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I\'m Ryan Gibbons, I rummage throughout the internet as Insanity5902, and I love technology. I am a Jack of all Trades, master of none—but I\'m damn good at most.

12 January 2009 ~ 0 Comments

Microsoft Office 2007

I have to admit, I am a fan. Ever since it came out, I was impressed with the user interface, things actually flowed and it become smart to use. I was finally able to install it at my new job. I am continue to enjoy using Outlook 2007, Excel 2007 and even Word 2007.

My only gripe, is I have to run Windows to use Office 2007. Even the Mac OS X 2008 isn’t the same. I wish Microsoft could look at they are doing and what they are losing and create a better compatibly layer to have their office products work inside Linux or any other Operating System.

I am such a huge fan, I would probably go out and buy the Office 2007 Enterprise just because I enjoy the interface that much. I have also been an advocate of OpenOffice, especially OpenOffice v3. While I still push OpenOffice for home users, I understand OpenOffice is still a distant 2nd in the Enterprise world, and that is because employees can’t be bothered with file compatibility issues. It’s a sad truth but the until document formats become more standardized Microsoft Office will dominate in this market simply because of their market share.

So I would like to challenge Microsoft to open it’s eyes. It doesn’t have to create a products for the OS only, they could expand into other markets. This would not only be better for everyone out there that doesn’t use Linux, but it would also help Microsoft rep. While they aren’t too worried about that right now, it is tarnished, and it is getting worse.

Our technology leaders in the world need to stop and and quite fighting with proprietary standards and doing things only their way. The world is change, we are becoming one, they need to follow suite and work together. It is okay to have competing products, but consumers should be able to move from one to the other without losing their data.

30 December 2008 ~ 8 Comments

Grammar Checking

As many of you have noticed, I don’t have the best grammar, or even spelling, skills. They are actually not to bad if I slow down and take the time (Like for a report or some other ‘official’ documentation). But my blog post are normally spur of the moment thoughts, that I try to get out the door before they leave, and before anyone at work notices what I’ve done (like this one :/).

I am now looking for ideas that would help out with that. I know one is to just take my time and re-read what I write .. but I really hate doing that. So now I am looking for something else. Firefox does basic spell checking, but nothing in the grammar arena. Open Office as the ability to grammar check, but I don’t know if it is any good or not. And it doesn’t play nicely with b2evo, at least as far as I know.

I’ve been thinking of moving to WordPress, just so I have that export capability, and I might just use it … but then again I might not. I am defiantly holding off until v2.7 is stabilized, it is pretty damn cool looking. I always try to use apps that are against the grain, even if they don’t carry the same feature load, I use them because they work and most of the time they have one or two things the other one doesn’t. With b2evo, that is about to past, with v2.7 of WordPress the admin interface is cleaned up a lot, and I just might have to start using it, as it now provides other features that I am starting to require.

If anybody is out there reading this, do you have any ideas on how to better Spell / Grammar check my blog postings.

23 December 2008 ~ 2 Comments

Thinking about ext4

Linux defiantly doesn’t have a lack of choice when it comes to file systems to choose form. I’ve use most of the them for my main file systems, currently I am running ext2 on /boot ext3 on /home and /, and using ext4 for my portage tree and distfiles on /usr/portage. In the past I have use reiserfs, reiser v4, jfx and xfs. They have all had their pros and cons, and I’ve have used them all on my /usr/portage. Interestingly enough, the best experience of them all is ext4. The others would become fragmented over time, since I am a bit anal about running the latest software I normally sync my tree almost daily. Most of the time every other day.so there are a lot of re-writes and small files scattered all throughout that partition. I have nothing but great performance using ext4. So much so, with the release of 2.6.28 I am thinking of moving my / partition to it.

This would give me /boot as ext2, /home as ext3 and everything else as ext4. I’ve read good things about it, it seems to handle large and small files alike with ease. I am actually pretty excited with the though of moving to it.

Hopefully my experiences will continue to be on the good side of things as I move to ext4!

16 December 2008 ~ 0 Comments

How do you use Email

Lately I’ve been reading through Jeff Atwood’s blog and the blog he maintains with Joel Spolsky over at StackOverflow. I am not focusing on the programing related posts as much as I am about over management of not only people but information in general. Recently Jeff Atwood wrote a blog post about how email is basically dead to him. Sure he still uses it, but it describes where e-mail fails and how some of the more social forms of communications are a lot more efficient.

