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THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

May 24 - 30, 1999

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This is a day book. It's not all that well edited. I try to keep this up daily, but sometimes I can't. I'll keep trying. See also the monthly COMPUTING AT CHAOS MANOR column, 4,000 - 7,000 words, depending.  For more on what this place is about, please go to the VIEW PAGE.

Day-by-day...
Monday -- Tuesday -- Wednesday -- Thursday -- Friday -- Saturday -- Sunday

 

Previous Weeks of The View: For an index of previous pages of view, see VIEWDEX.
See also the New Order page, which tries to make order of chaos. These will be useful.
For the rest, see What is this place? for some details on where you have got to.

Boiler Plate:

If you want to PAY FOR THIS there are problems, but I keep the latest HERE. I'm trying. MY THANKS to all of you who sent money. I'm making up a the mailing list. There are enough that it's a chore, which is not something to complain about. Some of you went to a lot of trouble to send money from overseas. Thank you! There are also some new payment methods. I am preparing a special (electronic) mailing to all those who paid: there will be a couple of these. I am also toying with the notion of a subscriber section of the page. LET ME KNOW your thoughts.
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If you subscribed:

atom.gif (1053 bytes) CLICK HERE for a Special Request.

If you didn't and haven't, why not?

If this seems a lot about paying think of it as the Subscription Drive Nag. You'll see more.

For the BYTE story, click here.

The LINUX pages are organized as the log, my queries, and your responses and advice parts one, twothree, and four. There's four pages because I try to keep download times well under a minute. There are new updates to four.

Highlights this week:

 

 

 

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Monday, May 24, 1999

Monday Morning, 1030: BE SURE TO LOOK AT YESTERDAY's VIEW as much of it was written yesterday but has not been posted yet due to my being locked out of my server. Read all about sinuses and snake oil.

In a few minutes I go to the Burbank airport to pick up Paul Schindler, Editor in Chief of BYTE.com. That will probably end updates to this site today. Of course I have no idea when this is to be posted, since I still cannot get access to the web site. This is a bit like magazine writing was: you write for people to read at an indefinite time in the future.

I am told that the server has to be rebooted, and this isn't all that uncommon with NT web servers. Since my experience with NT servers is confined to local networks, I don't know: I certainly don't have to reboot my Chaos Manor NT net servers for months on end. Of course they don't handle a lot of traffic. I do reboot the NT work station more often than I like: for reasons not clear to me, sometimes I can't get proper modem connections to my web site unless I do. This happens only when I have had a modem connection on for a long time and tried to make contacts that failed; and since it usually happens when there are OTHER web problems that are usually NOT fixed by rebooting my work station, it may even be superstition by now: that is, it worked or appeared to work a couple of times, and it's something to DO when you can't do anything else.

But I haven't found NT 4 SP 5 with Y2K fix to be particularly unstable at all, and the SP 5 fix seems to have taken care of the memory leakages I complained about. I still have MemTurbo on the workstation, but it doesn't seem to be needed, and hasn't been since SP 5; on the other hand, it did solve several problems before SP 5, and on Windows 95 a &; b, and 98a systems it seems invaluable.

I don't know if it does anything useful on Windows 98b (Second edition, beta test). So far I haven't detected any memory leaks to begin with. I haven't tried it on Windows 2000 (NT 5, in all but name) but I would be astonished if it were needed given that SP 5 for NT 4 seems to have cleared up the memory leaks that were bugging me.

I continue to work with Windows 2000, and I love it. NT with Plug and Play: everything just works. Often without rebooting.

 

 

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Tuesday, May 25, 1999

Be sure to see Monday, both MAIL and VIEW, and also be sure to see last week MAIL and VIEW since much of this didn't get updated properly since Sunday afternoon. I have to work on fiction today, but I'll have new updates tonight. I think we have taken measures to see that this sort of thing does not happen again. Now I'm out of here to work on books.

Got several hours of work done, and a bunch of mail posted. We are taking steps to assure that this site will stay available and current, including I'm going to have a couple of associate adminstrators for when I am gone. And I will look into tools for limited direct posting.

No new Buffy tonight. There's such a big scare that they thought it too much violence in the schools. My view is that Buffy is a wholesome moarlity play: the good guys win, there is no question that you are supposed to be a good guy, and it is COSTLY to be a good guy. You don't get goodness cheap. I doubt anyone has been corrupted by Buffy.

Thanks to all who explained that AOL does in fact lump multiple attachments together in one big MIME file. The remedy was to send them one at a time, and in fact I had already done that since I had inferred that was the problem. It's fixed, but do beware: if you send documents to an AOL address, send them one at a time unless you know the recipient can handle MIME files.

