MVP Summit 2008

Link. April 11, 2008. Comments [0]. Posted in: Personal

Provided the American Airlines problems from this week get sorted out, I'll be attending the MVP Summit again this year. I'll be arriving Sunday pretty late but will be staying until Friday.

If anyone wants to meet, chat, or just say Hi, send me an email (tomas at winterdom.com) or ping me via twitter.

More Music

Link. February 25, 2008. Comments [0]. Posted in: Personal

Here's some music I've recently gotten my hands on:

  • Dokken: From Conception - Live 1981. Dokken playing live at its best. It's also my second Dokken live album, as I already owned their Live from the Sun album.
  • Edguy: Hellfire Club. Edguy's always a fun band; several good tracks in this one like "We don't need a Hero", "King of fools" and my favorite, "Navigator".
  • Kamelot: Ghost Opera. A solid album, as most of previous Kamelot works.
  • Diabolique: Black Sun Collection. This is a double album combining their Wedding the Grotesque and The Black Flower albums, though the second one is far more polished and a lot better overall (I particularly liked songs like "Dark Rivers of the Heart", "Yesmine" and "Play in the dark". I also own their Butterflies album which is one of my favorites around.
  • Freedom Call: Eternity. It's an ok album, but clearly not their best.
  • Iron Maiden: No Prayer for the Dying. I had a copy of this album many many years ago and lost it, and ran into it a couple of weeks ago at Tower Records and got it. The only reason they're carrying this stuff is because Iron Maiden is giving a concert in Bogota soon, though I won't be attending :-(.
  • Winger: IV. Didn't really expect to get this one, given that I was never really a Winger fan, but it actually has a few really good songs, like "Four Leaf Clover".
  • David Shankle Group: Ashes to Ashes. Interesting album, though somewhat of a mixed bag. So far I'm liking "The Widow's Peak" the best.

Naming Your Computers

Link. February 6, 2008. Comments [3]. Posted in: Personal

There's a thread going on at reddit regarding an old FYI RFC about computer naming conventions. This made me think a bit about how I name my machines, and realize I don't really have a convention at all. Or, rather, I've had several over the years ranging from places/characters from books (from the traditional Lord of the Rings lore to science fiction) to famous scientists.

The machines I'm currently using are named like this:

  • My main Windows laptop is currently named arcano.
  • My other laptop running ubuntu is named isengard.
  • My main development virtual machine, running WinServer2k3, is named newton (after Sir Isaac Newton, of course).

Some other names I've used previously include kepler (in honor of Johannes Kepler), caladan (from Frank Herbert's dune), copernico (the Spanish spelling for Nicolaus Copernicus), radiant, arrakis (again, a dune reference), lothlorien, and colossus (a reference to the computer, not the comic superhero). There are probably plenty others I've forgotten over the years :-).

Another common choice seems to be using letters from the Greek alphabet. That was the convention at my college. I still remember our first account used to be in delta, which turned out to be an old Sun workstation hosting email, web and shell access to the CS department (and later decomissioned).

What do you name your computers?

Backing Stuff Up

Link. February 1, 2008. Comments [0]. Posted in: Personal | Tools

Jeff Atwood's post on backup strategies made me reflect on what I was doing myself to keep my data safe. I don't really have a "backup strategy", though I do try to keep a good backup around (and I'm always careful to, for example, backup my laptop when I'm traveling with it).

But definitely, I have some major holes in my current backup management. Currently, I have a very simplistic backup procedure:

  1. Every once in a while I back all my really important files (mail, pictures, documents and so on) over to an external drive that I usually keep connected to my laptop. My backups aren't really huge, so I can easily keep two versions around.
  2. Every once in a while (less often) I do a second backup into a 20GB small external drive (what used to be an Archos Gmini 120 MP3 player, now formatted using NTFS). This is small enough that I can easily put this somewhere else as a good second level backup.
  3. Regularly I do a third copy of my data into a DVD (yes, the backup of my core stuff still fits in a DVD with a bit of compression).

