English

On photography and why I'm back to it

A long time ago, I used to work in movies. I was assistant director, or production manager when working on ads, or I would shoot a number of short subjects when working in TV.
Unfortunately I'm definitely not a people's person. Translated to a film setting, this means that the artsy type soon gets on my nerves (because, no, you just can't watch a film with your sunglasses on... yes, even with a black turtleneck and champagne).

Fred dumps his iBook

Read the previous entries... it was bound to happen eventually. I guess OS X just wasn't meant for me.

In the end I turned my iBook into a fancy paperweight and got a Samsung Q35 instead. It runs Kubuntu and it's great.

Of the /home partition (or lack thereof)

I've been running Linux on my desktop(s) for more than 10 years now. And recently I switched to (K)Ubuntu because it mostly just works. Like many others, I lost the interest in poking at the system for the hell of it quite some time ago. Now I just use it for whatever I need to do. And *Ubuntu mostly just works for me without getting in the way much. Yet it's still broken in one major way.

Like all desktop distributions I've seen to date, *Ubuntu has a real problem. It installs by default to a single partition. Notably, home is bundled with the rest. This makes updates or distribution switching needlessly complicated.

Google page

Helloooo Goooogle !

Adding a disk to my workstation is more fun than it would seem

My main workstation, an amd64 system, runs with two SATA disks. However one of them, hosting most of the Gentoo system seemed to have a few problems. Time to upgrade.

Current setup :

sda1 : /windows (games)
sda2 : /share (network drive)

sdb1 : /
sdb2 : /home
sdb3 : /space
sdb4 : swap

Since there wasn't much space left anyway, I bought a new 200GiB disk and added it to the machine. My Asus K8N-E motherboard still has 4 SATA connectors that can be used for RAID, or apparently for standalone disks.

404 - No such page - Cette page n'existe pas

Sorry, this page does not exist
Désolé, cette page n'existe pas

The site is being completely rewritten. The data you are looking for may reappear soon (or ay be gone for good for such is the way of the Internet). Sorry for the delay.

Le site est en cours de réécriture. Les données que vous cherchez vont probablement réapparaître prochainement (ou ont disparu pour toujours car l'Internet a ses mystères). Désolé pour le dérangement.

You may go to the main page or go completely elsewhere.

Vo

Fred goes from Linux to an iBook (Part 4)

Fred's believe it or not
It may seem odd, but my very commercial iBook is an awesome demonstration platform for FOSS. I just had a great chat at the pub with this guy who was working on airport security in Africa and I pointed out to him the savings of FOSS compared to traditional software. NeoOffice/J and other pieces of FOSS were used for demonstration purpose. I gave him a couple Google search terms, I hope he'll use them. I suppose a full blown Linux KDE or Gnome desktop demo would have been better but I had to do with what was at hand. I should have connected to my workstation but my home network link is down. And I can never find an open hotspot anyway.

Fred goes from Linux to an iBook (Part 3)

Getting X11 to work
I can't get the xdm that comes with the Apple X11 to get its XDMCP chooser running. I'm beginning to wonder if Apple hasn't changed a few things inside it without changing the man pages. I'm now considering just getting up and working on my main machine (it's not as if anyone is using it anyway).
Ok, I gave up on the chooser, "sudo /usr/X11R6/bin/X -query 192.168.1.2" is less geeky but at least it works.

Mac gaming, a world of wonders
I looked at the available games for the Mac. Currently they are all excited because Deus Ex has been ported. Not Deus Ex 2 (or 3 or whatever the current version is, the original one, that came out years ago when the world was young). Amazing. I'm sticking with Asteroid for now. Maybe I'll try breakout next.

Fred goes from Linux to an iBook (Part 2)

Give me my disk back !
When I first started the brand new machine, less than one third of the disk was available. That's on a 30GB disk. Silly me figured that on a mobile machine, I'd never fill a 30GB disk since I'd have at least 20 or 24GB worth of disk space to play with. Hah.
Well I found a tool (called "Monolingual") that removes all the superfluous languages that come bundled with the system. All the hundreds of megs of them. I left a few European ones but I know I'm not going to learn Armenian any time soon. And while I'm not sure where Kanada is spoken, they probably don't eat fries with melted cheese and chicken gravy.

Fred goes from Linux to an iBook (Part 1)

A tale of puzzlement and discovery

Step 0: A foreword
I'm writing all of this in English as it's the language that most people on the network speak (unless the filters in China are suddenly dropped). However, it's written mostly in English, not US English, so don't bug me with "colour", it's the way lightwaves in visible light are named in English. Look it up. It is however possible that colonial spelling might have crept in here and there.
Secondly, I'm not a native speaker, so there might be grammatical or stylistic mistakes here and there. Just count yourself lucky that you aren't reading this through Babelfish and that I made the effort at all.

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