uncommonguy

uncommonguy

(287 comments, 1065 posts)

I am just marinated in unsavory-ness, all kinds. Mystery is my seventh name. So multi-faceted I glow in good lighting. I'm a paragon of virtue and smell minty fresh. And I'm always joking. Unless you say yes.

Home page: http://uncommonguy.com

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Posts by uncommonguy

Joining the Software Pedigree Review Board at Motorola

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Some good news from work today — I am offi­cially join­ing the Soft­ware Pedi­gree Review Board at Motorola. It is an inter­nal work­ing group that reviews open source soft­ware licens­ing, defines best prac­tices and processes for teams want­ing to use open source, and other types of intel­lec­tual prop­erty reviews. It is some­what pres­ti­gious inter­nally. I don't know much of the details yet, but there is a meet­ing about it tomor­row to famil­iar­ize new members.

 

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This advice might be enough to get me work­ing on some of my per­sonal projects again. Some­times the amount to do seems so huge it is hard to even start.

from: https://readmill.com/tswicegood/reads/the-developers-code-for-travis-swicegood/highlights/fe4e

Decid­ing to make your prod­uct bet­ter in two ways every day is a good men­tal exer­cise to keep those large projects mov­ing for­ward. In a work­ing week, you’ll have ten bet­ter things to say about your prod­uct than you do now. In a work­ing month, you’ll have forty bet­ter things to say about your prod­uct than you do now.

Travelling

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Looks like I will be on the road the next few weeks. I just got back Brazil (ah, lovely warmth) and was sent to Dal­las for a semi-emergency. I might be here the next 3 weeks, then a week in south­ern France. Then pos­si­bly back to Dal­las or up to Montreal.

 

The trav­el­ling has moments of fun, but mostly it's hard work, dan­ger­ous food (it's tough to stay gluten free, espe­cially abroad), and poor sleep.

 

Note to self: buy a few more nice dress shirts and slacks. My closet is pathetic.

Main work

A sea of wonderful pink stuff

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I've been work­ing really hard get­ting ready to insu­late our attic. The insu­la­tion was min­i­mal, barely up to the top of the joists in most cases, so 6–8 inches in most places. This was awful. Last year we had Home Depot come out and give an esti­mate for insu­la­tion work and they big $2000 which was a let-down as we didn't have the cash at that time.

We finally had the extra money to try again this year so got an esti­mate from a com­pany my father-in-law rec­om­mended, Williams Insu­la­tion. Esti­mate: $425. Yeah, 25% the amount of Home Depot's con­trac­tor. The esti­ma­tor also did a walk-through energy audit and sug­gested some really use­ful things.

The esti­ma­tor actu­ally found a whole sec­tion of attic we had never known about. He real­ized there was a gap along two whole sides of the house and sug­gested we cut a hatch to check it out. He turned out to be right — we found a space 40'x5' with even less insu­la­tion than the other main attic area. This was along the whole front and kitchen sides of the house.

I reported my find­ings and he came back for a free re-estimate. Amaz­ingly, this added only $100 to the esti­mate, bring­ing it to $525. Frankly, we would have paid twice that and been happy about it. Five hun­dred bucks is a no-brainer!

The main prep work was to imple­ment his main sug­ges­tion. He told us to tape up all gaps in the metal cas­ings of can lights and ven­ti­la­tion fans, and encase them in sty­ro­foam to fully air-seal them. He sug­gested the $2 sty­ro­foam cool­ers from Wal-mart, which turned out to be the per­fect shape and size for most of them. We had one larger fix­ture — the heat lamp in our shower — on which I used a larger, bet­ter cooler meant for ship­ping frozen goods.

I spent many hours up there the past few weeks, but par­tic­u­larly the past week­end. I spent half of Sat­ur­day and almost all of Sun­day skit­ter­ing around in the tini­est cor­ners seal­ing every­thing. It had to be done care­fully and cor­rectly to make it per­ma­nent, at least until the fix­ture itself fails. I wanted to never have to crawl through all the new insu­la­tion to reach and work on this stuff.

