Filed in Geekery, Crafty, Knitting
on December 1st, 2006 @ 2:26am

Yep, all is well again with my beloved. A quick downgrade solved all my problems. First up is the finished Tea Cozy Hat! It’s cute. I could’ve made it a bit bigger, and the ribbing needs to be tighter, but oh well! I like it anyway!

Tea Cozy Hat - Finished!

Yarn: One of the bulky yarns at handpaintedyarn.com
Needles: Clover Bamboo, circ & dpns, size 8.
Pattern: Tea-Cozy Hat, available at handpaintedyarn.com (free)

And next up, of course, is my new sock-knitting venture. I’ve knitted another 3/4 inch or so on this since this photo, but it doesn’t look much different. This is the Universal Toe-Up Sock, from Knitty. I’m knitting it in Knitpicks’ Gloss, with Clover Bamboo size 1 dpns.

Universal Toe Up Socks





Filed in Geekery, Crafty
on November 30th, 2006 @ 5:39am

So I finished the tea-cozy hat and am now working on my first pair of socks that might actually fit me. I’m using the Universal Toe-Up Sock Pattern from Knitty. Mom’s Stole has not yet been blocked, so I’m holding off on pictures for that, but I do have pics of the hat, and the beginning of my new pretty sock…

However.

Just a couple days ago (hell, yesterday, even?) Adept pops up with a notification of updates to the OS. I look them over, and click ‘accept’. All goes well. Then, today, I plug in the camera, and poof… “An unknown error has occured.” I plug it in again. Same thing. I take the card out of the camera and put it into my photo printer to see if I can connect from there. Same error. I take my usb thumb drive and put it in… same error. HAL, my beloved HAL, is broken.

What is HAL? It’s the hardware abstraction layer for linux. It is, in other words, what makes things you plug into your computer /work/. In a nutshell. To be honest, I don’t understand it a whole lot more deeply than that, and that explanation will do. The hal was updated in the update, I know that. And everything worked fine first. And now it doesn’t. So now, I’m working on downgrading it back to its previous version, so I can hopefully get some friggin pictures up. Otherwise, I’ll have to head over to the other computer and do it that way.

On a related geekery note… Windoze is broketh, too. Explorer won’t load, so I can’t do a shittin’ thing, unless I ctrl-alt-del and click ‘run’ and then find me programs. How bloody annoying. I’m hunting up my windows disc to do a rescue or reinstall (oh dread, oh dread), but that seems to have been misplaced in the move. Can you say I’m having some bad luck? Is Mercury in retrograde or something?

Anyway. Photos coming when I can fix one of my bloody computers to do their jobs properly.

The sock. Let’s talk about the sock. I’m using Knitpicks’ Gloss, which is soooo sooo soft. Wool and silk, baby, wool and silk. Merino, at that. It’s in Cocoa, a… well, cocoa-y brown. I’m using size 1 Clover Bamboo needles, which feel terribly fragile in my hands, and I am terrified of breakage. But so far, they’ve held up through some dreaded “purl three together through the back loops” so hopefully they’ll be okay.

Either that or I’ll be hunting for some metal 1s. Brrr. Metal in this weather, not fun. Did I mention it’s been below zero?? With wind chill last night and the night before, it was in the -50s. Once, I saw it drop down to -63. Crapola, that’s cold. Tonight, ti’s somehow warmed up to friggin 22 degrees! Weird. But we’re supposed to get fierce winds, so… I don’t expect it to last. Poo.

Reminds me… must knit mittens. Soon.





Filed in Geekery, Thursday Thirteen, Brainfood, Memes & Meta
on November 2nd, 2006 @ 3:54am

So I use Linux - Ubuntu (or rather, Kubuntu - the version with KDE as the standard desktop environment) to be exact. It’s been a year and… 3 weeks or so since I switched my main computer over to Linux now. A year of using Kubuntu fulltime, except for a few tasks I still relegate to the windows computer, just to give the thing something to do. Or maybe because I’m too lazy to migrate when it’s already set up and working fine on the other computer. Sure, Linux has its share of problems. But so does Windows - anyone, even a Windows enthusiast, will tell you that. The difference is this - I’m more willing to put up with Linux’s problems than Microsoft’s. Not to mention, Microsoft’s overbearing, threatening, and downright frightening business practices really put me off. And while there’s a place for every Operating system in the market, Linux is the one that belongs on my main terminal. Period. And here’s why.


