Phasor Burn

Warning: Do not look into phasor with remaining eye.

About

Yet another collection of random links and rantings of a greying unix geek with a photography bent. Pass the Guinness and Grecian Formula.

Archive for July, 2009

Boil, Kettle, Boil

Friday, July 31st, 2009


198/365, originally uploaded by tim caynes.

Pax Machina

Thursday, July 30th, 2009


Pax Machina, originally uploaded by bonedad.

Elementary Stats Fail

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009
And finally, we have Bill O’Reilly explaining why Canada has longer life expectancy than the United States despite living in a hellish single payer dystopia where patients who need a simple X-ray are made to wait for 17 years and then cast out on an ice floe to die of hypothermia or be mauled to death by polar bears. O’Reilly argues that the U.S. naturally has a shorter life expectancy than Canada because we have ten times more people. That means ten times as many accidents, crimes, and what have you

Coffee piped through Nose !

Full article here

Idiot americans.

A worthy rant if I ever heard one :

There is a prominent Unix derivate out there that doesn´t think about standards and portability isn´t an issue for this derivate. It´s called Linux, it got a large market share somehow and most people use it for the development of open source software. There is a make defined by standards, but most open source software insists on using GNU make. Often the only well tested makefile is the makefile for Linux, often you have luck for Solaris, but don´t try it on IRIX. I have the impression that portability comes just into mind, when some users ask about a different operating system.

… the worst thing that ever happened to development were notebook-class computer. People edit-compile-test their applications on their notebooks, optimize it and afterwards you get software for your server that runs exceptionally well on … well … notebooks. Then you get around with your server and the problems start. In essence you are forced to replicate the developers desktop on your server.

I find this a little bit funny: Microsoft gets critics for their embrace and extend attitude. But the Linux community isn´t much better when you look at the compliance to standards. And i think this is even a kind of lock-in. You aren´t locked to a hardware vendor. You are locked to you operating system community because of the toolset.

He’s very much on the same page as I, except more able to put it into writing without drifting off into rambling ranting spew. Funny, that a native German speaker puts me to shame that way :-)

Read the whole thing at Thoughts of an admin starting to get old …

On Golden Pond

Sunday, July 26th, 2009


On Golden Pond, originally uploaded by Tom Willekes.