Search Results: "moray"

14 March 2007

Nacho Barrientos Arias: Debian developer

Yes, that’s it, I’m finally Debian developer. I would like to use this post to say thanks to everyone who helped me to achieve this goal since I applied in 2005-10-05, here we go! Thanks to… I hope to write an small report about the NM process with my impressions and opinions soon, so stay tuned. By the way, if you are planning to join Debian and you’re able to meet me, I’m offering GPG key signing since today :) Finally, thanks to all my #dudes!

1 November 2006

Joerg Jaspert: DebConf7 dates announced

After a long time of waiting, and a lot of work from the localteam, Moray just announced the dates for next years DebConf7. So Edinburgh will have to deal with some hundred Debian people next June, from 10 June until 23 June, where 10-16 is DebCamp, 16 also the Debianday and 17-23 is DebConf time. Thanks to everyone who helped making this announce possible and to all that help to make the event possible!

28 June 2006

Alexander Schmehl: Leaving for a week...

... to check with stockholm, Ganneff and Moray the DebConf-7 venues. Need to catch a train at 06:34 and pick up my ticket at the airport. Hope that works well. I feel a bit unprepared for that country; usually I try at least to learn some common phrases -- actually I once was proud to know what "Thank you!" and "pardon."means in twelve different languages. Including Chinese! Today I just know how to spell my favourite Chinese beer, and that I still hate flying. Damn, I should have taken the train.

27 June 2006

Steve Kemp: I just came to make you happy

I just saw a reminder about the Edinburgh debconf visit. As somebody who volunteered to help be involved I’m a little blindsided by this sudden announcement. Then I realised my mistake. When I got the mail from Moray I subscribed to debconf6-localteam which appears to be a dead list. So I’m not sure what the status of anything is. So tomorrow I will join the recent lists and poke around. Since I’m local I’m happy to meetup for keysigning purposes to anybody visiting, although since I’ve not been involved in the bid at all its probably best I don’t suddenly appear and confuse things. If we “win” then I’ll do better. Now I’m going to bed. I’ve spent six hours on trains today, and that involved 90 minutes of standing, so I’m a little worn out.

