I agree with you, and I did use it. First under RedHat 6.something around 1996, later under Slackware 9.something. It was a lifesaver at the time. That said, I now run Ubuntu. Granted, I don't know all the nuts and bolts as well as I used to, but I've got a few kids and don't have the time for dependency hell anymore.
I'm an engineer, and I am a parent of a 4 year old (soon to be 5) and one that's about to be 2. The 2 year old is really comfortable with 'Duplo' (the double size lego sets) as he doesn't have the coordination to manage small parts yet, and there's a choke hazard. The other thing that fits the 2 year old well is the wooden Thomas the train sets. We spend hours building elaborate track sets.
The 4 year old, on the other hand, is helping me to build a wooden spaceship for part of his space themed birthday party in July. He has his own hand tools, but I've also gotten him an electric screwdriver and a small set of hex base drill bits which he uses only under my supervision. It's really fun for me when he specifies design changes with the reason 'After all, daddy, it IS my spaceship.' The tricky part is keeping things moving fast enough to maintain his interest, but still promoting tenacity towards the goal of completing the project and making it cool.
I don't necessarily want to turn my sons into engineers. That would be fine, but I really want them to experience the value of concepts like 'work vs. reward', 'make your own fun', and especially 'turning your own imagination into reality'. No matter what they do, these concepts will take them somewhere.
One thing I've learned is that my kids each have a compass needle. They gravitate towards natural abilities and interests, and I want to provide opportunities in those areas, but I also have to bolster the areas they don't naturally excel in.
Basically, I've got an 802.11b setup in the house, and one reasonably fast PC (AMD xp1800+) set up with SUSE 9.1 (used to run slackware and still do on other machines, but got tired of dependency hell on this one). I've also got an abysmally slow laptop (P-133 with 32MB of non-expandable ram) with a wireless pcmcia card.
I put Vector Linux http://vectorlinux.com/ on the client PC, and some of the logins automatically ssh -X into the server, where the login script there does a 'startkde'. Aside from the fact that you have to type your password twice, its made the thin client full featured and much faster than it ran standalone, and this is on about 2MB/sec practical throughput. I don't know what the load on the server is, except I can play UT2K4 on it while my wife surfs the internet on the laptop, and neither of us notices a slowdown.
Only problem is when you wander out of 802.11 range with the laptop. Everything stops.
After a party back in college, I awoke around noon to find my keyboard full of beer up to the lowest weep-hole on board.
Being a starving student, I took it apart, peeled the layers apart, washed them, and made it work for another 2 years. Only problem was a key would stick occasionally, but the actual top physical part of the key (the part with the letter drawn on it) wasn't pressed downnnnnnnnnn
I complained to dish and Viacom by email, warning dish that I would cancel the service if those channels were not restored (I don't really care who is to blame).
I got a response quickly from an actual person at Dish (I was impressed by this) but not from Viacom. The letter was apologetic, and directed towards my particular concerns, but suggested I voice my displeasure to Viacom as well; this I had already done. Today after the channels were restored I received this dish form letter, which you'll notice does not address price hikes (or a lack thereof):
Dear Loyal DISH Network Customer,
I am very pleased to announce that we've successfully reached a long-term agreement with Viacom to provide you with CBS and MTV Networks including MTV, Comedy Central, and Nickelodeon. I am happy to say that this agreement will allow us to continue to provide you the lowest all-digital price everyday.
I understand that it has been a difficult 36 hours to be without these popular channels. We appreciate your patience, your support for DISH Network and your continued business.
As promised, you will receive a credit on your next billing statement. In addition, we would like to thank you for all of your support by sending you a free DISH On Demand Pay-Per-View coupon that will allow you to view upcoming hits like "Cat in the Hat" and "School of Rock." The coupon will arrive in your April billing statement. Enjoy a movie on us.
Everyone at DISH Network will continue to fight to provide the best possible programming and services at the lowest possible price, every day.
Thank you for your loyalty and thank you for being a DISH Network customer.
whups. Meant RH 4.
