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Panoramas from Italy

29 July 2008 | 20:18 | General | No Comments

I took a few panoramic shots while I was in Italy. Using the open-source app Hugin to stitch the photos together I got the following results.

The Amalfi Coast

The Amalfi Coast

Florence

Florence

More Florence

More Florence

The Arch of Constantine as seen from the Collosseum

The Arch of Constantine as seen from the Colosseum

Piazza San Pietro

Piazza San Pietro

I don’t like how the sky is over exposed in most of them, but overall I’m pleased with the results.



Storage Box (III)

6 July 2008 | 0:49 | General | No Comments

Hardware all arrived on Thursday, threw it all together and got it powered up with no troubles.

Motherboard with parts completed case, sans disk drives

At the first power on, I immediately wanted to fix the fan on the north bridge. It started off with a bit of a clicking noise, but even after that quieted down, the motor noise was still pretty loud and very high pitched. So I took that fan off, and mounted an 80mm fan to the vent on the case side panel. Much better :)

Just a few temperature measurements as presented in the bios, ambient was 23C.

Stock:
CPU: 43C
Internal: 34C
Remote: 36C

No Northbridge Fan:
CPU: 64C
Internal: 38C
Remote: 49C

80mm Case Fan:
CPU: 45C
Internal: 30C
Remote: 35C

Perfectly reasonable temps w/o that noisy little fan involved. And the CPU seems quite happy as long as it gets a little airflow.

Haven’t had much time to play with it, but I did manage to get the ubuntu 8.04 amd64 iso converted to boot off a usb device using the excellent unetbootin tool. The system felt quite snappy and I was pleased at how quickly I was able to open a few openoffice documents.

Unfortunately unetbootin didn’t seem to work with any freebsd iso’s I tried, which is a shame because I eventually want to run FreeNAS on this system. Might just have to break down and borrow a CD drive from another system to get it installed.

Oh, and the best part of all. According to my kill-a-watt meter, power draw is at 30W! I should have no trouble keeping this system under 45W when I get drives in it.



Storage Box (II)

29 June 2008 | 15:52 | Hardware | 1 Comment

The first concept I had for my file server revolved around the Asus Eee Box. It met the low power requirements, was very quiet, and it’s diminutive dimensions would make it perfect to tuck away. However using this box would mean that I’d be stuck with external USB drives for storage. While this would not be terrible, there would be an added cost for a disk enclosure, and performance would take a hit as well.

Then I found out that Intel sells an Atom based motherboard, complete with SATA II ports and a PCI slot. After a little further reading about the product, I decided to go with it and picked out components to round out the system.

Here’s what I got:

Total $268.84

I’ve already come in at least $30 cheaper than what the rumored Eee Box price would be, and I’ve got something much more flexible.

In reading about this Intel motherboard, I learned that there are some compatibility issues with linux/bsd and the integraed Realtek ethernet controller. I opted to get the Intel gigabit pci card to ensure compatibility, but also because the onboard only supports 10/100mbit.

The SYBA card adapter will take both CompactFlash or SD and fully supports DMA for speedy data transfers. I also picked up two 2GB SD cards for my trip to Italy. When I get back one of them will become the primary drive for the file server. No noise, and very low power consumption. I’m not too sure how great the SD card will work, but I don’t expect any major problems.

I feel that the power supply is a bit overkill right now. But when looking for power supplies that were compatible with the Intel mobo, there are limited options that meet the 80+ efficiancy rating and include an ample number of SATA power connectors. I’ve alwasys liked Antec’s power supplies, and I’m sure that this one will work nicely.

I haven’t purchased the disk drives yet, but I will likely choose the WD Caviar GP 1TB drive. They are damn near silent, and as part of Western Digital’s ‘Green Power’ line they’ve managed to reduce power consumption by a few watts.

My order should be arriving on Monday or Tuesday. Pictures and an update will follow when I’ve got it all together.



Storage Box (I)

26 June 2008 | 22:42 | Hardware | No Comments

I’ve wanted to build a dedicated file server for quite some time now. I had a lot of requirements floating around in my head for what I wanted to achieve, mainly:

  • 1TB+ of fault tolerant disk space - I’ve already got 5 disk drives in a variety of sizes holding my precious data. Losing a disk would be a tragedy. So the new storage system needs redundancies in case of a disk failure.
  • ZFS - I’m a big fan of what Sun has brought to the table with ZFS. Snapshots are perfect if you’ve ever blown important files away with an accidental slip on the delete key. And the ability to grow a pool makes future expansion a breeze.
  • Energy Efficient - My current server is my old desktop. On average it draws 165W of power, all day, every day. Worst part is, 98% of the time it’s not doing a damn thing. For the new server I’d like to be using < 60W. I feel like using less electricity than a standard light bulb is a fairly good goal.
  • Easy to Manage - I’ve seen some truly terrible management GUI’s in my time, and I feel that most companies really underestimate how important a solid design is. A good web based interface is my preference, but I also want to be able to muck around at a lower level if needed.

Today I purchased most of the hardware to build a box that would meet all of these goals. I decided to wait until after I return from my trip to Italy to purchase the hard drives. Tomorrow I’ll get into the details of the hardware I picked out and the overall plan for how I’m gonna do this.



Silverton mercury contamination

13 December 2007 | 11:53 | General | No Comments

This King5 article talks about mercury contamination from the mining operation in the Silverton area years ago. I happened to be up there earlier this year and took pictures of the concentrators. As you can see, it’s amazing that one of them is still standing.



eee Xubuntu

12 December 2007 | 22:22 | General | No Comments

A buddy of mine built a nice Xubuntu image for the eee, and needed some mirrors to help get it out there.

The eeeusers wiki is getting hit pretty hard currently, so here’s a the current list of mirrors:

tivac.com
lildragon.eu
sitzmar.com (here)

I’d love to get my hands on one to play with, but I just don’t think I’d use it enough to justify the cost…



small world

21 October 2007 | 15:44 | General | No Comments

Just finished watching the Seahawks-Rams game, and the name of the Ram’s coach Scott Linehan caught my attention. The name sounded very familiar, so I did a little googling and discovered that the wife of Scott Linehan was my english teacher sophomore year of high school! At the time, her husband was the offensive coordinator for UW. She also talked about her brother-in-law the actor, who had a part in ‘The Thin Red Line’. Maybe you’ve heard of Jim Caviezel? Yeah, I thought so.

It really is a small world.



a simple agreement

13 August 2007 | 19:05 | General | No Comments

hitachi agreement
Click for full size

Okay, I promise. Can I please have a replacement drive now?



vista peeves

11 July 2007 | 22:56 | General | No Comments

I finally googled one of my biggest annoyances in vista: automatic reboots after windows updates.
Turns out it’s a simple change using the group policy editor.

Here’s the details:
http://4sysops.com/archives/disable-restart-after-windows-automatic-updates/



channel surfing

20 March 2007 | 15:29 | General | No Comments

Last night I used netstumbler to scan for wireless access points in my neighborhood. I found about 6 right away, and then another 5 after moving my wifi usb key closer to the window.

The original reason for my scan was to find out which channels were being used in the area. Not surprising 6, 9 and 11 were the popular options. Also, I was surprised to find that most of them had encryption turned on.

I switched my AP to channel 3, and was pleased to get an extra megabyte/s in throughput, putting me right around 2.2MB/s. I’m curious what performance will be like once we get the other computers upgraded from B to G.