25 May 2006

Martin F. Krafft: Post-Debconf

One thing that never really came to my mind during Debconf6 in Oaxtepec, Mexico, was blogging about what went on. In part, that's because I never had a minute to spare, plenty of other people were blogging about the event on the planet, and definitely also because I developed a dislike to play-by-play blogging, which I certainly do not like to read for my part. But now, sitting in Oaxaca in the Hostel Pochon (which has free wireless, imagine that), I feel like at least jotting down some of the highlights. My favourite non-Debian related happening must have been the descent to Mexico City airport. I am willing to bet that our pilots either had too much to drink or way too much fun, because we literally zig-zagged across this amazing city. It's about 2200 metres above sea level and our inflight information system noted our altitude at 3500m for at least 20 minutes, so glued to the window, I felt in a miniature world, hovering above a city that extends to all sides however far the eyes could see (I conclude that in all miniature worlds I've seen so far, such as the Eisenbahnmuseum Hamburg and Swiss Miniature, trains and cars are generally moving too fast). The population of "la Ciudad de Mexico" (which the locals just call "Mexico") is estimated to be somewhere between 20 and 24 million, which makes it the largest city in the world, and it was not hard to believe that during the descent (and afterwards). I arrived at Oaxtepec, a government-run vacational complex, some three or four hours after touchdown and didn't last very long until the jetlag took me to bed. That was Saturday night. With Sunday morning, the official Debconf conference had started and was to last for seven days. In general, that meant talks and BoF sessions throughout the day, loads of hacking and socialising in between, food, and drinks with more socialising in the evening (and throughout the night in some cases). I really enjoyed seeing many of the folks I had met at last year's conference in Helsinki, while some others' absence was equally prevalent. I spent most of the week hanging out with Biella Coleman, Micah Anderson, Sean Finney, Clint Adams, and a bunch of others, I also managed to make the real-life acquaintance of some people I had known online for a long time. In retrospect though, I should have spent less time with the regular clique (with whom I was to go to the post-Debconf trip anyway) and spent more time getting to know more of the attendants. The vacational complex was interesting, and unlike many others, I didn't get annoyed by the long distances between presentation room, my accomodation, the hacklab, and the place where we were served edible lunches and dinners. Rather, I enjoyed walking with others, engaged in discussions on some of the more prevalent topics filling my life with Debian (such as version control, low-level Debian tools, security issues, and social challenges). The only nuisance was the long walk to the nearby town and its market, from where I would get most of my food and drink throughout the week -- but even that walk I rarely had to manage alone. The massive pool (with a ten metre diving board) that lay in the middle of it all didn't really attract me that much, but then again I've never been much of a pool person. In the interest of various people worrying about my safety in Mexico, as well as some of my clients, I purchased a Mexican prepaid SIM card for my cellphone and linked up with the world (after two attempts and an accumulated 2.5 hour wait). The fun was only short though, when I found out that in Mexico, phone charges are ridiculously expensive, and receiving calls on a mobile phone costs exactly the same as making them. At USD 1/Minute to and from Europe, I ended up limiting my air time to a minimum. I spent most of the first couple days getting mdadm back into shape, bug triaging and uploading a new upstream to experimental, except for Monday, which I spent together with Joey Hess, Micah, and Biella trying to recover files from her wrecked filesystem, which we managed in the end using a simple fsck to at least recover her presentation. I'd be sitting on the terrace in front of the "hacklab" where people kept passing by, so my work certainly wasn't focused and without interruptions, but in the end I was still satisfied with the end result. And in the evenings, it was usually the same terrace, sampling the local beer, enjoying cheese from all over the world at the cheese party on Tuesday night, trying liquors from other parts of the globe, and talking and joking and meeting great people (I truly love the Debian crowd). Out of the large assortment of talks available, I attended several but found that front-up presentations aren't my thing and I would have to let the topic simmer a bit (along with some research) before delivering my questions to the speakers outside of the talk (where I finally got some interesting answers to long-standing questions). Thanks to the awesome work by our video team, which recorded every single presentation to tape, streaming it live and also intending to publish it on a post-conference DVD, I found myself often listening in on talks I wouldn't have gone to, while hacking away on said porch. Noticing, however, that many talk slots were left unfilled at the start of the conference (they did quickly fill with impromptu presentations and BoF sessions once the inertia of the event picked up), I was a little annoyed that my proposal was turned down in the first phase of selection. Wednesday was the day of the day trip. Against my recommendations of an early departure, we left the site at 11:30 with six busses (remarkably on time), heading for Xochicalco for a rather boring tour of the museum, and a vastly more interesting, two hour stroll (in the midday sun) around the actual archeological site, which was quite impressive despite mostly being artificially built or rebuilt by the government. We went on for an excellent buffet-style lunch (which was amazingly well organised), and then headed on for Cuernevaca, a small, romantic town where we had only an hour to spend before heading back home (who recommended starting the day earlier?). When we finally made it back to the conference, most of us were just tired and the evening wasn't as wild as some of the other ones during the week. Come Thursday, my mission was to attack the thinkpad packages, which make Debian on IBM laptops a lot more of a pleasure to use. Unfortunately, I didn't get anywhere (yet) with that work, simply