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Multiple Bifurcations is a term that I first heard from Andy Grove when he explained the future of Intel product positioning.
In my case, however, it's just a good term for how I'm slowly losing my mind. Instead of being interested in "Unix", now one has to consider Solaris, Mac OS, Linux, BSD etc. They all have their strengths and weaknesses, such that I can't just standardise on one. I love my old SPARC machines, for example, and Solaris is best on those. I use my various Macs for music, video, email and web browsing. Gotta have those. But for my webserver, my home-brew Slackware Linux machine is still plugging away after several years reliable duty.
Similarly, for blogging, I started off using Blosxom on Linux. It's really simple and I can work disconnected too. On my webserver I can post from a simple ssh session, or I can work on my mac and then upload afterwards.
However, for blogs with themes, photos, counters etc, I have been
experimenting with "iWeb". It's just about ok for a first 1.0 release
of a product, but has some shocking limitations. For example if you
have a slideshow, every photo is shown with a sort of reflective
foreground, like it was standing on a black shiny surface. There is no
way to turn this off. Personally I hate it. HATE IT. Also there is no
way to participate in the quality of photos, I can't ask for bigger
images, or smaller thumbnails, or more sharpening. I think that Flickr
is most likely better. Finally, a friend of mine has Aperture and a
quad Powermac with 4.5GB and produces some fairly nice slideshows
using that setup.
posted at: 19:05 | path: /misc | permanent link to this entry
My Sun rep was kind enough to arrange an Ultra 40 box as a demonstrator. I've had it up and running for a couple of weeks now and overall, it's great. Herewith some of the highlights and lowlights. Drawbacks :
Otherwise though, it's an awesome machine. I replaced the cheap mouse with a Logitech item I had lying around, since the "middle button" function was sticky (you push in the scroll-wheel, but often it wouldn't click out again). Since the machine has convenient front-facing USB ports I simply plugged in the extra mouse and it just worked. I love USB.
I even like the new Sun Type 7 USB key, and fortunately it came with the PC layout that I prefer (Ctrl key below the shift key). If I were Rich Teer I would have been disappointed not to get the unix layout, but I've just never learned to type that way.
The noisy high-speed fan noise is only the first time power is applied to the box, once it settles it has, so far, never made that kind of noise again, apart from one time it accidentally got unplugged.
Since the machine is a demonstrator, I wasn't sure what kind of spec. I would be getting. I discussed it with my rep and tried to emphasize the things that are useful in my team and those that are not. In particular, we don't use a spectacular amount of RAM, nor high-end 3D visualisation.
For some reason, though, I ended up with the "large" configuration, which is as follows :
So I probably have the fastest PC at my office.
The machine came with Solaris 10 pre-configured, however since I no longer have any Solaris responsibilities at work, I reinstalled it with Windows XP Pro 64-Bit edition.
Sun did a nice job with the Windows drivers for this machine, after downloading and burning the ISO CD image they provide, we were able to get everything working nicely.
Once I finish setting the machine up for my main responsibility
(running a Windows development team) I hope to stick in a second hard
drive and set up a double or triple boot environment so we can explore
this machine under Solaris 10 and Linux as well. Our source code
repository is kept on Unix and runs a homebrew bunch of perl scripts,
so a nice unix dev box may come in handy from time to time also. I
have some ideas about using ZFS with our CVS setup, and this box would
most likely just fly as a ZFS host.
posted at: 17:33 | path: /solaris | permanent link to this entry
