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Lotusphere 2011 Wednesday Party Venue?

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  ls2011 | Comments (0)  |  Visits (124)
Harry Potter
Opening Spring 2010  
 
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Getting ready for Lotusphere

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  lotusphere2010 | Comments (0)  |  Visits (133)
Like so many other in the Yellowverse, I am getting ready to leave for Orlando. A couple of more days, and I will be on the airplane heading to (hopefully) sunny Orlando again.
My schedule is still up in the air a bit, I know that Monday and Tuesday there are probably some interviews and meetings scheduled for me by IBM, and I will not know about them until I check in.
Except for the obvious sessions (OGS, Gurupaloza, Beat the Developers and CGS), there are a couple of sessions I want to push for. They are high on my priority list as well,a nd I hope I have time to go to all of them.
 
SHOW112 - How to Build an XPages Application from Start to Finish Tim Clark and Matt White
JMP102 - The Top Things All New IBM Lotus Domino Developers Need To Know  Thomas Duff and Kathy Brown
JMP106 - “Kum Bah Yah” Meets “Let's Kick Butt” John Head and Alex Kassabov
BP108 - Worst Practices 4.0: "Orlando, We Have a Problem" Paul Mooney and Bill Buchan
BP114 - IBM Lotus Domino Server & Application Performance in the Real World Andrew Pollack
BP202 - There’s No Fixing Ugly: How to Make a Great First Impression with Your Applications Scott Good
BP205 - "I'm a Programmer Not a Firefighter!": The Low Maintenance "Notes Shop". Timothy Paque and Bruce Elgort
BP210 - The Great Code Giveaway 9: Never Gonna Let You Down Rob Novak and Viktor Krantz
 
I am not a new Domino developer, but I still hope to be able to pick up a few new tips and tricks from Duffbert and Kathy. This is Kathy's first LS presentation so she need some friendly faces in the audience. I want to see if she live-twitter during her presentation or if she can survive without twittering for an hour. :-)
Last year I submitted a suggestion for a similar session, and I am very happy to see this session at Lotusphere this year. I think that is important to get new developers interested in the platform, and give them tips and pointers. So great job, IBM!
 
See you in Orlando! 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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The best Cognac I ever had

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  food drink | Comments (0)  |  Visits (128)
Delamain Vesper
Theo just blogged about some wine and single malt whisky, which reminded me about a blog entry I had planned to write last week, but then work came inbetween.
Recently my best friend from growing up came over from London on a business trip, so I picked him up at the airport and we went to have dinner at Capital Grille in Dallas. The food was good, if not as good as at Nick and Sam's where we went at a previous visit. But still good.
After dinner I had a Cognac. I am usually more a single malt person, but on occasion I enjoy a good cognac as well. Capital Grille did not have any really exciting single malts, so I decided to the the Delamain Vesper cognac. At $48 for a glass, it was pricey, but worth it! This 35 year old cognac was incredible smooth, had a great fruit flavor with a hint of vanilla flavor and a very long aftertaste.
I been looking in the local liqour stores for it, but no luck. Even wrote to the importer, who told me no stores in the DFW area carry it. They told me to contact their local sales rep/agent for this part of the country to see if I could buy a bottle. So when I get back from Lotusphere, I plan to do that.
If you like cognac, I can not recommend this one enough. At between $120 and $199 per bottle (online prices) it is not cheap, though. But I would say it is worth it.
 
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Lotusphere 2010 - Yes, I will be there!

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  ls10 lotusphere2010 | Comments (1)  |  Visits (235)
I am lucky enough to be able to go to Lotusphere again. This will be my 13th time in Orlando. I also went to LS97 in Nice.
This year I will be arriving to MCO on Saturday at 9:40am, and leaving Friday at 1:55pm. If anyone is interesting in sharing a cab, let me know. @TexasSwede on Twitter or texasswede@gmail.com. I am flying AA 1434 from DFW, anyone else on that flight?
 
Also, if there are any Swedish readers of this, I have a favour to ask... Could someone bring a few items that are hard/impossible to find here? Just let me know how much it is and I bring cash. What I am looking for is 2 or 3 of the larger (double) packs of Vasa Frukost (900g?) and 2 or 3 tubes of Kalles Guld. The regular Kalles Kaviar can be found at IKEA here in the US, but not the premium Guld. Let me know if you can do this, I would appreciate it!
 
