Win a trip to Hawaii (if you work here)
Timberline Dealerships sends another employee to Hawaii. No, not permanently but for a a vacation in the surf and sands of that beautiful ocean locked state.
Every year one employee is chosen out of all the employees who are recognized every month for outstanding customer service or just for helping out other employees. For the year of 2007 that employee is Marlin McCombs.
Marlin is a Specifier in the Parts Department. Many commercial parts customers already know Marlin. If you want to send him an email to see if there are any openings in his trip you can do so by clicking here.
Recently found in an operator’s manual
Sometimes I think that manuals should at least be read once before printing. But then again I wouldn’t have been able to find, “Note: No replacement parts are available for this tool. For replacement parts, please call xxx-xxx-xxxx”. I’m sure somebody will have to call the number.
Edit: I got an email back from this local discount tool store when I requested permission to place a scan of this portion of the test meter manual online. They said no. I’m assuming out of embarrassment. If they said yes, this local discount tool store would have had a link back to their website which is great for the search engines.
qmail is now Public Domain
qmail in some circles has had a bad rap because of its overly restrictive licensing policies and possibly its punctuation problem. Overly restrictive? Yes, it could only be distributed in source form. In order to use it you must compile it yourself. You could not distribute it compiled form and you couldn’t distribute patched sources for qmail.
Daniel J. Berstein recently made a public announcement that qmail, and the rest of what he has written and proviced to the public, is now placed in the Public Domain.
Watching the video I get the feeling that it is a reactive protest to other freely distributive licenses such as BSD and the GPL varriants. Whatever the reason, this means that all Linux projects like CentOS and Fedora can now distribute qmail without any licensing problems.
Now projects like QmailToaster and Dag Wieer’s RPM repository can now distribute compiled rpms instead of src.rpms.
What finally made me buy a Mac
For more than two decades I have been convinced that IBM PC clone based personal computers were the most cost effective way to compute. Fifteen years ago I operated a small local BBS on DOS and OS/2 operating systems. On that BBS we featured Fidonet messages and its accompanying Filebone freeware and shareware files.
One day I noticed a set of floppy images in my in folder. I found out that day that Linux was born. I tried it and discarded it. Almost a decade later, I now have Linux on 95% of the servers I build. The turning point for Linux was when easy CDROM based distributions started coming complete with GUI interfaces. GUI, while unnecessary for servers, is entirely necessary for self taught knowledge if only for multiple windows. Multiple windows can be opened and viewed at the same time. A help window and an application window or terminal window open at the same time can do wonders over a plain terminal or DOS window with ‘help’ or ‘man’. Sure you can swap to different screens but reading cryptic help messages and remembering after swapping screens can sometimes be problematic.
About this point I’ve used Macs for school and only very minimally for work. The online community has had a lot of OS Snobs. I never took Apple seriously, guilty of reverse snobbery. As far as I knew the added monetary cost of Mac equipment has either caused these people to be snobs because they spent too much and it had to get out of thier systems -or- they were already rich snobs. Either way, not for me at this time. Most of the applications I could find were all for purchase and expensive.
Windows from the ground up has been great as a single user multitasking operating system. It truly wasn’t good until WFW 3.11 when networking was introduced as part of the Windows package. And it truly hasn’t been great afterwords. Windows 98 is the closest thing to great that Microsoft has had since. I’m basing that in time to install, patch, load helper programs and plug-ins, and secure. Windows ME flopped. Windows XP added a lot of eye candy. Everybody likes eye candy and the Games. Windows XP does do better at the gaming experience except for Dungeon Keeper 2 which must be played on Windows 98 (I’m still looking to see if Leopard and Wine can do it.).
So lets go jump to 2004. Linux is great for file, web, and email servers. If you are not locked into vendor browsers and readers, Linux also makes for a good desktop. Windows XP is great at a user ‘experience’ but is poor on time invested on up-keep. What is this OSX people have been talking about? Is it really built up on a Linux/Unix type foundation? It sounds interesting. Let me look up online what I can find out… Hmm still too much OS Snobbery clouding out the people who want to help.
Jump back to 2007. Vista. Before Microsoft it was singular. You could only look at one vista. Now Microsoft has pluralized Vista into too many options. The parties involved at Microsoft who pluralized Vista into more than three platforms probably work at Apple or even for somebody that Microsoft stomped upon to get to where it is at. I had a notebook with Vista on it. I returned it to the store I bought it. I have a PC with a free Vista upgrade. The upgrade is still sitting on my desk unopened. Vista has more eye candy and dashboard plug-ins than XP, but nobody can convince me of its main selling point, security. Microsoft as a business is built on upgrading, how do you convince people must upgrade unless what they have is unsecure? The face of computing has evolved since Microsoft incorporated but the business model in this arena has not. Driver support and corporate lock-in aside, ultimately for me it came down to the number of versions of Vista that turned me away. Vista caused me to to not buy a notebook, or rather Vista caused me to return the notebook I purchased. This must cost the manufacturer even more. Not only a lost sale, but a return to process.
What now? I finally need to replace some old equipment. Boot camp? What is Boot camp? This is starting to sound promising in the computing world. There is a notebook designed to run Windows XP and is being actively marketed and it is called Mac.
I picked up a MacBook Pro, upgraded to Leopard (OSX 10.5), ran the Boot Camp install, and installed XP from my own disks. All the necessary XP drivers are included on the Leopard disks. I found out later I needed the non Leopard restore disks to install iLife 08.
I’m quite happy now. Windows XP games and business apps work. My new notebook has Wireless N and bluetooth. If I install VMware Fusion, I can even run Dungeon Keeper 2. If I wanted to, I could even skip boot camp and run everything in VMware Fusion. I have found a lot of freeware ported from the same free software movements that are propelling Linux.