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THE VIEW FROM CHAOS MANOR

February 1 - 7, 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 words.

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:

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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, February 1, 1999

I have the new truck: see yesterday's view. Now to catch up on work.

 

Largely worked on other stuff today. Roberta's program: we're trying to recruit a new programmer. You'll be much surprised who, if this all works out. Anyway, I've sent a Mac with her program on it off to be looked at, with the notion that maybe part of all of that can be put onto Windows, with playing prerecorded wave files instead of using the Mac speech synthesizer. If this works it can be a major thing, because her program really and truly does teach people to read. Every darned time. Ages 4 to 74 so far. It works, and the computerized version may be better than the personal attention (and may not; we don't have a good study on that). Certainly the computer as teacher is more PATIENT if less supportive…

Also got to thinking about course materials for home schooling, particularly Western Civilization. That needs to start with Greek Mythology and then the Greeks; biographies, particularly Harold Lamb's early bios of Phillip and Alexander the Great. But those are a bit difficult for early readers although certainly not above 7th grade capability. Kagan's Four Volumes on the Peloponesian War are suitable for high school lever. But there aren't any really good grade 4 through 8 readers, and not much for high school. Roberta and I are going to think about this. I don't myself think Western Civilization ought to be thrown away, and the 'multi cultural' stuff I have seen is really zero cultural: while studying the Rig Veda might be a good thing to do (although I think no better than a good study of Homer), pretending to study a non-western culture by reading a smatter of this and a dollop of that isn't going to make a civilized person. So I've got some thinking to do on this.

One book I can recommend for everyone as a systematic track through Western History is Fletcher Pratt's BATTLES THAT CHANGED HISTORY. This is done quite differently from Creasy's Fifteen Battles because Pratt embeds the conflicts into their contexts. He opens with Alexander the Great: "The Greeks had to go imperial to make it stick." Now he may be right and he may be wrong, but it's a view well worth thinking about, and he supports it pretty well.

So I'll make notes and think about this. I got a great education, and Mr. Heinlein taught me that you don't pay back, you pay forward…

I really am working on a report on the AAAS meeting. I have pictures and a story. Sorry to be so long. I am dancing as fast as I can...

 

 

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Tuesday, February 2, 1999

Regarding my need for getting some books retyped, I have several emails from OCR services. Alas, OCR wants typescripts, and that is precisely what I don't have. In many cases the typed mss., having been marked up by a copy editor, has been given to a fan convention to be sold at auction for a charity, and in any event I would think the copy editor marks would not come through well. What I have mostly is books, and paperback books aren't always typeset well. Letters can be broken, ink smeared on cheap paper. None of this is all that annoying to a reader, but in my experience it drives an OCR crazy. If there are more than three errors on a page it's not worth my time to correct, and I have yet to see an OCR system that produced fewer than two. My guess is I need these books rekeyed. If you have experience with a good service, I'd appreciate a recommendation.

I am now convinced that the web is an experiment designed to see how much time one will waste. I did an altavista search on +ford +explorer +parts and came up with a list of such things as brush guards, at least one of which I probably would have bought; after visiting each of the darned web sites I find either (1) the catalog request page gives an error and there is no way to get to it, or (2) the product is shown, it looks like I want it, and there is NOTHING to indicate how to buy it: no address, no shopping cart, no NOTHING. Perhaps I am doing something silly, but I can't figure the use of this. If anyone knows of a good shop in the San Fernando Valley where they carry and install brush guards and lights for Ford Explorer I would be grateful for the pointer. This is becoming silly. Things seem much different from when I had my Scout some 20 years ago: then SUV's were not popular and there were a LOT of good off-road shops. Now they are very popular, and I can't find anything. Ridiculous.

The Great Level II Cache conundrum solved.

 

 

 

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Wednesday, February 3, 1999

Oddest thing: Cyrus the Cyrix computer last night suddenly lost his CDROM. I can't manage to get anything to find it. The C: drive is SCSI, and that works fine, but I can't get anything to believe there is a CD drive on the Secondary Master IDE string. Very odd. The BIOS can't find it, and booting up with a floppy doesn't do it. Windows seems to work just fine, network and all, but it cannot find that CDROM drive. Windows compounds the problem by wanting to install a Soundblaster IDE driver.

