Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Unidentified Network issue with VMWare’s virtual NICs in Vista | a Single Point of Contact
I ran into the problem of the virtual network adapters used by VMWare virtual machines remaining unidentified after I reinstalled VMWare Workstation (version 6.5.4) on my freshly installed Windows 7 build (I figured that it was time for an upgrade from XP).
I found the fix at Matt Wade's blog, a Single Point of Contact:
Unidentified Network issue with VMWare’s virtual NICs in Vista | a Single Point of ContactSunday, April 25, 2010
B-17 at the Santa Barbara Airport (edited)
This is the B-17 "Aluminum Overcast", at the Santa Barbara Airport on 4/25/2010. I posted these pictures earlier, but decided to consolidate them all to a single post. Click on the pictures to see them full size.
Above: Cockpit from the port side.
Above: Technical specifications and crew positions.
Above: Ball turret closeup. Note the Nazi swastika on the right side of the turret. That means a Luftwaffe pilot had a VERY bad day.
Above: Cockpit interior. Hard to see in this picture, but some of the modern equipment present includes GPS and satellite radio. The satellite radio is used to provide consistent weather reports.
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
PowerShell
I recently concluded a class on using Microsoft's PowerShell, which is a more sophisticated scripting shell than the basic Windows command line interface (cmd.exe). All in all, I was impressed by it. It's still not as integral to Windows as bash (or other flavor of shell) is to UNIX/Linux, but it's a step closer.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Microsoft's advantage over open-source
Now, I realize that open-source software has many advantages. This posting is not about them. Go Google "open source advantage" to see the multitude of postings that cover that subject. No, this posting is about Microsoft's advantage over the open source development community. Horrors!
No, not horrors... what was the other word of which I was thinking?
Oh, yeah. Boredom.
Huh?
Here is the back story. I was recently revising my resume using OpenOffice Writer. All in all, Open Office is a pretty solid office suite, especially for the price (which is free, if you didn't know.) However, I encountered some problems* when saving to Rich Text Format (.RTF). Why did I choose .RTF? So that people can open the file with a minimum of hassle. This would be preferable to sending out my resume in OpenOffice Writer's default format (.ODS), which would basically require people to have OpenOffice installed** if they wanted to read it. Reading the resume, of course, being the goal of sending it out in the first place, instead of having the recipients do something such as ignore the file. Microsoft can't really say that it is ahead in this part of the game: just ask anyone who has tried to send a Word 2007 (.DOCX) file to someone using a plain vanilla version of Word 2003.
So, I encountered a problem with formatting in my document when I tried to save the document in a form that doesn't require me to provide free technical support to the people to whom I send the document. This problem is one known to the OpenOffice user community, and I would hope it is known to the developers within that community. (Sadly, my coding skills are as of yet insufficient to grab the raw source code and fix it myself.) Apparently, this issue (which perusal of the forums will reveal has been known about for at least a year) is too boring (not sufficiently interesting) to attract the unpaid programming efforts of the open source community to effect a fix.
And therein lies my realization of an advantage Microsoft (or any other company) has over the open source development community: money. You see, money is what you give people to do things that they otherwise not be inclined to do. Things that might make them bored. So, when a problem is sufficiently boring, the (largely unpaid) open source community might never get around to fixing it. A company like Microsoft, on the other hand, can decide that the problem needs to get fixed and pay someone to do the boring work. (Actually making that decision is a whole other mess, mind you.)
The moral of the story: a boring problem led to me paying Microsoft for a copy of Office 2007.
* Specifically, problems with bullets and indentation. More specifically, said bullets and indentation not always being present after the file was saved, closed, and reopened. This is a known issue and discussions can be found in the OpenOffice Community Forum. There are workarounds, but the issue has not yet been fixed in code.
** There are plug-ins for Microsoft Office that allow this, but you never want to assume that optional third-party components are installed.
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Help for Haiti
I'm linking this from Direct Relief International. Please contribute if you are at all capable of doing so at this time. Direct Relief is a medical aid organization based in my home town of Santa Barbara. As mentioned on their home page, "A recent bequest has enabled Direct Relief to cover all fundraising and administrative expenses from its own funds. All contributions will be used for programmatic work."
In the long run, Haiti will also need to rebuild its highly-degraded ecology to become self-sufficient. I believe that permaculture is the best way to accomplish this goal. Permaculture Haiti is a portal (still under construction) for coordinating efforts and sharing ideas on how to restore Haiti. Please take a look at it and contribute if you can.
Miller-McCune article on the Cyberwar for Iran's Future
Interesting article from Miller-McCune on the flexibility and limitations of electronic dissent. While in some ways it is more difficult for authorities to restrict, text messaging and the like are not necessarily a match for an authoritarian regime with a bit of technological knowledge. There are some examples in the article of popular movements that benefited greatly from new media technology. Most of the detail covers the events following Iranian election of 2009, as the title might indicate.
Here is the link:
Politics Articles | Inside the Cyberwar for Iran's Future | Miller-McCune Online MagazinePosted using ShareThis
Friday, January 8, 2010
AFL-CIO report on H1B hiring
According to this report from the AFL-CIO, American companies are using a non-existent labor shortage of high technology workers in order to justify H1B hiring. In turn, this depresses wages for American workers. In reality, the only shortage of American high technology workers is in the segment of the labor force willing to work at below-market wages.
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