Posts Tagged ‘Servusamanu’


Does it become easier or harder to write fantasy/science fiction when new wonders are continually being built for real?

The Rak Jebel Al Jais resort, to belocated in the united arab emarites, looks, from these concept works, like a space colony or perhaps the village of a group of tibetan monks who have been dabbling with some serious technology. (Interesting story idea.) It was design by the Office for Metropolitan Architecture (Desert, the new Metropolist), who seem to specialize in creating larger than life structures. Enjoy!

I have a hard time with charity. I’m not exactly swimming in bathtubs of golden doubloons; every day that goes to charity is coming out of some other part of the budget. Still, I’m willing to drop some money here and there for worthy causes.

I always wonder though, where does this money go? How much of it actually makes it to the end cause and how much is spent on ‘administrative costs’?  Is the money spent where it can and will actually make a useful contribution or is the charity really just a self-propagating machine, using the money to advertise the problem, in order to attract more money?

Charity Navigatory has answered a few of the questions. For example, the American Cancer Institute has a 3/4 star rating and only 1 star for efficiency. Most of the money gets wrapped up in red tape it seems. Other similar charities such as the Kidney Cancer Association seem to fare much better (although they are significantly smaller.) Charities like the Scripps Research Institute, seem to spend quite a bit more on direct biomedical research.

I’d still prefer to know exactly where the ‘program’ money is used. 99% of the money could be spent for cancer research, but really just be going to a guy who wikipedias ‘cancer’ all day long. That would technically meet the conditions but hardly helps the world. I’m sure that’s not the case for any of these large, well-established charities, but, and you can call me picky, I’d really prefer to know EXACTLY where the money goes. I want to fund research, which means I want the dollar I spent to go to a doctor or a lab tech or a college that is performing actual medical/pharmaceutical tests for treatments or cures. That kind of breakdown seems rather hard to get a hold of.

Ultimately, I prefer more direct forms of charity. Giving to those that I know need it or can I use it. That’s tough to find, but much more fulfilling, for me anyway. This Charity Navigator is pretty great though. If I ever give a donation anywhere, I’ll be doing just a little bit of research first.

Happy July 4th!

I’m enjoying the festivities somewhere around here.


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Every once in a while I come across an article that is too cool to pass up even if it doesn’t really have much to do with anything.

KiddOfSpeed.com isn’t exactly the most visually appealing website and the english is sometimes a tad haphazard, but the story is amazing.

A motocycle ride through Chernobyl. That’s a story right there. If there’s any place on earth that could be called a cursed wasteland that’s it. Filled with abandoned towns, old communist propoganda, and irradiated forest, Chernobyl’s got it all.

This is my favorite page. A town, not found on any maps. For a hundred and fifty years everyone in the town had the same name. Creepy…

In one of the greatest ironies, the area around Chernobyl, abandoned for so many years now, has a blooming natural habitat. Nature is reclaiming its own from the irradiated wasteland. Some of the pictures are truly gorgeous, and these are the places that are somewhat safe to go. What lies deeper within?

*Queue Lovecraft*

Here’s the easy navigation page. Enjoy!

As much as I profess to enjoy cooking (I do, truly!), I’m also partial to going out, especially when I can find a place that’s a little bit out of the ordinary. New Paltz, New York happens to be home to a wild array of culinary delights and debacles, the majority of which I’ve deemed to subject myself to over the last year.

Allow me to take you through a random, rabid traipse through the restaurants, pubs, cafes, and diners of New Paltz, NY.

Well beyond the McDonald’s, Burger King, Star Bucks and Dunkin Donuts, there exist a number of fast, reasonably cheap eateries and whatnot that are good for a quick bite.

Rocco’s, located in the main shopping plaza, has the best pizza in town. It has a small sit down area, fairly quick staff, and the greatest buffalo chicken pizza ever created. They also have a fairly wide variety of pasta/sandwich dishes for anyone that wants to eat there. The prices are cheap, the restaurant clean, the workers friendly, and it’s possibly my favorite place in town.

Not too far away, is Great Wall, a chinese restaurant. Eating there is an option, but it’s meant for take out or delivery. It’s standard american chinese food and it’s always been slow for me, but it’s probably the better of the two chinese places in town.

Also close by is the bagel shop. They only take cash, always an inconvienance for me, but they make their own fresh bagels and they’re the fastest place in town despite the crowds in the morning.

