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Friday, December 19. 2008MythTV Mini-conference
I just realised that I hadn't blogged about this at all. I'm hosting the MythTV mini-conference at linux.conf.au 2009 in Hobart, Australia in January. How could I have forgotten about blogging this?!
The little blurb about the mini-conference is:
MythTV is a personal video recorder (PVR) for Linux which allows you to decide what you want to watch; when you want to watch it. MythTV has been increasing in popularity since Isaac Richards first started working on it in 2002. It is now very usable, and has several dedicated Linux distributions, as well as several books written about it. This mini-conference is intended to bring together both users and developers of MythTV to discuss topics of interest to both groups.The programme is looking really good, and it should be a rocking conference. I'll post another blog entry once the programme is officially released. Thursday, December 18. 2008
IPv6 Steering Group Technical SIG - ... Posted by Andrew Ruthven
in catalyst at
20:15
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Here's an email I've just received about a new IPv6 group in New Zealand, if you have an interested in the future of IPv6 in New Zealand, please join:
A workshop at held at InternetNZ on the 28 November in Wellington saw the formation of a New Zealand IPv6 Steering Group. This group includes representatives from telecommunications carriers, internet service providers, ICT vendors, and industry and user associations. The members of this steering group consist of invited senior representatives from the following organisations: InternetNZ TUANZ ISPANZ Telecommunications Carriers Forum Digital Development Forum Telecom TelstraClear WorldXChange Orcon FX Networks REANNZ Canterbury Development Corporation Kordia Cisco Vodafone Juniper Networks Alcatel Lucent Braintrust This steering group will primarily be concerned with high level discussion regarding the deployment of IPv6 within New Zealand. The steering group will not necessarily be a place where technical discussion takes place. As with so many things these days, a combination of business and technical expertise must be bought together to solve a given problem. To this end at the same workshop a Technical Special Interest Group (TechSIG) was also established. The goals of this group are: . To act as a central point for IPv6 technical discussion within the New Zealand Internet community. . To identify to the IPv6 Steering Group any business related barriers to IPv6 deployment which have been identified by the SIG's technical contributors. . To comment and provide potential solutions to technical related barriers identified by members of the IPv6 Steering Group. . To stimulate the production of relevant technical documentation. The co-conveners of this group are Andy Linton Nathan Ward Brian Carpenter Dean Pemberton A mailing list has been created and membership is open to all interested parties. Subscription details can be found at the link below; http://listserver.internetnz.net.nz/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-techsig I would encourage anyone who has an interest in the deployment and growth of IPv6 to join and contribute to the list. Please do not feel that this is a 'Networking Specialist Only' list. The deployment of IPv6 (and depletion of IPv4) has just as significant an impact on system administrators and content/application providers as it does on network administrators. I welcome all technical viewpoints onto the list. Thank you for your time. Dean Pemberton (Co-convener, IPv6 Steering Group Technical SIG) Thursday, December 18. 2008Brooke - More photos
It seems to have been ages since we last uploaded any photos. Oops. To make up for that here is a double whammy:
Also, a huge congratulations to Susanne's sister Debbie and her husband Jeff for the birth of their first child Ellie on Saturday morning. Tuesday, October 14. 2008Fixed IPs on ADSL lines
S and I are looking at switching ADSL providers to a provider when also provides a phone service over VoIP, and I thought, "Hey, since I'm going to switch our phone over to VoIP, and our 'net connection will have to be online all the time for the phone to work, it'll have a fixed IP as part of the plan, right?". So I finally found the right person to ask at the new ISP and was told "No". It turns out I need to pay an extra $10 a month for a fixed IP.
Is it just me or is the whole attitude towards fixed IP addresses on ADSL lines crazy? First a little bit of history. Back in the early days of dial-up Internet usage all users were allocated a fixed IP address. You just got one, I still have my letter from Actrix Networks from 1996 which had my connection information, including my allocated IP address. Then when the number of users grew large enough that ISPs didn't have enough IP addresses available to allocate to more users, users were switched to dynamic IP addresses (so you received a different IP every time you connected). This worked okay since most people were only online for short periods of time, and allowed for the customer base of ISPs to grow, without further exhausting the IPv4 address pool. So, the reason that the industry switched to dynamic IP addresses was to make the best use of a limited resource. But now, having a fixed IP address is seen as another revenue stream by the ISPs. Which is crazy. I'm going be online 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. I'm going to be using an IP address from that dynamic pool the entire time. That IP address will never be available for anyone else to use. I can get around this by using a dynamic DNS service (which is what I'm already doing). But this seems crazy when my plan new will require me to be online 24 hours a day. If I'm not online we won't have a working phone. The up-shot? I won't be paying the extra $10/month, I'll continue to use my dynamic DNS service and I'll continue to consume a dynamic IP address never allowing it to be used by anyone else. Update: It was suggested to me that this could be due to the APNIC IPv4 Guidelines, but APNIC classify DSL as a permanent connection, therefore static allocations are fine, in fact it appears that they expect organisations to use static IP addresses for DSL connections. Sunday, August 3. 2008
Brooke Photos - 13 - 15 Months Posted by Andrew Ruthven
in family at
10:40
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Wow, another 3 months, time for some more photos! Brooke has really started walking now, she has two speeds, standing still and 100km/hr. She is definitely keeping us busy!
