Chip's Quips
A tiny spark of wit for a highly flammable world

Chipping the web: August 30th

August 30th, 2010 5:00:25 pm pst by Sterling Camden

Chipping the web

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Great Scott!

August 27th, 2010 10:00:48 pm pst by Sterling Camden

Bump, bump! — dropping off the end of the pavement onto the abandoned dirt road. I could almost feel it as I read the words “Here ends Fitzgerald’s manuscript” and continued on through notes he had written about how he intended to finish The Last Tycoon. Up until then, I had enjoyed reading this final novel at least as much as any of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s other works. He was a master of character analysis told through action. It’s a pity that a sudden heart attack interrupted his work.

I have now read four of Fitzgerald’s five novels all in a row. The only reason why I omitted his second novel, The Beautiful And The Damned, is because I don’t own a copy. I received a set of only four novels among other books from my first wife when we separated. I could be making this up, but I think they had belonged to her parents who were Pentecostals and therefore disposed of the one book because of the word “damned” in the title. If they had read the other books, I’m sure they would have gotten rid of them, too.

Of all of Fitzgerald’s novels, my favorite turned out to be — not The Great Gatsby, but rather Tender Is The Night. This story bored me at first, but I stuck with it on the strength of the pleasure I derived from Fitzgerald’s earlier novels and my own stubbornness about finishing a book once I’ve started it. By the end of the first “book,” however, he had me hooked. This story penetrated me in ways that I can’t even talk about yet.

All in all, my journey with Fitzgerald delighted me. As with most popular notions, the picture of the dismal spokesman for The Lost Generation falls far short of the man it’s meant to portray. I’m only sorry he didn’t write more.

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Chipping the web: August 26th

August 26th, 2010 4:00:09 pm pst by Sterling Camden

Chipping the web

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Chipping the web: August 22nd

August 22nd, 2010 8:00:03 pm pst by Sterling Camden

Chipping the web

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Around the WAP

August 18th, 2010 9:02:16 pm pst by Sterling Camden

Around the WAP

Drawn with Dia. Cleaned up with gimp.

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Chipping the web: August 17th

August 17th, 2010 1:00:08 pm pst by Sterling Camden

Chipping the web

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Chipping the web: August 13th

August 13th, 2010 8:00:03 am pst by Sterling Camden

Chipping the web

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Mix me a strong one

August 11th, 2010 8:34:58 am pst by Sterling Camden

Interfaces are the porno mags of mixins.
They show you what you want in graphic detail,
But they leave the implementation entirely in your hands.

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Chipping the web: August 10th

August 10th, 2010 2:00:07 pm pst by Sterling Camden

Chipping the web

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Busting Bug Butt

August 9th, 2010 1:25:31 pm pst by Sterling Camden

This weekend I took part in FreeBSD Bugathon #7. This was my first involvement as a FreeBSD BugBuster (though I’ve been busting bugs for more than 30 years now), so I relished the long-forgotten role of n00b as I learned the ropes of their PR (Problem Report) system.

Gavin Atkinson and Rene Ladan have been kind enough to help me along, and I’ve managed to test 14 PRs and submit corrections to a couple of patches.

Perusing the open PRs, the triviality of most of them impressed me. Critical bugs seem to get handled on the fast track in FreeBSD, thanks to the dedicated people who donate their spare time to deal with these things. That leaves mostly low priority bugs to be cleaned up by these Bugathon sessions. It’s a tribute to the high quality that a voluntary system can produce.

By far, the majority of PRs are in the ports. Many of these merely involved updating the application to a new version, so I applied the patch to the Makefile/distinfo and tested the install. I did get my fingers into a couple of termcap PRs (one of which I had submitted) to add 256-color support to xterm and rxvt. Those, I’m happy to say, have been committed. I also tested out some kernel patches to provide more helpful info for sysctl — a favorite nit for a newbie like me to pick.

Speaking of newbie, this event occasioned my first ever use of IRC. I chose simpleirc as my client, because it’s, um, simple. I think, if I have time, I should build IRC support into jab. Simpleirc operates much the same way as jab does, but I have a couple of reasons for preferring jab — jab is scriptable, and I’ve already built xmobar notifications of new jabs.

Another first (for me): to provide test-beds for the Bugathon, I brought up FreeBSD 8 as a guest of VirtualBox — in both 32-bit and 64-bit flavors. It runs great — which I’d expect, given how well VirtualBox runs Windows 7, the Napoleon of Resource Hogs.

The Bugathon lasts through today. I may work on a few more items if I have time, but I need to get some billable work in today as well.

Posted in Geek Meditations | 6 Comments » RSS 2.0