Two weeks running!

Posted by mike on Tuesday April 7th, 2009 | comments disabled

Unextreme climbing

I really liked this climbing video of Natalija Gros (or in Slovnglish).

There’s lots of good climbing films around, but many or most of them feature fairly “Xtr3m3” soundtracks – some are OK, but sometimes they can be a bit lame. The soundtrack to this video is entirely different, and it really suits the style of the filiming too.

Not to mention the climb, phew! Even if you’ve never lead a climb it should be pretty obvious that your instinct is always to clip into any protection you get near, so I love the way she takes her time, has a nice rest, gets some chalk and then clips in – a pro at work.

Posted by mike on Wednesday November 26th, 2008, tagged with , | comments disabled

After two months without music

Cause you’ve all been following me on last.fm you’ll already know this .. but I am really loving these albums.

At some point, it might even have been in the car driving back from Sydney, we heard one of the new Kings of Leon tracks and loved it. I notice with some trepidation that they’re from Tennessee, which I flamed a few posts back, but oh well I’m sure they’re top blokes. I don’t know their earlier stuff that well, but there is some seriously good song writing on this album.

I had to get the Muse album after listening it to a bit in Freiburg with Nahd, not to mention my obsession with playing Knights of Cydonia on Guitar Hero. In fact “Exo-Politics” is a great song to play on the (real) guitar, Cydonia is not bad but a lot of the best bits are actually keyboard.

Meg and I both loved the last Emilíana Torrini album, and I think this one is even better. It’s just a bit more varied and upbeat than the last, including the awesome dubish title track, and the very fun Jungle Drum which I think they’re playing on the J’s.

And for cute lyrics and singable melodies you’ve gotta love Josh Pyke. His newie is awesome, also better than his last I think, which is often hard for a second album but I think he’s done it. Great to play along with, though some of the guitar is trickier than you’d think. I’ve been a fan of his for a while now, nice to get another installment.

Oh and did I mention he’s playing at Woodie, rock!

Posted by mike on Monday November 17th, 2008, tagged with , | comments disabled

Me too

A little remix of a recent xkcd.

Posted by mike on Saturday November 15th, 2008 | comments disabled

Farewell Alice

If only Brendan Nelson were in power and petrol was 5¢ cheaper, we wouldn’t have to become a one car household … or maybe not!

Posted by mike on Wednesday June 25th, 2008 | 2 comments

Goodbye Azzurri

Hopefully the first of many defeats after the sham that was 2006.

Posted by mike on Tuesday June 24th, 2008 | comments disabled

Canberra and the world’s fastest computer

As Jeremy mentioned, the IBM QS22 was released a few weeks ago. The QS22 is the newest Cell processor based blade server, sporting the new PowerXCell 8i chip, and up to 32 GB of memory.

Because the QS22 can support larger amounts of memory, Linux needs to enable the IOMMU, whereas on previous blades that was optional. For some workloads this could lead to a performance loss, so I spent some time early this year working on a solution which avoids the IOMMU overhead.

Although he’s too modest to mention it, Jeremy maintins spufs, which is the key infrastructure in the kernel which enables the Cell processor’s power – the SPEs. If it wasn’t for Benh, who also works with us in Canberra, the QS22 probably wouldn’t even boot. And as of this year we’ve also had Mark, the NKOTB, working on Cell.

As of this week Roadrunner, powered primarily by the QS22, is the current world’s fastest computer, according to the Top 500. It’s also the first computer to break the “petaflop barrier”. That means it can do 1 quadrillion calculations per second, that’s the same as 1 million billion or 1000 trillion .. or a lot.

Did I mention it runs Linux 🙂

Posted by mike on Thursday June 19th, 2008, tagged with , , , | comments disabled

Sweeeet Offices

Stumbled across these seriously nice looking offices the other day. I have office envy. Although perhaps the nice offices are to make up for the fact that they make marketing software, blurgh.

Eventhough I’ve never had one, it’s pretty obvious to me that private offices are the best option in terms of productivity for concentration-workers [1]. I also want a pony.

Browsing on officesnapshots.com, it seems most tech companies still don’t go for private offices. Or perhaps it’s just that the “cool”, “hip” companies are all too edgy to have private offices … man.

A special dishonorable mention for the flickr offices, cube farm without proper cubes even! Photo by mylesdgrant.

flickr-office.jpg

The new Mozzilla offices come a close second, saved by the fact that presumably they’re planning to fit them out a little better. RedHat aren’t really trying either, in Brazil at least.

I don’t mind the look of the Last.fm office, although it reminds me of the “lab” at Uni, which was not the most productive place in the world – although fun.

I can forgive some of the smaller companies for having grungy startup style offices where everyone’s sharing a beanbag, but for the bigger companies I just don’t get it. You’re paying all these programmers to build your products, so you pack them all in a room together where they can’t concentrate? I guess the upfront costs are too much for the accountants.

Even the companies that do make an effort, seem to focus more on gimmicky stuff, cafeterias, break-out rooms etc. The core office spaces, where you’re going to have to spend some time – face it – aren’t that special. One aspect of that is probably that “cool” stuff is better for marketing yourself to potential employees, just don’t mention that at some point they will have to do actual work.

Part of Google’s Zurich office, photo from Picasa (which has no visible copyright info?)

zurich-google.jpg

So I guess for a while at least, a lot of programmers and the like will continue to get their best work done in the wee hours of the morning or night, when all is quiet and the logic flows.

Or perhaps we should just all work from home, then we can all have our own personal perfect office, and  we could stop worrying about petrol too.

[1]: I just made that up. But I mean anyone whos work involves concentrating on one task for tens of minutes at a time, like for example programming 🙂

Posted by mike on Wednesday May 28th, 2008, tagged with , , , , | 1 comment

Hardy = Gutsy + Broken

Is it just me, or is Ubuntu Hardy sucking so far?

So far I’ve got:

  • Pidgin: randomly segfaults, glibc double free etc.
  • Rhythmbox: randomly segfaults, no stack trace?
  • F-Spot: randomly dies, it always did, but it’s more common now.
  • Epiphany: dies sometimes loading flash – that’s probably flash player’s fault though.
  • Metacity: vertical maximisation is broken, very annoying.
  • Kernel: fails to resume more often than previously, sometimes locks up completely when undocking.

The killer is when you try to file a bug report you’re supposed to attach the info from /var/crash, but I have nothing in /var/crash!

Can I have my money back? 😉

Posted by mike on Friday May 23rd, 2008, tagged with , , | 2 comments

New rock climbing gym in Hume

In case you haven’t already been, get along to Hume to check out the new climbing gym. It’s run by the same folks who run the Mitchell gym, and it’s brand spanking new, no shiny worn-out holds!

There’s a bunch more routes, and they seem to be more interesting than the Mitchell ones. Although perhaps that’s just because I’ve been to Mitchell a million times. Still, there’s a bigger bouldering cave, a whacky roof section, a bouldering mezzannine, and stacks of overhanging routes.

We went along on Friday and really enjoyed the variety. I took a few shots, but they don’t really do it justice, it’s at least twice as big as it looks in any of the photos. And as you can see it’s pretty empty, so get along while there’s plenty of room!

photo View the photos »

Posted by mike on Tuesday May 20th, 2008, tagged with , , | comments disabled

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