The last restaurant in the main plaza is the New Paltz Diner. They have a wide variety of dishes (swordfish?!), although I’d only brave eating maybe a dozen of them. Not too fast, not that slow, they’re open all the time. I don’t care for the diner much, food always seems overgreased and bland, but they’re a solid average as far as restaurants go.

Moving across the street, we have Pasquales, a pizza place. The service is haphazard, ranging from swift and amenable, to downright incompetant. The prices tend towards being a bit high, but they’re the only really true sit down italien restaurant in town except for La Stazione, which I’ll get to shortly. The Chipotle Pizza here is spicy and delicious and my main motivation for occasionally sitting down at Pasquales.

My Hero sits in the middle of town, but of far from everything. I passed it a thousand times before I ever attempted to eat there. In retrospect I might have passed by it some more without regret. The first time I went there I had a cold turkey hero. The sandwich I got back was huge, 2 8 inch subs. While they were heavy on bread and lot on substance, for the price it was impressive. They location was still offputting, but worth the occasional stop. My second venture, with a group of 5, resulted in my receiving my sandwich about 45 minutes after everyone else. The chicken parmasan hero was hardly worth the wait being immensely subpar.

Lemongrass is the second middle-of-town restaurant. It’s a desceptively fancy Thai restaurant. The Pad Thai I had was good, but wouldn’t draw me back. I suspect I would have appreciated the place more if I had gotten a spicier dish or the place hadn’t been extremely crowded. It’s very small and somewhat expensive, but it’s the only place in town.

Before hitting Main Street, you’re likely to miss La Bella, a pizza place that was under construction the first year I was here. It’s a very solid pizza place and my second favorite after Rocco’s. The variety is nice and I really should try their deserts, but best of all, it’s extremely fast and well-priced. I’ve never had a reason to complain about the food, the service, or the atmosphere. There’s nothing special about La Bella, but it’s very good and perhaps a bit underappreciated.

Main Street has the majority of the restaurants. Towards the south Murphys and China Kitchen are across from each other. Murphys is an Irish Pub. The fare attempted to go beyond bar food, but despite the fancy names and descriptions it was pretty plain and a tad pricy.

China Kitchen is the second chinese restaurant in town. It’s standard and average, nothing to really recommend or take away. It has a larger sitting area than Great Wall for these inclined to sit.

Main Street proper is home to: P&Gs, McGillicudies, Muddy Cup, Rock Da Pasta, Gourmet, Fat Bob’s, Yanni’s, and Neko Sushi.

P&Gs and McGillicudies are both bars. P&Gs, located on the corner between the library and the road that rolls down to my apartment, is the older, stuffier, more dignified of the two, hence my slight partiality. The somewhat larger selection is still mostly standard bar fare, but it goes a bit beyond with nicoise salads, cajun burgers, and a variety of very delicious wraps. McGillicudies is more popular as a bar and throws a pretty great trivia night, but the food is rather average with little more than bar food and burgers.

Mexicali Blue is next to P&Gs and happens to be one of my favorite places in town. Fair warning, you might die of old age before you get your food, but once you get it, you won’t mind dying. The hole in the wall restaurant has no space, smells like fish, and almost disappears into the wall of shops beside it, but they have an amazing catfish burrito and a number of other more usual taco,burrito fare. I haven’t tried their black bean dip yet, but it’s on the list. On a bright sunny day, there’s not much better than a quick walk along the rail trail, a stop into the Muddy Cup for a smoothie, and then a Mexicali Blue burrito for lunch.

Across the street lies the only-slightly-larger, ‘Rock da Pasta’. Part jukebox ambiance, sixties and seventies rock primarily, and part pasta, Rock da Pasta a delicious and auditory experience tucked into a bedroom sized kitchen+seating. The owner seems friendly, but I still blanche at double digit pricing for pasta dishes. I had some dish named after David Bowie while I was there, so I can suggest that.

Gourmet and Fat Bob’s have the singular destinction of being ‘drunk food’. Adequate by day, both places shine for their late night service, bar side location, and licentious clientele. Gourmet has the best hot wings in town and Fat Bob’s is cheap. Both serve an adequate slive of pizza at a cheap price.

