Archive for April, 2010

When you find something you really like you want to have/know more of it, not really being important if it is food, an idea or a piece of art. And part of liking something is getting greedy+opinionated+political about it.
One little thing that bothered me about this book was the constant changed of fonts from like 12 points to 8 and then 6 with a gray background. Usability anyone? But this is not something the author should be blamed for.
I am more of a software person, but IMHO here are my comments about the book. More aimed at the next version of Karl’s book or in case some wants to pick up these ideas where he left them off.
Karls book was slashdotted also (go slashdot and search (underneath to he left) on 1593270364),
[...]
but I found more flame baits and slashdot’ing that attempts to talk about this excellent book intelligently:
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._ considering the 2.4 version of the kernel? fine! But why even talking about ipchains if the whole LVS idea is based on Netfilters and who uses ipchains nowadays anyway?
._ more on power management of the primary and back severs, does heartbeat do some kind of interfacing to APMD on both?
._ have these ideas been ported for *BSD? I mean, I really find silly these “Give me Linux or give me dead” battle cries from us, OSS techies, when we should actually love the fact that we have more options as robust (if not as popular) as Linux.
._ more on the reasons why the different pieces of hardware in a cluster would fail and how to work around these issues (just the basics of it with points to more info (we sw people some times code without consideration to the fact that RAM is very expensive nowadays and using in-memory Data Structures would make HDDs give us their blessings)).
._ there are NICs with two (and 3?) connectors out there, why not using them in an LVS env.? And if there are reasons, why not mentioning them? NICs are cheap and available
Linux Enterprise Cluster Build

I have to admit I’ve never had a digital scale before because I’ve never trusted them, but since I was given the Eat Smart scale as a gift, I am extremely impressed!! It was extremely easy to start (just wait for it to all go back to 0.0…which I was patiently waiting for at first…but eventually it worked like a charm). And after that, I was able to stand on it and within milliseconds my weight would come up — and accurate at that (I tested with the gym’s manual scale). Excellent!! I never have to have anxiety about the scale being wrong again!! Only have to have anxiety about what it’s actually saying =)

What a great product!! If I cooked more often, I’d consider other scales!! Great product, EatSmart!
Body Fitness French ed

I just learned that J.D Salinger has died.

American literature has lost one of its most influential and everlasting voices.

RIP
De Quiberon au Croisic

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