking. I saw the "static IP" bug...annoying !

I also saw the Firefox plugins that were not supported by FF3...

 More later...

Thursday, April 24, 2008

New hardware... Finally !

I got it !

That nice MSI motherboard, a K9N Neo v3... Looks nice, with aan AMD Sempron LE-1100 and 1 gig od DDR2 ram !

Finally I end up getting some better hardware, instead of running on those older parts that I usually salvage...

One small issue: It has only 1 IDE connector. And I have 2 IDE hdd's and 2 IDE DVD burners...

So far, I just plugged in my hdd's, and I'll end up spending money on a big SATA hdd next month, when I'll get some cash.

Other small issue: the audio driver from Nvidia (hda Nvidia) is not supported under Debian Etch, I guess it is because of the older kernel 2.6.18...

So I am in the process of upgrading everything to Lenny. I am saying "Lenny" and not "Testing", because when Lenny will reach the "Stable" status in September, I plan on sticking with it, and not going on with Testing... (at least for a while, in theory...)

I feel better, mentally... We are all just a bunch of big kids... A toy makes us feel like a million dollars !!

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

There are days like this...

yeah...

still quite busy today, work, kids...

My motherboard is being exchanged, I'll get another type, some MSI socket 754... Finally I'll be able to set up my main desktop again...

In the mean time, there was funny crashes on my "replacement" box. Nautilus crashed in Stable (???). So I upgraded to Testing overnight, that fixed it, but it would only boot the old kernel (2.6.18)... I figured it was a bad install originally, and just cloned some of my Internet-café's Debian partition so I could have a 100% complete and tweaked Debian Stable... Worked out just fine...

I used some closed source software from the Hiren Boot CD (Acronis clone utility, forgot the name...) It took about 40 mn altogether...

Great, so now I feel "at home" on my replacement box... Good...

Still a bunch of work to do, gotta visit a customer's place to check his wireless lan...

One of my kids is at the doctor... It worries me.

I wish I would take the time to set up those nice logos Béranger sent me... I want to make that place look a bit better. Will do it tomorrow, hopefully... But we have a internet sat connection to perform...

Anyway I'll work on some good articles... Today it's just my naked feelings "telegraphic style"...

Monday, April 21, 2008

Sunny monday...

You guys would think that sun shines all the time down here... Well, we had a rain flood last week !

But today it is really hot... I am back to work... Same thing, fixing and supporting Windows PC's... Downgrading Vista laptops to xp...

My own desktop has been rebuilt last month, when I purchased a cheap combo (motherboard+cpu+ram)... A non-name board, with an AMD Sempron 3000+ and 512 megs of ddr ram.

Now I am paying the price for this cheap stuff... The board won't handle any other ram. The shop swapped the board for me... Same thing. I put in a gig of ram, next to the 512 stick, it works fine for couple of days, and then things freeze. I run Memtest, and it's all red with errors...

What I did was cannibalizing various parts to make a "replacement" box, without having to touch the internet-café's PC's... I installed Debian Stable, and here I am, in my Fluxbox and IceWeasel.

Yes, I send my problematic motherboard back to the shop. I told the owner that I was ok to pay a bit more, and buy another type of board...

What the heck, I have so many old PC's here... I'll survive :)

This morning, sipping coffee and reading Planète Béranger. How nice from my Romanian friend to mention this humble "Tropical Blog" ;)

Gotta start somewhere... Gotta get my thoughts clear...

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Distro-hopping...

Ok, why is it that I am running Debian on all my computers ?

Just like most of the other users, I started using PC's with Windows... 3.1 on an Olivetti laptop in 1995, then all the others, 98, ME, 2k and XP...

But I am a sucker for Freedom, and around 2003 I started reading about Linux... It was Mandrake and Red Hat... But I was on dial-up... Never made it until a friend gave me a Knoppix 3.2 live-cd.

It looked good. But I couldn't use my winmodem :(

I also received 10 Ubuntu 4.10 cd's in 2004, I gave most to friends... On my PC's the sound didn't work...