 

 

 

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Wednesday, May 26, 1999

I have a problem that I know has a simple solution but my head is not working. Roberta has an enormous folder of files some of which have very long file names. I need a sorted by name listing of those file hames. There has to be an easy way and I have not found it. By opening a command window (the system is running Windows 98) and doing dir > 111.txt I create a file of that name that contains all the information I need, and I can print that file; but it comes out in the DOS order, which is the order of file creation, not alphabetical. I am sure there is a way in WORD or elsewhere to SORT that but I have forgotten it, and I would appreciate advice.

Otherwise all seems well here. We continue to hack away at things. Niven and Bob Gleason the Tor editor are supposed to be over here sometime this morning but they neglected to tel lme when, and I find I can't start doing anything because I don't know when they are coming. My life seems interrupt driven. Meanwhile I have the ISDN sound setup with a TELOS box so that in theory at least I can do really good sound for the weekly BYTE.com broadcasts.

There is also to be a BYTE.com newsletter. See www.byte.com for details.

Meanwhile, if you kow how to produce a sorted by name printout of a directory in Windows 98, I'd appreciate advice.

Thanks to everyone who responded. I'll put some of the replies up in mail. It was, as I thought, a pretty simple process.

 

Another problem: I am sure there is a way in Front Page to bring in images without importing the file first, but I don't know what it is. Again I suspect it's a matter of my head not working right this week. I don't want to be in this world at all, I want to be in a world of fiction.

The situation is this: I have a lot of photographs, Some, but only some, should go in reports here. I rather alike the photojournalism approach for some things: use a picture to trigger a free association. It makes for a different style that I think is suited for web reports. The problem is, how to I do that? Do I do it in WORD and import the WORD document into Front Page? I sure can't do it in FRONT PAGE since it will not insert an image into a page that it has not previously imported into Front Page, and if I import a hundred photos of which I intend to use maybe ten, all of them have to be uploaded next time I publish to the web site. It also takes a long time. When something has been imported into Front Page it's nifty because when you go to insert the image it gives you a little preview. Also, Front Page is very good at making thumbnails linked to the main picture.

I suspect this is a case of RTFM, but I'm running low on time, and as I said, I want right not to be in a fictional universe, not studying Microsoft-acquired products. Tips appreciated.

AND MANY Received. Thanks!

 

Thanks again to those who took the trouble to send directions on producing a printed, sorted directory. It was clearly something I used to know and forgot, and I'm grateful to all those who replied.

I am also grateful to those who replied to my inquiry about importing pictures to Front Page. In the DOS directory case, my head just wasn't working; I should have known. The FP Pictures are just a bit more tricky. Anyway, that's two problems solved and documented...

There is more on Health and the Internet, including comments by Dr. Huth.

 

 

 

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Thursday, May 27, 1999

Did the weekly BYTE.com broadcast with Paul in Orinda and Mary at the National Press Club in DC. See www.byte.com for how to listen. We have a new ISDN Telos Zephyr set up in one corner of the office, with sound deadening stuff glued around to improve the acoustics, and thick stuff on the table to decouple the amplifier and mike from room vibrations. The result is wonderful. Really high sound quality: three of us in 3 places and it sounds like we are all in a broadcast studio.

SORTED DIRECTORIES: this will be in the column. Thanks to all the suggestions it was done, but it wasn't quite as trivial as I thought, because DOS will not SORT 3,000 file names some of them long. It will however, created a "bare" file, and WORD will sort them, so we got our sorted directory list in about 5 minutes from starting including having to sneakernet the file from Roberta's system to mine on a ZIP disk.

And now I am about to walk the dog, then go up to the Monk's Cell and write on fiction. Thanks to all for the help. Much mail remains to clean up and I will try to get to some of it tonight.

The following was written as the answer to mail, but in fact deserves a place in the log:

We are at the moment fighting with a SONY CRX100/E CD-RW (an internal IDE drive) and Windows 2000. The Sony works fine as a CD. The software that comes with it is not, in my judgment, anything like as good as the Adaptec EZ CD Creator software, and with the software that comes with the Sony you can not use the CD/RW as just another drive: you have to create and erase the R/W within the CD creation software. I am about to download the latest Adaptec DIRECT CD and install that with EX CD Creator, and I presume both will work with Windows 2000; they certainly work with earlier NT.

I like the drive just fine, and if it will work with Direct CD and EZ CD Creator in Windows 2000 I will be very happy to recommend it.

There is a new comment and link on the Gulf War Syndrome discussion.

 

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Friday, May 28, 1999

I will be going down to the beach house this afternoon to work. That means updates will be sparse to sporadic for the next few days. I'll try to do some, but I won't get to it often. Mail is going to pile up, too.

Before you can do anything you have to do three other things, at least one of which is impossible. Maybe it's not quite that bad, but it seems so.

