Callaway

26 01 2008

Hey Corey, Tom’s last name is Callaway (Tom ’spot’ Callaway). He is the guy whom Ubuntu Chicago beat up on at last year’s Flourish Conference. It was in good fun, and there are pictures somewhere around the world with him and I embracing in a Red Hat/Ubuntu moment. By the way, I think I may be growing into a new addiction, OpenStreetMap. Geocaching is fun :)

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Hello Planet KDE

18 01 2008

Hello Planet KDE!

Just wanted to drop in and say hello as I was just added to the planet and provide a little information about myself if you don’t know me yet or haven’t had the privilege of me bugging you just yet. My name is Richard Johnson and I live in a small city in the US called Chicago. I currently work with the Kubuntu, Debian, and Foresight Linux projects with an emphasis of course in KDE. I have been using KDE pretty much since the day it made waves on the internet almost 12 years ago. I have been contributing here and there to KDE for the past couple of years. If you look closely you might see some of my work here and there, mostly with documentation and the Dot.

Thanks to everyone who made KDE 4 a reality, thanks to Chris for adding me to the planet, and thanks to Juan, Harald, Lydia, Martin, and others for telling me to quit wasting time and ask to be added. Thanks again, and here is to a wonderful 2008 and KDE 4!

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Interesting Observations

16 01 2008

Today I was tasked with fixing my buddy Matt’s computer. Matt is what you would call the average computer user. He uses his computer to surf the web, communicate via email, chat with friends, play some games, listen to music, watch some movies (probably pr0n), and get infected with viruses.

After working on this computer today, I got really irritated with Windows XP, to the point that I was disgusted at just how poor not only the system security was, but also the anti-virus software that it was using. Because of this, I needed to take a break, head up to the local Best Buy, and choke the first salesman who offered me a Windows computer. OK, wasn’t going to choke, but I wanted to talk to their tech support crowd and see what kind of work was the most popular there.

After speaking with the Geek Squad, which only one or two really qualifiedto be considered a geek, I now know I am not the only one who was irritated. Both of the gentleman I spoke with were Apple users, and were disgusted with Windows. Don’t blame them after today. We spoke for a bit and then I asked, what type of tech support is your biggest ticket. Oddly enough, removing viruses from Windows PCs, and fixing Windows PCs that are thrashed by your so-called “average users.” That is more virus fixing than home entertainment installations, which really threw me. Both of them said that with the quality of a lot of today’s hardware, they rarely get in a system where something has gone wrong with the hardware, and if they do, it is typically a power supply.

After that, I went to the Apple store just to see what kind of support they did. After talking to some of the techs and salesman there, who are all super knowledgeable and pretty damn cool, I was amazed that on average, they only get about 1 issue a week that isn’t hardware related. Just 1, that is pretty damn good. It was there that one of the techs said that Linux was by far greater than Microsoft Windows could ever be. I like to think the same.

A lot of people say that Linux isn’t for “mom or dad, or the average user,” and after having worked on this Windows computer today, I would have to say the same about Windows. Most people go to the local shop and purchase their computer because it was cheap. They are told they get this and that, one of those being virus protection, so they think they are golden. Little do they know that in 90 days, more than likely this virus protection is mute, just like my buddy Matt found out, and go about their business until a week or so goes by and their computer is pure garbage.

Within just a few days of the virus protection expiring on this computer, the hhard drive went from 160GB of free space to less than 300 MB, to the point that once you logged in, it would pop up errors and all 400+ Trojans took off. YES! 400+ Trojans. I plugged the PC into my network to try and get to a site but shortly after my ISP totally blocked my Internet connection. There was no connection in my house, I reset the modem and routers, unplugging the infected system first, and everything was back to normal. OK, so I wasn’t going to be able to fix Windows from within Windows, so I did what every good geek does, and whipped out the latest Knoppix CD and went to work.

Booted up Knoppix, mounted the hard drivee (sda1) with NTFS read/write support, went into the directory containing a bunch of fluff and deleted it. From there I did a simple apt-get install f-prot, updated the virus definitions, and went to town on checking out the drive. 400+ viruses, all pretty muchTrojanss of some sort, weredisinfected or deleted. But it didn’t get all of them, but it did get me to the point to where I could now boot into Windows, plug back in the network, and get to downloading some enamelware fighting software. 6+ hours into this adventure, and it still isn’t done. Right now eScan has found 8 more Trojans and 13 errors (01:27:21 so far, and still not done).