For anyone not familiar with Kalles, it is the most sold brand of caviar in Sweden. It is made from salted and smoked cod roe and comes in a metal tube. You squeeze it out on bread (for breakfast) or on hard boiled eggs. A piece of bread with a sliced egg and some caviar on top is a delicious and helathy way to start the day!
 
 
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New toy just in time for Lotusphere

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  gadgets blackberry | Comments (1)  |  Visits (295)
 As I wrote back in June, I managed to do a submersion test of my (then fairly new) Blackberry Bold. It worked perfectly fine after that. Then a little bit later in the summer I dropped it on concrete and got a small crack in the screen. I checked with insurance, it would cost me $125 to get the phone replaced, and it was not bad enough to spend that money on a new phone, which probably would be a refurbished anyway.
The phone started acting up about a month ago, dropping calls, etc. Sure, could be the network (I have AT&T) but I walked into the local AT&T store and talked to the sales guy. He said it sounded like a problem with the phone, and it should be covered by warranty. He then opened the battery compartment and looked, then said "OK, no water damage. Tell that when you call AT&T about warranty replacement."
So a few days later I called, and was told to open the battery compartment and tell her color of the sticker on there. I told her it was red, and she said that it indicated water had come into contact with the sticker. Oh well, just wonder why the sales guy could not tell. The label is supposed to be white when no liquid has touched it.
I decided to hold off a bit longer. Then the camera stopped working (even if it later started working again, after about a week) and the battery started to drain quickly and teh phone got really warm while charging. Something was obviously wrong.
I called the insurance company on Monday. While on hold, the automated voice mentioned that I might be eligible for an upgrade. So I checked online, and I could get the Blackberry Bold 9700 for just $99 after mail-in rebate. When the 9700 came out, I decided I would stick with my 9000, that it was not worth to spend the money on an upgrade. But now, with the phone acting up and Lotusphere coming up, I had to bite the bullet.
I received the phone Thursday (no shipping charge when placing order online!) and have now been playing with it for 2 days. Here are my thoughts.
  • The phone is smaller. I am still getting used to the smaller keyboard, at least initially I did more typos when texting.
  • The screen has a higher resolution, 480x360 instead of 480x320. This cases my favourite theme not to work anymore. I can download it, but it does not show up in the list of available themes.
  • The trackpad is very nice, but will probably take another day or two to get used to. The nice thing is that dirt won't get in there to cause problems, like with the ball on the older Blackberries.
  • OS 5.0 installed from factory. Very nice. There are some small details I don't like, hopefully I can change that using Blackberry Theme Studio. For example, in the inbox the name of th sender is black and bold while the subject is gray and normal, making it much harder to read.
  • The reports say that the battery life is better than on the old Bold. This is of course hard to tell after just 2 days, especially when loading software, transferring files from the old phone through USB, etc.
  • Mini-USB connector replaced by micro-USB. My car charger and spare wall charger won't work, unless I get some adapters. At just over a dollar each, I will probably get a couple. The shipping is the expensive part, though.  My Motorola P790 portable charger that I got for Lotusphere last year is also using mini-USB. Oh, if you don't have one of those chargers, pick one up! They are down to $15 or less now...
  • My charging cradle won't work anymore either, since the phone is smaller.
But generally I am happy with the new phone. Just some small quirks, and I am sure I will get used to them or figure out how to address them.
Below is a picture of the two phones side-by-side. Bold 9700 to the left, Bold 9000 to the right.

Blackberry Bold 9700 vs 9000

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Dead USB harddisk? It may still be alive!

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  hardware rescue | Comments (5)  |  Visits (254)
About two years ago I bought my first 1 TB harddisk, an external USB-drive from Hitatchi. I been having it connected 24/7 since then. It have mostly been used for backup purposes, I syncronize all my photos there from the internal drive where I normally store them. But I have also been using it to download files, especially when the other drives in my computer were full. At times I used Bittorrent to download things (like ISO images of Ubunty, SUS, etc), and since I then shared the files for a while, there were a lot of read and writes.
About 2 weeks ago I noticed a worrying clicking sound from the drive. I turned it off, let it cool off and turned it on. The sound got worse, and the external indicator was spinning for minutes instead fo seconds. And of course the computer refused to see the drive. 
 
