• Presentations Cont.

    Well, the presentation went well. I was able to deliver exactly what I wanted to the class with the meager slides that I had created, which is exactly how I feel it should be done. The slides ARE my cue cards, dammit!

    After class went to a LUG meeting, which pretty much bored the daylights out of me. They did a long presentation on the programming language “Clojure”, which is just another variation on a theme and to me does not seem all that practical since it requires the JVM to run and a number of other things running at the same time just to get off the ground. There are some bonuses for using languages that compile into proper binaries or are dealt with through a light-weight interpreter.


  • Presentations

    So today I have to do a presentation for a class I am in. For the last day or so I have been worrying about this presentation, feeling this overall feeling of dread that I am going to screw up. To top it off, I have not been feeling all that great and I am a bit congested.

    However, in the last ten minutes or so I have started to feel a lot better about it. The slide presentation that is going to go with it looks to be solid and readable, without getting too cramped. My section of the presentation actually has the only slide I feel is cramped, and that is because of the nature of the slide. I will make apologies and stuff concerning it.

    Regardless, I am feeling a lot better now because things seem to be falling together properly for what is going on.


  • Legion Riders

    So, went to a Legion Riders meeting tonight. Not sure how much I am going to be involved with it, but I would like to get some rides in with them. They unfortunately seem to be very focused on the fund raising aspect of things, and have forgotten that the main purpose of the group is to ride.

    I guess I will see.

    There does seem to be an opportunity there to put them together at least in some way with the Guilde in order to do some fund raising on both sides.


  • Sadness

    So, the girl that I loved, who also dashed my dreams, is looking for songs that have to do with learning to fly.

    I can come up with tons of different songs, but she won’t even bother to listen to me…. what is the point?


  • Pot Roast Recipe

    OK…. here we go….

    Ingredients:

    • Some sort of roasting beef.
    • Red wine
    • Balsamic Vinegar
    • Onion
    • Carrots
    • Brown sugar
    • Raisins
    • Celery (optional)

    I will use anything from a beef roast to a very thick 7-bone steak cut. Just make sure the meat is at least 1″ thick. If the meat has a bone in it, try to de-bone it prior to cooking. If there are little scraps of meat attached to the bone that you can carve off with a small knife, do so and add to the pot… can’t hurt!

    First, get a good size pot that will hold the meat and the added stuff. You don’t want the pot to be too big, just the right size. The less liquid you can have in the pot while still covering the meat, the better.

    To really do this right, you need to do a lot of prep work. I let the meat marinate in a mixture of wine and balsamic vinegar overnight, then added the crushed tomatoes (or chopped…doesn’t matter really… what you want is the acidity that is involved in the tomatoes…)

    Once the marination is done, you need to pull the meat out of the marinade for a moment and sear it in a pan at high heat. You really want a heavy-weight pan for this, not an aluminum frying pan that you would fry eggs in. You want something that has a lot of weight to it because it will tend to hold the heat longer. You want to sear both sides of the meat, then return it to the marinade in the pot. if your roast is large, don’t be afraid to cut it up into more manageable pieces for the searing… it won’t matter, and makes portion control later much simpler.

    Now to the mix you need to add the onions, carrots, and raisins. Also to this mess add some brown sugar. If you keep the onions and carrots on the bottom of the pot, it should be good. You can also add chopped celery if you like. Basically anything that is considered to be an “aromatic” in the cooking world.

    Throw the pot in the oven, and cook at 225F for a minimum of four hours. The nice thing about this cooking temperature is that you can cook it up to that four hour point, then let it sit in the oven for the next couple of hours without it going bad or overcooking. This is really a stew thing in the first place, so no big deal.

    When it is time to serve, pull it from the oven, take out some of the chunkies and liquid like I showed you and blend away. Don’t forget to take some slurried flour (2-3 table spoons should be enough… if you are making more gravy, start with 2-3 tablespoons, then add more if you need it thicker…)

    Slurried flour: This is where you take flour, add it to cold water, and mix well. This is because you are soon going to be adding the mixture to something hot, and if you simply add the flour to the hot thing, it will clump… yuck! So add water to the flour, get a nice white sauce looking consistency, then add to the hot stuff… no problems with clumping.


  • My weekend

    Let’s see…

    First, I got torque running on the fulong. It works fine, and I am in contact with the torque maintainer for gentoo to get the mips keyword applied to it. Still not sure if I have mipsel tested on it yet, however. The problem with that is that I am not sure if I actually have any mipsel machines to test it against, so it is sort of up in the air. Regardless, it is working for me quite well, and I have the Fulong running it as a client.