I've also discovered that I'd forgotten to upload her birthday pictures. I've uploaded them (and a few others) to her 9 - 12 Month album. Oops. In other news, we're now living in Belmont, and enjoying it, even though the lawn is really a swimming pool. Tuesday, July 22. 2008Debian Maintainer
Well, as of debian-maintainers version 1.39 (uploaded on 2008-07-08) I'm now a Debian Maintainer.
w00t! Francois will upload a new version of MythTV Status soonish which amongst other things adds the magic fu required to allow me to upload it directly. Oh, and I've changed MythTV Status to be GPLv3. More w00t! Tuesday, June 24. 2008Old Schoold Unix: finger
Back in the days when the Unix world was more trusting, we had a command called
finger . This command was used to find out information about a user. The output would look something like this:
And if you ran finger against a host it would return a list of the users logged in. But the finger daemon that was queried had a few issues. Early versions had gaping security holes, and as more bad guys started appearing it became a useful way to find out what accounts existed on a host. This was useful to know who to target. Because of these reasons the use of finger has declined, quite drastically. One thing of interest though is the "Plan" section, this displays whatever is in the .plan file in the users home directory. This used to be used to indicate what someone was up to, or their plan. Last year some of the folks at Catalyst started creating themselves Wiki pages called .plan or ToDo in their own namespace. In a moment of insanity I decided to create a finger daemon that would return those wiki pages. I also hooked it up to our internal staff directory. So it would return something like:
This was easy to do with our original wiki software - MoinMoin - because it had an output mode for plain text. But we've changed to MediaWiki, and Mediawiki doesn't have support for spitting out pages in plain text. Yesterday I decided enough was enough and wrote a filter to support this. It grabs the Printable version of the page and strips out the toolboxes and headers and footers, then passes it to the text based web browser links before printing out the plain text version. Perfect. If you are interested in this filter, you can grab it from its git repo or you can just grab the script from here. Wednesday, April 2. 2008Brooke 9 - 11 Months
We've had some exciting developments with Brooke, she's been crawling and "cruising" for a few months now (she can even crawl up and down stairs!). She finally has teeth! 4 weeks ago a tooth appeared and 6 days later another one popped out next to it. And it looks as though another two are about to come through on the top. Brooke has settled into daycare 5 days a week now that Susanne is back at work, and both of them seem to be loving it!
Brooke's 1st birthday is just over 2 weeks away, wow! Where has the time gone? Here are some 9 - 11 Month photos. I'll upload Brooke's 12 month photos into that album shortly after her birthday so I can include some birthday pictures. Wednesday, December 19. 2007
Brooke Photos - 5 - 8 Months Posted by Andrew Ruthven
in family at
09:12
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Wow, we've been busy! Has it really been that long since we last uploaded any photos? As a bonus here are photos of Brooke between 5 and 8 months.
The current exciting news is that Brooke has started crawling, not very fast yet, but she is getting faster! Andrew's Mum has also uploaded some more photos. Sunday, December 16. 2007Nifty eBook reader
It seems that the iLiad might be really nice eBook reader. It supports PDF, allows you to annotate documents using a touchscreen and lots of other fancy things.
Nice. Now if only it cost less than AUD$1,000... Thursday, December 13. 2007MythTV Status in your MOTD (and email) - Version 0.6.1
I'm pleased to announce a new version of my little script - 0.6.1.
Update: I've disabled comments for now as I'm tired of all the spam. Tuesday, December 4. 2007
Domain Name Registry System - ... Posted by Andrew Ruthven
in catalyst at
01:15
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It is time for another open source release of the Domain Name Registry System (DNRS) - the software which runs the .nz domain name space.
Head over to DNRS on SourceForge to check it out. Thursday, November 22. 2007
MythTV Status in your MOTD (and ... Posted by Andrew Ruthven
in catalyst at
19:28
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I'm pleased to announce a new version of my little script -
Thursday, November 15. 2007
MythTV Status in your MOTD Posted by Andrew Ruthven
in catalyst at
20:24
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The other day I was recompiling some kernels during the day on our
MythTV backend, which at the time happened to be recording my wifes
favourite program (Grey's Anatomy, we discovered it part way through the
season, so the repeats are good). It turns out the compilation caused
some issues with the recording (which reduced the WAF).
MythTV status for localhost =========================== Status: Mon Oct 15 2007, 8:41 AM Encoders: cerberus (9) - Idle cerberus (12) - Idle Scheduled Recordings: 2007-10-15 13:30:00 - Grey's Anatomy 2007-10-15 18:00:00 - 3 News 2007-10-15 20:30:00 - Mythbusters 2007-10-15 22:00:00 - Flight Of The Conchords 2007-10-16 13:30:00 - Grey's Anatomy 2007-10-16 18:00:00 - 3 NewsI run Debian, so there is a .deb. For those not running Debian there is a tarball (but the MOTD updating glue is Debian specific at the moment). For those interested in hacking there is a git repository.
Tuesday, October 30. 2007The Day the Routers Died |
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