Lots of band rehearsals, seems our situation will change somewhat in the next time.
Hung out all night in what happened to become my one of my favorite chat systems (don't ask...), got into a bitter argument with one of the ops who apparently thinks it is not only his right to misuse his privileges to harass other users but his duty. Too little sleep. Now I'm awfully grumpy and have all kinds of sentiments I'd rather not have. I guess its time for another attempt at cutting down sensless 'net usage and getting more sleep instead.
To my surprise, when I arrived at the exhibition hall, no
one was there, some of the others had already dumped their
machines on the table but noone was around. But after a few
moments of standing around puzzled, Ernst arrived, and
shortly later Igor and a friend of his, and we got busy
removing the protective plastic wrap from the floor carpet.
(note: it is not a good idea to have tables standing around
and computers chained to that tables when you still need to
clear the floor.) and got hooked up for power and network
from the MausNet people who
have the booth on the back side of ours. And I even managed
to convince my serial terminal to talk to the DECstation
(turns out it wanted a null-modem cable. Huh?)
Then went to work, so I don't have to go there tomorrow.
Just to find my boss telling me that I'm now responsible
for about twenty more machines. Ugh.
29 Sep 2000 (updated 29 Sep 2000 at 23:33 UTC) »
Ah well, it is my last day on that job today. I still have to write a few pieces of code and document all the stuff. And since the project coordinator is in the US at the moment, I can't get out of the office early, but have to call him at 6:30pm for hand-over of my software. Which means I have to cancel an other appointment. Bah.
Have you ever thought you might inadvertantly compromise a person you know in your diary?
26 Sep 2000 (updated 26 Sep 2000 at 07:49 UTC) »
I am back in Germany now, with four days left at Agilent to
finish all the stuff.
*YAWN* Just 4 hours sleep is Not Good. Maybe I should apply
as a Debian new maintainer so that I at least have an
excuse for hanging out in #debian.de all night. The truth
is, however, that I installed all sorts of multimedia
players on my home machine so that I can now be a happy web
consumer.
More meetings. Finally we distributed the tasks to be done on the available team members. Somehow I got all the monkey business. Bah.
Went to BALUG meeting yesterday evening. Gene Kim, co-
author of the tripwire utility and CTO of Tripwire Inc,
spoke about security and what Tripwire can do about it. I
was a bit dissapointed with the talk, not technical enough,
too much about why we should care about computer security
and not about how we should care about it. From the talk I
didn't even get the info that tripwire is going to be
GPLed, I learned about that later.
Going out afterwards for a drink with Gene Kim, another
security consultant and two nice visitors from Taiwan, was
really nice, though.
nymia: What are you talking about? There has never been a real DOS shell in Windows NT, and so there is none in Win2k. If you want a real DOS, you have to install a real DOS, and do dual boot. The "Command Prompt" tool has always been a native Win32 console application and although I haven't seen a Win2k system yet, I'm pretty sure it is still there.
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