I stumbled upon this blog today via slashdot.
This guy has customised his home to support ~ 15 gaming terminals, all receiving their images through a Ubuntu Server.
Awesome work!
networks, security, unix == 'life'
Monday, 19 December 2011
I stumbled upon this blog today via slashdot.
This guy has customised his home to support ~ 15 gaming terminals, all receiving their images through a Ubuntu Server.
Awesome work!
Wednesday, 17 August 2011
Today I sat my Cisco Professional level switching exam and passed! As some of you might know I failed the first attempt. You may be wondering what I did to compensate for last time. Since my initial failure I’ve been reviewing the ‘actualtests.com‘ exam dump on 642-813. These practice questions were invaluable for me to brush up on the areas that I needed to.
For now I will be concentrating on setting up my new business website and start on the learning material for the Routing exam. I’ve heard it’s the hardest out of the three.
In closing: HOORAY FOR ME!
Tom.
Friday, 12 August 2011
So I finally got around to registering my business domain the other day. It also gave me a chance to try out the new shell scripts I’ve been working on to automate my database sysadmin duties! Total success, the user input prompts need to be cleaned up (sometimes I can not even understand myself). I even found a nice looking theme to go with it! Jess is going to take some photos of me working hard for page aesthetics and then we go live!
Tuesday, 9 August 2011
After studying for my exams last night I decided to set my self some tasks for the next day. The first tool I tried using was Google’s Calendar service. It did almost everything I needed (provide me a calendar & tasks manager) except I was not able to hook into my tasks in Thunderbird. I’ve been toying around with installing a Calendar Server for awhile now as I’ve used countless providers, each one falling short of the mark.
I ended up doing a bit of research and had a choice between these three services:
I chose Apple’s (ohwow) open source option ‘Darwin Calendar Server’. This seemed the best choice as it is lightweight and does exactly what I need. The other options required Java and a SQL database; of which I didn’t want to stress my server with.
I followed this rough guide and the install was quick and painless. The only dependency was on the file system itself which was easily rectified by remounting it with an extra parameter.
The configuration portion did have me stumped. The default config-file has the SSL arguments commented out. Apple in their infinite ‘against the grain’ wisdom decided that a comment characters should be this “-> & <-”. After uncommenting and starting the server; listening on the right ports, I’m now able to access my tasks & calendar from work and home.
I’d recommend this solution to anyone with an Internet connected server in need of a CalDAV server. It doesn’t have the fancy front end like other offerings but it gets the job done efficiently.
Tuesday, 26 July 2011
On Sunday evening I attended the last show of the Amenta tour in WA and had a great time! The band really showed what they’re capable of and I was very proud of them. Jess helped them out by taking photos and I was asked to do the lighting (and ruled!) Here’s the embedded clip:
The Amenta from stephen miles on Vimeo.
Congratulations are in order for Stephen who did an awesome job filming. Jess hasn’t finished with the photos she took so I’ll congratulate her later.
Saturday, 23 July 2011
For the past two days I’ve tirelessly configured Packetscape for e-Mail services. I admit I was conceited coming into it, I figured any HOWTO guide sourced via google would be sufficient instructions, alas I was wrong.
Through a few failed initial attempts and a few orphaned packages I stumbled upon this tutorial referenced from the http://postfix.org site. The guide was a step by step, from base to finish, install of: Postfix, Dovecot & Roundcube on a Debian (squeeze/lenny) system.
The tutorial was quite intuitive and mostly easy to follow. I did however, run into a few snags, particularly during the Dovecot configuration portion. Either my brain wasn’t switched on or the documentation was too ambiguous. During this section the author instructs the administrator to modify the file with a few directives (sic) allowing the daemon to interface with Postfix. I made the changes to the config file and restarted the Dovecote daemon. Every time I would get a syntactical error. Plagued by this issue I trawled the Googles looking for a solution, each one I found, more obscure and non-related than the last.
I managed to get it working eventually. I copy and pasted exactly the commented out config-directives in the guide underneath each other and edited the values accordingly.
If any of you reading are embarking on this voyage I would give this advice:
All up the experience was an eye opener, I learnt a lot about Unix mail services, reading documentation and perseverance.
Thursday, 21 July 2011
If you are reading this, welcome to my blog! It’s looking quite bare at the moment as most new blogs do. I would invite anyone who’s interested to check out my Bio of which I’ve written a few paragraphs about myself.
Recently my Partner Jess and I have initiated a new venture ‘Brazen Screams’. Its a work in progress at the moment where I will be contributing articles and content that are ‘Dark & Extreme’. The site is unique to Perth and encompasses all culture (i.e movies, theatre, music and video games).
The site is still in development but there is a Facebook page where you can catch up on the latest news.
The new blog and news website have all been published through my also new business ‘Bitfrost Technologies’. So if you stumble upon this and require Managed IT Services, I specialize in Web Hosting, Server/Network deployment, Troubleshooting and PC Repairs/Builds. As of yet a site hasn’t been setup but it will be as soon as I register it as an Australian Business.
Tom.