Thirteen Reasons to Love Linux

  1. Free - as in beer! No more shelling out a couple hundred dollars for the latest operating system - or more for a new computer with it already installed. Linux is completely free - download it straight from the internet and burn it to a cd, or, if you like, order one for a minimal cost (from a few dollars for postage and CD costs, up to around $40, if you want a distribution with a manual in it). But honestly? All you need is a broadband connection and a cd, and you’re good to go. No need to spend more - and virtually anything you’d like to know how to do in Linux is online - no need to purchase books, unless you want to!
  2. Free - as in speech! Open source software is great. Sure, you may not want to know what goes on under the hood of your car, but they don’t weld it shut, so you can open it up to take a look every now and then - and heck, you can check your oil and add fluids, too. Linux is like that - you may never have the desire to look at the code and make some changes - but if you do, the option is available to you, unlike proprietary systems, which ‘weld it shut’, so to speak.
  3. Choice - There’s dozens of distributions of linux available - something for everyone’s taste! Like a lightweight OS that uses minimal resources? Linux can do that. Like something more like Windows - with loads of features and eye candy? We can do that, too. Like simple and easy? Try Ubuntu. Like something you can really dig your hands into and get dirty with? Try Slackware.
  4. KDE & Gnome - Two incredible desktop environments with a far broader range of customization options and much better performance than Windows could ever offer. Much prettier, loads of gorgeous themes, and the ability to customize just about everything. Learn more: KDE / GNOME
  5. BASH - the command line shell is wondeful. Ever been frustrated by Window’s “command line”? Hate DOS? Try BASH and be delighted. For you windows users, you can experiment with Cygwin, which actually installs the bash shell for windows!
  6. Software - Thousands of applications, free and at your fingertips. Many of these programs rival expensive or proprietary Windows counterparts - Gimp, Firefox, OpenOffice, Gaim, gnucash, amarok. While some distributions of linux can indeed make installing software difficult, as you’ve probably heard, Ubuntu and other newbie-friendly distros actually make the process simpler than it is in Windows. You just open up your package manager, select the programs you want to install (and there are thousands in the database - all tested rigorously and compatable with your distribution - and click “install”. And it does all the work for you - downloading the program, installing it where it needs to be, and setting it up to run properly. Uninstallation is just as easy.
  7. No Spyware - That’s right, no spyware. So far, there has been absolutely no spyware for linux. While it’s inevitable that some programs may crop up, if you stick with the thousands of tested applications in your repositories, you will NEVER come across spyware again. In open source software, spyware has literally no place to hide, because ANYONE can look at the code - and better, anyone can modify it, too.
  8. No Viruses - Same deal. A small handful of prototype viruses have been forged for linux - but none of them went far - when they did anything at all. Linux is a secure OS - and its system of user priviledges tends to limit what a virus would be capable of. For instance, software simply can’t be be installed anywhere outside of a user’s home directory without root (administrator) permissions. Therefore, any virus that a user ran across during normal computing simply wouldn’t be able to do damage to the system as a whole - if it could do much of anything at all. And again, open-source software simply has some built-in protections against viruses, and linux, more so.
  9. Stability - Linux is hailed for its stability; crashes are not the daily occurance that they are on some Windows desktops. Many linux boxes are never rebooted, except for important upgrades to the system. Most upgrades to a home user’s system do not require a restart at all. Installing software in Windows almost ALWAYS requires a reboot. Not so in linux - only for major kernal upgrades, and similar services. Also, when programs crash in linux, it does not typically bring down the whole system - just the program that’s failed to respond.
  10. Servers - Run your own servers! Yes, you! I run an ssh server that allows me to log into my computer from anywhere in the world and read my files, access other computers on my network, perform system maintenence, check my mail, and more. Free and simple. You can also run a mail server, web server, file server, print server, or anything else you want… without buying expensive software!
  11. Installation - Ubuntu, in particular, is a very fast, very easy install. Virtually no technical questions asked, and even when downloading the OS, it’s very quick! Lately, they’ve evolved to a LiveCD dvd install disc - where you boot directly into the OS from the cd, and you can actually surf the web and play games from the CD while it installs!
  12. LiveCds - This is great, especially for troubleshooting. LiveCDs are cd boot discs that can boot you straight into a fully graphical operating system - or not, your choice - without installing a thing. Carry a livecd, and pop it into any computer that will boot from a cd (most newish computers in the last several years do this by default, though some may need a bios setting change, first) and instantly be immersed into the environment of your choice. You can even download and “install” software - all without touching the data on the machine’s hard drive!
  13. Hardware Support - Better than you’ve heard, especially for fairly standard machines made in the last few years! (Getting cutting-edge hardware is a bit riskier, as it takes time to develop support for them.) My camera, printer, graphics card, sound card, usb key, etc. were all automatically detected and set up for me. The only driver I needed to install was for the graphics card, and it was an incredibly simple process.
  14. And a bonus - dual booting. You do not need to throw away windows to use linux! You can run them both from the same machine - easily! :) Learn more at Ubuntu.com - or choose another distribution, such as Debian, Fedora, Mandriva, SuSE, Mepis, or more.

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