Archive for the ‘General’ Category

This week’s random books

Sunday, August 6th, 2006

I never used to like buying so many random books, but as time moves on and one grows older, it’s something that becomes more enjoyable. I have a (slightly insatiable) appetite for knowledge that tends to leave me continually frustrated – I probably also have some kind of attention disorder considering the way my interests will swing from one topic to another. But I like being how I am, just it takes some getting used to never fully being satisfied. Here’s the Amazon purchases/arrivals from the last week:

  • Mac OS X Internals. Can you believe Amit finally wrote a book on it? Well, he did, and this one is going to kill my free time once I have some free time to devote to it! This guy is seriously smart and seriously likes PowerPC – we’ve been in occasional contact for the last couple of years. Since I know the editor on that book too, I’m even more convinced.
  • The Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. After all, I want to support this guy in his quest to actually build/buy his pirate ship. I think that’s an insanely cool thing to do, and I think the whole FSM concept is a good one too. I’m going to especially enjoy reading this in the company of right-wing religious types who can’t take a joke, if I find some.
  • Principia Discordia. Since I’m on the trail of more interesting religions, I figured I might as well read this classic too.
  • The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Boating and Sailing. I need to re-learn a lot of this stuff. I’ve got my eye on a couple of other titles too – and once I move, and spring approaches, I’ll look into finding a local sailing club in Boston/Cambridge that I can get involved with.
  • Born on a Blue Day: Memoir of Aspergers and an Extraordinary Mind. I like this guy (Daniel Tannet) because of his ability to explain his “condition” to the world around him. I’ve seen the recent UK documentary a couple of times and discovered his blog too.
  • The Qur’an. I’ve never read it (we would say “Koran”) and figured that it was a good idea to try to understand the beliefs and values of Islam since I’m constantly frustrated and annoyed at the actions of the many extremists who take it all out of context.

I’ve been trying to come up with a 5 year plan for those things that I want to achieve now that I’ve decided to settle down with one job for the time being. Although I have less personal time, I am about to embark on an interesting journey and want to combine that with a lot of other tweaks in my personal life. For example, I’m on an aggressive diet at the moment and want to re-establish my interest in climbing, cycling and other activities. I want to learn to sail (again), take up fishing, learn to fly, go on more crazy adventures – and other stuff.

Jon.

The clock is ticking

Sunday, August 6th, 2006

So I got my approval to work in the United States. That came with a folder a half inch thick worth of supporting evidence that was necessary in order to convince the powers that be. I now need to go see some people and have some poking and prodding before (hopefully) they will issue me with a magical rubber stamped piece of paper in my passport and I can move. At this point, the clock is ticking – it’s likely that I’ll be out of here within two months at this point.

I’ve got a lot of fun ahead of me. I don’t have a US Social Security Number (SSN) and I can’t get one until after I move, but I probably can’t get a US bank account without an SSN either. And nobody really wants to let a house/appartment to you if you don’t have a US bank account… so I asked a friend and got the reply I expected – namely that I’m going to have a month of pain after I move. Figures. I don’t actually expect this to be easy, but I’m hopeful that I won’t get caught up in too much needless paperwork and legal red tape crappiness.

In preparation for the move, I’m moving my mail and other stuff onto machines that aren’t at home. I can’t move stuff onto dmesg and panic directly, because I need some kind of SLA to exist – so those machines are secondarying for me from this point in. Instead, I’ve setup a couple of new virtual machines with linode, Bytemark and so on. Some virtual machines like fremont.jonmasters.org and london.jonmasters.org are in the process of being made ready for this stuff. They’ll then host email and round-robbin on web content.

Jon.

Pastafarianism, wooden sailing boats, and general musings

Friday, July 28th, 2006

So, I’m “back” in the UK after a couple of weeks the other side of the pond. The more often I do this, the more I realize how totally I don’t feel I belong in this country – the UK’s a nice place to visit, but I’m done with living here. For me, the only issue is whether I ultimately settle in the US or in Canada. The former is preferable for high tech jobs, but the latter is politically and socially more conducive to my way of thinking. This is important, especially when you just decided that being an atheist isn’t nearly as cool as being a member of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster – pirates rule! So I ordered a copy of the Gospel of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster and am incidentally also waiting for permission to make “Linux is evolution, not intelligent design” t-shirts. As soon as I get approval, I’ll stick some up on cafe press.

