As of yesterday, the latest Ubuntu release 'Hardy Heron' is available for download (both client and server). Every time a major Linux distri(bution) hits 'the shelves', the Linux community roars. With each release (Ubuntu or whatever flavor) the Linux community gets closer, and closer to Windows.
Even though the OS itself is getting better and better. It still lacks the support of decent major software like Adobe Creative Suite, etc. It's missing the software people use in every day (business)life.
Sure, there a million different ways of running Microsoft Office or Adobe Photoshop on a Linux OS, but these require a commercial piece of software (CrossOver) , or in depth knowledge of the OS to make it work (Wine in some cases). Two things that shouldn't be required. Not if you're used to Windows (or Apple's OSX). And even if you find a 'substitute' it's most likely to have an awful user experience.
The average housewife won't use Linux, because her friends all use Windows. All those nice little Windows programs, which makes life easier (or a living hell with all the mal/spyware out there). So if the Linux community wants to make a difference they need to create some sort of critical mass (by their selves, or by Microsoft screwing up) to get the attention of the 'normal' user. But in a community where there's no real (commercial) business model, it's gonna be damn hard.
Microsoft created this critical mass by playing (probably) the best marketing trick in the world; Release Windows 95, and turn a blind eye to those who use a pirated copy at home. The home users create demand on the workfloor, so businesses start to use it on their workstations. Soon everyone was addicted. And now it's damn hard to beat the addiction.
B.t.w., Apple is doing it a lot better. They created a nice and stable OS (just like the average Linux desktop distribution), BUT the OS has ALL the relevant drivers for the hardware used. ALSO they have a complete (and cheap) software suite (iLife and iWork), which is more than enough for the average family. No need to search the caverns of the Internet for software, and they look and feel the same as the OS.
So, I guess that my conclusion is that the OS is nearing perfection, but it (Linux in general) lacks good and decent third party software (and a good marketing machine :) )
In the mean time; I'm gonna upgrade my Linux (mail, web, and ssh) servers at work to 'Hardy Heron'.
VMWare and Firewall / VPN Clients
Well, that was another morning well spent....
A couple off weeks ago I started experimenting with FreeRADIUS on Ubuntu server (v6.06.2 TLS). Mainly because I needed to test some things for work. So I used VMWare to experiment. The networking part was set-up as Bridged.
Today, I wanted to test with iperf (a tool for network performance testing). So I launched the virtual machine, but there was no network connectivity. ifconfig showed that eth1 didn't received an IP adres.
So I ran every possible test there was;
- restarted the interfaces (/etc/init.d/networking restart)
This resulted in the following;
Listening on LPF/eth1/00:0c:29:68:e3:eb
Sending on LPF/eth1/00:0c:29:68:e3:eb
Sending on Socket/fallback
DHCPDISCOVER on eth0 to 255.255.255.255 port 67 interval 8
DHCPDISCOVER on eth0 to 255.255.255.255 port 67 interval 12
The "DHCPDISCOVER" messages continue about 4 times, then the message:
No DHCPOFFERS received.
No working leases in persistent database - sleeping.
- restarted the DHCP server
- rebooted the virtual machine
- changes the networking to NAT instead of Bridged (this way, connectivity was restored, but not the way I wanted. I needed Bridge-mode)
- Tried to run the virtual machine on OSX (VMWare Fusion), which worked surprisingly.
After this I ran Wireshark on my server to see if DHCP request were coming in.... And you might have guessed; No DHCP request were reaching the DHCP server. So the problem was work PC related.... As a matter of fact, I had the Cisco VPN client running..... Which didn't allow the DHCP request broadcast.
Shutting the VPN client down solved the DHCP problem. After the virtual machine worked I could reinitiate the VPN.
Mental note to myself: do NOT boot/restart the virtual machines when the VPN is up.
OSX Update Galore
Nokia E61i Firmware Update
- Use the Nokia Datasuite to create a FULL backup of the phone, because during the upgrade the phone goes back to factory defaults.
- Have lot's of patience (and some deodorant handy)
- Make sure the PC isn't doing anything else that might interfere with the update.
- the e-mail application seems more stable
- camera and video are still crappy (the time between the snapshot sound and the actual capture is still multiple seconds)
- Idle connections are terminated. This is a bad thing (for me at least), because I had my UMTS connection open all the time, and this way I received mail throughout the day. Now I have to connect each time I want to check my e-mail.
Awesome Screensaver
TrueCrypt Cross-Platform??
GPS Logger Put to the Test
We went to the Hoge Veluwe in Gelderland last weekend for some 'serious' photography. This would be the first real trail for my GPS Logger (Qstarz BT1000).
At the 'start' I switched the logger to 'Log', and forgot about it completely during the day. The device did its work during the day. The real challenge came at home. Linking the GPS info to the photo's.....
The software for adding the GPS data to the photo's was 'GPSPhotoLinker' (remember that I use a Mac). Unfortunately, the software kept crashing when I tried to combine GPS data and the images. Possible reason could be the large NEF (Nikon RAW) files, because the crash happened every third image.
So the search for an alternative started, and I quickly found 'PhotoGPSEditor' (also DonationWare). This tool could also manipulate NEF files.
Adding the GPS info was relatively easy with this software (GPSPhotoLinker is more intuitive IMO). After that I imported the photo's in Adobe Lightroom, which showed the GPS data in the Metadata section of Lightroom (you can see the map location when you click on the arrow behind the GPS coordinates.
Just click on the following picture, to see when and where it was taken.
The complete set can be seen here.
Google Maps and Nokia e61i
SanDisk RescuePro Software on a 'Mini' CD
TrueCrypt v5.0 Coming Soon
TrueCrypt 5.0 Release scheduled for: January 2008The following features are planned to be implemented in future versions:
- Windows system partition encryption with pre-boot authentication
- Mac OS X version
- GUI for Linux versions of TrueCrypt
- Parallelized and pipelined read/write
- and more.
- Support for external authentication modules (cryptographic tokens)
- 'Raw' CD/DVD volumes
- TrueCrypt API
- and more.