Main Street Bestro is nearly across for Gourmet. It’s only open for breakfast and lunch, but it has a healthy reputation as one of the best places to eat in town. Sadly, this leads to longest waits in town as well. On weekends it is rare not to see a dozen or more people milling outside waiting to be called inside. Those that get past the wait are treated to an expansive menu with a lot of organic, vegetarian, and delicious breakfast/lunch options. The service was surprisingly fast and everything I’ve had there, egg sandwiches, salads, chicken, has been tasty and filling. The prices are average and appreciated.

The Muddy Cup, next to Rock da Pasta, isn’t really a restaurant at all. It’s a coffee shop and local hang out for the various hippies, skaters, and culturals that live in town. They serve a variety of pastries, all decent, and some excellent fruit smoothies. I try to get one every other week or so.

I went to Yanni’s for the first time about a month ago. It’s a Greek place on main street. The atmosphere is a bit cramped and dark, like many of the places on main street, but it has a certain old world charm with the dainty tables, haphazard glasswear (one cup advertized nascar, the other some soccer team?). The waitress spoke greek and suggested I try the pork gyro. About 20 minutes I had a fabulous gyro bursting with lettuce, peppers, pork, a delicious sauce all on a soft and warm gyro wrap. Since then it’s become a new favorite for when I want something other than mexicali blue. Also, the prices are between $6-10 a plate, so it’s cheap as well.

Neko sits on the north corner of main street. The building is hideous. Brown paint, red roof. It looks like it fell off of a slum and landed, half collapsed, at the edge of town. The inside is similarly dark and tacky. Despite the atmosphere the Sushi is impeccable. For $3-12 a roll, a ptron can order dozens of different varieties of sushi, sashimi, and other delicacies. I am especially partial to the new york roll: salmon, apple, and avocado, the budda roll: roasted peanuts and avacado, the shrip tampura roll, and, my favorite, eel. The presentation is simple, clean, and fairly cheap.

The last restaurant is Saruchi’s a bit off of main street near the independant bookstores. It’s an Indian restaurant, one of two. The other I’ve never had. Saruchi’s does it’s best to create a fantasy of india. The waitresses are dressed to the period and there are lounge booths available. Me and my companion decided to take a less adventurous table for our repaste.

Before ordering ‘chips’ were brought out. These ash flavored bits of unknown came with a trio of similarly inedible sauces. Our meals, however, were memorable. Bowls of meat, soupy sauce, and vegetables were delievered with a glass of water, which was quickly used in quenching these packages of spice. The meal was flavorful and filling and well worth the price for any adventurous soul looking for a taste of India. Fair warning, the leftovers did not keep well and I was forced to throw mine out, leaving behind a trail of pungent waste that held in the air for a good few hours.

Route 32 has two restaurants of note, Barnabys and Wrapsody.

I’ve only had breakfast at Barnabys. I was sadly disappointed with my omelette, a rather plump collage of tasteless vegetables wrapping in a slightly overcooked egg wrapping. Nevertheless, the smooth jazz pumping out of the speakers, the old wooden benches and the smartly dressed staff give the place a singularly posh atmosphere. I’ve heard excellent things about the dinners and intend to go there.

I have a love hate relationship with Wrapsody. As the closest restaurant to me I always want to eat there. Sadly, the wraps are just a bit expensive. $6+ for a single wrap is only reasonable when the wrap is very large or sides are provided. With each wrap being a half pencil length and a inch thick, it requires a good two wraps to make a meal. With a drink and or desert the price starts to equal twice what I could get for substantially more at Rocco’s, Yanni’s, or Mexicali Blue. Nevertheless, they occasionally have 2 for 1 specials and the thanksgiving wrap (cranberry, stuffing, gravy covered in turkey) is a treat.

The Gilded Otter is near the Water Street Market. It is probably the preeminent dinner restaurant in town and there is usually a short wait on weekends. There is also live entertainment most friday and saturday nights during the summer. Famous for their large brewery, the Gilded Otter is a cross between a bar restaurant and a genuinely fancy place. The service is well-trained, friendly, and prompt. The restaurant is clean, spacious, and lively. The food, well, it ranges from standard burgers, to the best calamari in town, to the meatload sandwich I am always tempted to have one more time. The steak is cooked to order, the fries transcend the world of bar fries to another plane, and the salads are clever. It’s possibly the best overall dining experience in town and comes at a price comperable to the average Chili’s, Outback, or Applebees.