because most of my time was spent battling the weird hacks that make up module-assistant, which actually makes it a lot harder for developers to provide kernel module packages (while really improving the end-user's experience). But of course, there was a positive twist to this issue, as I would now leave my screen in frustration much more frequently and socialise with the others. For the evening, the organisers had prepared the "formal dinner" (which isn't so formal at all). A bunch of busses took us to a nearby shed, where we found all tables arranged in a massive swirl, and when we were all seated, a Mariachi band entered, at the same time as the rain outside picked up -- I thought one of the Mariachis was playing the snare drum but as the rain grew stronger, I concluded it must instead be the drops on the metal roof causing the noise. Generally in love with rain, I made my way to the door while others lined up to fetch dinner and stood in awe for a bunch of minutes at the sight of the marble-sized drops descending from the sky. ... when suddenly I saw one of Debian's troublemakers, Jonathan/Ted Walther, running at me, chased by three developers and found myself amidst their altercation before I could do anything. People screaming, one reaching over my shoulder to push Ted, it was all too much. I told everyone to calm down, to which Jonathan/Ted reacted, vigorously shaking and foaming, with a "get out of my fucking way, you fucking Nazi" and I knew that stuff had gone wrong. I withdrew, and in an attempt to find out what had happened managed to piss off one of the three involved developers, who'd then later refuse to hear me out for an explanation. All that really left me in a depressed state mainly because I simply hadn't expected Debian developers getting physical at each other, and this time it was Erinn Clark who consoled me and turned the night around for the better. I still had no appetite and took the first bus home, sent an apologetic email to the offended developer (who never acknowledged receipt but seemed to have forgotten the incident the next day), and enjoyed beers while the others kept returning to the hacklab. Apparently, people were quite aware of my (passive) involvement during the incident, so I was bombarded with plenty questions, most of which I refused to answer for lack of knowledge of the actual facts. Still, when I saw one girl in another altercation with Jonathan/Ted later that night in response to severe offences he published on his blog, which led her to come close to tears, I decided it was time to pull him off the planet. He re-added himself shortly afterwards by "fixing a typo" (according to the CVS changelog), but by that time, I couldn't care less no more and simply resumed the discussions, which eventually turned into topics of life, intelligence, and the bottom-up vs. top-down debate. I am a strong supporter of bottom-up (as many of you know), and I somehow regret the way I approached the discussion, because in retrospect I see myself as somewhat arrogant during it; fortunately, noone seemed to hold it against me the next day. Throughout the entire week, I built up a reputation of the guy that needs no sleep: staying up until the early morning hours, yet rarely missing any of the first talks at 10 in the morning, and even joining with people for breakfast at the market before. Friday morning, however, I just couldn't get up. We talked until six in the morning, and when my eyelids finally moved after I dropped into bed, it was already noon and I dragged myself to the next talk. after which I simply returned to the hacklab and developed more of my dislike towards module-assistant, before the call for the official Debconf6 group picture rescued me (and those around me). The keysigning party followed and I made the mistake to offer to coordinate it (picking up where Anibal's great preparation left off), without really running the process through my head before. Standing up on the diving tower and screaming to the crowd of 140 participants, it was in part due to Moray Allen's comments that the party went more or less without any complications; I did get to conduct another experiment though. During the keysigning, Mark Shuttleworth invited a bunch of us to join him for dinner to discuss the Debian-Ubuntu situation (no bribes involved; we paid for ourselves). I'll have more on this in a separate post when it's ready. The discussion continued after we arrived back at the hacklab, and once again, I didn't go to bed at a civilised hour... ... but I did get up in time for Biella's talk, during which she employed very effective techniques to get me to actually pay attention (which I would have done anyway): she required my laptop for the presentation. Again, the talk didn't do much to me (which is not Biella's fault), but I am certainly interested in reading the relevant parts of her dissertation. At the same time, however, it made me realise how far from reality the academic world is: big words and complicated concepts just don't count when it comes to getting your hands dirty, and I will try my best not to go down that route when my own dissertation gets more serious. Two other memorable events happened on Saturday: the fun group photos (I was determined to get the participants to line up in a swirl in the pool, and partly succeeded), and the last-night-party on the porch of the hacklab, which was mighty fun, in part because we had speakers blasting tunes for the first time that week (thanks to the dance BoF the night before), and Ryan Murray was playing some of the truly excellent mixes of a close friend of his, which are available from mux.ca. I didn't sleep that night. And then Sunday had arrived, the sad last day of a great conference. I would like to thank all the organisers and helpers for making this event possible! I know some of you had some reservations before and during the event, but in the end it's the result that counts, and I was only one of many who were absolutely satisfied by the week. A great big THANK YOU to you! Following the last bits of socialising and copying Biella's harddrive image to Micah's drive for later rescue of some of her precious videos, we were off to Mexico city for the vacational part of the trip. Some of us went by bus, Vagrant and myself hopped onto the bus to assist one of our developers with his wheelchair at the airport. When the group reconvened in front of our hotel for the night in the centre of Mexico city, the vacation had started (blog post forthcoming sometime...)

