Archive

Archive for September, 2009

A Nice Clean Garage

September 20th, 2009
WTF?

WTF?

Spring has passed, however, our garage didn’t get its fair share of attention. We used it as a staging area for some of the shed materials, and after I had returned the left-overs, we had the beginnings of a clean garage once again.

There are no before pictures, that would be too horrendous; here is what it looks like now, and hopefully will remain that way.

View from the Kitchen Door

View from the Kitchen Door

try to imagine the vacuum cleaner is a car..

try to imagine the vacuum cleaner is a car..

My corner

My corner

We also re-arranged where the server is, so I had to shut that down and move it down one shelf.

If you are curious as what the top photo is, that is Rody. Owen’s physical therapist lent him/her/it to us. Owen doesn’t seem to care for it, I can’t leave it alone. I laugh every time I look at it, and its funny just to kick. It looks so happy and blissfully stupid when you launch it into the air with one swift kick!

mike General ,

PC-BSD 7.1.1

September 13th, 2009
PC-BSD KDE Desktop

PC-BSD KDE Desktop

PC-BSD is a nice mesh between FreeBSD and a ready to use Desktop (which uses about 6GB of disk space). It is based on FreeBSD 7.2, so it has all the cool features of the latest release. Best of all, without ANY additional configuration, I was able to:

  • Use the official FreeBSD nVidia driver for hardware acceleration
  • Watch clips on YouTube (with flashplayer)
  • Play back all sorts of media types like mp3’s, divx, mpegs,wmv,qt…
  • use ZFS
  • Create and edit documents with the latest OpenOffice 3.1
  • Browse the web with Firefox 3.5
  • Create VM’s with VirtualBox

Plus, if there wasn’t a PBI package for what I wanted, I could still use FreeBSD’s pkg_add or, cd to /usr/ports and make one. I would say, that’s pretty impressive for a commercially supported Unix platform.

Otherwise, it is very much like Fedora or Ubuntu, where it has an update manager (updates PBI’s and the system), network manager, helpful tutorials, and for once (for FreeBSD at least) a full blown X11/QT graphical installer. FreeBSD has always had a simple ncurses installer, which I like, but it tends to frighten a lot of people who are used to GUI installers.

Once strange thing it does is place all PC-BSD binaries in /usr/PCBSD. I guess this is to remain independent and out of the way of the base FreeBSD binaries, as well as /usr/local, which is the normal prefix for all Ports.

To wrap it up; my initial impression of PC-BSD is a positive one. I like how I could use the FreeBSD ports and package system and it did not conflict with the PC-BSD packages that were installed. I like the installer, and the storage options at install time (UFS2+SU, or UFS2+Journal, Encrypted swap…). With all OS’s, it normally takes a few weeks of using it to see its weaknesses, so I’m sure PC-BSD has some issues waiting to pop up. The only one I see right now is that KDE4 is the default GUI, and I prefer Gnome. I could install it, but it wasn’t an up front, as all of PC-BSD’s install tools are written in QT. The initial X setup tool was pretty slick, and it worked with my picky laptop.

mike Geekyness , , , ,