Repensando cómo configurar Linux: Parte I
Y empiezo con uno de los pedazos grandes: configuración.
Parte I de una serie larga (espero que sean por lo menos 5 partes).
Y empiezo con uno de los pedazos grandes: configuración.
Parte I de una serie larga (espero que sean por lo menos 5 partes).
Dear fictional character that oppreses the workers of the North Pole: This christmas, I want an Asus eee PC, an Everex gPC, and some bare white box with a nice Phoenix PC 3.0 BIOS.
Why am I asking the red menace from the north for these items?
Well, they do have one thing in common: Linux. Another is that they are consumer boxes, not servers.
For many years, one of the huge advantages windows had was that it came preloaded with most PCs. This enabled people to turn a blind eye to windows installation and configuration since it was done by Someone Else (TM).
Since getting Linux has become much easier in the last 10 years [1] this has been very frustrating. Imagine you had something you gave away for free, but people kept using something more expensive because they had to pay for it anyway!
That itches. If Linux was not chosen because it was inferior for the task at hand, that's one thing, but not even being able to be tested because the other product was bundled and paid for? Annoying.
Of course on servers this worked differently. The OS was not the expensive part, and was preloaded less often. Corporations have prearranged licensing terms, and adding things to the mix is simpler.
But for consumers, preloading has been a huge problem [2]
So, if the jolly trespasser brings me what I ordered, I will find the following:
Asus eee: A cheap subnotebook with Linux and KDE preloaded.
Everex gPC: A cheap Desktop with Linux and Enlightenment(!?) preloaded.
Phoenix PC 3.0 BIOS: an embedded hypervisor and Linux OS.
The eee is probably the most appealing. It's ideal for many uses:
Salesmen who are now using some ungodly Blackberry app (or worse)
System and network admins. Really. I would love to have a cheap notebook I won't hesitate bringing to a roof, a bar, the beach, whatever. It would live in my bag. My current notebook? Besides weighting 8 pounds, it's expensive and large. All I need are webpages email and SSH sessions!
Kids and students (it's cheap! You can buy a replacement if he drops coffe on it!)
Basic users and old people. Really, an office-like thing and a web browser? And I can use it wherever there's wifi? Neat.
And it is going to get a lot cheaper, and it's going to get a lot better. I expect there will be a 32GB, 10" model by the end of next year for $350, and the current model available for $250 (after all, half the components are cheap as dirt already, only flash is expensive, and that's a fluke)
And so on and so forth. If Asus creates a decent dock [3] and a nice rdiff-backup-based backup solution (it should be at least as nice as Apple's Time Machine), this box turns into my main computer whenever I am at home, and is a useful tool on the road. I really can live with those specs.
The gPC is a bit harder to grasp.
First, it's even cheaper. $200 is cheap. The CPU is slowish, but there are a whole range of tasks that are not CPU bound. I really want one of those as a home server. This is the first time I can see one of these ITX boxes as actually cheap not just small (in fact this one is not small at all).
I have a TV capture card, I could make a PVR out of it using LinuxMCE? It does have enough CPU for that (since I am doing it with a slower box already)
A file server? More than good enough for that.
A houseguest computer?
A MPD server?
All of the above?
And do all this while being quiet and power-efficient? Neat!
And the Phoenix PC 3.0 BIOS simply would be cool because I can virtualize without jumping through any hoops. This one is still fuzzy for me, but I only found out about it today. I need time for things to grow.
Why do I think these boxes mark a trend? Because they are definitely low-end products. These are meant to be made by thousands and hundreds of thousands, and make small money on each.
The makers are being smart about providing as little functionality as they can and making them simple, niche, consumer products instead of monstruosly powerful Linux monsters (sorry for how ugly that sounds).
Another factor is the huge growth of web apps that work well on non-IE browsers. This is making the OS irrelevant just like Netscape hoped in 1996. If the OS is invisible, Linux won.
So, Santa, for this christmas I ask for all these toys, and if it has to be only one, please make it the Asus eee. Roberto Alsina PS: and if you don't do your part, the raindeer's a goner!
Since this blog just broke the 100K visitors barrier yesterday (although it had about 150K more when it was lateral.pycs.net), it's a good time to revisit some of the old stuff that was somewhat good.
So here are (IMVHO) the best ten things I remember writing in this blog in the last 7 years.
This article describes a cool (again, IMVHO) way to implement DB-backed apps using PyQt. It's short, working code and you end being able to create neat stuff. I liked it, noone else did.
Be a good lamarckian froggy
It has it all! Evolution theory (theories)! It pretends to provide insights into FLOSS! Movie-critic-like quotes in the comments!
best blog i've read in a long, long time.
—Aaron Seigo
Rapid Application development using PyQt and Eric3 ... in realtime!
An original premise, a semi-useful app written, got good reviews. I still like it, but sadly it's not a format that ages well, since you can't update the tutorial for newer versions of PyQt.
Squid authentication via POP or IMAP
It solves a real problem, does it elegantly, and I still am installing it.
Shared: Narnia, The Da Vinci Code is Broken., Kong at dawn, Matrix Revolutions, Troy (not McClure), Double feature at the Electric
I sometimes try to "review" movies in an oddball way. Please read them if you saw the movies. I think I made sense.
Skeletons of stories that won't ever be written.
I have no idea why I wrote it, but I still like it.
Too sentimental, but hey, I did feel that way.
The subtitle is "Shameless explosion of nerditude." and it is that. I am at the same time very ashamed of writing it, and rather amazed by it.
The Linux Booting Process Unveiled
One of my most popular articles. It's even cited as a reference on Linux booting in Wikipedia! (I edited it because they had the link wrong, though). It was even copied without atribution a couple of times.
A Modest Usability Improvement
Other articles had more links, more views, or more comments, but this article inspired the creation of two new apps that are much better than what was around before I wrote it, which makes me feel all warm and fuzzy inside. So, check it out, then use Speedcrunch or Abakus instead of kcalc (or wincalc).
It's the second coming of the Toshiba Libretto, only this time it's:
Cheaper
Filled with Linux goodness.
It's the Asus eee. And the default UI is some sort of weirdized KDE. And it is going to sell a whole lot.
Really, lugging my current notebook is tiring, not having my own tools when I go to a customer's is annoying. This baby should fix that.
Sure, you Word/Excel/Powerpoint jockeys are going to be annoyed with a 800x600 screen, but it's awesome for ssh sessions.
Well, it seems I am in trouble for PyWeek.
Why? Because it's wednesday and I have done nothing. Nothing! It's because I have been working a lot, really, and I have a 4 month baby, too.
So, I am upping the ante.
I will do a PyDay.
I am taking tomorrow off (yeah, right!) and I'm doing the game in one day. Maybe I will scrounge a few hours on sunday, too.
It will probably not be fit for the contest because:
I will use PyQt
I won't test it in any platform other than my Linux box
But here's the game concept (BTW: Twisted sucks as a theme. It sucks really, really, really hard!):
According to the dictionary, Twisted also means perverted. So, this game, Twisted Little Boy is about a bad boy. A really bad boy. But a clever one. He creates machines using random equipment he finds to do evil, really mean things.
I will probably do a live-blog thing like those tutorials I wrote years ago about PyQt.
There's a Google code project (obviously empty): http://code.google.com/p/twistedlittleboy/
See you all tomorrow.