22 March 2006

Martin F. Krafft: Myanmar or not?

It all started with about 15 kilogrammes of children's clothing... wait, let's try again: It all started last year on my trip to Laos, about 14 hours walk from Luang Phrabang (the tourist capital). We were guests to a community somewhere up in the hills north of the city, where the children either wore some threads (it couldn't be called clothes anymore) or nothing at all. I felt pity, especially because people from those areas freeze very easily, since it's always hot there. I decided to come back. So when my girlfriend's mother, who runs a second-hand clothing store for children offered I'd take some before she clears out last year's "collection", I gladly did, even though I didn't have any concrete plans yet -- plans, yes, but no concrete ones. So with the clothes in my flat, I felt obligated to do something and finally ended up booking my trip to South-East Asia. Well, Bangkok, from there it's all do-as-you-go. It turns out that by rare circumstances, my girlfriend will be accompanying me for two of the five weeks I have set aside. The rest I am alone. And I wanted to go to Myanmar [0], which is the last of the countries on the South-East Asian mainland I haven't yet visited. But just today, I called the German Department for Foreign Affairs and was informed that Myanmar is fighting with bomb attacks in the cities and avian flu outside -- aside from the internal frictions caused in large by the ruling militia. Anyway, I am less afraid of the flu than of bombs, which are a risk -- however low -- that I won't take because I don't have any influence or control. So I am reconsidering (and I would love to hear any advice you may have). There are, of course, plenty of alternatives: for instance, the circle Chiang Mai, Laos, Hanoi, Hue, Saigon, and back. The clothes will be welcome (and needed) mostly anywhere, and I have at least some experience with the other countries. I doubt I will actually go back to Luang Phrabang because the only sensible way to do so is by spending two days on the boat from Chiang Khong, or flying in to Vientiane. I don't want to do that boat ride again, and I don't have money to burn either (despite flights being rather cheap over there). Anyway, my intention is not to travel and be a tourist, but instead to teach computers. I've done this before and noticed the need, and it's really not hard to get a bunch of interested kids into an Internet cafe, which you "rent" for the day for $20. I don't speak any of the languages there, and few speak English, but it's surprising how little speech is needed (maybe that's Bhuddism?). Sounds like Hanoi or Saigon will be the best places for that. Phnom Penh (in Cambodia) also has me interested. My flight's on the 4th of April, and I shall not return until the 5th of May, although the return date is flexible. I am excited, but also feel somewhat weird. Last year, I took a full turn in my life but have since been disabled. Now that I am regaining control over my body, but at the same time wondering whether a Ph.D. is what I want (I could just do Debian without the academic appendix, and probably earn money more effectively), I am burning to actually dive into the matter to be able to finally answer that question. The trip to South-East Asia just pushes this further out into the future. Some of you may wonder why I am even daring to bother with such petty concerns -- after all, they aren't really existential, more like luxury (compared to some previous troubles in my life). Well, I don't have an answer. I feel weird about it all, and it's been weird to be disabled for the better part of that last half a year, just after quitting my previous job. At least I am maintaining my optimism.
[0]Moray Allen (of the Debian project) was actually the first to give me a good reason (in Brussels) to call Myanmar Burma instead/again -- it seemed backwards before. But apparently, Myanmar was the name chosen by the militia in control, which is undoubtedly not to be supported. Burma has the negative taste of Britain to it -- negative only in the light of the tourist boycott Tony Blair called out last year. I will stick with Myanmar as do most other sources.