Reading through this, I think most people can relate. Trying to keep that Inbox clean is a time intensive task. I find myself doing just what Jeff describes, adding more content and detail then needs to be in the e-mails, and I get a lot of e-mails like that also. Even my family now is using e-mails to communicate news in the family, pictures and updates on their kids. While it is nice to have this information, being consumed with it is overwhelming. Using micro-blogging services is a why to help cut back on some of the e-mail chatter, while using IM’s is another way to handle those quick conversations. Jeff also suggest using a blog to answer questions in e-mails. Why answer 20 e-mails separately when one blog post can handle them all. A lot of people use e-mail, thinking it is private and safe. I’m sorry to tell you, it isn’t. Go search on Microsoft e-mail and lawsuit, and you will find out what is said in e-mails isn’t private. So why treat it that why?

I find myself wanting to get away from e-mails, and that form of communication, but I also don’t have to time to follow blogs all day. We live in a very information driven society. The internet has made us more involved with everyone. We have to be in the know. Most of us enjoy sharing our information. But we, as humans, only have so much capacity. Time, resources, memory; where does everything end. It is a on-going information share.

I think things like IM, blogs, migro-blogging and wiki’s are all in our future and really have a chance of replacing e-mail. But as long as there are people who have trouble moving to new technology, old technology will stay around, almost dragging us down as we the rest of us try to move on.

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02 December 2008 ~ 0 Comments

Software Management in your OS

Every PC owner has this problem, most don’t realize it, but it is Software Management. I am talking about how one manages the software installations on their PC. This isn’t a Windows centric post, or a Linux centrix post, but every OS has this problem. Every OS and software package attacks this differently. Windows XP and Vista has this add / remove programs feature, which compared to what it used to be in Windows 98 , is awesome. But all this allows you to do is track already installed software. How do you now manage updates of this software. Some applications have built-in update checkers, and a few will go ahead and download and prompt you to start the install. Adobe Flash, Java, Mozilla Firefox, and even Open Office all do this to some extent. But what about the rest of your applications. Most just sit there, unchecked, unmodified, and in some cases vulnerable to malicious attacks. Some older Linux distributions had similar problems, but the community saw the problem and developed a solution. No Red Hat and the equivalent’s can not only update their system via rpm, but they have up2date which checks all installed packages for newer ones. Apt-Get has the same features. Gentoo has portage. FreeBSD has it’s Ports. But the two biggest OS distributions have nothing. Mac OS X and Windows. Since Mac is based on unix, people have ported over FreeBSD ports system, to help with the task, but it still doesn’t work with the native system. It is kind of ran along side the system.

I think one of the reasons for this, is that Linux distributions really take control of the PC Environment, which one could argue is why they provided a faster and more stable machine. But think about it, each Linux distribution is merely a way of combining the Linux Kernel and other open source software. They didn’t stop at just the software needed to boot up, but just about every imaginable piece that a user could want. This is what differs from Windows and Mac. With these two, Microsoft and Apple are busy developing a kernel that can run on all machines, all the support libraries, the API’s and then on top of that they provide a ‘bare’ minimal amount of software to create a usable desktop. They haven’t taken the time to think about the other software that a user might want.

Now, this is where it gets tricky. With OSS software, this is very little to worry about with the distribution of that software. When you start working with software you have to pay for, then it gets tricky. You have to consider, does this commercial piece of software allow updates, if so for how long, or how many versions. If you get a discount on upgrades, how do you pay, who handles the payment. It really gets tricky fast.

I think I can speak for a lot of geeks when I say, we like Linux of the no hassle software management. I don’t have to worry about a lot of things when I update my servers, desktops and laptops. On my single windows machine, it is a hassle, it is a completely manual process of checking websites, downloading updates and installing. And this brings up another point, Linux has just about always thrived because of the distribution of software over the Internet. Distribution of software for Windows as primarily been through retail stores, people buying the CD and installing. So updates weren’t something to think about. But now Windows and Macs are becoming a software distribution over the internet.

