The current India Australia cricket series is available online at http://www.livesportzstreaming.com/voip-tvu.html
You will need Internet Explorer to watch this and install an active x plugin. Doesnt work with firefox though.
The current India Australia cricket series is available online at http://www.livesportzstreaming.com/voip-tvu.html
You will need Internet Explorer to watch this and install an active x plugin. Doesnt work with firefox though.
HP has started their India specific Snapfish website. This is nice!! Helps you share and print photos online. They have some cool features like printing on T shirts, mugs, key chains etc. The calendar option costs about 800/= for a period of 12 months. Everything looks OK priced and im just waiting to upload my first album soon. Seems like the first 20 prints are free, but havent yet checked the disclaimer.
The website is http://www4.snapfish.co.in/login
I had ordered the Ubuntu 6.06 CD’s in early June and I got them today. I immediately took the PC edition of Ubuntu and set about installing it on my laptop (WLG 22200).
The Ubuntu CD is both a live/install CD. You first boot into the Lice CD and login with a user name you provide while the Live CD boots into the GNOME desktop environment. Once you are on the desktop, you can click the ‘install’ icon and set about installing Ubuntu on your PC/Laptop.
Ubuntu is debian based and my recent foray with trying to install Debian turned out to be fiasco.
The install process is kept very simple. All you need to provide are details like
1) timezone
2) keyboard layout
3) partitioning information (I used the manual option here) etc.
There are about 5-6 steps and the installation time is neat, less than 20m i believe. Hmm so that set me wondering if i would get the software i wanted. I did not find an option of custom installation of packages/features. Meanwhile the installation was done with and it was time to reboot and get into Ubuntu.
I must say, The look and feel of Ubuntu is real cool. Its neat and its polished. Windows now really Beware!! Ubuntu is getting there for sure
I booted into Ubuntu and as i booted i realized that
1) The 915 chipset drivers were ‘in’ and hence i got a good resolution straightaway.
2) the sound subsystem was up and running
After logging in, i opened the terminal and tried gcc. Hmm!! It wasn’t installed.
I then used system->administration->networking to setup my Ethernet connection. No problems there. Don’t have a wireless network to test with in my office, hence i decided to test it with my Huawei wireless router/modem (BSNL) the moment i got home.
Other things i noticed while i was logged on was that the firefox version was 1.5.0.3 and that the ‘check for updates’ in the menu was disabled.
As i left office for home, i put the Ubuntu Sticker on my laptop. Its a neat sticker which i placed just below the ‘Designed for Windows XP’ sticker.
Once home, as i booted into Ubuntu again, i realized that the 3rd party drivers were ‘in’ which probably meant that the wireless firmware was also taken care of!! SuSe/Fedora (in my earlier post) dint have the firmware. Of course there is a lot of debate on including 3rd party driver binaries/blobs, but that’s an issue that’s more to do with GPL/philosophy/Morals than user experience.
Again back to system->administration->networking to setup my wireless. Added the BSNL DNS address and 5 seconds later, i could open my router admin page and google.com. wow!! That’s really seamless wireless networking for you!! Ubuntu is cool!! Way to go!!!
More updates with Ubuntu in more posts later. I guess I’m going to stick with Ubuntu for some time now (next week or so
) ). Have had 3 flavors FC5/SuSe 10.1/Ubuntu 6.06 and the ‘feel better’ experience has been in exactly the same order of my installation experiences.
One of my friends downloaded the 5 CD’s of SuSE Linux 10.1. He has a Rs 900/- plan with BSNL which permits unlimited downloads (this is a *big* deal in India). I couldn’t resist the thought of installing SuSE on my Wipro LG 2200 laptop. I have hardly used a SuSE Linux distribution. My first choice has usually been Redhat and now the Fedora Core series. So i set about installing SuSE.
Well i did have initial problems with the installation. I first got an error of one of the font packages not being found on the CD1. I tried out the skip/retry/ignore option presented. But none of these worked and i ended up with a text based menu from where i could restart the installation. Now this is at least better than the Fedora installation coz while installing in Fedora one *has* to reboot and has no other option if one of the packages is not found or is corrupt. I realized that the CD1 was corrupt and had to wait till i got a new CD burnt again.
One of the great things about the SuSE distribution is that it has the Reiser Filesystem. Now this is *cool* coz i have had some experience benchmarking ext2/ext3/Reiser and Resier comes out on top. The installation otherwise was a breeze. I dint have to use expert setting to repartition. I used the suggested partition table and continued with the installation.
Well once the CD1 installation was done, i had to reboot and then it set about installing the remaining CD’s. Another good feature here which i believe is not available in Fedora is that once the basic installation is done, you have a bootable Linux OS. If your CD2 turns out bad, in Fedora you have to abort your changes and have to start all over again. This is not the case in SuSE, i could boot into SuSE in a ‘distressing’ resolution and with the minimum of tools. Once in, i could use YaST to go ahead with the updates in CD2/3/4/5.
Well, i managed to install packages from CD1/2/3 and then go about completing the installation.
