Ben’s Blog

The Ramblings of a computer Geek
May 30, 2008

Bitfolk!

Author: Ben Ward - Categories: *nix, geek

I’ve just bought a VPS from bitfolk! (www.bitfolk.com). I bought the 120MB RAM server in London. I got the last one! The servers went out of capacity as soon as I bought it, which means that I got the last one! It runs Ubuntu 8 (Hardy Heron). qIt’s currently accessible at antlers.mooseguy.com. I’m also running my own nameservers, not silentflames, which makes me feel happy. Sean is scared that I am going to move mooseguy.com onto it, and take it off Silentflame. I don’t think I will, though. Time to configure iptables…

May 26, 2008

*buntu!

Author: Ben Ward - Categories: *nix, geek

Well, the upgrade failed. Utterly. I presume it was because the nvdia drivers I have installed completely messed up the xorg.conf file. I tried restoring from backup, but when that failed I really couldn’t be bothered to fix it, so did a clean install. I decided to go with Ubuntu this time, as the clean looks of Gnome have really won over me since a while ago. Maybe KDE 4.1 in July will change that. I don’t know. Anyhow, the install went smoothly, I installed the restricted drivers, compiz fusion etc etc until I had it how I wanted. Took about half an hour =). Looks very nice, and I have changed the overall feel to the Kubuntu blue, rather than the Ubuntu brown.

Eyecandy aside, I’m going to try to use nix more, as I can play music over my ipod (my main reason  for using winduhs, other than gaming.) I already have Gentoo installed, but tend to use that just for remote connecting from school with SSH, and acting as a mini web server. Oh, it also lets me say that I have a triple boot computer.

Yesterday, my father said that I could have an old mac laptop (Powerbook G4, running OS X 10.3). I decided to nixify it, downloaded Xubuntu PPC and burned a disk. There are advantages to having a 20Mb/s internet connection! Slightly off topic, but last week, Jonathan and I found an accelerating broadband connection mentioned in the Guardian! 2Mb per second per second. I put the disk in, and spent about ten minutes trying to work out which boot option would boot Xubuntu without crashing the computer. Turned out to be live-nosplash-powerpc. The laptop doesn’t like spash screens, evidently. Any other option made the screen a slightly distressing shade of green, with a slight gradient. Once I’d booted, the installed ran without trouble. However, when I rebooted, it shut down immediately, because there was no nosplash boot option! Grub doesn’t run on PPC, so you have to use Yaboot, which isn’t really as mature. There was a fix on the ubuntu forums though. I had to boot the livecd again (with live-nosplash-powerpc), open a terminal, edit the /media/disk/etc/yaboot.conf file (/etc/yaboot.conf accessed from the livecd), and change all instances of ’splash’ to ‘nosplash’. Then, run ybin, or, if you like a good laugh, ybin -v. After yaboot has been updated, and, if you ran it verbosely, your hard drive has been blessed with holy penguin pee (try it yourself), then you can boot straight into Xubuntu. The next problem was getting the network card to work. Luckily, the wired connection worked, so I wasn’t completely lost. (This is turning into a guide for how to install Xubuntu on a PowerBook G4). I found a very good post on the ubuntu forums again. You need to be using a Broadcom networking card (which is in PowerBooks). You can check by running lspci | grep Broadcom\ Corporation. If you get some kind of output containing the words ‘Broadcom Corporation’ then you’re probably alright. You then need to download this file: http://svit.epfl.ch/stuff/wl_apsta.o . Then, install the package bcm43xx-fwcutter. It’s in the Universe repository, if you havn’t enabled it (Google it if you don’t know how to enable it). Ignore the GUI prompt that comes up during the installation. Just close it. Once it’s installed, run the following command: sudo bcm43xx-fwcutter -w /lib/firmware ~/Desktop/wl_apsta.o .Or wherever you saved the file. Then, run sudo bcm43xx-fwcutter -w /lib/firmware/`uname -r` ~/Desktop/wl_apsta.o . Or, again, wherever you saved the file.  Reboot, et voila. Wireless works. Next, since the powerbook only has one mousebutton, I wanted to be able to right click without pressing F12 (The default key). It is very easy. run sudo vim /etc/default/mouseemu . Uncomment the line which says Left Ctrl + Click next to it. Do this by deleting the hash at the beginning of the line. Press i to enter insert mode, then delete the character. Press escape, and type :x <enter>. Now, run the following command: /etc/init.d/mouseemu restart. You can now right click by control clicking.

There you go! Xubuntu set up nicely, and with minimal effort.

May 25, 2008

Upgrading Kubuntu - Wish me luck!

Author: Ben Ward - Categories: *nix, computer, geek

I’ve decided to upgrade my Kubuntu install to Hardy Heron. After Sean’s experience updating his *ubuntu install, I am slightly worried. He forgot to disable the nVidia drivers, and messed up his computer =(. Oh well. I’m not scared of clean installs. Kubuntu 8 - here I come! Oh, and KDE4.1 is being released in July - so that’s another big update…

April 18, 2008

Netburst

Author: Ben Ward - Categories: geek - Tags: ,

I decided that I was going to start doing IRC properly this evening. After browsing all over the internet, and finding many free shell hosting sites, almost none of them actually worked. I found one called Netburst (http://netburst.zenknight.org), and decided to give it a go. After sitting in their IRC channel (irc://irc.freenode.net/#netburst) for about an hour, some nice person started a private message with me, and within about five minutes, I had a shell. I’m now running irssi on that shell, which is a server in Norway running Debian. Hopefully, I’ll now be on IRC more often.

April 8, 2008

Stuff (But mainly DnD)

Author: Ben Ward - Categories: dnd, geek - Tags: , ,

I was in Game on Good Friday, and saw a copy of Neverwinter Nights II on the shelf, and, on recommendation from Sean, I decided to buy it. It is a very good game. I have currently only played the single player game, but there is easily fifty hours of play in it. I am a twelfth level wizard, and can cast suitably entertaining spells.

On Easter Day I was at the Cathedral for eight long hours, singing services and eating Pizza, and when I returned both of my brothers had started campaigns on it, and were hooked. After much talking about DnD to them, we decided to buy the books. We got the 3.5 core rule books, Forgotten Realms and Complete Arcane. I am writing and adventure, and have almost finished it. I will upload it when I am done. Of course, these book weren’t cheap (About £85, but I have no desire to buy 4e when it comes out), so I have set back the computer stuff a bit. I also want a Binary Watch.