All posts by Mick

Meat!

And I like a nice steak now again, but then I think that’s the point. Too much red meat is bad for one, so why not cut down on overall red meat consumption but still enjoy a nice steak now and then:

http://www.boston.com/

Excess body fat and red meat are linked to an increased risk of common cancers and should be avoided, the World Cancer Research Fund and the American Institute for Cancer Research said …

The panelists recommended keeping extra weight off, exercising at least 30 minutes a day, and limiting consumption of alcohol and high-fat foods, such as burgers, french fries, milk shakes, pastries, and sugary drinks. The guidelines also apply to cancer survivors, the report said …

Researchers said men should limit their alcohol intake to two drinks a day, and women one.

Red meat, such as beef, pork, and lamb, which are linked to colorectal cancer, should be replaced with poultry, fish, and eggs. Processed meats that include bacon and lunchmeat should also be avoided, researchers said.

So eat more fish!

Late night sushi feast at Ginza

Adriondacks

2 interesting articles about the Adriondacks from the NYTimes:

Adirondacks Are Hot. That’s Good. Or Not.

Logging Is Part of a Plan to Preserve Adirondacks

Which has this multimedia presentation:
http://www.nytimes.com

A poet from Johnsburg, Jeanne Robert Foster, echoes the fears of many who live here and love it: “And the way things are going there won’t be woods very long, or wilderness; it’ll be imitation ranches, and ski runs, and places called by names that the folks who lived there years and years ago never heard of.”

Old Posters at the Adirondack Museum

Canadian Living article about Boston

Written by my friend Helen, and with input from meself:

Boston Twilight

http://www.canadianliving.com

By Helen Racanelli and Mick Timony

Traveling to Boston for a vacation, either for business or with the kids? From Montreal it’s about a six hour drive, from Toronto, about 9 hours. Here are some ideas of what to do, where to go, and where to stay in Boston.

1. Boston’s museums are top-notch
What’s a vacation without a little culture-vulture action? Boston’s museums are among the finest in the United States. If you can only check out two, try the Institute for Contemporary Art (ICA), and the Children’s Museum. Here’s how to get there: From South Station, where Amtrak has a big station, and the Red Line on the T (Boston’s subway) has a stop, you can walk about two blocks to the Children’s Museum where you can also have an ice cream cone.

Ice cream!

From there, the adults can go to the ICA (Institute for Contemporary Art), which just moved to a really cool building that overlooks the waterfront. Depending on their age, kids might enjoy it too.

2. Boston’s neighbourhoods are colourful
Boston is an excellent walking city, with many of its ethnic neighbourhoods intact. Bring your walking shoes! Boston has a small but active Chinatown, which is near Boston Theater district. On a side note, oftentimes the Theater District, which is a short walk from Boston Common, (the oldest park in the United States), will have plays before they get to Broadway, but usually it gets them after Broadway. There is an Italian neighbourhood, the North End, which has many Italian cafes and restaurants, and the beautiful Old North Church.

Cherry Blossoms on Beacon Hill

3. It’s easy to get around
You can walk, or “T” (short for MBTA: Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority) to almost all the things you’ll want to see. Taxis are expensive in Boston. For the MBTA, ask the attendant for a “Charlie Card”, fares are cheaper with this credit-card-like T pass, versus the paper “Charlie Ticket”. Alternatively, ask about tourist passes if you’re in town more than a day or two.

Mass Ave

4. There’s more to Boston than Fenway Park
There’s lots to explore whether or not you’re a Red Sox fan. (Though if you are a baseball fan, could anything beat seeing a game at Fenway Park?) Love the bustle of a food market? Sample gourmet fast food at Quincy Market, a can’t-miss indoor market in the city centre. It’s touristy, but not tacky. Into shopping? Check out the one-off boutiques on Newbury Street. Near Newbury street is Boylston street, that’s where the shopping really heats up with shops we don’t have in Canada, such as Anthropologie, Crate Barrel, and Filene’s Basement to name but a few.

Pillow Fight!

Harpoon Octoberfest

5. Harvard is nearby

If you’ve always secretly harboured Ivy League dreams for yourself or your kids, you’re probably aware that Cambridge, Massachusetts is where the famed Harvard campus resides. It’s very near Boston: you can get to Cambridge by the T (subway) with no extra toll, and it takes only about a half-hour to get there. Stroll around the historic campus, take in the beautiful buildings, and enjoy the town where you’ll find lots of pubs, a smattering of shopping (and another Crate & Barrel) and cheap student-thronged restaurants.

Head of the Charles, 2007

6. There are lots of free events in Boston

Similar to Toronto’s Shakespeare in the Park, is Boston’s Shakespeare on the Common, during the summertime, in Boston Common. The MIT Museusm is free the 3rd Sunday of every month. The Harvard Museum of Natural History is free on Sunday Mornings to Massachusetts residents (so don’t look like a tourist, hint, hint). The Freedom Trail is also free: it takes you around all the major tourist and historical sights in Boston.

Boston Beantown Jazz Festival

7. Hotels range from affordable to fancy

Whatever your price range, you’re likely to find something suitable in a good neighbourhood of Boston. For a special trip, like an anniversary or perhaps a honeymoon, Boston’s Kimpton Hotels, The Nine Zero and the Onyx are both the epitome of chic, friendly, comfy boutique hotels with a splash of luxury.

