Posts Tagged hardware

Say “Hello” to my little friend.

About a year ago I scavenged a “to-be-decommissioned” PC out of our closet here at work and installed Ubuntu Server on it.  I stuck it under my desk and proceeded to familiarize myself with some administration tasks.

I installed a LAMP stack and moved my web development stuff over to the new box.

Then I set up a bunch of disorganised CRON jobs to back-up all my files.

I installed SAMBA and set about connecting to our Windows Server.

Then I found instructions online about how to connect to a Novell server, so I created a bunch of mount points and wrote a couple scripts to access our Novell server.

doesn't look like much, does it?

doesn't look like much, does it?

Shortly thereafter, I wrote some new scripts to do some routine nightly file maintenance between our Novell network and our Windows network.

I had an old legacy MS Access application that was giving me fits and I wanted to upsize it to something a bit more robust – so I ported it into MySQL.

Then I wrote a web front end for it.

Then I had an idea to create a corporate help-desk application that would allow users to fill out a form online and submit work requests to our department.  Simple, but effective.

One day we were overrun with viruses (annoyances, actually) that our current corporate anti-virus wasn’t aware of yet.  So I installed Avast Antivirus on the linux box and spent a couple weeks cleaning up flash drives, memory cards and external media of all sorts until the corporate AV got updated with the new virus signatures.

Most recently,  I’ve embarked on another we-based front-end to a older application.  Sticking it on the web will save tons of money on paper alone.

While modifying my cron jobs to backup the most recent project files, I began to remember this machine’s humble beginnings.  Destined for the trash heap, linux breathed new life into an old machine and turned it into a little workhorse.

Eventually, I’m going to need to move my files onto a larger, more secure machine, but I think I’ll keep this little baby around long after that.

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Boys Toys

Yesterday the UPS man delivered a long awaited new arrival. For years I have wanted a laptop computer and for one reason or another (*cough* price *cough*) have been unable to get my hands on one. Oh, sure, I’ve got an older laptop that I shoe-horned Windows 98 onto (It currently streams internet-radio or mp3s in our bedroom. It’s got firefox on it, but it takes 3 minutes for it to start and is painfully slow for anything but the most basic email-checking and browsing.)

Only recently I had a nice, modern laptop for work. After I took the time to tweak it all out just the way I like it, I was ordered to give it to another department. *sigh*

Late last summer I started hearing about a new, low-cost laptop from Asus. I knew Asus as a reputable hardware company (motherboards and the like) but this looked like an interesting idea. An ultra-portable laptop computer, utilizing solid-state flash memory rather than a hard drive, a bunch of USB ports and built-in Wi-Fi. Oh, and it runs Linux. No M$ bloatware. Sounds good, huh? But how much? $200.

Wow. I was hooked.

Of course, this was last summer and the Asus EeePc was just an idea. Asus had not finalized all the specs and the internet was warned that the price might go up once things were finalized.

A couple months later, I was getting ready to buy and starting to get antsy about the release date (which Asus pushed back about three different times) when, what? Another delay and confirmation that the price was indeed going up. The $200 laptop was now looking to cost between $300 and $400. Damn. I abandoned hope and drowned my sorrows in a new Nintendo DS instead (well, a geek is a geek, after all)

So there we were at the beginning of the 2007 holiday season when I started seeing that Asus finally released the EeePC and it was garnering great reviews! As it turned out, the EeePC had been out for a couple months and early adopters were praising the little laptop. Asus projected selling 300,000 by the end of the year and wound up selling 350,000 before Christmas! I was interested all over again!

Long(ish) story short(er)… my EeePC arrived yesterday afternoon and I’m typing this entry on it. Although I’ve only had a day to play with it, I think it’s going to become a very handy piece of hardware. A bit bigger than a hard back book with a kick-ass Wi-Fi makes sure that almost everywhere I go I can have my information with me and I’m only a hot-spot away form my email, blog and news. I opted for the 4G Surf model for $350 from Newegg.com. For $50 more I could have had a built-in webcam and a slightly beefier battery – but I don’t think either item will be an issue.

I’ve already installed VPN to connect to my work PC, transferred a bunch of small videos and customized my Firefox browser. All easy, all successfully.

What a great little laptop.

Thanks, Asus.

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Frozen Bytes


So it might be time for a new computer. Great. This one has started freezing up at random moments. Nothing in the log – no error messages – just WHAM! Frozen. I changed the memory and reinstalled the operating system. I just can’t figure it out. Adding to the fact that this machine is a few years old (in computerese that means it’s sadly obsolete) I think it might be time to shop for new “guts”.

When I built this one a few years ago I made sure I did it right – nice big case, hard drives all the cables and everything so when this moment came I’d only have to buy another motherboard, a processor and some memory.

I think I found what I’m gonna get too. I’ve heard great things about newegg.com, so I checked em out and put together a nice little wish list.

Wanna See? Click Here to check it out.

Wanna help? I got a birthday coming up… hint hint hint…

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