So what data did I lose? All the pictures were copies of the ones on the internal drive, but I might have some other files on there which I did not have backed up. ISO images and similar could be downloaded again, but I hated to not know what else I might have lost.
I assumed I had to go buy a new drive, I need that space for files and I want somewhere to store a copy of all my photos. I went to the Hitachi website to check on warranty, even if I knew the warranty most probably was expired long time ago, but does not cost to check. Yep, expired. No surprise there.
 
Then it hit me. What if I could open the case, take out the physical drive and hook it up to my computer using one of my USB adapters? I started looking more closely at the drive. No obvious screwholes, but there were two labels on the back, with teh text "Warranty void if removed". Feeling on them I could tell they were covering two screws. 30 seconds later the case had been opened. Another 60 seconds, and I was holding a 3.5" 1 TB SATA drive in my hands.
 
I hooked the drive up to my SATA & IDE to USB adapter, plugged in the power and connected the adapter to the computer. The drive showed up fine, I could look at the files, and running the hard disk diagnostics in Ubuntu showed that the drive was fine.
It seems like it was simply the electronics in the USB case that had died. 
 
Then, just 2-3 days later, a friend called me in tears. Her 500 GB external USB drive (Western Digital MyBook) refused to show up in her computer. It had made some sounds earlier, which she ignored. Now the drive was dead, and she was missing all pictures from the first five years of her daughters life. No other backup, of course, the USB drive was her only copy. 
I did the same operation on her drive. It was much harder to open and had more screws, metal and junk inside. But finally I had a SATA drive in my hands and plugged it in to my computer. When I texted her a minute later that I was able to get to all her files, she was extremely happy!
 
So if your USB harddisk dies, it may just be the electronics. Buy a $20-30 USB adapter (should be in your toolbox anyway!), hook the drive up that way, and chances are that the data can be saved. Also, don't use a USB harddisk as only storage for important files... 
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"Project Ubuntu @ Home" - First Impressions

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  ubuntu linux | Comments (4)  |  Visits (296)
About two weeks ago I decide to switch my main operating system at home to Ubuntu. By using VMware I was going to be able to run the handful of Windows applications I needed, and at the same time get better security, etc. I had a couple of small problems, that were eventually solved, and now I have been running this setup for a few days.
For the most part I like it. I am still having to look around a bit long for where different things are, I miss being able to right-click on the desktop to change all settings related to it, and instead have to select several different items under System Preferences.
I tried to get Epihpany Empathy working as my IM client, but it did not take/store my different accounts. I then installed Pidgin instead, which works fine. Only problem there is that many nice functions I am used to in Yahoo and MSN Messenger, like webcam support, is not available. I also can't just drag-and-drop a file to the chat window to send it, I have to click my way through the directories. And Pidgin does not let me browse network drive, just local drives for some reason.
Some websites I visit are clearly more designed for Internet Explorer, but I have not had any real issues with Firefox.
I still have not installed Notes or Domino Designer/Admin. Waiting for my network admin to download 8.5.1 for me. Hope to get that installed soon too.
I have been sick most of the last week, so not been doing that much. But this far I like my new setup.
 
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Project "Ubuntu @Home" - weekend update

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  ubuntu vmware | Comments (0)  |  Visits (251)
As I mentioned the other day, I am planning to start using Ubuntu as my main operating system at home, and use VMware to run Windows applications when needed.
 
Late Friday evening I started by emptying a 250 GB IDE harddisk from files, and then I unplugged all drives except the empty one as a precaution. I put the CD containing Ubuntu 9.10 ("Karmic Koala") in the computer and turned on the power. The install went extremely smooth, and I even found some new things I really liked compared with 9.04 that I had installed on my son's computer this past summer. For example, you can now select "United States" and then "Central" as time zone, instead of having to set the location to either Chicago or some small town i never heard about. Why a large city like Dallas is not in the list baffles me, though...
 
The operating system found some hardware, but not the wireless network card. I actually tried both a Xyxel G-302 and a Netgear WG311, none of them really unknown cards. I then (thanks to the online help) found out how to use a Windows driver, and I got the Netgear card to work. I choose that card since I was able to find the driver CD in my messy office. :-)
I then installed the Nvidia graphics drivers. This is where i had some problems. I have a GeForce 7900 GS card, so with some help from Google, I found instructions on how to get the latest drivers, and installed them. I think I had to do some recompiling of parts of the operating system as well. I got the drivers to somewhat work, but then something went wrong. In the end I just re-installed the opearting system and started over. I then found out about Envy, and it was a breeze to get the drivers installed.
I now had the drivers installed, and even got twinview working.
 
