[I started writing this entry months ago, but never got around to finishing it.]
After a few months of running Ubuntu as a VirtualBox on a Windows host, I’ve got most of the kinks ironed out. Continue reading “VirtualSummary”
Thinking out loud about cars, computers and security
[I started writing this entry months ago, but never got around to finishing it.]
After a few months of running Ubuntu as a VirtualBox on a Windows host, I’ve got most of the kinks ironed out. Continue reading “VirtualSummary”
Bonus feature: mostly readable shot of the whiteboard Kirk and I used while reviewing the state of 64-bit quotas: Continue reading “64-bit quotas”
Mostly readable shots of the whiteboards used during the 9.0 brainstorming session. Continue reading “FreeBSD 9.0 Wishlist”
Herbert Schildt is the author of a series of books on computer programming, including about a dozen about C, which are widely considered by the C community to be, to put it bluntly, shit. Two of them, C: A Complete Reference and The Annotated C Standard have been roundly criticized by Peter Seebach and Clive Feather, respectively, and inspired a number of scathing reviews on the Association of C and C++ Users website. Even Steve Summit’s C FAQ includes a warning about The Annotated C Standard.
Recently, a certain Edward Nilges has been waging a highly entertaining crusade against Schildt’s critics on comp.lang.c (C as a Platonic pathology) and comp.lang.c.moderated (Statement on Schildt submitted to wikipedia today)).
The whole point of this entry is to share with you some exquisite gems from the latter thread: Continue reading “Nilges v. the World”
I find myself in a position where I have to run Windows on my laptop, and use it on a daily basis. This does not make me a happy moggie, as I have run Ubuntu exclusively (except for gaming) for several years. I finally decided that the best solution would be to run Ubuntu in VirtualBox on top of Windows.
(Yes, I still run Hardy, as I still haven’t recovered from trying out the unmitigated disaster that was Intrepid. I may give Jaunty a spin some day; VirtualBox makes this so much easier… but in the meantime, Hardy it is. Besides, it’s an LTS release.)
Why not the other way around? Three reasons: Windows is a PITA to virtualize (not least from a licensing POV); I never do anything really performance-sensitive in Linux, but I do in Windows; and doing it this way around means I can suspend and hibernate, something Linux still can’t do. (Cue angry comments from Linux fanboys insisting that suspend and hibernate work just fine and I’m an idiot; sorry, but no, it has never worked for me on any of the laptops I have owned or managed—even those manufactured by companies that spend millions of dollars every year on Linux development.)
Running Ubuntu in VirtualBox is not as easy as it sounds, though. You can’t just create a new VM, pop in the CD, and install. There are several issues that took me quite a while to resolve, and the VirtualBox web forum was no help at all: the moderators arrogantly shut down any thread touching on issues covered by the FAQ, even when the answer given in the FAQ is incorrect and / or insufficient. Continue reading “VirtualWoes”