A Conservative Techie

Thoughts from a Conservative point of view in regards to technology

Disappointment with KMail and reloading my computer

After successfully installing and using the most recent version of Kubuntu (7.10), I was running into some serious problems which was adverserly affecting the way I worked so I decided to reload my laptop.  And this is where the problem started.

I know that I can copy my ./.kde folder to make sure I have a “backup” of everything, but every time this happens something seems to go wrong, way wrong….  I copied back my /home/ directory including the .kde and had my bookmarks, files, and settings, however I did not have my mail configured correctly or even the mail messages.

So I tried in import of the backup folder into KMail and had half of my emails.  What did I do wrong?  Nothing that I can think of.  This is the recommended way to make sure you have all of your mail files, but seems very silly to me.  I can create a .PST file in Outlook or Outlook Express and save this information as it moves between computers.  I have been successful with this over the years maintaining conversations and emails from friends I no longer talk to.  This is not the case with KMail.  I have tried to copy and import my folders several times and lose email each time I do this.  Can someone please come up with a better way of doing this?

I’m thinking about making the switch from my current account to using GMail full time.  Any thoughts on doing this?

December 14, 2007 Posted by Jonathan | Technical, Ubuntu/Kubuntu | | No Comments

Altiris vs. Landscape

A little delayed post here due to traveling to Austrialia for work, but at UDS-Boston, the Ubuntu Developers Summit, I spent a lot of time with the Ubuntu Server Team. One of things we discussed was the different Lifecyle Management Tools that are open source. I highlighted one in an earlier post, Net Director and then the Ubuntu guys spoke about a project they have called Landscape and I wanted to drop a couple of notes in regards to the presentation they made.  (The more I write, the more I realize it is like comparing apples to oranges)

Landscape is a tool created by Canonical to help manage Ubuntu devices in a Small Business. Landscape helps a system admin monitor and admin his/her Ubuntu systems by installing an agent, which is open sourced in case that matters, and that agent then “phones home” reporting information such as package status, what is stored in HAL, and user management information. Landscape reports this information back to a central server managed by Canonical which one can access via a web page to get information about their systems.

Landscape has 4 areas of focus: Package Management, Monitoring, User Management, and Hardware Inventory. I would like to focus on each area and then how Altiris competes with them. Currently Altiris does not support Ubuntu at all, something I would love to see change.

By using Landscape, one can track the different packages and the relationships of those packages. This also allows for a central apt repository that you can download and install the packages from. This is allows one to manage which packages are on the central apt server and then deploy them from the central apt server limiting the bandwidth out to the Internet. When one goes to install software from Altiris, they do it through a software delivery job and the use of package servers thus controlling bandwidth. However you have to download the packages first from a source (such as an apt repository) and then distribute.  If some how Altiris could work with an apt-mirror or something similar it would be awesome.

The Hardware Inventory focus of Landscape will grab anything that is reported by HAL.  Altiris will inventory the same information.  However where Altiris really shines is the reporting more on that later.

The monitoring section of Landscape is just monitoring services that are available.  Basic monitoring Altiris can do as well.

User Management is a poor man’s LDAP in Landscape and currently does not integrate with any real directory service.  I can read the users that I have on each machine but not control how they are setup.

The real focus or wish I have from the little I have seen Landscape is the lack of real reporting.  Altiris dumps all of its data into a SQL database (Microsoft SQL), but at least it is into a database  I can then run reports off of.  This lack in Landscape is a real weakness. 

Say I want to know how many computers have 2 Gigs of RAM in it?  I can pull this information easily out of Altiris, but can’t do this in Landscape.  From Landscape, I can look at each computer, but I can’t create reports of all of my computers.  I hope this comes in future updates to Landscape… Another part of this reporting that Altiris wins in is through the use of collections and policies based on these collections. 

 

From what I’ve seen in Landscape it looks very promising to help someone in an SMB manage their Ubuntu machines, but really how does it scale for the Enterprise?  Seems like there is a lot of work to be done to get it more enterprise ready.

December 14, 2007 Posted by Jonathan | Altiris, UDS Boston, Ubuntu/Kubuntu | | No Comments

Doctors and Traveling

One of the things I have recently learned is how hard it is to get into a doctor’s office when you travel as much as I do.  I average 2.5 weeks out of 4 that I am on the road, which makes it hard to squeeze doctor visits in.  Also I have a flexible schedule which changes, so I make an appointment weeks in advance and then often times have to reschedule it.

Let me give you an example, I have recently learned I have a food allergy and also have dealt with pericodits (inflamation of the heart lining) which both have required doctors visits, and also unfortantely ER visits but that is a different story.  So made sometime with my primary physician and then was sent to a cardiologist, the cardiologist needed some test ran, which he could run “next week.”  However next week I wwas out of the office so needed to schedule it that day which was successfull.  However for my allergist I am currently waiting to see him and have something scheduled the week of the 18th of January.  Will I be in town?  No clue…..

What I would love is the ability to schedule appointments when I was available, not neccesarily when the doctor’s office scheduled me.  So I would be able to see a “Free/Busy” schedule and then make my appointment when I was able to attend the appointment and also reschedule the appointment if needed without having to call and wait on hold forever.  Of course this scheduling would work only when the doctor’s office wasn’t open and the doctor was available.

This would be even better if I could somehow link it to my personal calendar and then see when I would be out of the office/on the road versus when the doctor was busy.

Can you imagine how much simpler this would make our life?   Let’s not just limit it to Doctor’s visits, I want to be able to schedule everything.  When is the lady who cuts my hair available?  Just check the schedule and book everything there.  Need to schedule a babysitter?  Why just check his/her schedule and book things there.

OF course there would have to be some way to handle double bookings, but let the office or person resolve the problem.  Now if someone could just implement this for me….

December 14, 2007 Posted by Jonathan | Personal | | No Comments