    Second, figured out a problem that occurs when installing maui on a gentoo system. Apparently when it installs, it has no idea what kind of resource manager you may have installed on a system, so it doesn’t bother to list one in the configuration. This is a problem on a couple of different levels:

    • Maui should fail or give some sort of warning that no resource manager is configured for use on the scheduler. This may be by design as you may just want it to start without any sort of resource manager, but in that case I think I would want the line to still be listed in the configuration with a dummy module or something defined so that you know that it is set for that kind of operation.
    • The gentoo installer should define in that configuration file what kind of resource manager you have installed. Gentoo already has maui depending on the pbs virtual package, which is only provided by sys-cluster/torque, so this could easily be defined. If another pbs virtual package for resource manager appears, I expect that there is a way for the ebuild language to figure out which one is being provided by the virtual package of pbs.

    I’ve also been watching the Olympics, and rooting for the teams that I feel should be rooted for. The US has done exceedingly well in the swimming events, and they cleaned house in women’s sabre, which I feel is wrong. No one nation should be able to take all three medals in an event. I believe that this is something that is being worked on by the IOC, but apparently not in time for these Olympics. Watching the women’s gymnastics was a bit horrifying, seeing as the floor routines were… well… not pretty. Also, what the hell is up with the apparently required technique of throwing in a double-pirouette into the routine? It looks STUPID!

    So all this, and last night I made dinner for a wonderful woman I know. Pot roast, mashed potatoes, and peas. The pot roast is sort of a specialty of mine these days, because I take the time to do it right. Started the night before by taking the roast and soaking it in vinegar and red wine, then in the morning added some diced tomatoes to the mix for some real breakdown of connective tissues. At around 1pm I added sliced onion, chopped carrot, condensed tomato soup, and some brown sugar to the mix. Then I took the meat out of the mixture and braised it in a pan before returning it to the pot. Then a nice slow cook in the pot at 225F for the next seven hours.

    The potatoes were boiled in salted water for about 30 minutes until soft, then removed from the water and mashed with a masher. A bit of salt, a bit of cream, and bobs your uncle you have some delightful mashed potatoes. Just before serving, pulled out some of the chunky bits from the pot roast pot (you know, the onions and carrots, along with some of the juice) and threw all of that into a blender. Blended it, added a bit of slurried flower, and poof, a wonderful gravy to go with it all.

    Unfortunately, I let the peas go a bit long, so they were on the mushy side.  🙁 She didn’t seem to mind, so I let it go. She loved the gravy, so that seems to be a good thing.  🙂


  • Gentoo ebuilds

    Couple of things…

    First, new version of the netrek cow client is out, so I have written a new ebuild for it. This required some work because when the new client came out originally, it had a missing file in the tarball distribution. This was later fixed, but the filename for the new version of the tarball was not something that portage really liked, so some massaging in the ebuild was required. This is now done, and there is now an ebuild of version 3.2.6 of the netrek cow client available at my website: http://inthewings.net/ebuild

    Second, I got emacs to build on the fulong, which required both an ebuild file and a patch for the configure.in file in the tarball because the emacs tarball does not recognize mips64el the way the fulong presents it. Not too bad a patch, but it was also interesting just getting it to work in the first place. That patch is also available in the above website.


  • Rants and Ebuilds

    OK… two things…

    First, I read Slashdot, mainly because it does keep me up on the latest tech news to some extent. That being said, it amazes me sometimes about the questions that some folks ask the readers of Slashdot, because I have seen the comments of users of Slashdot and they are not necessarily the ones that you want advice from.

    Second, I just completed writing an ebuild that works for netrek on gentoo using mips architecture. It is located here.

    It was interesting writing the ebuild this time around, as I was able to fix some bugs that I had in the old one. The above is now a basic template for things that I will do from now on in creating ebuilds.


  • mesa build

    Well, I have been chasing this one down for about three or four days. The goal was to get mesa-7.0.3 built on the fulong, but it just kept crashing in the build whining about dri. Couldn’t get around it.

    Then I noticed (finally!) that it was also whining about gcc-config not being set on the system. Well… this had been the first time that I had seen this particular problem cause other problems, so I went about setting it, which was not really a hard thing to do and actually reminds me very much of the mpi-selector that exists for those that use mpi programming tools.

    The second gcc-config had been set to the most recent version of gcc that I had on the system, the mesa build apparently appears to be going quite well.