19 March 2006

Clint Adams: This report is flawed, but it sure is fun

91D63469DFdnusinow1243
63DEB0EC31eloy
55A965818Fvela1243
4658510B5Amyon2143
399B7C328Dluk31-2
391880283Canibal2134
370FE53DD9opal4213
322B0920C0lool1342
29788A3F4Cjoeyh
270F932C9Cdoko
258768B1D2sjoerd
23F1BCDB73aurel3213-2
19E02FEF11jordens1243
18AB963370schizo1243
186E74A7D1jdassen(Ks)1243
1868FD549Ftbm3142
186783ED5Efpeters1--2
1791B0D3B7edd-213
16E07F1CF9rousseau321-
16248AEB73rene1243
158E635A5Erafl
14C0143D2Dbubulle4123
13D87C6781krooger(P)4213
13A436AD25jfs(P)
133D08B612msp
131E880A84fjp4213
130F7A8D01nobse
12F1968D1Bdecklin1234
12E7075A54mhatta
12D75F8533joss1342
12BF24424Csrivasta1342
12B8C1FA69sto
127F961564kobold
122A30D729pere4213
1216D970C6eric12--
115E0577F2mpitt
11307D56EDnoel3241
112BE16D01moray1342
10BC7D020Aformorer-1--
10A7D91602apollock4213
10A51A4FDDgcs
10917A225Ejordi
104B729625pvaneynd3123
10497A176Dloic
962F1A57Fpa3aba
954FD2A58glandium1342
94A5D72FErafael
913FEFC40fenio-1--
90AFC7476rra1243
890267086duck31-2
886A118E6ch321-
8801EA932joey1243
87F4E0E11waldi-123
8514B3E7Cflorian21--
841954920fs12--
82A385C57mckinstry21-3
825BFB848rleigh1243
7BC70A6FFpape1---
7B70E403Bari1243
78E2D213Ajochen(Ks)
785FEC17Fkilian
784FB46D6lwall1342
7800969EFsmimram-1--
779CC6586haas
75BFA90ECkohda
752B7487Esesse2341
729499F61sho1342
71E161AFBbarbier12--
6FC05DA69wildfire(P)
6EEB6B4C2avdyk-12-
6EDF008C5blade1243
6E25F2102mejo1342
6D1C41882adeodato(Ks)3142
6D0B433DFross12-3
6B0EBC777piman1233
69D309C3Brobert4213
6882A6C4Bkov
66BBA3C84zugschlus4213
65662C734mvo
6554FB4C6petere-1-2
637155778stratus
62D9ACC8Elars1243
62809E61Ajosem
62252FA1Afrank2143
61CF2D62Amicah
610FA4CD1cjwatson2143
5EE6DC66Ajaldhar2143
5EA59038Esgran4123
5E1EE3FB1md4312
5E0B8B2DEjaybonci
5C9A5B54Esesse(Ps,Gs) 2341
5C4CF8EC3twerner
5C2FEE5CDacid213-
5C09FD35Atille
5C03C56DFrfrancoise---1
5B7CDA2DCxam213-
5A20EBC50cavok4214
5808D0FD0don1342
5797EBFABenrico1243
55230514Asjackman
549A5F855otavio-123
53DC29B41pdm
529982E5Avorlon1243
52763483Bmkoch213-
521DB31C5smr2143
51BF8DE0Fstigge312-
512CADFA5csmall3214
50A0AC927lamont
4F2CF01A8bdale
4F095E5E4mnencia
4E9F2C747frankie
4E9ABFCD2devin2143
4E81E55C1dancer2143
4E38E7ACFhmh(Gs)1243
4E298966Djrv(P)
4DF5CE2B4huggie12-3
4DD982A75speedblue
4C671257Ddamog-1-2
4C4A3823Ekmr4213
4C0B10A5Bdexter
4C02440B8js1342
4BE9F70EAtb1342
4B7D2F063varenet-213
4A3F9E30Eschultmc1243
4A3D7B9BClawrencc2143
4A1EE761Cmadcoder21--
49DE1EEB1he3142
49D928C9Bguillem1---
49B726B71racke
490788E11jsogo2143
4864826C3gotom4321
47244970Bkroeckx2143
45B48FFAEmarga2143
454E672DEisaac1243
44B3A135Cerich1243
44597A593agmartin4213
43FCC2A90amaya1243
43F3E6426agx-1-2
43EF23CD6sanvila1342
432C9C8BDwerner(K)
4204DDF1Baquette
400D8CD16tolimar12--
3FEC23FB2bap34-1
3F972BE03tmancill4213
3F801A743nduboc1---