Intercontinental Hotel

The new Westin at the waterfront can have some amazing deals on rooms when there are no conventions on at the neighbouring convention centre. For those with kiddies in tow or on a tighter budget, La Capella Suites are family friendly with washer/dryers, fridges, microwaves and a self-serve breakfast included in the rate.

The Finale ... almost!

All of the photographs shown here (and not in the original article) were taken by myself.

Ubuntu & Bluetooth, & SD Card.

Just got a Bluetooth dongle (adaptor) from NewEgg (for $12.99). To get it to be able to browse (using Gnome) my phone I had to install the gnome-vfs-obexftp package (along with the bluez-gnome package).

I also got a Kingston 2 GB MiniSD-Card for my phone (for $20.99), with an adaptor so I can plug the card into my laptop. It looks the card reader on my Dell 700m now works! Previously it didn’t and there was no way to get it to work as there wasn’t a driver for the chipset Dell used.

We have got to get our groove back.

From the NYTimes:

Roger Dow, president of the Travel Industry Association, told me that the United States has lost millions of overseas visitors since 9/11 — even though the dollar is weak and America is on sale. “Only the U.S. is losing traveler volume among major countries, which is unheard of in today’s world,” Mr. Dow said. …

Total business arrivals to the United States fell by 10 percent over the 2004-5 period alone, while the number of business visitors to Europe grew by 8 percent in that time. The travel industry’s recent Discover America Partnership study concluded that “the U.S. entry process has created a climate of fear and frustration that is turning away foreign business and leisure travelers and hurting America’s image abroad.” Those who don’t visit us, don’t know us …

We can’t afford to keep being this stupid! We have got to get our groove back. We need a president who will unite us around a common purpose, not a common enemy. Al Qaeda is about 9/11. We are about 9/12, we are about the Fourth of July — which is why I hope that anyone who runs on the 9/11 platform gets trounced.

Beantown Paddle Boat

Debian: weird mouse behaviour

In my last post I upgraded to the 2.6.22 kernel to get the nvidia closed source driver to work. Since then the behaviour of the mouse has been very weird:

  • Clicks register as double-clicks
  • Can’t access menus in Firefox/Iceweseal using the mouse
  • Selecting icons on the desktop is difficult, more than one gets selected.
  • Can’t click on items in the top Panel, but can on the lower panel
  • Clicking on a Window’s border causes it maximise then return to it’s former size

Bizarre, and annoying! Much googling has turned up almost nought, except for this bug report:

http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=427406

Found via DebianHelp

I’ll try upgrading to Metacity 2.20.0-1 from Unstable:

apt-get install -t unstable metacity

And of course that doesn’t help!

In my xorg.conf, I’ve 2 mice configured:

Section “InputDevice”
Identifier “Configured Mouse”
Driver “mouse”
Option “CorePointer”
Option “Device” “/dev/psaux”
# Option “Protocol” “PS/2”
Option “Protocol” “ImPS/2”
# Option “Emulate3Buttons” “true”
Option “ZAxisMapping” “4 5”
EndSection
Section “InputDevice”
Identifier “Generic Mouse”
Driver “mouse”
Option “SendCoreEvents” “true”
Option “Device” “/dev/input/mice”
Option “Protocol” “ImPS/2”
Option “ZAxisMapping” “4 5”
EndSection

This is in case my USB mouse craps out and I need to plugin an old PS/2 mouse. This has worked fine for at least a few years, but I suspect the 2.6.22 kernel, or the nvidia driver is getting confused by this. I commented out the “Configure Mouse” section, and that didn’t make a difference.

Switching to the Opensource Nvidia driver (nv) didn’t do it. So it makes me think it’s a kernel specific problem.

Going back to 2.6.18-4 kernel and the nv driver (as I can’t get the Debian packaged nvidia driver to work with 2.6.18). Same behaviour there, which means it’s not the nvidia driver or the kernel so it must be Xorg! And after some googling found this recent bug report:

http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=443503

I sent a couple e-mail to the bug report, with no reply. So, I downgraded to Xorg from testing and had to manually install xserver-xorg-core_2%3a1.3.0.0.dfsg-12_i386.deb . Which cause nvidia-glx to be removed:

The following packages have unmet dependencies:
nvidia-glx: Depends: xserver-xorg-core (>= 2:1.4) but 2:1.3.0.0.dfsg-12 is installed.

Debian & Nvidia & Kernels 2.6.20/21

Getting this error message after you’ve compiled the nvidia video module and try to load it:

FATAL: modpost: GPL-incompatible module nvidia.ko uses GPL-only symbol ‘paravirt_ops’

This happens because paravirtualisation is enabled in these kernels, and causes the kernel to only allow GPL modules to build:

What happens is that when paravirtualization support is turned on many functions in the kernel call implicitly paravirt_ops – function marked as GPL only. One of these functions is udelay – function that makes a program stay idle for some period of time. And the nvidia driver uses udelay (I can’t imagine a driver that won’t use udelay somehow) and therefore you can not compile the driver normally.

This only happens if your running a 2.6.20 or 2.6.21 kernel on Debian. The quick fix (at least for me) is to upgrade to a 2.6.22 kernel and make sure you’ve upgraded nvidia-glx also. Alternatively, you can patch your kernel, see here for more detail and for links to patched verisons of the nvidia driver:
http://grizach.sc18.info/nvpatch/