La Stazione is located within the old railway station that sits opposite Water Street market near the Wallkill River and the Gilded otter. The outdoor seating is quaint and perfect for a late summer afternoon. They light up the candles, which flicker against the evening sky against the backdrop of the Minnewaska mountains. Sadly, that’s the best I can say. La Stazione specializes in italien dishes, all nearing $20 a plate. The meal however was plain, bland, small, and came with the most atrocious service I’ve had in a restaurant in years. When two people are paying over $60 for a meal, I expect to receive my check within an hour. Other people have had far better experiences, but for taste, price and service I’d much rather go to Rock da Pasta or Pasquales.

Leaving town, you may pass the College Diner. It’s a skeevy, sketchy place, but it’s always open. It’s a standard diner and has a wide variety, but nothing is very good or very bad. Infinitely average.

The last restaurant is Caribbean Cuisine. I don’t actually know where it’s located, but I’ve had it delivered. With a menu that sells jaimaican jerk, ox tail, and jamabalya, it’s tough to go wrong. Each dish is accompanied by a healthy side of fried plantains and delicious portions of rice and beans. The food is delicious, though I wonder at what sort of establishment delivers these heavenly packages of heavily spiced taste.

I still need to try Main Course, Beso, Harvest Cafe, Paul’s Kitchen, the pizza place near the card shop, the fish restaurant, Village Pizza, the indian place near Fleet, and a handful of other places. Until this, this is my review of bread and wine in New Paltz, ny!

I finished the rough draft of The Lonetracker Chronicle just an hour or two ago. Now, there’s plenty left to do. It’s an unedited masterpiece and by that I mean it’s a masterwork of misplaced commas, typoed words, broken continuity, and boring narration. I’m taking a few weeks off to get some reading done, enjoy the summer, maybe visit a few friends and then it’s on to the editing. I feel like I’m only maybe twenty percent done with the whole pen to published process, but I’m past that first big hump. It feels pretty great.

The Lonetracker Chronicle is a science fiction story built around the apocalypse that nearly destroyed humanity in the early 22nd century.  Mankind survived and even made it into space, but even two hundred years later the scars of the great apocalypse run deep.  For history professor Arrek Borthwait, his own scars run even deeper.  Invited to critique a movie depicting the apocalypse, he finds his own past has come around in the person of Sengal Tariff, the movie’s director and an old nemesis.

That’s all I’m going to put out for now.  I still need to write out the back blurb text and get together a suitable query latter for when that time comes.  For now though, whew!  Both very happy and very tired.

I recently setup A Centos 5.3 box to backup a handful of windows machines and a boat load of Freebsd servers. If someone finds this guide useful…great. If not, well tough. My disclaimer: I take no responsibility for what anyone manages to do with this guide.

I’m assuming the Centos box is all installed. I went with a clean install of Centos 5.3, using the basic Gui-less server packages. I named the box BACKUP. Also, I didn’t want rsnapshot running as root so it’s setup to work as the rsync user. I’m also installing webmin and samba for some remote access. Enjoy.

Add BACKUP to networks

setup
Go to Network Configuration
Add in static IP addresses
service network restart
This should set your box with the static address.

Set Time
date
Confirm date is correct. If not…
date nnddhhmmyyyy
Thats MonthDayHourMinuteYear

Add Rsync User
/usr/sbin/useradd rsync
passwd SomeGoodPassword

Add an Rsync user to every linux/unix computer that you’re going to be backing up.

Install Rsync on every Linux/Unix machine that you want to backup.
For FreeBSD Machines:
/usr/ports/net/rsync
Make install clean

Install RSnapshot
Centos:
Mkdir /download
Cd /download
wget http://www.rsnapshot.org/downloads/rsnapshot-1.3.0-1.noarch.rpm
rpm -ivh rsnapshot-1.3.0-1.noarch.rpm

Create Password-less SSH Login for RSync User
Login as Rsync User
ssh-keygen -t rsa
default options no passphrase

To add a FreeBSD Machine:
scp /home/rsync/.ssh/id_rsa.pub rsync@remotehost.com:~/.ssh/authorized_keys
To A Centos Machine:
scp /home/rsync/.ssh/id_rsa.pub rsync@remotehost.com:~/.ssh/authorized_keys2

(If you get a permission error log into the remotehost and create the .ssh folder under the rsync user’s home directory.)