I agree with you, and I did use it. First under RedHat 6.something around 1996, later under Slackware 9.something. It was a lifesaver at the time. That said, I now run Ubuntu. Granted, I don't know all the nuts and bolts as well as I used to, but I've got a few kids and don't have the time for dependency hell anymore.
I'm an engineer, and I am a parent of a 4 year old (soon to be 5) and one that's about to be 2. The 2 year old is really comfortable with 'Duplo' (the double size lego sets) as he doesn't have the coordination to manage small parts yet, and there's a choke hazard. The other thing that fits the 2 year old well is the wooden Thomas the train sets. We spend hours building elaborate track sets.
The 4 year old, on the other hand, is helping me to build a wooden spaceship for part of his space themed birthday party in July. He has his own hand tools, but I've also gotten him an electric screwdriver and a small set of hex base drill bits which he uses only under my supervision. It's really fun for me when he specifies design changes with the reason 'After all, daddy, it IS my spaceship.' The tricky part is keeping things moving fast enough to maintain his interest, but still promoting tenacity towards the goal of completing the project and making it cool.
I don't necessarily want to turn my sons into engineers. That would be fine, but I really want them to experience the value of concepts like 'work vs. reward', 'make your own fun', and especially 'turning your own imagination into reality'. No matter what they do, these concepts will take them somewhere. One thing I've learned is that my kids each have a compass needle. They gravitate towards natural abilities and interests, and I want to provide opportunities in those areas, but I also have to bolster the areas they don't naturally excel in.
Basically, I've got an 802.11b setup in the house, and one reasonably fast PC (AMD xp1800+) set up with SUSE 9.1 (used to run slackware and still do on other machines, but got tired of dependency hell on this one). I've also got an abysmally slow laptop (P-133 with 32MB of non-expandable ram) with a wireless pcmcia card. I put Vector Linux http://vectorlinux.com/ on the client PC, and some of the logins automatically ssh -X into the server, where the login script there does a 'startkde'. Aside from the fact that you have to type your password twice, its made the thin client full featured and much faster than it ran standalone, and this is on about 2MB/sec practical throughput. I don't know what the load on the server is, except I can play UT2K4 on it while my wife surfs the internet on the laptop, and neither of us notices a slowdown. Only problem is when you wander out of 802.11 range with the laptop. Everything stops.
After a party back in college, I awoke around noon to find my keyboard full of beer up to the lowest weep-hole on board. Being a starving student, I took it apart, peeled the layers apart, washed them, and made it work for another 2 years. Only problem was a key would stick occasionally, but the actual top physical part of the key (the part with the letter drawn on it) wasn't pressed downnnnnnnnnn
I complained to dish and Viacom by email, warning dish that I would cancel the service if those channels were not restored (I don't really care who is to blame).
I got a response quickly from an actual person at Dish (I was impressed by this) but not from Viacom. The letter was apologetic, and directed towards my particular concerns, but suggested I voice my displeasure to Viacom as well; this I had already done. Today after the channels were restored I received this dish form letter, which you'll notice does not address price hikes (or a lack thereof):
Dear Loyal DISH Network Customer,
I am very pleased to announce that we've successfully reached a long-term agreement with Viacom to provide you with CBS and MTV Networks including MTV, Comedy Central, and Nickelodeon. I am happy to say that this agreement will allow us to continue to provide you the lowest all-digital price everyday.
I understand that it has been a difficult 36 hours to be without these popular channels. We appreciate your patience, your support for DISH Network and your continued business.
As promised, you will receive a credit on your next billing statement. In addition, we would like to thank you for all of your support by sending you a free DISH On Demand Pay-Per-View coupon that will allow you to view upcoming hits like "Cat in the Hat" and "School of Rock." The coupon will arrive in your April billing statement. Enjoy a movie on us.
Everyone at DISH Network will continue to fight to provide the best possible programming and services at the lowest possible price, every day.
Thank you for your loyalty and thank you for being a DISH Network customer.
Charlie Ergen
CEO
DISH Network