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LOL

I meant at the age of 30 at which time your absorption of various environmental factors as well as your hormones will flatline. If you play with the CLI.

also

I.e. the reptile demons are both the evil force controlling the government and the energy saving bulbs in our house but they haven’t blown just yet. One fell out of my computers just to show off and brag about what dicks they are.

My attempt to install gentoo did not work. This is not really that surprising all things considered, I knew from the outset that this would be, ah… a learning experience and probably take a while to succeed given that until less than a fortnight ago I’d never even used Linux. Fair enough. I am trying again, I am not going to let this thing beat me, I’ll show it. LOL. For a while I could not get the internet working through the install medium and this frustrated my efforts however I realised why (it was very obvious, I am embarrassed) and fixed it. I am not quite yet ready to go though. Last time I basically guessed, in a lazy way, about what useflags to use and what to include in the kernel. I will not do it thusly this time around. I am going to research first what I might need to include and include it. Hopefully that way I will have more success.

I found this amusing:

Gentoo provides two ways for you to handle kernel installation and upgrade: automatic (genkernel), and manual. Although the automatic method can be regarded as easier for the user, there are a number of reasons why a large proportion of Gentoo users choose to configure their kernel manually: greater flexibility, smaller kernel, shorter compilation time, learning experience, severe boredom, etc.

From: http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/kernel-config.xml

Anyway I will get back to causing my dad apoplexy when he sees that we for a second month running approach our broadband download limits :p

Edit: Another amusing thing I found:

2. There is no blanket module for all USB devices, each one individually (with the exception of standardized devices like mass storage) has it’s own module. You would need to enable any of those on top of the core USB support. You could enable them all as loadable modules and simply leave them unloaded until you need them, but a little logic goes a long way here. How many types of USB devices do you really think you will be plugging in? The kernel has support for everything from LEGO bricks to a USB vibrator, you certainly aren’t going to be using them all (unless you are planning one hell of a party).

From: http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/slackware-14/some-general-kernel-questions-793706/

LOL also, I was going to do the installation through my main computer because my laptop is on my printer and bending over to look at it is giving me neck cramps, but I am not sure…

If you want to allow other users to access your computer during the Gentoo installation (perhaps because those users are going to help you install Gentoo, or even do it for you), you need to create a user account for them and perhaps even provide them with your root password (only do that if you fully trust that user).

From: http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/handbook/handbook-x86.xml?part=1&chap=2

Not sure I can say I fully trust myself tbh :p

Still in love with Linux.

Took my old laptop which I haven’t used in years and stuck Debian on it (figure I’d compare).

Then I got a ethernet switch from the pile of backups my dad has and plugged the laptop, the main computer and the ethernet from the downstairs LAN into it. Internet works on both, good good. Next task, set it up so I can access my desktop computer from my laptop via ssh.

This was successful, although I had a little trouble from the fact I had tried to change the ssh port, and I had assumed when I got no feedback that my attempt had failed, which was foolish of me :p. I went into the firewall and unblocked port 22 (having given up on changing the port) and yet couldn’t get in. Eventually though I worked it out, reblocked port 22 and unblocked the new port. From the terminal in debian I put: ssh -p portnumber -l username -v -X ipaddress.

And yay! It worked. To test it I put: xeyes. YAY EYES!

All is well, life is good, love burns strong.

Next task, see if ssh works from outside the LAN.

So a few days ago I downloaded the DVD iso of Fedora 13, after having tested various LiveUSB’s of Linux distro’s I settled on Fedora because it seemed to function most smoothly on my computer (Linux Mint 8 had advantages, but all in all I liked Fedora better). I am currently running Fedora 13 from an external HDD. My internal (and tiny in comparison) HDD is retaining windows a) incase Fedora breaks sometime (and thus to give me the freedom to experiment with updates without worrying about it breaking) and b) because I also just got Oblivion, a game I have wanted for a while and Planescape Torment a game I wanted for over a decade. If I can get all the computer gaming out of my system in this summer I can finally declare myself an adult or something :p.

