Sunday, November 16, 2008

Moved


Due to certain issues with Blogger... I've moved to WordPress.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Yes, that's a bug!

Who says you can't turn a serious subject into a funny one?

Ubuntu Launchpad Bug Report Site:
#1 Microsoft has a majority market share.
Importance: Critical
Status: In Progress




Gotta love that!

Friday, November 14, 2008

Sending our money into space.

With our country in a financially strapped time, we are all looking at cutting from our budgets. What about our government? What are they doing to cut unnecessary expenses?


Q. How much does it cost to launch a Space Shuttle?
A. The average cost to launch a Space Shuttle is about $450 million per mission.
-www.nasa.com


So how many launches are there? Already for 2009 NASA has planned 4 launches. That's so far, more can be scheduled at any time. Their running total so far is $1.8 billion. Looking at the scheduled missions below, which ones do you see that can't wait at least one year??

1-The Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) is a new Earth orbiting mission sponsored by NASA's Earth System Science Pathfinder (ESSP) Program. The ESSP Program funds competitively selected, low to moderate cost Earth Science missions. These highly focused missions acquire exploratory measurements of the atmosphere, the oceans, the land surface and the solid Earth. These missions share a common goal of improving the capability of Earth scientists to predict changes in weather, climate and natural hazards.

2-The Solar Dynamics Obdervatory (SDO) is designed to help us understand the Sun's influence on Earth and Near-Earth space by studying the solar atmosphere on small scales of space and time and in many wavelengths simultaneously.

3-NOAA-N is the latest polar-orbiting satellite developed by NASA for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). NOAA-N will collect information about Earth's atmosphere and environment to improve weather prediction and climate research across the globe.

4-The flight of space shuttle Endeavour includes several significant steps to install new crew equipment inside the International Space Station and service the solar array joints of the laboratory. During STS-126, the crew of space shuttle Endeavour and the space station will:

-- Exchange crew members. Sandra Magnus will swap places with current station resident Greg Chamitoff.

-- Conduct four spacewalks. Working in teams of two, astronauts will emerge from the space station’s Quest airlock and work on the two large joints that turn the station’s massive solar array “wings.” They are to service the starboard side joint and perform preventative maintenance on the port side joint.

-- Install new crew quarters, a galley, waste water recycling system and oxygen generator inside the space station. The equipment has been packed inside refrigerator-sized racks that require forklifts to lift them on Earth. But in space, a single astronaut can move a rack around with little problem.

Endeavour and its crew are to land at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center after 15 days in space.

Book meme

No, that's not a typo. This is something going around the Ubuntu RSS feeds. It's kind of a game with very simple rules:

-Grab the nearest book.
-Open it to page 56.
-Find the fifth sentence.
-Post the text of the sentence in your journal along with these instructions.
-Don’t dig for your favorite book, the cool book, or the intellectual one: pick the CLOSEST.

OK, here's mine:
Now both of those have been torn down, and some new brick buildings - not brilliant architecturally, but certainly an improvement on the gas station - have been erected in their place.
Even though you don't have to tell what book it comes from, I got mine from neither here nor there by Bill Bryson.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

My Ubuntu

What geek doesn't love screen captures?


Go to my Picasa Album

Ubuntu Wireless Broadband Support

The latest version (8.10) of Ubuntu and Kubuntu both have upgraded their network manager to support the 3G service I subscribe to from Verizon. I have one word for you:

THANKYOUTHANKYOUTHANKYOUTHANKYOUTHANKYOU!

Now I don't have to mess around with command line hassles anymore just to get gppp or kppp installed and configured. It even speeds up my connection by about 10%.

New iPod ... Kinda

I was listening to a FLOSS Weekly podcast yesterday, and the one I was listening to featured the program Rockbox. This program is one you install on your iPod to replace the one Apple ships installed. Not only can I now change how my iPod 30G video model looks, I also get tons of other features. Some of these new features includes games, the ability to play a wide range of file formats, themes and so much more!The main reason I wanted to switch was I wanted ogg support. iPods do not support this open source file type at all. In fact, it's hard to find a handheld media player that will. Another great feature since the last time I used Rockbox is they have an automated installer for Linux. This project has come such a long way! I used it when I first got my iPod and converted my Archos 5ooo mp3 player over. Their list of supported player is huge. Don't worry about messing anything up either. Their installer lets you undo everything you do and their documentaion is outstanding.

So what are you waiting for? Get on over there and let your mp3 player be all it can be!