For (1) and (2) I've been using Microsoft's SyncToy for a number of years, and for the most part it usually works OK (as long as you don't have too many read-only files and make sure no files are in use). It's not perfect, but it does the trick, though I guess I could easily replace it with a batch file and robocopy.

There's one thing I haven't covered yet in my backups: Source Code. Actually, this is for the most part easy because most of it is in source control already, so I don't have too much of a need to back it up explicitly (and most of it is my client's servers, so I don't have to take care of it). I do keep a local CVS repository (yes, one day I'll migrate it off that, I promise!), which I do backup regularly as part of my backup sets.

Though these simple mechanisms have worked for me so far, there are a few significant things I'd definitely like to improve:

  1. I'd definitely like to start keeping more offsite backups, and more often.
  2. I don't currently backup a number of things, particularly my music collection (ranging around 40GB now). If I lost it, I could rebuild it from a number of sources (CDs, emusic catalog and so on) but I would still lose some of it. Still, backing up that much data is a hassle. I'll probably end up getting a second large external drive for this once I finally get a desktop machine.

A while ago I had given Mozy a quick try, and rather liked the idea. The problem at that time was that our internet access here in Colombia still isn't all that very good (unless you're willing to pay very large sums of money for it). Specifically, we have very crappy upload speeds, which pretty much made a service like Mozy impossible to use effectively.

Recently, after our local phone company started getting some competition this has changed a bit, and now they have doubled our upload speeds to a whooping 256Kbps (on good days!), so I decided to give Mozy a try again. It took all day, but I was able to create and upload a new 850MB backup of some of the most important stuff (mostly documents and such), so at least this gives me hope that I can start using this more effectively now. We'll see.

Recently Acquired Music

Link. November 11, 2007. Comments [1]. Posted in: Personal

A few months ago I signed up again for emusic. The plans are not as good as they used to be, but they are still fairly cheap, and there was tons of new music I wanted to try out. Also helped that finding good music here, particularly if you like Metal, is no easy task.

Here are some of the albums I've recently bought:

  • Amorphis: Eclipse
  • Axel Rudy Pell: Nasty Reputation
  • Iron Savior: Megatropolis
  • Metal Church: A Light in the Dark
  • Russell Allen / Jorn Lande: The Battle
  • Serenity: Worlds Untold & Dreams Unlived
  • Sonata Arctica: Unia
  • Sunterra: Graceful Tunes
  • Therion: Gothic Kabala
  • Thought Chamber: Angular Perceptions
  • Throes of Dawn: Quicksilver Clouds
  • Tiesto: Parade of the Athletes
  • TNT: Transistor

About

Tomas Restrepo is co-founder of devdeo ltda. His interests include .NET, Connected Systems, PowerShell and, lately, dynamic programming languages. More...

email: tomas@winterdom.com
msn: tomasr@passport.com
twitter: tomas_restrepo

Technorati Profile

devdeo logo

View my profile on LinkedIn

MVP logo

Syndicate

Ads

Links

Tag Cloud

.NET (232) Architecture (47) ASP.NET (6) BizTalk (170) Blogging (64) C++ (3) Castle (2) Commerce Server (3) Development (118) DLR (7) Enterprise Services (25) Fonts (4) Host Integration Server (1) LINQ (3) Linux (5) NHibernate (1) Personal (143) PowerShell (22) QuickCounters (4) Tools (74) Vista (38) VS Color Scheme (10) VSTO (2) WCF (64) Web Services (87) WinFX (80) Workflow (47) WPF (5) XML (21)

Statistics

Total Posts: 986
This Year: 56
This Month: 6
This Week: 0
Comments: 755

Blogroll

Post Archive

Other

Copyright © 2002-2008, Tomas Restrepo.

Powered by: newtelligence dasBlog 1.9.7174.0

Sign In