Archive for June, 2009

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OpenSolaris 2009.06 on a MBP

June 25, 2009

I don’t really have the time to try this out, especially with all the gotchas, but it is nevertheless interesting. I may give it a try once some version of OpenSolaris goes into 2010. For now, I’ll keep watching out for Karim’s experience and see how it pans out. No, not giving up on Mac OS X; just curious about the possibilities.

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Windows VPN: DNS funkiness: braindead

June 23, 2009

I try to stay as far away from Outlook as I can, but I needed to something with it today and that required hooking up through the VPN. I fired up VMware, started Windows, ran through the network wizard for a VPN, got set up, connected… and nothing really worked. See here and here for details. Sigh.

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HP Color Laserjet CP1215: No Mac’s Land

June 19, 2009

Along with the system I picked up yesterday, I bought a HP Color Laserjet CP1215, which isn’t particularly Mac friendly. Many thanks to Ryan Ridge for his very helpful write-up on how to get this printer to work with a Mac. I still can’t get color, but I’ll settle for B&W for now. Thanks again Ryan!

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OpenSolaris 2009.06: ready, set, go!

June 18, 2009

Today I picked up a cheap Compaq Presario (yep, C-o-m-p-a-q) with an Athlon X2, 4GB of RAM and a 320GB SATA drive for under $300. I have some VMs and other cruft to run and I rather not do it on the Mac Pro anymore. This will do fine, especially as a playground of sorts. I wanted to put OpenSolaris 2009.06 on it, which took less than 20 minutes, including the creation of a ZFS root mirror. Another 10 minutes to flip into a Dom0 and I’m ready to go.

Very sweet indeed.

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Jira and Plugin Goodness

June 15, 2009

I have been using Atlassian’s JIRA for quite some time now, and have delved into coaxing it to do things that go well beyond the standard workflows shipped with it. In the interest of full and fair disclosure, I’m a huge fan of Atlassian’s tools (Confluence is a very sweet wiki indeed), and I know a good deal of developer types who also like some of their other kit (FishEye and Crucible being top choices).

Part of what makes JIRA such a strong tool is the availability of an extensive plugin collection. Although I will at some point write a more detailed account of my JIRA adventures, I did want to post some of the plugins I use quite extensively (and, at the same time, thank their developers for creating them).

  • The JIRA Advanced Mail Handler is an extension of the standard JIRA email handler; while the built-in plugin works quite nicely, this one quite a bit of punch to the creation and workflow of any issue. Kudos to Daniele Raffo.
  • The JIRA Calendar Plugin shows issues and versions in a calendar format based on their due date, and its produced (but not supported) by Atlassian. If you run a production environment and have changes flying in and out of the environment, this is an invaluable plugin to get a sense for what’s happening when.
  • The JIRA Charting Plugin is another great addition to Atlassian’s stable of JIRA plugins. It lets you slice and dice data and present it in a sensible matter.
  • The JIRA Component Watcher Plugin, written by Ray Bartham, is great when different people need to be notified of things related to components they manage in a larger project (but who are not necessarily the owners of said component).
  • The JIRA Labels Plugin, for loose tagging of issues, ends up providing a decent way to organize issues and find like things later. Also by Atlanssian.
  • The Jira Suite Utilities is a nice collection of workflow conditions and validators. A must have by Alexey Abashev.

Finally, and although it’s not a plugin proper, Bob Swift’s JIRA Command Line Interface is a great way to poke into JIRA for those of us who spend time with terminal windows.

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OpenSolaris 2009.06

June 8, 2009

OpenSolaris 2009.06 is out. Get the bits. They’re yummy.