For those we lost, We will not forget 09/11/2001 “Our God given unalienable rights are given to us all as individuals. They tell us what me may do for ourselves, and they are the embodiment of liberty. The so-called rights that government gives to some of us are parcelled out to select groups as classes. They tell us what one class of people may require another to do for them, and they are the very essence of slavery.”
— Perri Nelson, February 9, 2010

A bheil Gàidhlig agaibh?

No politics today, come back tomorrow


Published Mon, Jul 28 2008 9:45 AM
Technorati Tags: Computers and Internet, Cool Stuff

Mt. Rainier

This weekend my wife and I went to the Scottish Highland Games and Clan Gathering in Enumclaw, WA. As far as I know, I don't have a drop of Scottish blood in me. My wife might have, but we're not sure. Her maiden name is in a list of Scottish names that the genealogists at the gathering had, and we know that some of her ancestors came from the British Isles, but that's about as much detail as I know.

Fortunately, you don't have to be Scottish to enjoy the games or the gathering. One of my wife's friends and coworkers is a member of the local Scottish dancing group, and they perform at the games every year, and march with the clans during the opening ceremonies. We go to the gathering to watch, but we've missed the dancing every time so far. We still have a great time, and this year we actually got to see Cindy and her brothers.

Speaking of the dancing, Cindy has invited us to join the group, to learn the dances, and to perform with them. We're actually considering it, but there's only one drawback. I'd have to wear a kilt at least once a month, and for performances. From the prices I saw at the gathering (ranging from $95.00 to $500.00), that could be fairly expensive for an item of clothing I'm only likely to wear occasionally. Still, it might be fun (the dancing), so we're going to at least look into it.

After watching the opening ceremonies, we wandered about and visited all of the little shops. We ate some meat pies. We bought some gifts. I bought a really nice shirt. The man that sold it to me told me to tell the cashier that I was an “extra large rogue”. He also told my wife that she'd need a stick to beat off all of the women if I wore it. We  also collected lots of business cards for the places that had things we wanted to buy but would have put us over budget for the month.

Afterward, we were going to go to a quilt show, but we postponed that until Sunday. Instead, we went home and mucked about on the computers, and started getting the materials together for the quilt that Betty and I started over a year ago but never finished. It had been quite a while since we had worked on it, mostly because we didn't have a place prepared in the house for it. Now that the combination sewing, computer, and entertainment room is finally arranged we could get back to it. While Betty struggled to figure out what we needed and whether we had everything that we had started with, I tried getting a virtual machine running on my computer to install Ubuntu Linux. I spent most of the rest of the weekend trying to get that working, without success.

I tried using Microsoft Virtual PC 2007. Every time I booted the Ubuntu CD in the virtual machine, the virtual machine would restart. I tried using Microsoft Virtual Server 2005. I was able to install Ubuntu, but only by first installing Windows XP and running the Ubuntu installation from within Windows. When I actually tried running it though, the virtual machine would reboot. Needless to say this was pretty frustrating. I eventually abandoned that effort. I'll try again with a Red Hat installation in a few weeks. At least Red Hat Linux will work in Virtual Server 2005 — or so Microsoft claims. They don't, of course, support that configuration.

I also ran into a few other irksome issues. I wanted to set up a virtual machine running Windows Server 2003. I searched all through my software CD collection and couldn't find my installation disks. I looked through the boxes and boxes of software I have collected over the years, and I can't find the product box either. Needless to say, I'm less than happy about that. Even if I'd found the software though, I ran into another problem with running virtual software, although I'm not sure that this has anything to do with the Virtual Server or Virtual PC products.

You see, I can't get the networking configuration working properly with the virtual machines. In fact, ever since I upgraded my machines at home to Windows XP SP3 not one of them has been able to communicate with the others on my network. I don't blame SP3 (yet), but I really need to get the networking issues figured out. Every machine in my house can access the Internet, but they can't access each other. So much for file sharing, and printer sharing. I suspect that this is the reason I can't get the networking configuration working on my virtual machines. It's really strange too, because the virtual machines were actually able to see my router, and they were able to obtain an IP address from its DHCP server. Not only that, they appeared in the network's list of servers once everything was set up. They just couldn't communicate with anything but the router.

Oh well… it's a puzzle for me to solve. …Next weekend.


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Perri Nelson responded with: Still more issues

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I'm also having problems with my hosting provider again. Now it seems that my email servers aren't working quite right. I'm only getting intermittent mail delivery, and sending email is hit or miss. This all happened after Brinkster upgraded the mail system to support a new product.

Somedays I wonder whether I'm in the right line of work. I hate it when technology lets me down. You'd think I'd come to expect it by now though.

David responded with:

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Love the video. (Lotsa Celtic background in my family--mostly Welsh, but Scottish and even--way, waaay back--Irish.)

More than a few folks have had difficulties using Me$$y$oft's virtualization w/various Linux distros. Try:

http://cmsproducer.com/Ubuntu-Linux-Windows-VMware-Server

So far, of the virtualization products I've tried out, VMWare Server (which you can use free as an individual) has been the best solution. For networking, I have had my best results with it by settin g up my virtual machines as bridged machines, so that they have separate IP addresses on my local network, They've all seen my gateway and othe comps (including the one hosting them) just fine.

BTW, my wife's WIN XP SP3 computer cannot "see" network resources apart from the router. Indeed, for some time (until I had time to tinker w/it) it lost the ability to connect wirelessly after the SP3 update (yeh, was busy and lazy so just plugged a wired patch cord in--lotsa extra ethernet inputs available, anyway.)

Caveat: I have yet to get either of my sound cards working properly in a VMWare Server-based VM. But that's about it for "failures".

BTW, there's a possibly confusing typo min the page I pointed to above ("You are not [SIC] equipped with the VMWare server and you are ready to install operating systems"), but I don't especially think it'll cause you to blink. :-)

Perri Nelson responded with: Service pack 3

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This is the second time I've heard of machines no longer being able to access network resources other than the router. It looks like I'm going to be downgrading back to Service Pack 2 (Man I just love those 1X robots), right after I make sure my Carbonite backup is complete.

Perri Nelson responded with: Ubuntu!

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Well, after installing the VMWare server and all, I am now running Ubuntu in a virtual machine on my desktop. It's nice that Firefox 3.0 came right out of the box. We'll see how the rest of it goes soon enough. At least now I have a virtual machine that can access the Internet.

Marshall Art responded with:

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Three Scottish related comments:

-I'd love to go to Scotland (or Ireland, England or Wales)
-Our second oldest daughter did six months studying in Edinburgh
-I just did a service call at a local college where a very beautiful Scottish girl chatted with me. (Very hot)

David responded with:

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"This is the second time I've heard of machines no longer being able to access network resources other than the router."

I shoulda been forewarned. Jerry Pournelle had a note up about the issue at one time, early on in SP3 deployment, IIRC.

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