3EBEDB32Bchrsmrtn4123
3EA291785taggart2314
3E4D47EC1tv(P)
3E19F188Etroyh1244
3DF6807BEsrk4213
3D2A913A1psg(P)
3D097A261chrisb
3C6CEA0C9adconrad1243
3C20DF273ondrej
3B5444815ballombe1342
3B1DF9A57cate2143
3AFA44BDDweasel(Ps,Gs) 1342
3AA6541EEbrlink1442
3A824B93Fasac3144
3A71C1E00turbo
3A2D7D292seb128
39ED101BFmbanck3132
3969457F0joostvb2143
389BF7E2Bkobras1--2
386946D69mooch12-3
374886B63nathans
36F222F1Fedelhard
36D67F790foka
360B6B958geiger
3607559E6mako
35C33C1B8dirson
35921B5D8ajmitch
34C1A5BE5sjq
3431B38BApxt312-
33E7B4B73lmamane2143
327572C47ucko1342
320021490schepler1342
31DEB8EAEgoedson
31BF2305Akrala(Gs)3142
319A42D19dannf21-4
3174FEE35wookey3124
3124B26F3mfurr21-3
30A327652tschmidt312-
3090DD8D5ingo3123
30813569Fjeroen1141
30644FAB7bas1332
30123F2F2gareuselesinge1243
300530C24bam1234
2FD6645ABrmurray-1-2
2F95C2F6Dchrism(P)
2F9138496graham(Gs)3142
2F5D65169jblache1332
2F28CD102absurd
2F2597E04samu
2F0B27113patrick
2EFA6B9D5hamish(P)3142
2EE0A35C7risko4213
2E91CD250daigo
2D688E0A7qjb-21-
2D4BE1450prudhomm
2D2A6B810joussen
2CFD42F26dilinger
2CEE44978dburrows1243
2CD4C0D9Dskx4213
2BFB880A3zeevon
2BD8B050Droland3214
2B74952A9alee
2B4D6DE13paul
2B345BDD3neilm1243
2B28C5995bod4213
2B0FA4F49schoepf
2B0DDAF42awoodland
2A8061F32osamu4213
2A21AD4F9tviehmann1342
299E81DA0kaplan
2964199E2fabbe3142
28DBFEC2Fpelle
28B8D7663ametzler1342
28B143975martignlo
288C7C1F793sam2134
283E5110Fovek
2817A996Atfheen
2807CAC25abi4123
2798DD95Cpiefel
278D621B4uwe-1--
26FF0ABF2rcw2143
26E8169D2hertzog3124
26C0084FCchrisvdb
26B79D401filippo-1--
267756F5Dfrn2341
25E2EB5B4nveber123-
25C6153ADbroonie1243
25B713DF0djpig1243
250ECFB98ccontavalli(Gs)
250064181paulvt
24F71955Adajobe21-3
24E2ECA5Ajmm4213
2496A1827srittau
23E8DCCC0maxx1342
23D97C149mstone(P)2143
22DB65596dz321-
229F19BD1meskes
21F41B907marillat1---
21EB2DE66boll
21557BC10kraai1342
2144843F5lolando1243
210656584voc
20D7CA701steinm
205410E97horms
1FC992520tpo-14-
1FB0DFE9Bgildor
1FAEEB4A9neil1342
1F7E8BC63cedric21--
1F2C423BCzack1332
1F0199162kreckel4214
1ECA94FA8ishikawa2143
1EAAC62DFcyb---1
1EA2D2C41malattia-312
1E77AC835bcwhite(P)
1E66C9BB0tach
1E145F334mquinson2143
1E0BA04C1treinen321-
1DFE80FB2tali
1DE054F69azekulic(P)
1DC814B09jfs
1CB467E27kalfa
1C9132DDByoush-21-
1C87FFC2Fstevenk-1--
1C2CE8099knok321-
1BED37FD2henning(Ks)1342
1BA0A7EB5treacy(P)
1B7D86E0Fcmb4213
1B62849B3smarenka2143
1B3C281F4alain2143
1B25A5CF1omote
1ABA0E8B2sasa
1AB474598baruch2143
1AB2A91F5troup1--2
1A827CEDEafayolle(Gs)
1A6C805B9zorglub2134
1A674A359maehara
1A57D8BF7drew2143
1A269D927sharky
1A1696D2Blfousse1232
19BF42B07zinoviev--12
19057B5D3vanicat2143
18E950E00mechanix
18BB527AFgwolf1132
18A1D9A1Fjgoerzen
18807529Bultrotter2134
1872EB4E5rcardenes
185EE3E0Eangdraug12-3
1835EB2FFbossekr
180C83E8Eigloo1243
17B8357E5andreas212-
17B80220Dsjr(Gs)1342