Over­all I sealed up 4 can lights above the kitchen, the rest being below the floor of the lit­tle play­room. In the main attic I replaced the non-working bath­room fan with a new one and sealed it up, and sealed up the other one that I replaced last year. I also ran duct­ing from the fans to exhaust out­lets in the roof. There was one reg­u­lar can light to enclose, then one huge heat lamp to enclose. All of those took a lot of work because of the cramped space. Much of it I had to work one-handed, hold­ing myself on a joist with the other hand. It was brutal.

Mon­day night I worked from 9pm to 3am fin­ish­ing up the var­i­ous bits, includ­ing seal­ing up the huge hall­way fan. It was quite a trial after a full day of work, boy scouts, and hang­ing out with Asa (my Lit­tle from BBBS). I was a mess of insu­la­tion, sweat, Great Stuff expand­ing foam, and grime.

The big pay­off was Tues­day morn­ing when the insu­la­tors came. In just an hour they crawled to all the dark cor­ners of the attic and blew in insu­la­tion to the 20" mark. This gives an insu­la­tion of R-60, which is higher than even the lat­est stan­dards for this part of the coun­try. The work was fast, effi­cient, and looks great — a uni­form sea of pink energy and money-saving fluff.

We've noticed our fur­nace run­ning much less and the house feels warmer, par­tic­u­larly the upstairs office. We are super happy about the project. In fact, it's kind of embar­rass­ing how excit­ing the insu­la­tion is to us. The insu­la­tion plus the work involved in prep­ping for it was really reward­ing and feels like the best improve­ment we've done to the house since we replaced the doors. And the energy-saving aspect makes us feel gen­er­ally good about our­selves and our house.

Christmas list

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I want the entry-level Nook e-reader, but the shape is awful — it's prac­ti­cally square and would never fit in a pocket. It's just like the Xoom tablet — great hard­ware wedged into poor design. Just not sure what to do here. I'm not cer­tain I will get enough use out of this either.

Really good long under­wear for cold-weather camp­ing and out­door chores.

"Ray­man Ori­gins" game for Wii

 

Picture 8

Midweek Mania, in a good way

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I've been prac­ti­cally manic the last 2 days. So many things to be happy about. Work has returned to a happy nor­mal­ity from the insane crush of the last 3 weeks. I kicked ass dur­ing an onsite visit and saved a fea­ture trial at a cus­tomer. My boss's boss sent me a really touch­ing email thank­ing me for all the great work I am doing. Rachel got an excit­ing new job. I am mak­ing real progress rebuild­ing and reor­ga­niz­ing the garage. My Mom's back surgery was a suc­cess. The dogs are healthy. The weather is good.

Life is just great.

cgrep — a grep enhancement to show preceding lines

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Solaris grep has no way to print­ing the lines sur­round­ing a match. Yet my most com­mon use of grep is to locate par­tic­u­lar strings in a log file, with the goal of look­ing at the log mes­sages pre­vi­ous to them. There is a sim­ple solu­tion for this. And also, please note, I did not write any of the code linked here. Just post­ing it to help oth­ers find it.

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Install sudo on Solaris 10 (intel, x86)

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Instruc­tions on installing and con­fig­ur­ing sudo on Solaris 10. It is really easy.
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Installing Oracle 11 <span class="caps">XE</span> on Ubuntu 10.10 or 11.04, 64-bit

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Ora­cle recently released the XE ver­sion of Ora­cle 11 specif­i­cally for Ubuntu 64-bit. These instruc­tions and an auto­mated script will get it up and run­ning in just a few min­utes.
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Call before digging, or curse after digging…made my choice.

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You know those ad spots from the power com­pany about "call before you dig"? And the mag­nets? And the warn­ings on the monthly bill? Well, I ignored all that and just cut a cable while dig­ging. Inter­net still works, so guess we didn't need it much. I nicked the other one last month but repaired it. Feel­ing pretty dumb right now.

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