Once the installation was complete, i booted for the first time into SuSE and used the GNOME desktop.
I have a Intel 915 chipset and SuSE had no problems there. Its has a 2.6.16 kernel which is just fine
. I got a 1024*768 resolution and i was pretty pleased that i dint have to break my head over the display. With the look and feel working out of the box, i set about testing the rest of the available stuff.
These are some of the features/tools/packages that i set about testing
1) Software Suspend
With a lot of pessimism, i used the suspend option. swsusp started the suspend and wow! it did go to the suspended state. I pressed the power button again to get it out of hibernation (is that a windows word?:) ), and well it did come out of suspend. This is really beautiful!!:)
2) Browser
Firefox 1.5+. Hmm impressive and it loaded up real fast. This is something that i noticed with great surprise. Things load up much faster than they do in Fedora or for that matter Windows.
This is true with Firefox/Ethereal/consoles.
3) Display
Works out of the box. Has drivers for the 915 chipset and provides me with a decent 1024*768 resolution
4) Sound
Works out of the box. Had no issues here as well
5) Network
Ethernet: Works out of the box.
Wireless: Now this was the pain area. I have spent about 20 minutes but haven’t yet got the wireless working. The firmware is not available. Once i download and install it, i should update this blog. Bear with me till then!!
6) NTFS support
The installation gives a default NTFS support (unlike Fedora i believe) and it mounted my Windows partitions without problems. This is a *good* feature to have.
7) Virtualisation
It provides XEN which i havent used as yet. I have been using vmplayer all along on both Linux/Windows. Will try out Xen and update this blog at a later point in time.
Well there are many more things to play around with, but the experience has so far been fruitful. SuSE seems to be slicker than Fedora.
I sent an enquiry mail to one of the embedded board manufacturers that make “way small” boards (http://www.gumstix.com/) . I wanted to order one of their basic boards and to my surprise i received a mail from telling that they *dont* ship to India currently. The explanation given was that India was listed in “Tier 3″ (not 1 not 2, but 3 !!!) by the US Commerce department. They also mentioned that the process to put India in their shipping list was in progress.
Now what is amazing to me is that India is listed in the “Tier 3″. Why? Isnt that a barrier to trade?
Now, is that an export control regulation on India? Guess what!!! Googling with “export controls + tier 3 + india” shows India listed in tier 3 along with Pakistan, Russia, Middle East etc. Guess these restrictions came about after India had their ‘peaceful’ nuclear explosion some years back. Subsequently the US put an embargo banning the export of “Dual Use” technology.
Huh!! All with with my Dad/FIL/MIL being Scientists working in the Dept of Atomic Energy.
)
But then i guess US is working towards removing that embargo and allowing exports of arms and “Dual use” technology.
My laptop has a pentium M processor which should run at 1.6 GHz, but it usually runs at 590 MHz. this i believe is because the power management comes to play. On linux, this can be changed by ‘echoing’ to a tunable variable in /proc (i vaguely remember doing this). Now how do i do this on Windows. Yeh i also run Windows XP on my laptop and i need to make the processor run at 1.6 GHz instead of 590 MHz. Ok id google and try to look for some tools that can help me do that.
Top 100 Network Security Tools
Interesting to see the wireless tools listed.
I did the unthinkable. In a fit of rage i booted my laptop i WinXP and deleted my linux partitions.
Now why did i do that? See the story below
I have been happily running linux on my laptop for quie some time now and i run winxp on vmplayer. vmplayer has been slow but not “irritatingly”. now a couple of weeks back, i noticed the winxp getting to that “irritatingly slow” level. i thought about it. *I* dint do anything that could have slowed it down. Also because of the ACPI issues, the linux usually ran only at 590 MHz for which i did a “echo performance > /etc/sys…..A path i will update later (can be googled easily)
However even with that i dint notice any discernable performance excpet that the windows welcome boot message was now understandable
earlier when it booted, i could hear every note
and it went on like for a screeching 10-12 seconds (im guesstimating here). ok finally this got to me one day and i thought id just do everything from scratch up. Had all the data i required on CD’s.
Into windows and in 2 minutes deleted all my linux partitions, recreated some blank partitions for linux and then remained on windows. i decided id run linux on windows inside the vmplayer and check the performance. *THEN* it hit me……………huh!!!!
there was an enterpirse patch for an antivirus software that was installed on my virtual machine (win xp). now this wasnt there earlier and this software rn 10-12 services which took quite a toll on the processor (i believe).
Anyways, things went on fine that day and i was ready to work on windows fo a while.
Next day, i started my laptop as usual and hey it just came to the grub prompt. Ooops!! i realised, where is the grub.conf?? i deleted that linux partition. I was ill and at home and couldnt boot into any OS to chek out google. So i called on my friend who did the googling.
Well there ar just 4 steps to get into windows from the grub prompt. do this
1) rootnoverify (hd0,0)
2) chainloader +1
3) makeactive
4) boot
and then you are in Windows!!!!!