17796A60Bsfllaw1342
175CB1AD2toni1---
1746C51F4klindsay
172D03CB1kmuto4231
171473F66ttroxell13-4
16E76D81Dseanius1243
16C63746Dhector
16C5F196Bmalex4213
16A9F3C38rkrishnan
168021CE4ron---1
166F24521pyro-123
1631B4819anfra
162EEAD8Bfalk1342
161326D40jamessan13-4
1609CD2C0berin--1-
15D8CDA7Bguus1243
15D8C12EArganesan
15D64F870zobel
159EF5DBCbs
157F045DCcamm
1564EE4B6hazelsct
15623FC45moronito4213
1551BE447torsten
154AD21B5warmenhoven
153BBA490sjg
1532005DAseamus
150973B91pjb2143
14F83C751kmccarty12-3
14DB97694khkim
14CD6E3D2wjl4213
14A8854E6weinholt1243
14950EAA6ajkessel
14298C761robertc(Ks)
142955682kamop
13FD29468bengen-213
13FD25C84roktas3142
13B047084madhack
139CCF0C7tagoh3142
139A8CCE2eugen31-2
138015E7Ethb1234
136B861C1bab2143
133FC40A4mennucc13214
12C0FCD1Awdg4312
12B05B73Arjs
1258D8781grisu31-2
1206C5AFDchewie-1-1
1200D1596joy2143
11C74E0B7alfs
119D03486francois4123
118EA3457rvr
1176015EDevo
116BD77C6alfie
112AA1DB8jh
1128287E8daf
109FC015Cgodisch
106468DEBfog--12
105792F34rla-21-
1028AF63Cforcer3142
1004DA6B4bg66
0.zufus-1--
0.zoso-123
0.ykomatsu-123
0.xtifr1243
0.xavier-312
0.wouter2143
0.will-132
0.warp1342
0.voss1342
0.vlm2314
0.vleeuwen4312
0.vince2134
0.ukai4123
0.tytso-12-
0.tjrc14213
0.tats-1-2
0.tao1--2
0.stone2134
0.stevegr1243
0.smig-1-2
0.siggi1-44
0.shaul4213
0.sharpone1243
0.sfrost1342
0.seb-21-
0.salve4213
0.ruoso1243
0.rover--12
0.rmayr-213
0.riku4123
0.rdonald12-3
0.radu-1--
0.pzn112-
0.pronovic1243
0.profeta321-
0.portnoy12-3
0.porridge1342
0.pmhahn4123
0.pmachard1--2
0.pkern3124
0.pik1--2
0.phil4213
0.pfrauenf4213
0.pfaffben2143
0.p21243
0.ossk1243
0.oohara1234
0.ohura-213
0.nwp1342
0.noshiro4312
0.noodles2134
0.nomeata2143
0.noahm3124
0.nils3132
0.nico-213
0.ms3124
0.mpalmer2143
0.moth3241
0.mlang2134
0.mjr1342
0.mjg591342
0.merker2--1
0.mbuck2143
0.mbrubeck1243
0.madduck4123
0.mace-1-2
0.luther1243
0.luigi4213
0.lss-112
0.lightsey1--2
0.ley-1-2
0.ldrolez--1-
0.lange4124
0.kirk1342
0.killer1243
0.kelbert-214
0.juanma2134
0.jtarrio1342
0.jonas4312
0.joerg1342
0.jmintha-21-
0.jimmy1243
0.jerome21--
0.jaqque1342
0.jaq4123
0.jamuraa4123
0.iwj1243
0.ivan2341
0.hsteoh3142
0.hilliard4123
0.helen1243
0.hecker3142
0.hartmans1342
0.guterm312-
0.gniibe4213
0.glaweh4213
0.gemorin4213
0.gaudenz3142
0.fw2134
0.fmw12-3
0.evan1--2
0.ender4213
0.elonen4123
0.eevans13-4
0.ean-1--
0.dwhedon4213
0.duncf2133
0.ds1342
0.dparsons1342
0.dlehn1243
0.dfrey-123
0.deek1--2
0.davidw4132
0.davidc1342
0.dave4113
0.daenzer1243
0.cupis1---
0.cts-213
0.cph4312
0.cmc2143
0.clebars2143
0.chaton-21-
0.cgb-12-
0.calvin-1-2
0.branden1342
0.brad4213
0.bnelson1342
0.blarson1342
0.benj3132
0.bayle-213
0.baran1342
0.az2134
0.awm3124
0.atterer4132
0.andressh1---
0.amu1--2
0.akumria-312
0.ajt1144
0.ajk1342
0.agi2143
0.adric2143
0.adejong1243
0.adamm12--
0.aba1143