I then downloaded Mepis 3.3 (over a dial-up connection... it took ages !) in early 2005.

Warren (the Mepis dev) included the winmodem driver, so I could really install it in dual-boot and surf the net over my dial-up. My Linux life was starting "for real".

I finally subscribed to ADSL in july 2005. Then a real distro-fever started for me, and lasted until this winter, when I totally settled on Debian.

Over those past 3 years, I used and installed Ubuntu, Mandriva, Fedora, Debian, Knoppix, Kanotix, Blag, PCLOS, Mint, Mepis, OpenSUSE, Vector, Zenwalk, Slackware, Pardus, Wolvix of various versions... I used often live-cd's such as Puppy, DSL, Dyne:Bolic...

I used KDE, Xfce, Fluxbox, WindowMaker, IceWM, but most of all Gnome, my DE of choice.

In the Debian Sarge days, there was a guy who issued an iso with Debian Sarge+codecs... It was called PureDebian... I enjoyed it a lot, as it was easy to set up... It doesn't exists anymore, and it's good, because I had to learn how to do things in Debian.

For the most part of those 3 years I used Fedora (starting with Blag, then going for the "original")... It worked well on my hardware.

But the Debian Social Contract (here: http://www.debian.org/social_contract ) made a strong impression on me. I wanted to be part of that...

A year ago (spring 2007) I installed Debian Etch on most my PC's except my main desktop. I wasn't educated enough about Debian to get all the stuff to work (my TV card, for instance...)

So I stuck with Fedora. Last fall (2007), I tested the big 4 (Ubuntu, Mandriva, Fedora Suse). They were all good. But I wanted to escape that 6 months release cycle, as it didn't felt right for my own needs. I used Fedora 8 a bit, I used Mint a bit... Couldn't make up my mind, until one day I just downloaded a Debian Testing netinst, and made it !

I really enjoyed Debian Testing... But suddenly I changed motherboard+cpu. I went from k7 to amd64. So I decided on a clean install, but went for Debian Stable instead.

-Why Debian Stable when Testing looks so much more fun ?

Testing was the fast rolling release concept, just like Arch, for instance...

But Stable was really what I need. It still can be a rolling release, in the sense that one can change one's sources.list and upgrade from Sarge to Etch to Lenny (never tried yet...)

So this is it, I have most my boxes using Debian Stable. I plan on giving more details later...

putting things in perpective...

Sunday morning... Wife & kids are away.... I took advantage to bicycle to the beach, and then take a good walk.

That gives me a bit of perspective, since this past year has been mentally confusing.

I tend to just brush off reality, and get deeper into exploring the Linux world to fill the gap. But walking alone on the beach on a Sunday morning for an hour and a half helps.

The problem I mostly can't deal with is the noise. I live in the Dominican part of the village. Despite being a tropical paradise, it is also a very noisy Carribean "barrio". People tend to play very loud music (merengue, bachata, reggaeton) all the time. They speak loud, and there's a lot of traffic (motos, cars...).

I slowly grew to use ear-plugs, but it is not efficient enough. I need something that really cuts the noise. I don't have the funds (nor the will) to build a "soundproof" house, but I have to soudproof somehow... Anyway, my house is well located because it is downtown, and I have my workshop right there... It is cheap, efficient, it works... That is why I am brainstorming about soundproofing my own ears, which is the "easy" way.

The reason why...

It's been years I am posting comments on other people's blog... I never made the move.

I am dong it today...

-Why ?

So many blogs,so many posts all over...

Well, I am bit of an alien, since I have a European heritage, grew up there, but live in a "Tropical Paradise" since the last 6 years...

-What do I plan to write about it ?

My opinions and experience in the Linux Word, since I am mostly a Debian user, but have a history of distro hopping. Yeah, I am one of those Linux geeks... Strange, for a "Tropical bump" ;)

But also I plan to write about those contradictions I am living... I plan on exposing the good and the bad, the paradoxical things about being a "long-term" European in the Carribean. I shall go ahead and write it down, for what it is, the naked truth.