Anyway, I am impressed with Linux. It seems to get a lot of flack from a lot of people, and I can understand some of the issues, although some of them are a bit outdated (it’s really not hard to set it up nowadays unless you deliberately choose some 1337 distro like Gentoo or something) some of them are fair enough (dedicated teams of paid developers are generally speaking going to be more focused on producing software for customers according to their needs rather than just what they the developers would like). But still, I am impressed for the most part. I am impressed with the stability of GNOME, the appearance of KDE (I installed both just to get a feel for them) – indeed I find going into windows after only a few days of using Linux hurts my eyes with its hideousness. I like the way there are so many open source programs available now. I like the fact that open office seems to be working far better than way back when I tried it before. Most of all though, I am falling in love with the command line.

I don’t know how much you can do in cmd in windows. All I ever use it for is a) formatting stuff b) ipconfig and …no that’s about it these days (I mean, its not even msdos, it’s just an emulator…). So I can’t say “the Linux commandline is far more powerful” because truthfully I don’t know. What I can say is that even in a few short days of experimentation from a zero state knowledge base I have found so many cool things I can do with it. Simple things, but things I definately do not know how to do in MSDOS (or windows DOS emulator).

For instance I have learned how to use m4 to turn things like NAME into either a specific name, or the results of some other sequence of commands. I have learned how to use tr to replace characters with other characters (all this is in terms of output, the original file is unchanged). It’s so cool, there’s tonnes of other fun stuff. I did some of the vim tutorial. There is a perl tutorial I might try soon. It’s also just fun to type commands prefixed with sudo, sure its my computer, they’re my files, I can do what I like with them, but I still feel somewhat of a powertrip everytime I type sudo and my password. Haha.

I’m not a computer person. I’m basically an experienced windows user but only insofar as doing the basic tasks that I generally do, and some minor troubleshooting (or if connected to the internet I would say my troubleshooting skills are actually very good in terms of outcomes, but that basically comes down to my searching skills not my problem solving skills). I say that to make clear that I understand that really this is basic stuff, but its basic stuff that is really getting me into it. I am just so delighted when I try out a command and woooooo it works! So all in all I am really enjoying linux. Fedora is not hard. To set it up was very easy, older versions were apparently not, but 12 and 13 (I started this experiment in linux just before 13 was released as stable so I tried both) were both very easy to get set-up. 13 has so far been a smooth ride. I am looking forward to continuing my learning experience and my experiments in Linux. Once I am all grown up and weaned off computergames, maybe I’ll switch over completely ;)

My dad has been teasing me no end about Linux, when I was trying different distros on LiveUSB and half of them didn’t boot he was all “what do you expect” and generally coming from the “free as in crap” school of thought. But he has never used it. He’s quite wrong. It’s really fun. Even when I broke something major, and it took me two days to fix it (on a LiveUSB with permanence) – it was exhilarating. I had the time, it was a fun challenge. I want more!

Seriously, this rocks. It’s not geeky to think so. It’s true, anyone with any sense of adventure would agree. :p

So it is 1.18am, tomorrow around 4pm I must give in an essay on how the Visigothic presence shaped Iberia. I have not begun said essay, basically I have written two sentences, and written down three key phrases “mozarabic rite”, “visigothic law code” and “changes in perception of visigothic period: e.g. under Franco”.

You would think then I must be desperately rectifying this situation, perhaps my brower’s tabs are full of articles from JSTOR about the Visigoths (or Franco, or the Mozarabic Rite)? Haha, no no – what I have open in my tabs are “google search: language learning” “FX’s essential guide to learning a foreign language” “last.fm” “adult underachievers” ;-) this tab, and most importantly “Umlaut (diacritic)” the wikipedia article (my search bar holds the words “möööööööre üüüüüüüüümläääüüüüüüütsssss”). Yes my friends, this is my life.

Umlaut… a very woody word.

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