8 January 2006

Moray Allan

Some of the books I read in 2005:

Bruce Feiler, Walking the Bible: A Journey by Land Through the Five Books of Moses
Georges Perec, Species of Spaces and other pieces
Bob McCulloch, My Fare City: A Taxi Driver's Guide to Edinburgh
Origen, On First Principles (translated by G. W. Butterworth)
Sin-leqi-unninni, Gilgamesh: a new English version by Stephen Mitchell
Vladimir Nabokov, Pale Fire
Richard Fletcher, The Conversion of Europe: from paganism to Christianity 371–1386 AD
M. A. Screech, Laughter at the Foot of the Cross
Oliver Sacks, The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat
Otto Friedrich, The Kingdom of Auschwitz
Nicholas Barton, The Lost Rivers of London: a study of their effects upon London and Londoners, and the effects of London and Londoners upon them
Anton Chekhov, The Steppe and Other Stories (translated by Ronald Hingley)
George Orwell, Down and Out in Paris and London
Otto F. A. Meinardus, Coptic Saints and Pilgrimages
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
R.W.B. Lewis, Dante: a life
Miles Glendinning and Aonghus MacKechnie, Scottish Architecture
Arturo P rez-Reverte, The Flanders Panel
John Chadwick, The Decipherment of Linear B (second edition)
Bart D. Ehrman, Lost Christianities: the battles for Scripture and the faiths we never knew
Plato, Timaeus and Critias (translated by Desmond Lee)
Albert Camus, The Outsider
Tim Wallace-Murphy and Marilyn Hopkins, Rosslyn: guardian of the secrets of the Holy Grail
Ginevra Lovatelli, Secret Rome
Dauvit Brown and Thomas Owen Clancy (editors), Spes Scotorum: Hope of Scots: Saint Columba, Iona and Scotland
Plato, Phaedrus and Letters VII and VIII (translated by Walter Hamilton)
William Chester Jordan, Europe in the High Middle Ages (The Penguin History of Europe)
J. M. Coetzee, Disgrace
Giovanni Boccaccio, Famous Women (translated by Virginia Brown)
Kazuo Ishiguro, An Artist of the Floating World
Georges Perec, A Void (translated by Gilbert Adair)
Saul Bellow, The Victim
Franz Kafka, The Trial
George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four
J. K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Francesco Colonna, Hypnerotomachia Poliphili: The Strife of Love in a Dream (translated by Joscelyn Godwin)
Italo Calvino, Our Ancestors (The Cloven Viscount; Baron in the Trees; The Non-Existent Knight) (translated by Archibald Colquhoun)
Eusebius, The History of the Church (translated by G. A. Williamson)
Flynt Leverett, Inheriting Syria: Bashar's trial by fire
Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy (City of Glass; Ghosts; The Locked Room)

20 December 2005

Kai Hendry: Holiday

Holidaying in the Andaman I am making arrangements to go to New Caledonia on my travels from Saturday. So I won’t be packaging imminent releases of: Sorry. I am pissed with Debian the last couple of days. Boiling. Yes I’m stressed, yes Debian is my scapegoat. My unstable system is completely b0rked. :( I tried. Honestly. I tried. I am running the 2.4 kernel which no matter how many modules I insert can’t seem to get X running with mouse support. I expected perhaps I need to dpkg-reconfigure xserver but then that reported I had a broken installation. WTF! Thanks mate. Paging around the end of virtual consoles in 2.4 which I have to do now, also does not bloody work. If I go off the edge it gets stuck. ALT+arrows don’t work. CTRL+ALT+F-keys don’t either. Nightmare. Reboot. Fsck errors. Fuck. dpkg -i of a 2.6.14 kernel just bombs out too while trying to make a mysteriously complicated initrd. I can’t really debug this problem as I don’t have Internet connectivity with my laptop either. Internet connectivity problems aren’t to do with Debian. That’s Australia’s fault. To add to my miseries I’ve caught a cold. I’ve also been playing around with sed all morning, trying to parse Debian LDAP output. Nightmare. To think I wanted to do my Debian New Maintainer stuff this month. Moray got back to me last month (or the month before that?) saying he was too busy (again). I’ve written to debian nm frontdesk for another AM and I’ve yet to hear from them. Oh well, I’m going to roast my ass in the tropics for a while and try forget computers ever existed.

Next.

Previous.