Different ramblings about different subjects...

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Miscellaneous, mischievous minutiae!

Well, life happens, and that's good, I guess. A few interesting and a lot of quasi-interesting things happen at times. Firstly, I upgraded my desktop Ubuntu install to Edgy Eft! Thank you, Debian and Ubuntu, for making another brilliant release. Xvideo has broken, though - I'll try to figure that one out, but I think it's my own fault (Did not restart after upgrade).

But probably most interestingly, I've started my first real restoration project since the PDP-7 project in 2003. Though that never did pan out (That wasn't just my own fault...), with this project I have no excuse. I should take you back to the start of this:

25th of March, 2006, we get a mail by Norwegian ARPAnet/Internet pioneer Pål Spilling. Apparently, there is a NORD-1 in a barn in Gjerdrum (Countryside outside of Oslo). We go to inspect this. It's not just a NORD-1, there's also a NORD-10. (pictures available here)

Apparently, the farmer, a very nice man named Finn Stokke, had been hired to haul away the decaying remains of Norsk Data, and he realized that there was history in these machines.

Multiple attempts are made to salvage the computers, but things collide every time. Finally, months later, Pål Spilling nags a little more at me. We arrange a move with Pål Spilling's trailer.

We had a tentative agreement from March with Geir Isene (really cool guy) in FreeCode (really cool company) to place the machines there. Problem was, I couldn't reach him. The haul was on very short notice, and he was in meetings the whole day. So we improvise. We load the machines into the CS building, with help from some very friendly people at the University.

This has proved to be distinctly for the better. FreeCode was considering moving, and the subsequent restoration project would not have been possible without the equipment of the microelectronics laboratory.

There is talk about a permanent exhibition in the new cantina planned for the second Computer Science building currently being constructed (To the neighbours' great chagrin, I might add...). A NORD-1, a NORD-10, and a few DEC machines would be obvious candidates.

In addition, I have been talking with the telecomms museum and museum of science and technology to try to somehow get together an exhibit in occasion of the 40th anniversary of Norsk Data, with a few running machines. I'm sure a Satellite-9 would make an excellent machine to run a multiplayer game application on, to entertain the kids - and also have some neat exhibits, possibly even with live demonstrations of what application development was like in the bad old days - Blinkenlights, Teletype, Facit punch, maybe magtape, and all.

I've also gotten some (insufficient) work done on my website. I really want to make a document called "Program development using MAC" on the wiki.

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Test post to explain problems with Opera text break.

I'm just posting this as an example of how the Opera browser seems to have problems coping with line breaks in posts.

Somehow, it seems to only happen sometimes. I believe the relative positions of line breaks and paragraph shifts make a difference. I'm not sure why I am currently unable to reproduce it. It's been like this every previous time I've written it. Oh - it's the demo syndrome!

It used to happen, anyway. I am not entirely sure of why I am currently unable to reproduce this error. It seems to be wrapping perfectly every time! It's very odd. Testing, I'd like it to be less wrappey, testing, testing... This is very odd.


Ah! Now I remember the exact cause of it. Once the vertical scroll bar appears, it starts to ignore line breaks, and allow me to continue along the rest of the blog without ever wrapping. It's a frustrating bug as blogger.com seems to trust the wrapping given to it by this JavaScriptey editor.  Thus, text seems to fly off the end of the page. It does, however, seem to arbitrarily rebreak the above paragraphs, and somehow it's now almost randomly breaking the lines. I'm just typing to have text. Lorem ipsum, Dies Irae, Dies Illa -  Solvet saeclum in favilla, teste David cum Sybilla. QUantus tremor est futurus, quando judex est venturus, cuncta stricte discussurus! Dies irae, dies illa, solvet saeclum in favilla, teste david cum sybilla. Ompa, ompa. Tuba mirum, tubaen min, tubaen din.

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