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Recent entries

  1. Keeping Track - Lawn mowers: our most pampered and successful pets
  2. Keeping Track - The Rails of the Royal City
  3. Keeping Track - Bus system overhaul coming to Guelph while GO station might go to Lafarge after all
  4. Keeping Track - Sikh Temple issue column
  5. Keeping Track - Rethinking the commute
  6. Keeping Track - there is always more to discuss
  7. Transportation planning leaves a lot to be desired
  8. A sombre anniversary
  9. Weighing civic politics, punditry
  10. Column: GO service is coming to Guelph
  11. GO Transit EA study for Georgetown to Kitchener expansion complete
  12. Column on UK vs CA rail service
  13. BC defeats PR nearly as soundly as PEI and Ontario
  14. Police Week
  15. On May 12, vote safely: Don't give BC an STV
  16. older entries...

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Michael D on Keeping Track - Bus system overhaul coming to Guelph while GO station might go to Lafarge after all
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Anonymous on The myth of the wasted vote
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Links of interest

  1. 2009-03-27: The Mother of All Rejection Letters
  2. 2009-02: Road Worriers
  3. 2008-12-29: Who should go to university?
  4. 2008-12-24: Tory aide tried to scuttle Hanukah event, school says
  5. 2008-11-07: You might not like Obama's promises
  6. 2008-09-19: Harper a threat to democracy: independent
  7. 2008-09-16: Tory dissenters 'idiots, turds'
  8. 2008-09-02: Canadians willing to ride bus, but transit systems are letting them down: survey
  9. 2008-08-19: Guelph transit riders happy with 20-minute bus service changes
  10. 2008=08-06: More people riding Edmonton buses, LRT
  11. 2008-08-01: U.S. border agents given power to seize travellers' laptops, cellphones
  12. 2008-07-14: Planning for new roads with a green blueprint
  13. 2008-07-12: Disappointed by Layton, former MPP likes `pretty solid' Dion
  14. 2008-07-11: Riders on the GO
  15. 2008-07-09: MPs took donations from firm in RCMP deal
  16. older links...

All stories filed under linux...

  1. 2003-04-25: April 25th, 2003 (from Advogato)
  2. 2002-10-27: October 27th, 2002 (from Advogato)
  3. 2002-09-26: September 26th, 2002 (from Advogato)

Displaying the most recent stories under linux...

April 25th, 2003 (from Advogato)

FIDO's GPRS service runs flawlessly in Linux. I'm thrilled. Here's how:

Use pppconfig or something, it's a standard dialup connection with numer *99# and l/p both 'fido' - authentication is really done using the smartcard in the GPRS pcmcia card. As far as Linux, well pcmcia-cs, is concerned, the GPRS card is a totally generic serial modem, so treat it like one.

I spent a while looking around for information about GPRS support in Linux and while I figured it existed I found nothing concretely useful. So maybe someone will find this useful.

I called fido up and asked for the ppp information to use my gprs card in linux. I was put on hold for a moment, and a technician came on and told me everything I needed to know.

By contrast, when I've had to call Rogers up for problems now and again with my cable modem connection, the moment I say Linux they literally hang up on me. Some service.

internet linux 168 words - permanent link - comments: 0. Posted at 19:45 on April 25, 2003

October 27th, 2002 (from Advogato)

@echo off
mem/d|find/i "ANSI">nul
if errorlevel 1 goto :error
echo %0%1%2%3%4%5%6%7%8%9|find/i "/?">nul
if not errorlevel 1 goto :help

The opening lines to boggle, as I wrote it in DOS .batch in highschool.

Remember batch files?

They were the only redeeming feature of DOS. They allowed me to learn basic coding skills without getting any kind of compiler or trying to squeeze Linux onto my XT or my PS/2 (personal system, that is, not playstation).

There were only a couple of things you couldn't do without getting additional binaries not included in a basic DOS system.

Mainly, you couldn't sleep, and you couldn't read the keyboard once the "program" was already in progress. To solve these, I used a small file called "keytrap.exe" which was a whopping two or three lines long written for me by an acquaintance with a compiler named Chris Micali, and two small files called getkey.com and getscan.com which were 8 and 10 bytes respectively, and sleep.exe which I got off shareware.com eons ago, and have long since lost the associated license file.

With those tools I spent entirely too much time writing batch files throughout my years at NMH.

For the sake of sheer, morbid curiosity, I've posted a small selection of these batch files here. I strongly recommend NOT running any of them without backing up and quarantining your archaic little DOS box.

Note the existence of "random" number generation in some of those files, particularly the game of boggle.

alias.bat was my attempt to have something with similar functionality to alias in a variety of un*x shells. I had shell access from the computer labs and found this to be a useful little tool missing in DOS. Careful though, alias is a self-installer which makes sure ANSI.SYS is loaded and burrows itself in its own directory.

Once I finally bought a Linux-capable box, I was disappointed to learn that random numbers could be obtained across a large range using a single line in bash - rather than the 200 lines with a limited range of 1 to 100 found in batch - and that reading keyboard input and sleeping could be done without batting an eyelash.

It took all the fun out of scripting.

*sniff*

linux 376 words - permanent link - comments: 0. Posted at 19:42 on October 27, 2002

September 26th, 2002 (from Advogato)

Democracy.

It is an interesting concept.

In two weeks time it will be put to the test one more time. This time it won't be a political jurisdiction up for grabs, a country choosing new leadership, or a province deciding its fate within a country.

Nope, this time it is a bunch of project members rating eachothers' performance and ability. Every member rates every other member between one and the total number of members of the project. Whoever has the lowest total number is the most trusted and seen as the most competent member, and becomes the project's leader. Whoever has the highest cumulative rating is assumed to be hampering the project based on his peers ratings of him and will be removed from the project.

There is no campaigning, there are no speeches, there is no publicity, it is simply a matter of the project members collectively deciding the future of the project.

When it is all over, the project's administration may look exactly the same as it does now, or the landscape of the project will look completely different and everyone will wake up scratching their heads.

Only time will tell.

linux politics 198 words - permanent link - comments: 0. Posted at 19:40 on September 26, 2002

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