Archive for June, 2003

Blue Belt

Monday, June 23rd, 2003

Oh yeah, on Saturday I tested for and recieved my blue belt. I think this solidly places me in the intermediate category. Of course I have heard black belts in my system referred to as “serious” beginners. But at least I get some new material, and a new form.

The Incredible Hulk

Saturday, June 21st, 2003

This movie was great. I caught it at 7PM last night, and all I can say is wow. There was a great story, I really liked the production effort put into trying to make it more like a comic book, with the split views and vibrant colors.

And everyone who thought the CG hulk was going to be too cartoonish, no way. I mean come on, do you want Lou Ferrigno to play him some more? He is more cut out for security guard work than anything else. But seriously it was quite easy to suspend disbelief for that big monster. And guess what, they had a pretty good story going on too. So enjoy.

Redhat 9, MySQL 4 and DBD::mysql

Friday, June 20th, 2003

In attempting to install Bugzilla on a Redhat 9 system, with MySQL 4.0.13 RPMs installed I ran into some trouble. I wanted to take the easy way out and use ‘perl -MCPAN -e “install Bundle::Bugzilla” to make sure I had all the right perl modules to get bugzilla up and running, but for some reason DBD::mysql wouldn’t compile, the problem appears to have been related to the default LANG setting on RH9 which wasn’t handled well by the DBD::mysql build process. The solution is simply “unset LANG; perl Makefile.PL; make”

I was able to track this down in the perl.dbi.users newsgroup, here I have also put the complete text of the posting in the extended part of this entry entry. (more…)

Highway Driving

Thursday, June 19th, 2003

Attention All morons who think the only way to slow your vehicle, particularly on a high-speed roadway, is to apply the brake: Please stop by at your convenience so I can punch you in the head.

On a related note, anyone who wants to assist in handing out head punches, apply within.

Toof Extwacted

Tuesday, June 17th, 2003

Well I just got my upper right wisdom tooth extracted. It wasn’t bad at all, aparently novocaine is a fairly good thing for body part removal. Anyway, I guess I should make sure my remaining teeth don’t get to such a level of decay as to warrant removal.

Tooth issues

Tuesday, June 17th, 2003

I went to the Dentist for the first time in about 4 or 5 years the other day. I was prompted to go because my upper right wisdom tooth sort of crumbled when I threw a quarters worth of chicle tabs in my mouth after lunch. I had been planning a trip to the dentist for a year or so, and just never got around to it. This event helped me re-arranged my priorities. The first trip I went to my regular dentist from when I was a child. He looked at it took and X-ray and suggested it be extracted. Said it was fairly well decayed. So today I will have #1 extracted, hopefully that isn’t too bad. But I decided in the mean time I should have a checkup and a cleaning.

Mike had previously told me about Doctor Mel Burchman, and his hi-tech dentistry, no drills, etc… So I decided to check it out. Well all I can say about my experience with Dr. Burchman is that it was phenomenal. I am used to the 1 – 2 hour appointment for x-ray, cleaning, poking and scaling of the teeth. Where you spend 95% of the time with a dental technician and the dentist pokes his head in to sign off on their work. Well the trip to see Dr. High Tech was quite different. I was there for no longer than 40 minutes. The X-ray was done at a single shot, rather than sticking a bunch of film in your mouth and then pointing that X-Ray gun at your head. They had this device that just spun around your head, and put your full mouth X-Ray on a single piece of film, and it was placed where you could see it. Then about 30 minutes were spent with the Doctor examining the X-Ray, finding all the cavities, I have 10 :-( And showing you pictures of the decaying teeth up on the rooms TV. Then there was the best part, the cleaning. He used this high powered sandblaster, basically just a strong water pick, and cleaned all my teeth in about 3 minutes, with no scraping and minimal gum poking, then I was finished.

I went back yesterday to have some of the cavities filled, again it was about 30 minutes with the Doctor, where he used an even stronger sandblaster to removed the decayed material from my teeth, and then patched up the three newly formed holes with some type of natural colored filling and a laser. No novicaine, and only a couple short periods of slight discomfort. When he was sandblasting the tooth, I felt a hot sensation when he was lasering the tooth, and finally the buffer/polisher he used to clean up the patch jobs a little was slightly uncomfortable. But the entire visit took exactly 35 minutes. I need to go back twice more to finish the job, but I can see myself going to this dentist twice a year for my cleanings, because it is so quick and hassle-free. That should prevent these marathons of cavity filling.

Wachovia USPRO Championship

Monday, June 9th, 2003

So I started drinking at 8:50 AM on Sunday June 8th. My brother rents a house in Manayunk, which is a section of Philadelphia that was originally a real blue colar town when my parents were growing up there, now it is a strange mixture of a shopping attraction, convenient (and high priced) living area for people who work in and around the city, and there are still the roots of hard working grit. Manayunk has become a trendy area for the rich to live in very old houses and try and find a place to park their many SUVs and expensive cars, there is also the college element as it is centrally located to LaSalle, Drexel, UPenn, Villanova, St. Joes and others. And of course there is Main street which is littered with overpriced resturants, bars and nick-nack shops squeezed in between container factories and some other industrial plants, all butted up against the Canal that used to be the lifeblood of the town. Anyway the point of this description was to give you a feel for a neighborhood that is a mixture of college life, rusty grit, high polish, lots of bars and lots of cars squeezed into a layout that was designed for a few horses and buggies to pass through.

So I showed up in Manayunk with 35 lbs of ice to help keep the keg of Michelob and the keg of highlife cold, so we could have a full day of drinking, cooking dead animals and oh yeah, I think there was a bike race too.

Drinking went on for the whole day, starting at 8:50 AM when the highlife was tapped. There was lots of yelling and some beer pong, and some racially motivated diatribes from some of my less tactful friends.

I documented a fair amount of the activity with my Sanyo 8100 camera phone, and put it up on my Photo Gallery. So you can check out a low resolution view of the events. And since my brain was addled with alcohol the resolution of the pictures matches my recolection exactly. Oh and I think someone won the race too.

Reclaim the Public Domain

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2003

Go read and sign the petition to ensure a rich, diverse public domain.

Saw it at Freedom to Tinker

SCO vs IBM nonsense

Monday, June 2nd, 2003

If you are interested in Linux and the status of the SCO vs. IBM debacle that is going on, probably the best place to follow it is on, Karsten Self’s wiki here. You can also follow along on the linux-elitists mailing list or associated archives.

Lots of good information, and a high signal to noise on the linux-elitists list. If you are interested in Hard free software questions and clever answers.

Let me close this entry with a quote from Darl McBride the SCO Group CEO in August 2002 (reference).

Obviously Linux owes its heritage to UNIX, but not its code. We would not, nor will not, make such a claim.