This is a fairly old mother board, and I recall having a problem once before. I can experiment with removing the sound card entirely (it's an older ISA card anyway), but I'm tempted just to replace the mother board and be done with it. The SCSI hard disk is still good as is the CPU and memory; in fact everything is working fine except that nothing I do will cause this system to find that CD drive. Of course it's possible the drive itself is hosed. The system failed during a game that uses the CDROM drive a lot. Mostly I am going to peel everything off here and put Eagle One in its place while I think about what else to do. I also have SCSI CDROM drives, and I suppose I could put one of those into CYRUS.   CYRUS has been a good machine for a long time. I don't think I ever had one just 'wear out' before...

Then there's this:

Erich Schwarz [schwarz@cubsps.bio.columbia.edu]

Windows Refund: $199 for 5 minutes on the phone

I'd spend 5' to get $199, wouldn't you?

Full story at:

http://ibis.home.texas.net/dell.html

 --Erich Schwarz

The story is that someone telephoned Dell and was told that they'd refund $199; the caller hadn't bought a system, but was going to. If anyone actually gets $199 from Dell for returning Windows, or is able to get Dell to knock off $199 from the hardware price, that's news. Until there's a report that it really happens, as opposed to having one customer relations chap give an interesting answer (and it's not clear to me he understood the question), we'll just have to wait and see.

 

I have some sympathy for the people who hate Windows. I just decided to update Eagle One from the old makeshift case and power supply to a new PC Power and Cooling case and power supply. That's all I did: transfer everything one for one from one box to the other. No attempts to upgrade or chance.

Unfortunately I must have got the boards in the wrong PCI bus slots, because Windows went insane. It detected everything as new hardware and insisted on everything being reinstalled. Then nothing worked. For a while on each boot up I got a message to the effect that the ODBC DLL or something of the sort -- I didn't write it down and should have -- was the wrong version and obsolete and should be reinstalled but then that went away. The sound still doesn't work, and booting up takes forever as the system does network searches. The only thing I can think of to do is to remove all the boards, get it running clean, and reinstall each device. This seems excessive punishment for moving the system intact from one case to another and perhaps swapping the network and sound cards in the PCI bus slots.

Of course nothing else works any better. Sigh.

I took the boards out, and first it wants to install new hardware, a modem. An external modem. Of course there IS NO EXTERNAL MODEM. There was one, but it's not there now.

The ODBC message is back. It says I must reinstall the ODBC components. There is nothing about that in help. I will have to find books on what an ODBC is and where I can find one, and where this one supposedly came from. Could I have updated something from the web when this machine was running properly? And how do I get back to the system working properly? This is insanity. Do I have to scrub down to bare wood and reinstall everything just because I swapped two boards in the PCI bus? I mean, really, this is going a bit far.

==

 

So. I ran WINDOWS SETUP again. When it was all done, I was told that my ODCB installer is the wrong one. Yet again. There is not one thing about an ODCB installer in anything I can find. I have taken the system to nearly bare bones. Next is to reformat the hard disk and try again.

Microsoft ought to pay me to do this. It is ludicrous that they charge money for something like this. WHAT IS ODCB DLL and why is it nagging at me? I suppose next I must ERASE THE WINDOWS DIRECTORY and begin again. Will that get rid of whatever ODCB problem I have? Is the ODCB problem the reason nothing works? Tune in. Another time. This is insane. This is not an operating system it's a game.

Whatever ODBC Resource DLL is, it has utterly ruined my computer. Short of reformatting the hard disk I do not seem to be able to find a way to escape this problem. Does anyone know what an ODBC resource DLL is, and how I can do something about the problem?

VERY LATE (0430 Thursday)

I have the machine stable and it is no longer asking about ODBC, but I still don't have all the features back in. One moral of the story: DO NOT SHIFT CARDS AROUND with a Plug and Pray system.  It likes them where they are. Ah, Windows. Continuing to look for hardware that isn't new and reinstalling itself...

 

 

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Thursday, February 4, 1999

A reader explains ODBC, and I suppose this system is now stable; but I have yet to install everything I want and get it working. And all I did was move the system to a new case. The good news is that I have a new CELERON, from SYS, a company I haven't previously worked with. This is a nifty little system with an ATI Rage video board and a decent sound system built onto the mother board. It's running at slow speeds for a Celeron at the moment, but it's working just fine with a new ZIP IDE internal drive and a networking card installed. I'm about to give it a new second hard disk. There were adventures on that one too, but not the machine's fault, and this needs to be explained at column length since there's a good moral to that story.

An IMPORTANT message for NT USERS who use Diskpeeper. See Mail.