Now I know you Windows people who are above average, ya, those of you who say “I don’t have virus software and I have never gotten a virus.” Your trusty little operating system isn’t any better than Linux, actually I would have to say it is much worse than Linux for “average,” or your mom and pop users. Everything this person does can be done with Linux, and if he would use Linux, we wouldn’t be in this predicament. I switched my brother over to Kubuntu about 3 months ago, and within 3 months the only time he called was when he tried to get his Nokia phone working with Kubuntu. It didn’t work all that great and at the same time it didn’t work any better in Windows.

The results are in, and after today, I am sorry, Windows loses. This is absolutely ridiculous considering the amount of work I had to put in just to get the computer Trojan free. So from this point on, I could never in my life recommend Windows for a user that doesn’t know any better. The security is poor, but the support for fighting viruses and figuring out what every app running is doing is great. I think this will definitely be my last “will you fix my Windows” support ever.

Just so everyone knows, you can totally alleviate all of your viruses in Windows in less than 30 minutes with a Kubuntu Live CD. Boot up the CD, and when you get to the desktop, simply click the install button and follow the instructions. Yes, within 30 minutes your virus head aches will be gone, and that crap called Windows will be gone as well.

/me goes for the largest bottle of Tequila in the house

PS: Posted this with KBlogger for KDE 4. Pretty impressive little application, just a bit buggy still though. The spell checking is a little off, so if you notice some weird words, it wasn’t my fault this time :)

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Welcome KDE 4.0

11 01 2008

Leave the reality….
Live the dream!

Congratulations is in order for everyone who participated in making KDE 4 a reality that in fact allows many of us to continue living the dream. Thank you to all!

kde40.png

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KVM Guidance

9 01 2008

Howdy all, I am coming back at you with yet another question that I am hoping you all can answer. I am looking at purchasing a new KVM switch to update my old one. A couple of things I would like and actually prefer are:

  • Good Linux, Mac, and Windows support
  • USB support
  • Audio support
  • Good video support and wireless keyboard or mouse support, video is far more important here though, it isn’t major if I have to use a wired USB keyboard or mouse
  • I prefer a 4-port over a 2-port
  • Price…hopefully not to expensive. Under $100 USD if possible

THIS is the one I am currently looking at. It would fit nicely under an LCD and gives me pretty much everything I am looking for. If you know of one better than this one please do tell. I can actually get this one for about $70 brand new, $10 cheaper than Newegg. Now of course if there is a KVM manufacturer out there that would like to ship me one to review, I would be more than happy to do so, just email me at nixternal AT kubuntu DOT org :p Thanks everyone!

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Bag’em and tag’em

4 01 2008

KDE 4.0 Release Counter

It is getting much closer now to the official release of KDE 4 and KDE’s very own Troy Unrau has put out a post titled Tagged!, where he details the tagging process being completed for KDE 4.

Please remember that 4.0.0 will have bugs, issues, the odd crash that results from a corner case that no developer has encountered as a use case before, and so forth. There will be frequent maintenance releases from the 4.0.x branch in the future that will rapidly shape up the 4.0.x line. In addition, some things, like major improvements to plasma, will likely only happen in trunk. Yeah, we know plasma doesn’t do as much as kicker, and you can’t create a new folder by right-clicking on the desktop… we aren’t done with 4.x though, so hold on to your panties for a few months and use KDE 3.5.x if that really bothers you.

I think quite a few of you already realize that this isn’t going to the glitz-and-glam release of what is to be known as KDE 4, but it is about as close as you will get to it until a later released of KDE 4.1 makes its way to us. My favorite quote concerning this is the following by Troy:

If you are the type of person that was bothered by Apache 2.0 not being as well tested as 1.x, and you weren’t the first to try using kernel 2.6.0 because your uptime was more important, please keep using KDE 3.5.8 for now. Bug and security fixes are still accepted against the 3.5.x branch, and a 3.5.9 release would not be unrealistic development in the future.

This is true, however I think you will be fine no matter your background playing around with Kubuntu’s LiveCDs as they start rolling out the door.

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