I had a revalation at OLS. This wasn’t purely alcohol related, but I realized that I really do want to build my own cutter ship and sail the seas. It’s something I’ve been saying that I want to do, but now I’ve decided that these things don’t happen unless you start somewhere. So, I’m going to have the proceeds from a certain book go into a fund for making this dream a reality – it’ll take more than that to actually build the thing (I’ve ordered a couple of books on boat building and will need to take a lot more lessons in sailing as I’ve forgotten a lot of what I learned) but it’s a start. I’ve so far found at least one person who wants to sail with me, so that’s cool too. Motto: it’s very dangerous to offer me compelling justification :-)

Canada was fantastic. Did I mention that it’s one of the greatest countries in the world? I think I did, just a few times. In fact, I’m going to do another weekend trip sometime soon since I think October/November is just a little too far away to be over in North America again. I hung out in Montreal and Ottawa for most of the time around and during OLS. I saw a bunch of talks, hosted a BOF on drivers, had a lot of ideas, talked to really cool people, consumed 12 shots of coffee in a day, had 6 whiskeys and 10 shots on another day, generally didn’t sleep much for a week, and realized that OLS is just getting cooler as the years pass. Sure the programme could do with more work next year – but who can honestly say that’s the only reason for turning up?

Noise cancellation headphones rock. I picked up a pair at Logan the other night (right after having a double extra order of Clam Chowder at Legal Sea Foods – the folks there were totally understanding of my need to stock up before my return to the land of the quaint and boring) from a store where the dude who sold me this impulsive buy recognized the iPod Linux bootloader on my iPod – turns out Mad Dog goes there quite often too. Funny. Anyway, I’m now able to turn off the annoying world around me, thanks to the power of a little signal processing and basic audio theory applied to a gadget that should have been installed in every Jet Liner about a billion years ago anyway.

Did I mention that Canada rocks?

Jon.

Hanging out in Boston

Friday, July 14th, 2006

So I made it to the United States and am hanging out in Boston/Westford for a couple of days prior to OLS. I was staying close to downtown Cambridge yesterday, but today I’m out in the woods due to the logistical benefit and my lack of driving/car ownership. I’m enjoying my trip so far insomuch as I expected to be busy but also have time to reflect upon the whole relocation thing. And in summary, I expect that my life will become even more hectic, but that I’m going to enjoy it in the longer term (remind me I said that in a year from now), though I do need to find a place that’s near Cambridge if I’m going to avoid 6am introspective blogging such as this.

I arrived on Wednesday afternoon and got to my hotel with just enough time to remove plane-smell before going out for the evening. The flight in from IAD was interesting in a “on time departure”, “sitting on the runway for 40 minutes” let’s-all-play-with-statistics kind of way. Anyway, a bumpy ride followed by traffic, trains and a cab soon put that behind me. A half bottle of wine, a few pints and some interesting live music later, and I was feeling much better. I woke up the next day with no real side effects and having had some of the best sleep in a long time. In fact, I should probably tire myself out like that more often. I’m now almost running properly on EST and it’s only been one full day so far. Now I’m looking forward to next week when I’ll probably have virtually no sleep during the entirity of OLS.

In other news, I’ve decided it’s a recurring theme that I always go after the unobtainable. It’s a curse. And anyway, there’s just something about having your beating heart ripped from your chest that makes that worthwhile. I’m quite certain that somebody somewhere would have a whole heck of a lot of psychobabble to describe these situations I get myself into. Anyway, the lesson to be learned here is you can be as smart as you like and yet still understand nothing about the needs of other real-life human beings. I’m adding “distance” and “youthful optimism” to my list of things that piss me off about myself, the world, and everything.

Jon.

m-i-t

Sunday, July 9th, 2006

I’m now the official maintainer of module-init-tools and am looking to get more folks involved with future development. There’s a mailing list, there’s a wiki, there’s a lot of interest in getting various patches moving forward.

One of my first key interests is in adding configuration file support to tools like depmod so we can dynamically alter the priority of “extra”, “updates”, “weak-updates” and other directories under /lib without having to have lots of per-distro patchsets in place. We also need to get some of the non-intrusive vendor patches upstream and generally have a code cleanup (there are a few obvious memory leaks from just looking at the list handling code in depmod alone).

Further out, there’s an interest in allowing greater integration with udev and expanding the functionality of modinfo. If you have useful ideas, please check out that website and mail me suggestions. If you have a kernel project that you’d like to host on kerneltools.org, please also drop me an email – the wiki is easy enough for you to just add projects anyway.

Jon.