Cyrus is dying in interesting ways. No disaster, since I have lots of equipment and backups all over the place; but interesting. I expect his CPU chip is fine and will replace the Winchip, since the Winchip machine seems to have odd instabilities.

 

 

 

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Friday, February 5, 1999

 

It's Friday morning, and it has been raining. I have a noon appointment downtown with the Corel people who are going to show me how easily you can change from Word to Word Perfect now, and who are serious about trying to compete with Microsoft. Good. While I am not one of the Microsoft haters, I know from long experience that in any area where they don't have serious competition, Microsoft gets, well, soft, and complacent. Hardly surprising: Microsoft has some very bright and highly motivated people, young and old, with a lot of computer skills; but of course there are never enough so the A team gets assigned to areas where the company thinks they're needed, meaning that the cleanup crews working to improve things not actively under competition won't have the same resources.

Anyway, I have to run. It's column time, and there's a LOT to write about. CYRUS is dying in interesting ways, so it's time to transfer to a new machine. ODBC or whatever that alphabet soup is is trying to drive me nuts, and may make it.

I ought to be grateful to Microsoft for giving me so many things to write about that Dave Barry included my column in a book, but you know, there's a lot to be said for smoothness and tranquility.

As to Linux, I am getting to it. REALLY. If Microsoft will just stop with the problems long enough…

Have switched over to an interesting machine, by SYS, using a Celeron 333; this is one sweet system, and it will be big in the upcoming column. It replaces CYRUS.

Darnell spent the day trying to make LINUX 5.2 work, and we have some kind of odd error: everything installs, but when we try to boot it tells us it cannot find a bootable partition. We can boot from floppy or CDROM, and everything SEEMS to install and format properly, but when all is said and done we are dead. This is the machine that was running Red Hat 5.1 before we repartitioned and started over again. Does anyone have any ideas on what we have done wrong? Why can't it find it? It isn't hardware; two different disk drives have been employed. So what is going on? It sure used up the day. More of the story below.

Corel competes: their new Word Perfect Suite looks very good to me, and while it's still Windows they intend to put it on Linux quite rapidly. They have sold off the hardware division that makes Linux boxes but they retain an interest in the company that bought it: the official story, which I believe, is that they decided they aren't the right marketers for hardware and they've turned it over to people who will do a better job with it. It will still be a box with Linux and Corel Office suite all preinstalled and working, and that should have some competition with Microsoft. They also have sales figures to show that Word Perfect is still out there, selling more copies last year than the year before, and still hanging on; and they have added a number of neat features. All told, they have a better shot at competing with Microsoft than most. I'm somewhat impressed.

 

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Saturday, February 6, 1999

Come on, fellows, it's all a big joke, isn't it? Linux doesn't actually work; it's a big conspiracy to make me feel like an idiot. Well I'm on to you. No more laughs here.

Well, all right, I know that's not true, but I feel like I'm on a snipe hunt.

I have a dozen letters from people telling me to just set the active partition on the disk, using Druid or fdisk. Bully. But this is a bit like Will Rogers telling the Navy how to solve the WW I submarine problem: "Just boil the Atlantic Ocean. They'll have to come to the surface. -- Yeah, well, look, I solved your problem, why are you bothering me asking for details?" I feel the same way. I have booted that system with DOS fdisk, and I have tried using the Red Hat Druid. In neither case am I told which partition is where, and which one is the one I am supposed to make active. DOS fdisk offers to make a partition active, but knows nothing of the names of the partitions. RED HAT fdisk doesn't seem to have a "list existing partitions" command, although it may be offering to set one partition active if you know which one it is to set.

I suppose I have several alternatives. One is simply to wipe out all the partitions and start over; but we did that three times, and I don't have any reason to believe it's going to work now. There is something in the system that simply will not set the boot partitions active. Since this machine was running Red Hat 5.1 not 24 hours ago, I assume it knows how to boot Linux; but it did have a DOS partition on it as well as the Linux. We wiped that out, reformatted the disk, did everything we could think of but every time when the installation, which went smoothly, was finished, we got the "cannot find any [active partition] message. I can boot from a floppy the system made for me. I can boot from the CDROM.

But I cannot figure out how to make the hard disk have an active partition, or even to get a list of the partitions installed. Yes, I know: I kept a good log of what we were doing the first three times we tried all this, but finally I gave up. I know that out first attempts did not have a "boot" partition and we were going to boot from the root. That didn't work. I think at the last we set a "boot" partition, but I don't know which one it is. I don't know anything here, and I think this whole thing was invented to make me feel like an idiot.

There is more on this in mail.