If you want to improve the User Experience, don’t worry about superficial effects of minimizing a window. Make managing the computer easier. Microsoft has started this with their new Microsoft Update, which patches the core windows system, along with any other Microsoft software that is installed. But Microsoft needs to take a bit of responsibility and check for other software that is installed and free updates that might be available for them. If Linux distributions can do this and provide this for free, why can’t Microsoft do this for an Operating System people pay hundreds of dollars for?

27 November 2008 ~ 0 Comments

Happy Thanksgiving

Happy Thanksgiving everyone. Be thankful for everything you have, no matter how much or little. It doesn’t matter what you believe in or where are at in the world, just be thankful to be here today!

24 November 2008 ~ 0 Comments

10 things your IT guy wants you to know

The author of this list is unkown. His Blog has been deleted, most likely by him, but it could of been by wordpress. Either way, I found it over on The Java ME Blog. Pretty good list, pretty accurate.

  1. If you ask me technical questions please don’t argue with me because you don’t like my answer. If you think you know more about the topic, why ask? And if I’m arguing with you…it’s because I am positive that I am correct, otherwise I’d just say “I don’t know” or give you some tips on where to look it up, I don’t have the time to just argue for the sake of it.
  2. Starting a conversation by insulting yourself (i.e. “I’m such an idiot”) will not make me laugh, or feel sorry for you; all it will do is remind me that yes, you are an idiot and that I am going to hate having to talk to you. Trust me; you don’t want to start a call that way.
  3. I am ok with you making mistakes, fixing them is my job. I am not ok with you lying to me about a mistake you made. It makes it much harder to resolve and thus makes my job more difficult. Be honest and we can get the problem resolved and continue on with our business.
  4. There is no magic “Fix it” button. Everything takes some amount of work to fix, and not everything is worth fixing or even possible to fix. If I say that you just need to re-do a document that you accidentally deleted 2 months ago, please don’t get mad at me. I’m not ignoring your problem, and it’s not that I don’t like you, I just cant always fix everything.
  5. Not everything you ask me to do is “urgent”. In fact, by marking things as “urgent” every time, you almost ensure that I treat none of it as a priority.
  6. You are not the only one who needs help, and you usually don’t have the most urgent issue. Give me some time to get to your problem, it will get fixed.
  7. Emailing me several times about the same issue in the same day is not only unnecessary, it’s highly annoying. Emails will stay until I delete them, I won’t delete them until I’m done with them. I will typically respond as soon as I have a useful update. If it is an urgent issue, let me know (see number 5).
  8. Yes, I prefer email over telephone calls. It has nothing to do with being friendly, it’s about efficiency. It is much faster and easier for me to list out a set of questions that I need you to answer than it is for me to call and ask you them one by one. You can find the answers at your leisure and while I’m waiting I can work on other problems.
  9. Yes, I seem blunt and rude. It’s not that I mean to, I just don’t have the time to sugar coat things for you. I assume we are both adults and can handle the reality of a problem. If you did something wrong, I will tell you. I don’t care that it was a mistake, because it really makes no difference to me. Don’t take it personal, I just don’t want it to happen again.
  10. And finally, yes, I can read your email, I can see what web pages you look at while you are at work, yes, I can access every file on your work computer, and I can tell if you are chatting with people on an instant messenger or chat room (and can also read what you are typing). But no, I don’t do it. It’s unethical, I’m busy, and in all reality you aren’t all that interesting. So unless I am instructed to specifically monitor or investigate your actions, I don’t. There really are much more interesting things on the internet than you.

18 November 2008 ~ 5 Comments

Smartphone Market

It is a very interesting market out there. Consumers have the choice between the some huge heavyweights, such has the Apple Iphone, Blackberry Bold,Blackberry Storm, and for the enthusiasts of Palm the Palm Treo. For those people looking for something different, AT&T has the Fuse (HTC Touch Pro), T-Mobile has the G1 made by HTC. And I am sure there are plenty of others that could be categorized in this smartphone market.

I currently have an aging Palm Treo 680, yes I am a Palm advocate. I think they create a great product, or should I say, used to. The Palm hardware and software is becoming outdated quickly, missing the higher res screens, better interfaces and better connectivity found on all modern smartphones. To qualify a modern smartphone, at least for power users, it must have 3G or other high speed network, WiFi, lots of memory, a keyboard (either virtual or physical) and most of the modern ones are also including GPS. My Treo doesn’t have 3g, it doesn’t have wifi, it doesn’t have GPS, but hey, it does have a physical keyboard, and enough memory to store the apps you need.