For adding windows machine allow me to direct you to this great cwrsync tutorial.

Using Rsnapshot to Backup Windows Machines

Change Permissions
chgrp rsync /var/log/rsnapshot
chown rsync /var/log/rsnapshot

mkdir /.snapshots/
chgrp rsync /.snapshots/
chown rsync /.snapshots/

mkdir /var/run/rsnapshot/
chgrp rsync /var/run/rsnapshot/
chown rsync /var/run/rsnapshot/

Change Rsnapshot.conf
I change the lockfile location to a folder that is owned by the rsync user so I don’t get permission issues when I run the command.

Nano rsnapshot.conf
Uncomment: cmd_rsync /usr/bin/rsync
Change:
Lockfile /var/run/rsnapshot.pid
To
Lockfile /var/run/rsnapshot/rsnapshot.pid

Add Rsnapshot Entries
Nano rsnapshot.conf

Examples Entires (note everything is tab spaced)

For interval

interval daily 7
interval weekly 4
interval monthly 3

#Example entry for a FreeBSD machine-this backs up the /home/all/ folder and puts it undr a machine.com folder when backed # up. Make sure the rsync user has access to that folder.
backup rsync@machine.com:/home/all/ machine.com

#Example entry for a windows machine
backup windows.machine.com::AShare windows.machine.com/Share

Add Cron
Nano /etc/cron.d/rsnapshot

50 23 * * * /usr/bin/rsnapshot daily
40 23 * * 6 /usr/bin/rsnapshot weekly
30 23 1 * * /usr/bin/rsnapshot monthly

This can also be tweaked in the web admin installed later.

Test Rsnapshot
Test by logging in as rsync user
Rsnapshot daily

Daily.0 should be created in the /.snapshot folder. It should have completely backed up all the desired folders.

Install Webmin
cd /download
wget http://superb-east.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/webadmin/webmin-1.380-1.noarch.rpm rpm -i webmin-1.380-1.noarch.rpm

Add it to Centos Firewall
setup
Go to Firewall Configuration
Add port 10000
quit
service iptables restart

Login to Webmin

https://BackupMachine.com:10000

I want my freebsd machines to backup their databases so I can hopy them over.

Start Mysql Database Backups on Client Machines using Webmin.
In webmin
Server->Mysql->Backup
Set Backups to run automatically.

Configure for the /mysqlbackup folder.
chown rsync /mysqlbackup
chgrp rsync /mysqlbckup

Enable Samba
Enable Samba in Webmin
Edit smb.conf
Add Modules (This is pretty obvious. There are a thousand and one Samba tutorials)
Restart Samba Service

Add Users
Smbpasswd NameOfCurrentUser

Add that linux user rsync group

And done. With this you can backup every day (or whenever. Hourly?) databases, windows computer, normal files, and whatever else. You can monitor the server via webmin and check the backups through the samba share. However. Have fun!

Also: for more information. Try this guide.

2009 is the quadricentennial of Henry Hudson’s discovery of the Hudson River. I’m sure there were plenty of natives who were rather surprised to find themselves discovered and named, but after four hundred years these things tend to be forgotten.

In honor of this particular bit of history a flotilla of ships has been traveling up the Hudson River including an old wooden galleon. I made my way to Newburgh landing this last weekend and snapped a few pictures as it passed by.

Stick a camera on a boat, set it to take pictures every few seconds, stich the images together into a movie, see what you get. Looks pretty cool!

Night Run Part I

Night Run Part II

I should do this on my drive to work. You’d get to see the town of New Paltz, the Franklin D. Roosevelt Bridge, and part of Poughkeepsie. I don’t think my camera has an interval mode though. Hmm. Research time!

/slow monday

I’m currently working as a network admin.

For the nerds out there:

8 FreeBSD Servers
1 Debian Server
1 Centos Server (1 more on the way)
2 Windows Server 2000 Boxes
1 Windows Server 2003 Box
1 Solaris Box

Email: PostFix
Monitoring: Nagios 3.0.6 among other things
Backups: RShapShot
WebServer: Apache 5

I’m working on moving things to Centos and virtualizing the network. I also want to get the email moved over to Zimbra. Users: 30 local users, 50 ‘offices’ with up to 10 users each. W00t w00t!