We also have an interesting excahnge on CDROM drives, master and slave, over in MAIL; it's the kind of thing that makes me love this place, even if Linux is working on making me hate it.

I never do column stories that don't have a happy ending, and I am getting up against column deadlines; we will see if we can solve this mess in a fw hours or if it has to be put off. There is something very odd about all this. There's more on the Linux boot problem in mail.

OK, I have work to do, but the Linette problem is solved, and it's instructive in a horrible sort of way. As Bob Thompson reminds me in our last exchange of letters (see mail), I do this stuff so you won't have to. But I tell you this was getting to me.

The solution to the problem was to use DOS fdisk, and randomly select a disk partition to set as active. As it happens I got the right one first frack, but then to test, I went back and set the wrong one. That did no harm, so I went back again and set the proper disk partition as active, after which lilo boots, I can log in, and I am not the proud posessor of a BIG Linux box. I have forgotten all I knew about Linux -- Darnell was over to show me that but all his time was consumed overcoming this bug in Red Hat Druid 5.2 which doesn't seem to want to tell you about active partitions -- so that's all I am going to do with Linux just now.

One neat thing about 5.2: if you do Control-alt-delete, the system shuts down NOW, but it does it in an orderly way.

Now I have a lot to get done, and the Red Hat druid ate all the time I had budgeted for Linux so that will not have much in the column. Next time. But it's working.

It is important though, and do see all the discourse in mail. Apparently there is a bug in Druid 5.2 that interacts with an Award BIOS that causes no partition to be set active when you set up Linux with the Red Hat installer. It is fixable in a few seconds IF YOU KNOW TO DO IT. Use a DOS booter with fdisk on it, and set the partition active. I used a DOS fdisk and boot from Windows 95b which is to say one that understands large disk drives; that may or may not be important. But I did set the partition 1 active, and that did work; but this problem stumped a real expert for hours (Darnell not me) and stumped me with all my experience in what I call "the relentless application of logic". It may not cause you any problems, but if it does, don't go mad, just use fdisk.

And now this:

Roger G. Smith rgsmith@c-gate.net

Jerry,

D. W. Electrochemicals Ltd can be found at http://www.stabilant.com/bccomp.htm. You’ll find Product and ordering information, Application and Tech Notes, Labeling and Reviews. Several Byte Reviews are there, including the May, 1985 column where Stabilant 22 (as tweek) won "Product of the Year". That review even includes a picture of you that has no resemblence to Isaac Asimov... :-)

Roger

Thanks! I still use that stuff. It's wonderful. Simplest hardware problem preventer I know.

And the end of the story on booting Linux with Red Hat 5.2 is here.

 

 

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Sunday, February 7, 1999

King Hussein of Jordan is dead. I never met him although I did have some dealings with him through Laika of Albania back in those bizarre days when Albania was a communist hermit kingdom and the monarchy contemplated its overthrow with the aid of Hussein of Jordan and Constantine of Greece. (I have a picture of me talking about this with Weissman of Israel; we had planned to use the Jordanian Air Force as part of Laika's overthrow attempt, but then came the 6 Day War with Weissman in charge of the Israeli Air Force and then there wasn't any Jordanian Air Force...)

The world will miss Hussein, a voice of reason in a part of the world where that is scarce. He was not destined to be the modern Salladin, but they shared strength and character.

I will be off for a while since I need this phone line. I'm moving Roberta to a new machine, and I'll have to dial in for updates and all kinds of stuff. Wish us luck. This is two moves now, from CYRUS to the big SYS Celeron machine for me, and from the Gateway 2000 Pentium 200 to Scarlet for Roberta.  Wish me luck.

Later:

We couldn't find the Eudora program installation disks to install Eudora Pro on Roberta's new machine. Eris is here and says that Norton UNINSTALL has a program mover, so we are trying Norton Uninstall's mover which supposedly will update the registry. Problem: makes a self extracing file, which we transferred, and all was well until it came to a folder called ZDBENCH. Clearly there is nothing in ZDBENCH we need, but it won't move. Fine, kill that folder and make a new self extractor and try that. Only ZDBENCH says it is a Windows System Folder and cannot be deleted! Use Uninstaller to kill that. It did. But what in the world is ZDBENCH that it is needed for that machine? Apparently some imbecile benchmark program Roberta downloaded or AOL shoved down her throat of some such; whatever it is, it's dead and the system still works, but HOW DARE ZD send a program that tells the registry it's a vital program? Madness. Sheer madness.

 

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