There was just one problem. The resolution was just 1152x864 on each monitor at the most, while I was used to 1280x1024 in Windows. The second monitor, a Samsung, was able to go up to the resolution, but my CyberVision C92 was not recognized. After some googeling, I figured out that I had to modify the file /etc/X11/xorg.conf in order to provide the hsync and vsync values. I changed the values, after I figured out that I could not just use the editor gedit from the menu, I had to go to the terminal and start it from the command line using sudo in order to get full access to the system. Why there is no right-click and "run  as root", I don't get...
I restarted (I am sure there is a way to restart X without restarting the whole computer, but I am a noob and my computer restart really fast anyway) and now I could use the Nvidia control panel to set the resolution. Oops. The settings did not stick, I had to svae them. OK, no problem, click on the "save configuration" button. Nope, could not save the file. Again, I had to go to the terminal and do sudo nvidia-settings in order to run the settings program as root. Why even add it to the menu then, when it can't be used from there? Well, let's be clever and change the rights to xorg.conf using chmod.
 
Anyway, I changed the resolution, restarted, and... WFT? Just a console login prompt? OK, something is wrong... Did I corrupt xorg.conf like I did before? I tried all different ways of cleaning it, creating a new blank one, etc. The easiset way for me to do this was to boot using the Live CD, mount my hardddisk and use sudo gedit to edit xorg.conf on my drive.
Spent several hours trying to get this fixed. Finally I realized the problem. When I changed the rights, I had modified all the files in the /etc/X11 directory using chmod 666 *. You probably spot the problem. Yes, I had removed the execution flag for X. So sudo chmod 777 X and restart, all set! I told you I was a noob! :-)
 
Finally I was all set, running two monitors in 1280x1024 side-by-side. I installed VMware, imported a (clean) Windows XP virtual machine I had built earlier and made sure it was fully patched and that everything worked: networking, sound, etc.
I connected the other drives, mounted them and made sure I could read them. No problems. I then figured out how to mount them permanently, so they were available after each startup. I set them up as VMware shared drives as well, so my guest operating systems could map to the drives. Now I was pretty much done with the OS install.
 
I created a clone of the Windows XP VM and designated it for image and video editing. I installed Photoshop, Nero, Sony Vegas and DVD Architect, as well as DVDshrink, Divx 6 and a few other utilities I use. No problem there this far. Tonight I plan to do some final testing to make sure I can render movies correctly.
 
The next step is to build another VM for development tools. Might even do separate ones for Visual Studio Express and Eclipse, not decided that yet. And of course one for Notes 8.5.1, where I can install Domino Designer and Administrator.
I plan to install the Notes 8.5.1 klient in Ubuntu as well.
 
There are some issues with Ubuntu, as I see it. Mainly issues with it not being as user friendly as Windows. Right-click and "run as root" would make sense, for example. I understand that Ubuntu have a concept of "restricted" drivers, i.e. "non-free" drivers, and that is why the Nvidia drivers are not installed automatically. But it is still annoying. And if I want later versions of the driver (version 185 is included as a restricted driver, while Nvidia have version 190 on their site), it is even more complicated: 
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:nvidia-vdpau/ppa
sudo apt-key adv --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys CEC06767
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install nvidia-190-modaliases nvidia-glx-190 nvidia-settings-190
 
All this from the command line, of course.
 
Sure, Ubuntu is very powerful and safe, but it is still missing quite a few of the features that make Windows so popular and easy to use. I am not bashing Ubuntu (or Linux overall), just stating the facts as I see them. I am (this far) happy with Ubuntu on my computer, it start faster than Windows (much faster than the almost 1 year old installation I had running until Friday), and have the equivialent to many of the programs I use on a daily basis.
 
I will come back with a report in a few days when I have everything installed, configured and have had some more time to test drive the whole system.

Update: This entry somehow got corrupted. Thanks to Chris Whisonant, he helped me by deleting it last night so I could restore it this morning. Sorry if you tried to read it while it was missing.
 
