Okay, I didn’t really spend the entire weekend with Gutsy, I spent it with my wife, vacationing in Maine. I really only spent a few hours with Gutsy the morning before we left, and one late night when I couldn’t sleep because I had strong tea with dinner.
Anyway, after a somewhat frustrating Thursday, where I was not able to install Gutsy due to server timeouts, as of Friday morning, all of my installations and downloads were ready to complete. Continue reading “A Weekend With Gutsy Gibbon”
East Central Vermont Fiber Network
Last night, at the request of the Town Manager and Bethel Selectboard, I attended a closed presentation on the East Central Vermont Fiber Network. In a nutshell, they are proposing to build on the community-owned fiber-optic network built by Burlington Telecom in the Burlington, Vermont area, to bring fiber to every house in 14 towns in east central Vermont.
Some notable points from the presentation:
- The US is behind the rest of the world in terms of broadband access
- The Upper Valley is behind the rest of the US
- The east central portion of the state is behind the Upper Valley.
- The Upper Valley is behind the rest of the US
- The fiber network would be used to provide telephone, television, and Internet access to every home that “currently has a [phone or electric] pole to it.”
- The network would be a community-owned, not-for-profit entity. Without the profit motive, rates can be substantially lower.
- They require an average of 12 houses per mile to make it cost-effective. Since Bethel has an average of 11.8 houses per mile, we would bump the average up.
- The plan is that this would be a capital lease by each town, and by state law it would not be considered a debt owed by the town.
- The packages are very competitively priced. For example, a basic rate service might include 1Mb up/down Internet access, $0.02/min local calling, $0.05/min long distance, and 20 television channels, for around $50/month.
- The up-front cost to towns is nominal, basically some legal fees. The infrastructure is being built out by private investors.
- They claim they will have a better acceptable use policy than, say, those of Comcast and Verizon. This would be the advantage of a community-owned network.
- The stability and reliability of fiber-optics is significantly better than that of copper networks, which require repeaters at regular intervals and have significant range restrictions.
- They plan to open up the service to anyone, and would have business packages available.
- The network would use Burlington Telecom’s existing technical support and billing/customer service infrastructure.
This sounds like a fantastic idea. The downsides are small, and the advantages are numerous. Fiber optics to every home. This is this century’s “power and phone to every home.”
Twitter this!
I couldn’t find a “twitter this” bookmarklet last night, so I made my own. Add this link to your bookmarks to enable you to automagically copy and paste a link into your Twitter status box.
How to Print a Man Page
If you want to print a man page, it’s this simple:
man ls | col -b | lp
Continue reading “How to Print a Man Page”
Man Page Minute 20070828 – ls
LS(1) User Commands LS(1)
NAME
ls – list directory contents Continue reading “Man Page Minute 20070828 – ls”
Note to New Readers
If you’re coming here from the FreshUbuntu podcast, you’ll most likely be interested in the Techspeak and Man Page Minute articles.
All Hands, Brace for Impact!
Harlem mentioned my blog on this week’s Fresh Ubuntu podcast. I wonder if I’m going to get a ton of hits from our listeners…
Fresh Ubuntu's Newest Co-Host (that would be me)
I just wrapped up recording my first appearance as co-host of the Fresh Ubuntu podcast. Check it out!
Harlem Quijano, the host and creator of the podcast, and I have been corresponding for over a year, since his first episode, and when he decided it was time for a change, he chose to bring me on board to liven things up. Hopefully I can do that without turning off any of our listeners. 😉
Gaming at Work – Good for Stress?
According to this post, a huge chunk of us white-collar types are playing games at work. I find this number rather high, and somewhat hard to believe. One in four? The way I figure it, this means the entire IT industry (and I mean everyone) is playing games in the server room at lunchtime. I just don’t buy this number, unless you count Solitaire, in which case the number is pathetically low.
Either that, or we really gotta play more games at Paradigm. We used to do this on our lunch break, almost every day, but things tapered off over time. In the late 90’s, we played lots of RTS games like Age of Empires and Starcraft. A few years ago, it was GuildWars and World of Warcraft. Now that I employ a former guildie of mine, perhaps we should do this again. I’m sure our clients would love to hear the sounds of dying Fel Orcs and Shadow Council Warlocks when we answer the phone on our lunch break.
Switch Update
So, it turns out that the root cause of all of our problems that we were troubleshooting with the new content filtering software that was deployed. Somehow, it was instructed (or just decided) to install itself onto our two domain controllers, among others. This resulted in our DCs sending all traffic out to our content filter, which is a hosted service on the Internet, for perusal, before sending it back to the client. No wonder we had so many delays and disconnects.
This really was a comedy of errors, which included a faulty NIC in one of the servers, as well as a poorly-configured switch cascading setup. Throw the content filtering debacle into it, and we had a real mess.