Archive

Archive for June, 2003

Linux vs. BSD

June 7th, 2003

For a long time, I had been a die-hard FreeBSD user, running it on all the servers under my control, my laptop, my home system, everything. Then one day I decided to give Gentoo Linux a try on my laptop. Got to know it, and at this point I find it to work better in that application than FreeBSD did. Since then, I’ve noticed the major difference between Linux and BSD. And it’s not a technical thing, it’s a social thing.

For example, it’s been my experience that when two BSD users meet, and ask each other what they run, it goes something like this: “Hey, I run FreeBSD” “Yeah, so do I” “Cool” “Yeah.” and that’s about it. However, when two Gentoo users meet, you get something like “Hey, I run Gentoo” “Yeah, so do I” “Cool” “What kernel do you run?” “Gaming-sources, how about you?” “Gentoo-sources” “Cool, how’s that working out?” “Pretty good, you run reiserfs?” “No, I’m on XFS” “Ah, interesting, I’d been thinking about that” and so on and so on, covering basically every option that one could select in Gentoo, from the kernel sources down to the syslogger. With BSD, you pretty much know what the system is like just by knowing what it is, with a Linux system, at least with Gentoo, each system is as different as the person running it.

This leads to Linux people, or at least Gentoo people, spending vast amounts of time talking to each other about what little tweaky things they’ve done, or what they want to try, and so on, which inevitably is overheard by other people, who will sometimes think things like “Hey, that sounds neat, I should give it a try.” And so it spreads. BSD people on the other hand, don’t need to talk about it nearly as much, sometimes discussing new features in a new release, but never to the extent that Gentoo people talk. This means less people overhear, and ultimatly less people go around trying to use BSD.

And while this individuality is great for conversation and tinkering and taking up vast amounts of spare time, from a business perspective, it kills. When looking for a Linux system admin, you need to take into consideration what distrobutions he’s familiar with, and what daemons he’s worked with, and what versions, and a bunch of other factors. And when that admin does finally get hired, he’ll need to learn how the last admin did everything. With FreeBSD at least, this happens a lot less, since a lot more of the system is standardized.

So, it’s basically my opinion that Linux and BSD each have their place. I am very much enjoying running Linux on my laptop, and now on my desktop at home, but there is no way I’ll be running it on a server anytime soon. It makes a great discussion piece, but it just doesn’t have the stability and standardization that I desire in a server.

Thoughts and Ideas

Matt, stuff, cookies

June 5th, 2003

Matt is back in town now, got in yesterday morning, all graduated and whatnot from SCAD. Now he’s got he oh so fun task of finding work. Hopefully he’ll find something fairly quickly, it sounds like he’s not enjoying living at home again. So, if anyone needs a photographer or web designer…

As for me, I’ve been spending some time working on my HTPC project. I’ve got it doing TV-out, but want to redo it so it can do overscan. I hope to have it running MythTV this weekend, and will hopefully be playing some good old 8-bit games by Sunday.

There is a true and sincere friendship between you both.

The chinese food place changed fortune cookie brands again. These don’t seem to be as good…

Random Junk

Upgrades

June 5th, 2003

Following the lead of Chris, I’ve upgraded to MovableType 2.64. Nothing terribly exciting in this release, but it plugs a cross-site scripting thingy. I also decided to try out the MT-Textile 2.0 beta, which appears to include a perl module for doing the formatting. I’m thinking of making a quick little Mason component to act as a Textile filter now, for use on my other pages. I really like the Textile markup syntax, and it makes a lot easier to write ordered and numbered lists and suchnot.

Also, it appears that Textile now allows you to format paragraphs using other text formatting plugins, for example, I can now do stuff like this:

This is normal text, as I would normally write, but it’s going through the jive filter. No, I don’t see any practical use for this yet either, except maybe with the POD filter if I want to show off some documentation from a perl module.

Isn’t that fun?

Geek Stuff

Arrrg!

June 1st, 2003

The one thing I didn’t think of when buying my new stuff: The case I’ve got, an older Skyhawk, has it’s power supply mounting upside down. With the new power supply, this puts the intake fan on the top, where it does nothing useful. So I’ve got a couple options now. 1) I could just stick with my old power supply. It still works fine, but I dislike the lack of a bottom air intake, as it tends to trap heat near the CPU. 2) I could hack up the back of the case to be able to mount the new PSU. I don’t have the tools to do this though, since it requires cutting away some of the aluminum and drilling new screw holes. Or, 3) I just go out an buy a new case.

Not really sure what I want to do. I would kindof like a new case, as the Skyhawk is kindof a pain to deal with a lot of the time. Maybe an Antec Lanboy

Geek Stuff