First. some press releases on negative gravity and other odd cosmology. I haven't time to discuss them. That clears the Word file I use for conditioning stuff to post here. Now I can write up the log:

So. I want to get out to the beach house and write, but first I need to back up those 3000 sound objects in Roberta's machine. Due to the geography of Chaos Manor, we haven't strung a Level 5 Ethernet line from her office to up here. Her two machines are networked with a crossover cable. Today I wanted to do backup things to both of them. So:

Take out a new Bay Networks NETGEAR FE 108 Fast Ethernet Hub which I got on sale at Fry's with two 10/100 PCI cards and 25 feet of Level 5 cable for $160 the other day. Take that down to her place and install it temporarily; disconnect her orange crossover cable and connect her two machines with regular cables. Test. It works. Plug a 100 foot Level 5 cable into the uplink port on the FE-108 and be sure that the button is pressed to make it uplink (it crosses the data lines just as a crossover cable would) and string that along the floor to upstairs, where it plugs into an open port on the NETGEAR DS-108 (the difference between the FE-108 and the DS-108 is that the DS will accept both 10 and 100 lines and automatically takes care of the speeds).

Go to Praetorius, the Pentium III running Windows 2000 and see if I can now see Joizy and Scarlet, Roberta's two machines. I can. Copy her big file. Go to breakfast while it's copying.

Got it. Now install the new DISKMAPPER for NT on Praetorius and use that to map Roberta's C drive on Joizy (if this isn't very clear it's because this is the log and it will all be explained in detail in the column). Lots of stuff I can remove, and the system is very short of drive space, but calling Roberta at the Beach -- she went down yesterday so as to be able to practice with the choir group she sings with (All Saints, San Diego) when we're down there -- got no answer so I can't be sure I can eliminate some of the stuff. NO problem. Suck it up the stairs to Praetorius. Easy enough to do.

Now I want to ZIP her big (3000 sound wave files) folder and make a CDROM archive of the ZIP. Hmm. No ZIP on Praetorius. Get out ZIP Magic. Install. Must reset the machine. Do so.

First problem: for the first time in his life, Praetorius with Windows 2000 does not shut down properly. Something there is about Zip Magic that it doesn't like.

Run. Humpf. It barfs and dies when shown a 3,000 file name (some very long file names) folder even though I have not selected a single file yet. Control-alt-del, task manager, yep, ZiP Magic not responding, close it. Probably doesn't work on Windows 2000 thought I. Well, I have a Pentium II I know it works on, I can map the Praetorius C drive to that machine, and make my archive remotely.

First uninstall Zip Magic from Praetorius. Wants to reset to complete uninstall. Interesting.

Go to Parsifal. Network neighborhood. Yep, there is Praetorius. Only I can't log on. Apparently no one added me to the list of authorized users on Praetorius. Go study up on how that's done. It is easy enough once you figure out what to ask for, but it takes a quarter hour to find the proper help file, then about 2 minutes to add myself to the authorized user list. Map Praetorius C to Parsifal's drives. Now try Zip Magic on Parsifal.

Zip Magic barfs and dies when shown that big file folder. Ctl-alt-del, task manager, yep, Zip Magic not responding. End task.

Now look around for WinZip. Where is it? I know I just got a new copy, updated, but things FLOW here so. Can't find it. Ah. It is on Princess. I'm using Princess. Transfer the files to Praetorius. Install on task bar. Yep. Works. Try it on that 3,000 long file name directory. Opens it. Make a new Zip Archive and add a few files to it to see if that works. Yep. Works fine. OK, use WinZip to archive the whole mess, 3,000 files and 2 gigabytes of data. Let's see how big a file that makes…

Hmm. It won't do them all at once. But it will do them in bunches. I can't tell it to do the entire huge folder in one gulp, but it does do a few hundred at a time. This gives me a hobby, but it's working…

And I am still at it. Oh well…

More things to log. Robert Bruce Thompson reports problems with Windows 2000. Blue screens. I am not having any such problems. The difference seems to be memory: I have a full 256 meg, he has 64 meg. I suspect that's it, because I never had fewer problems with a system than with the Pentium III and Windows 2000. ZipMagic is the only program it that has given it problems, and that was cured by task manager. I have never SEEN a blue screen on Praetorius. I bet it's memory…

And that's it. I am off for the weekend. If I can manage to get on again, I will, but I don't make no guarantees nohow until next week...

 

 

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Saturday, May 29, 1999

 

At beach house working on Burning City. I have the new Campaign mapping software from England and I am learning it. It looks pretty good. A bit complex, and not all the commands are as intuitive as they seem to think, but this looks like the very thing.

 

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Sunday, May 30, 1999

At the Beach House.

Reading about High Tech War to work on my High Tech Wars book, and also working with the neat Campaign Cartographer program from ProFantasy Software (www.profantasy.com); incidentally, in FrontPage editor if you want a URL to automatically become live, you must NOT precede it with an open parentheses until the link has been made; then you can add them.

Anyway, we'll go home Tuesday.

 

 

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