Archive for January, 2008

Musical Reset

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

A post from Ryan Singer of 37signals about how to take control of a massive iTunes library got me thinking about my own music collection. Obviously I’m not using iTunes, but according to Rhythmbox my music collection isn’t small. Right now it claims I have 2,884 songs taking up 14.3GB of space which would provide me with 7 days, 19 hours and 14 minutes of non-stop, non-repetitive (barring duplicates) music. I’m sure there are lots of people who can (and will) boast of larger music collections, but as far as I’m concerned that’s a lot of music. This, coupled with the fact that my Top Rated and Recently Played automatic playlists encompass only a fraction of my collection inspires me to do something about it.

Initially I was going to follow Ryan’s approach – archive off all the music and only add it back into my collection when I had a real desire to listen to it – but after mulling the idea over for a few days I’ve decided to take an additional step: instead of simply rebuilding my collection from, er, my collection, I’m going to actively seek out new music.

My collection is wide and varied, but I do tend to listen to the same stuff over and over again. Now I’m going to enlist the likes of , Last.fm, Jamendo, and Magnatune to discover something new. I’m also going to try and tune into a few more musical podcasts like Podrunner and Groovelectric to add some variety.

Any suggestions of artists/bands or podcasts for me?

Cast Your Vote

Saturday, January 26th, 2008

The Official Ubuntu Book has been nominated in the favourite Linux book category for the Linux Journal 2008 Readers’ Choice Survey.

All Linux fans should take part anyway, but while you’re there cast a vote for the best book about the best distro <wink />.

Cutting out distractions

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

On his new blog Write To Done, Leo Babauta talks about how to write without distractions. I wanted to look at a couple of his points from the FOSS/Linux/Ubuntu perspective.

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Spoof!

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

or Fun Ways To Spend Your Afternoon #4853

This afternoon I started getting mails saying that messages had been rejected due to lack of storage. Over 2000 appeared in a very short space of time – it seems my domain has been spoofed once again. This wouldn’t be a big deal except that my server was already near capacity and this flurry of activity pushed it over the edge. I’d been aware of the space issue for a while, and had plans to address it but quite simply hadn’t bothered until I was forced into action.

My planning had gotten as far as preparing a larger partition for /var, but it was sitting idle. A quick reboot into single user mode, mount the new partition, copy the data, unmount, move & rename the folders, edit /etc/fstab, remount, check everything appears normal and reboot. By far the longest part was copying the data – next time I’m using rsync so I can track progress.

Unfortunately the bounces are still rolling in. I think I’m finally going to have to look into getting SPF set up.

Design Decisions

Thursday, January 17th, 2008

A comment in my recent post about letting the air out of Air got me thinking about some of the design decisions Apple have made with their new laptop.

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Socially Ostracized?

Thursday, January 17th, 2008

I stumbled across nugget of wisdom earlier today:

For many web workers, there’s email, and then there’s Gmail. You can use a different email client, but prepare to be mildly teased/socially ostracized

What?!? Are they serious?

Bestseller?

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Just did a quick check on how my book – Managing Software Development with Trac and Subversion – was doing on Amazon UK. They had stock earlier in the week, but it’s all gone now – that can only be a good thing!

I was also really pleased to see that I had made into the top 100,000 bestsellers – number 94,492 to be precise. Considering I’ve seen books ranked over the million mark, I’m very happy with my current position.

Letting the air out of the Air

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Unless you have been living under a rock for the past 24-odd hours, you will have heard about the new Macbook Air ultra-slim laptop from Apple. Reactions seem to be falling into two categories:

It’s the latest must have gadget Apple have missed the target

Since everyone else is talking about it, I thought I would join in the fun.

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Lies, damned lies, and statistics

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Or “Buh-bye Google Analytics”.

As most of the commentary on my previous post about some statistics from this site (as reported by Google Analytics), the figures seemed… wrong.

Even though the Google Analytics code is included on every page I serve, the two obvious causes were:

People were blocking it (this seems more common than I realised) It’s broken in some undefinable way

Seeing as I have full access to my server logs, I decided to go directly to the proverbial horses mouth and see how the numbers work out from there.

The results are interesting to say the least.

Note: These statistics are purely for the same period – January 2008 up to the date of the this post. This means there may be some discrepancy between the GA figures in my other post and this one.

MPB (Most Popular Browser)

Google Analytics Logs
# Browser Percentage # Browser Percentage
1. Konqueror 42.55% 1. Firefox 61.2%
2. Safari 41.13% 2. MS Internet Explorer 15.3%
3. Opera 15.60% 3. Konquerer 6.7%
4. Firefox 0.71% 4. Unknown 4.2%
      5. Safari 3.6%

Bit of a difference, isn’t there?

Operating Systems

Google Analytics Logs
# Browser Percentage # Browser Percentage
1. Linux 45.39% 1. Linux 46.6%
2. Macintosh 36.88% 2. Windows 40.6%
3. Windows 11.35% 3. Macintosh 6.9%
4. (not set) 2.84% 4. Unknown 5.6%
5. iPod 2.13% 5. Sun Solaris <1%
6. iPhone 1.42% 6. FreeBSD <1%

Hmm. Some confusion there.

…and the moral of the story is:

Look before you…

No, wait, too many cooks…

That’s not right. It’s never work with animals, children, or a third party statistics package that relies on JavaScript. Especially when you have access to your own logs. So the real moral is don’t be lazy. Here endeth the lesson.

Target Market?

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

Cartoon courtesy of Hugh MacLeod.

It would seem my assumptions about the target market for this site are a bit off.

I skim through my report from Google Analytics every day or so to observe traffic, but I had a bit of a closer look today and noticed something interesting: Safari is the most popular browser to view this site.

Here are some of the more pertinent figures:

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