Anti/Pro Americana?

Saturday, July 8th, 2006

Let’s clear this up…

I am not now, nor have I ever been “anti-American” nor necessarily “pro-American” in the way that people would like to think I might be. I have believed for a long time that the US has a very flawed foreign policy, that the Republican party is extremely damaging to the country as a whole, that modern day isolationism doesn’t work and that Canada’s previous Liberal government made a number of much more enlightened decisions than their neighbor (which I expect Harper’s Conservative government to screw up as quickly as possible). I am, however, very much pro the reasons for the founding of the United States and the ideology underpinning the whole thing, I just feel that there are a few bad apples trying to ruin it. But the same is true of most western[ized] countries.

Actually, I’ve been remarkably consistent in my geopolitical views for a long long time (there’s more than one reason for the blue theme on this blog…), it’s just that interpretation will inevitably follow whatever I choose to talk about. If I decide to write about how I think Independence was a good idea then I’ll be accused of being “pro-American” by some people. But if I decide to criticize the Iraq war as an unjustified conflict retrospectively relabled as a liberation excise to calm those with short memories (as I have done many times), then the inverse will be deemed true too by some people. Most people have a mixture of views on different subjects, not always in line with one overall viewpoint or another.

Jon.

4th July

Thursday, July 6th, 2006

Photo: My alter ego, Team America Jon comes to save the day.

So, just in time for Independence Day to be over, my order for large US flags was fulfilled and I became the proud owner of one too many of them. I’ve now got 4 5×3 feet flags, one 3×2 and a giant cotton flag on order that I’ll pick up in the US next week. That’s not counting the original Star Spangled Banner t-shirt I ordered on cafepress over the weekend. Betsy Ross would be proud (and a little disturbed, I’ll reckon). There’s no particularly good reason for this, it just seemed like a good idea at the time. I don’t like to do such things in half measures.

The Declaration of Independence

“But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security” — Declaration of Independence (backdated July 4th 1776).

Anyway, 230 years ago on Tuesday, 56 brave people signed a declaration that changed the world forever. In case you’re interested, five of them were later caught and died (read: brutally and horribly murdered for treason) at the hands of the British (it’s arguable whether they died specifically for signing it or just because the British didn’t think too kindly of them in a cup-of-tea? let’s all go to war fashion). These weren’t poor men either – amongst them were lawyers, farmers and other men of notable means. They knew their lives would never be the same, but they believed in something. In fact, they believed that they were morally obligated to effect positive change on the world around them because they were in a position to do so. And I think that’s amazing.

What the British did wrong

The full list of charges in the declaration against the British waste-of-time Monarch – George III – included some fantastic farces:

  • He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.
  • He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the consent of our legislatures.
  • He has plundered our seas, ravaged our Coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people.

1776 was hardly the finest hour for the British and what’s most annoying to me is that we don’t learn in school about that history. In fact, few people in the UK can be aware of the true extent to which we were utterly evil and reprehensible in our actions (we burned the library of Congress in the War of 1812 too – so the British did know in history how to burn books). For if they did, it might get a little more attention in the media next 4th July. It’s not just an American holiday, it’s a reminder that we in the United Kingdom weren’t always whiter than white either.

And the point is

Learning about the history of the United States (trivia: did you know Texas was an independent nation for only 9 years?) makes me think differently about events that came later – for example the American aid in WWII that helped us out of a real jam. I now understand the isolationist viewpoint of the US in earlier times, though I’m glad the world of today is very much a more connected one. My point? For all the Republican right-wing crap of the modern day United States of America, it’s a great nation that’s done a lot of good in the world too.

In the future, I have no doubt that the United States will address a few of the efforts to undermine democracy in the modern age. Illegal spying and other government interference in due process that goes against all that the Founding Fathers believed in. That declaration of Independence was made 230 years ago this week, I think it’ll still be good in another 230 years – and no, neither this nor the constitution is “just a piece of paper”. No matter how hard Bush and elements of the Republican party try to destroy the values of these historical documents, they’ll still be there.

Jon.

Update: I just ordered a copy of Common Sense and Rights of Man by Thomas Paine from Amazon. Common Sense is one of the books that kickstarted the American Revolutionary War and describes Britain in no uncertain terms for how it treated its North American colonies in the 18th century. Paine described the “royal brute of Britain” using language that appeals to me. And yes, I’m anti-unelected unrepresentational Monarchy. I think that’s pretty obvious. Monarchy is antiquated crap.