I am wanting a new phone badly, but can’t find one that fits my needs / wants. I don’t want the Windows Mobile OS, which really blocks out a lot of the smartphones being developed now days. I would prefer a physical keyboard, but I might be able to get by with an iPhone like keyboard. And I want to be able to control the apps on my phone, not be dictated to which apps I can use on my phone. As you can see this crosses the iPhone off, Blackberries aren’t as bad on the app side, but I really dislike the idea of using the BIS for my personal e-mail, especially since it is really just a one-way sync. The Android looks cool, but I really questions how good it is going to be. Don’t get me wrong, I really like Google, and they come out with some great ideas, but their products seem rushed and never polished. They just don’t seem stable enough. And then you got Palm, using the same OS base for 1901 it seems. Their interface hasn’t changed much, but it really hasn’t had a need to. But the bad thing is, the underlying components to their OS hasn’t changed either, which is killing it, a slow painful death. They have known for years that high speed internet was coming to phones, but yet their OS can’t handle 3g or wifi … WHY Not, this isn’t new technology. It is sad, They’ve been producing the Treo’s now for almost 5 years, but not a single change to the OS in that time, okay, maybe small changes, but nothing significant. Microsoft has released two new OSes in that time WM 5 and WM 6. Palm in that time has sold their software side, bought it back, rumors of working with Access to create a Linux based OS was out there, and now we sit here , the fourth quarter of 2008 with nothing.

And now I sit here, with my Treo 680, which needs to be rebooted about once a week, and I have to reboot the reboot each time because it doesn’t boot up properly on the first boot up. It freezes on my in the middle of conversations. If I have a call come in while on the other line, and hang up with the original caller to answer the new call, I can’t. It doesn’t respond until the caller has been sent to voicemail. It is crazy how many bugs are in the OS.

So what am I do, I need a phone. I am on the AT&T network and really don’t want to switch. The Bold looks cool, and it could work, but I don’t want to pay for a BES connection to get my IMAP mail working. The iPhone could work, but I have Apple telling me what I can and shouldn’t load on the phone that I bought. (Why people put up with this, I have no idea, if Microsoft only let you load programs they approved on your desktop .. would you like that). Palm’s OS sucks, Windows Mobile sucks. Symbian’s are okay, but their aren’t any cool phones out there .. It looks like I am stuck with my Treo 680 for a while. Maybe the iPhone 3 will change things. Maybe by the time AT&T adopts the Android it will be proven as reliable and viable option. Maybe Palm can fix their OS and even better, have it be Linux based.

17 November 2008 ~ 0 Comments

64bit Adobe Flash player released

I’m not lying, I promise. Adobe has announced an x86_64 version of their adobe flash player. I unistalled that latest 10.0 32bit version along with nspluginwrapper, and downloaded the v10 alpha. The install was a simple copying it into ~/.mozilla/pugins, and it works.

Two initial findings I have, are dropdown menus are now popping up in front of the flash banner, instead of behind. Which is amazingly great. And the second is cpu usage. So far, listening to pandora is quite a bit lower, probalby b/c it was going through nspluginwrapper, but I notice about 4 – 5% difference in CPU. Can’t wait to check out more flash streams that I’ve noticed cause some high cpu load.

For links to download and a chance to read up a bit about the release, check out the SWF Penguin’s blog (one of the developers for linux flash)

04 November 2008 ~ 0 Comments

Zabbix 1.6 Released

I know, I missed these release by about 2 months, but better late then never, right? Anyways. Zabbix 1.6 was released. I’ve been watching this product since the 1.1 release, and they keep making it better. For those that don’t know, Zabbix is a monitoring solution. It uses agents and SNMP to collect information and provide a nice interface to view it all. It is actually pretty robust as it is a distrbuted monitoring solution, which can make for some nice scalability through larger enterprise networks.

The last version I used was 1.4 and it was at my old job. I’ve been watching the development of 1.6, they have added a lot of improvements and features. I can’t wait to get my hands on this release to see what it can do. If are looking for a monitoring solution, I highly recommend Zabbix.