linux

The tablet and the bowling ball

Asus TransformerI was impressed with the Ipad when it came out, the speed, the responsiveness and the battery life. I really wanted one, but my use case for a portable device included a keyboard, standalone usability and easy transfer of data. A netbook would have achieved most of the goals, only it did not provide the form factor I wanted for reading - the portrait work mode.

After reading the AnandTech review of the Asus Eee Pad Transformer, I thought I finally saw a device that met all my requirements. I would highly recommend you read the review of the device. I do believe Asus brings true value and innovation to the tablet space. Asus not only has experience from the Netbook, it also lacks (in a good way) the links and the bondage of a cellular maker. I would only hope that Asus will join up with a Linux distribution to create a Linux ARM tablet.

I have made one mistake in the purchasing this device. I did not buy it for my self, but rather for my wife. It felt like the American husband buying a bowling ball for his wife's birthday. The joke, however is on me. She likes it, and she is by no mean a geek.

While the device is not without it's fault (I mainly find the Wireless connection wanting), it is a well rounded standalone device, which I can see as a replacement for most tablets and net-book devices. It remains to be seen how Asus handles software upgrades over time, and how the battery lasts in day to day use, but so far we are happy with it. Well, she is...

Backup local machines

I have Windows, Mac and Linux machines. Each uses a separate backup mechanism

Howto Implement a pxes thinclient deployment in a MS dominated environment.


The faculty of health sciences at Ben Gurion University needed to deploy a set of 30 classroom computers to function as thinclients to a MS Windows 2003 Terminal Server.

We wanted to use existing classroom hardware - Pentium III, 64MB RAM computers and we needed to retain use of floppy disk, CD-Rom and disk-on-key USB devices, All network cards were Intel pro 100ve.

Our server infrastructure included MS based RIS Server, DHCP and AD servers, working over a 100MB Ethernet network.

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