“I ain’t talkin’ to you!”

That’s apparently what Ubuntu and VMWare Server 2.0 decided to say to each other after a recent Linux kernel update. Weird. Everything was just hunky-dory between Ubuntu and VMWare Server 2.0 before the kernel update. After? VMWare would NOT load any more. Period. Solution? Recompile VMWare Server 2.0. *sheesh!* That’s dumb.

Ah, well. At least it was a trivial task. All it involved was typing a command at the command line and hitting the “Enter” key… A LOT. When it asked for my regnum, I was even able to just keep hitting “Enter” and select “no” because my regnum was already entered in the config script. Stupid silly, an annoyance. But a trivial thing overall. Oh, and sure, I don’t like the new web management “feature”. It simply does not work as well as the console management did with version 1.X. Still, the ability VMWare Server has to load 64-bit clients on a 64-bit host brings it a notch above other options out there, so I guess I’ll stick with it as my primary virtualization tool in a Linux host.

So, for future reference, I’ll know: put another potta coffee on, invoke the config script and start wearing out the “Enter key” again. By the time the coffee finishes brewing, I should be halfway through having VMWare Server recompiled/reconfigured…

Petty annoyances. At least I have fewer of them than in a typical Windows setup.

Bonus gripe: Windows machines are sometimes simply too dumb for words. Take finding and using the printer attached to this Linux box. Never had troubles configuring a Linux box to use a printer attached to a Windows machine. Find it on the network, bang! I’m on. (Heck, I’ve never–well, in the last five years of using Linux boxes off and on–had to install printer drivers in Linux for the printers I have–admittedly, all pretty current models. Every Linux box I’ve built has just “automagically” configured printers. Nice.) Other way around? Hit or miss. Sooo… downloaded and installed Safari browser on the problematic Windows machines. *Huh?!?* Installed an Apple browser to fix network printing on a Windows machine? Yep. That’s because Safari comes with the neatest lil applet to solve Windows network printing that I’ve found: Bonjour.

Bonjour just finds and configures networked printers. Period. And does it well. Heck, I’ve even installed and used it with a Windows VM running inside a Linux host to see if it would work there. It did.

Easy-peasy network printer configs.

BTW, Safari browser isn’t bad. Limited deature set (not even as configurable as Firefox from what I’ve been able to tell) and minimalist controls. For folks who like that sort of straightjacket, very nice indeed. Rendering engine is fast and reasonably accurate. Better overall than Internet Exploder, a step down from both Firefox and Opera, IMO, but still a pretty decent little browser. About on a par with using Konqueror (which is fine as a file browser) as a web browser.

OS Play Time

No politics, no rants, no foaming at the mouth with this post. Just a lil fun.


Well, Ubuntu 8.04 LTS “Hardy Heron” has been out for over a week now, and here at twc central, three Windows computers have had it installed… three different ways. The full install (partitioning off a chunck of one hard drive) went slick as goose grease. Nice looks, snappy performance.

Two “Wubi” (Windows-based Ubuntu Installer) installs. One was straight off the CD. (Note: for the one or two readers of twc that don’t know what an iso file is or how to create a CD with one, no sweat. Just visit the Ubuntu home page, download the iso and read up on the well-written tutorial available there.)

A Wubi installation from CD in Windows is just like installing any Windows app you’ve ever installed, only a bit slicker than some. *heh* On a Toshiba Satellite WinXP system, the hard part was putting the CD in the drive. *yawn* Slipped it in during a commercial break (was watching one of my Wonder Woman’s fav shows with her) and autostart brought up the Wubi installer. Told it what user name and password I wanted and let it trundle along. Next commercial break, looked over at the notebook and it was asking for a reboot. Let it. It did its thing and before next commercial break it was rebooting and giving me a choice of booting Windows XP or Ubuntu, using the Windows XP boot manager.

Slick.

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