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OpenSUSE blocked by Postini - "Illegal Software"

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  security postini linux | Comments (0)  |  Visits (259)
At my work they use Postini to block websites in categories that the management does not think any users should have access to. Webmail of all flavors, Facebook, twitter and many more sites.
Today I was looking at different Linux distributions, and decided to take a closer look at OpenSUSE. The main page loaded fine, but when I clicked on the link to learn more, I got the following message:


Guess Postini thinks Linux is illegal software... 
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New project - Ubuntu at home

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  ubuntu vmware windows | Comments (2)  |  Visits (343)
Last night I started a new project at home. The other day I wiped my son's computer, running Ubuntu 9.04 and installed the new version, 9.10 Karmic Koala. I got everything working, so I thought I would try something new. Since Erik mostly go to Youtube, Wikipedia and some educational sites, he does normally not need Windows. But he have some Windows-based games (mainly MS Flight Simulator) he like to play, so I thought it would be nice if he could play them on his computer instead of using mine. So I installed VMware Workstation on the computer, and it worked really good. I quickly copied a Windows 98(!) virtual machine over to his system and it loaded up without any problems. I am now in the process of building a Windows XP VM for him.
So obviously the next thought was: "Why don't I do this on my main computer?". It is about time to reinstall the system anyway, it has been a year and the system is starting to run slower. Many of the things I do on a daily basis I can do in Ubuntu. And if I create a couple of virtual Windows XP machines, I can even separate different invironments from each other.
The plan is to get a new drive and install Ubuntu on it, then add VMware. I plan to have one clean Windows XP VM, which I can use as a base system. Then I will build one where I install Photoshop, Sony Vegas and DVD Architect, DVDshrink, Nero (yes, I know there are tools in Ubuntu to burn CD/DVD, but I have the impression Nero have more functionality, and it integrates with DVD Architect and DVDshrink) and a few more related tools. Another VM will contain development tools (Eclipse, Notes 8.5.1 with Domino Designer and Administrator, perhaps Visual Studio Express). If I want to test some new programs, I just load up a new VM, test it and delete afterwards if I am not happy.
So tonight I will finish testing the setup on my son'ts computer, and then I will start preparing my main computer. I will have to clean up or get a drive where I can install Ubuntu, with enough space for a number of VM images.
Will see how much I will break. :-)
 
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My first email address

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  email nostalgia | Comments (0)  |  Visits (245)
Carl Tyler wrote about him realizing it was 21 years ago he got his first email address:
The day after my 40th birthday, I realized it had been exactly 21 years since I got my first email account.  It was if I remember rightly Tylerc2@NossVM6.  This was my IBM PROFS address and I was given it the day I started there.  
That made me think back at my first email address. I got it when I started working at Microsoft, in late August 1988, so just over 21 years ago for me as well.
I was fresh out of the gymnasium (the Swedish equialent of the College Preperatory High School in the United States), and the Systems Programming education I had just started was cancelled and postponed for a semester due to lack of students. So I applied for a job at Microsoft, despite never using any MS products. I was using CP/M-86WordStar and and Turbo Pascal 3.x in school.
During my first week they gave me the address karlhenr@microsoft.com. Notice the missing y in my name, they could not handle my long/full first name. The limit back then was 8 characters.
We had to login to a Xenix-based system to read our email... I also had a FidoNet address, but I did not get that one until a year later.
 
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Google Maps - New look

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  google | Comments (0)  |  Visits (421)
Google announced that they are making some changes to the look and feel of Google Maps, actually the first changes of this kind since the service was launched almost 5 years ago.
I did not realize it have been around that long. I use Google Maps pretty much exclusivly, even if I had to use MapQuest a few weeks ago to find an address out in the countryside in east Texas.
My first look at the new Google Maps is positive, I like the changes. They are small but help readability quite a bit.
 
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Sweden can make more than meatballs...

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Comments (0)  |  Visits (215)
R. Lee Ermey from Lock 'n' Load on History Channel guides us through the Swedish AT-4 Rocket Launcher. 
 

A new version, AT-4 CS (Confined Spaces) as shown on FutureWeapons
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For that special girl in your life...

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  hello_kitty fun | Comments (0)  |  Visits (321)
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Texas Law H.B. 2003

Karl-Henry Martinsson |   | Tags:  texas law social_networking | Comments (0)  |  Visits (279)

A new Texas law that took effect September 1, 2009. H.B. 2003 says a person commits a third degree felony if the person posts one or more messages on a social networking site with the intent to harm, defraud, intimidate or threaten another person.
The same thing goes for instant messaging, it is now illegal to pretend to be someone else in an IM, trying to defraud or intimidate someone.

 
 
 
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