Archive for September, 2006

Face for Radio

Friday, September 29th, 2006

The Ollie C Show on Wednesday night was a great laugh and something I’d love to regularly. The show went well I thought although you could check for yourself when it repeats on Saturday 13:00 till 16:00 on RadioRSP.

I’ve been reading the news paper (last weekends WEEKEND magazine to be precise) and read an interview with Jamie Oliver. I’m a big fan of Jamie’s since he started Jamie’s Kitchen. For anyone who didn’t watch it Jamie takes on fifteen kids with little or no interest in food and trains them to work in his restaurant fifteen as part of the Fifteen Foundation which I think is fantastic and now has restaurants in London, Amsterdam, Melbourne and Cornwall. In fact as I type Jamie is making an appearance on Friday Night with Jonathon Ross. Recently (well, the last four years) Jamie has been on a quest to improve the state of our school food services by trying to introduce variety into the kids diets. I think it’s a fantastic cause and it’s a sad state of affairs when Jamie regularly gets abuse from these kids for taking probably more interest in their health than most of their parents do. That said, recently some parents have taken an interest but seem determined to provide their kids with junk food despite all the hard work. I mean come on, how is passing school kids burgers and fish and chips through the railing at their school going to help anybody? I think it’s disgusting.

I’ve gone off on a huge tangent, I was only going to mention that the article in the magazine mentioned that it ‘Home Cooking Day’ is on Oct 12th. And I think that everyone should make an effort to get the whole family in the kitchen to make a meal together. Go on, you might find you all really enjoy it and want to make it a regular thing.

Daytime Tv and Radio

Wednesday, September 27th, 2006

Over the last couple of weeks I’ve been housesitting for my Dad whilst he and his partner Karen are off sunning drinking in Spain. So whilst I’ve been here I’ve had to keep myself busy with daytime tv and coding. Whilst coding is great you can’t spend all day everyday doing it, unless your paid for it ofcourse but there are some great shows on tv. Terrestrial can get lost, I lost interest when Monk finished but I’ve descoverd the joys of Paramount Comedy on sky!! All day it plays King of Queens, Two and a half men, Fraiser, Everybody loves Raymond and Becker! Daytime tv has never been this good! If I was destined to be a jobless bum forever I’d sign on and use the money to subscribe to Sky!

Anyway, tonight I’m off to do some radio with Ollie C over at RadioRSP should be a laugh… we’ll see huh.

New Computer

Thursday, September 21st, 2006

Woohoo, I’ve finally got my hand on a new(er) computer and I’m currently full of the joys that come with starting from fresh. Thanks to Jonny’s generosity the machine has 2.9Ghz, 200Gb Hard drive, 512Mb Ram and a DVD R/RW Drive and all for only

Avast! Talk like a pirate day be upon us you scurvy dawgs!

Monday, September 18th, 2006

September 19th is International Talk Like A Pirate Day! So ‘don your hats and grab your cutless! Get down the pub and tell the wench to smartly stack up the ales!

Ok, so my pirate lingo skills sucks but hey ho, it’s all in the name of fun!

Fixing laptops and websites

Saturday, September 16th, 2006

Over the last couple of days I’ve been installing Windows XP Home Edition on a friends laptop and it’s been pretty blooming difficult! First off I couldn’t find my disk so after two days, a lot of hard work and dedication from a guy at university I know only as Skyhigh(department forum user name), I finally have a CD I can start installing from. Smooth sailing from here? Nope.

As seems to be the norm when it comes to me and operating systems of late, the fresh install managed to break itself. Explorer broke every time a message bubble came up from the task bar. This is a huge problem on an unactivated install of windows as it reminds you to activate as soon as you login with a helpful message bubble. Grr. So I re-installed and it wouldn’t activate! Arrrggghhh. So now I have an un-activatable windows and the only way to do it is to ring. I’ve just tried to install again over the top of the current installation using the upgrade option(why it gave me the option to upgrade from XP home to XP home is beyond me) and it’s not asking me to activate anymore. Hmmm, further investigation tomorrow will be necessary!

I’ve been working on my website today and can now edit and delete articles and comments from inside the site, which is good news. Now if those spam bots get me again I can get rid of them without having to go into the database. :)

Moving away from computers(thinking of you Steve) I’ve had The Great Big British Quiz on in the background whilst working on my computer and the puzzle is annoying me big time. Any ideas as to the answer?
Quote:
Q. Do the math!

SIXTY FIVE - 2 +
TWO + 20 +
46 = ?Some people have tried adding only the word together, only the number, all of them, I don’t get it! One guy came up with 1098? I mean, wow!

I really can’t be bother to stay up for the answer so goodnight everyone :)

Xubuntu on a Cyrix M-II 150Hrz

Wednesday, September 13th, 2006

Over the past week I’ve been playing with old hardware. I decided that I wanted a Linux machine to play about with and maybe use as a test web server for development. First step was to find some old hardware which wasn’t too hard as we have lots of old ATX cases lying around. I managed to find myself an old motherboard(which as far as I can determine is an 583lmr12, whatever that is) that has a Cyrix M-II 150 (150Hrz? ~0.15Ghz? he he), a power supply unit (AC 230), a floppy drive(just in case), a CD-ROM drive(a 24x Creative, woo) and a Samsung 10.2GB hard drive.

Off I went putting the thing together first to see what I could get out of it. First problem was it didn’t boot into the hard drive but that’s not so bad seeing as I have no clue what’s on their. I see if i can find some information on the motherboard and see if I can upgrade the BIOS, no luck but I managed to find a manual for the motherboard, this was a very long google session indeed, around six hours I think.

After that I decided to play with the jumper settings on the board. Disable modem… check, enable Ethernet… check, enable on board sound… check, reset bios… crap. Whilst setting up the BIOS again I notice that when I come to check for hard drives it displays it in the right location(hd0) but crashes to sound of me hitting the keyboard and the system blipping away. This is a problem, everything else in the BIOS is OK, it just doesn’t properly configure the hard drive. Next I try every jumper setting I can to find the problem with no luck, gah. I then come to the conclusion that it must be broken and put it on the ‘to go out the window’ pile that now consists of the hard drive and an ATX case. I gather up my 80GB Excelstar I have spare and stick that in, but it doesn’t recognise it, grrr? I try all the master jumper settings and it likes it all of a sudden, the reason? I’ve limited it to 32GB, oh well, progress is progress. Next I make myself a Debian installation CD on suggestion of Jonny and stick it in the CD-ROM drive; boot from floppy… none, boot from CD-ROM… none, boot from hd0… HANG! At this point I’m a little peeved and leave it with the intention of giving up and throwing it all back in the loft or out the window.

Next day I have an idea, I’m using a CD-R to try and boot from, it’s an old CD-ROM, D’OH! After a scavenge around the house I get myself a comparatively shiny 32x LG CD-RW drive and stick in the Debian CD in on suggestion of Jonny. It boots. Hooray! I start the four hour installation of Debian, remembering that this thing has the speed of a drunk snail. Once that’s done it works, great apart from having been a windows user for a long time I’m faced with a command line so I decide that I need a GUI for it. I reckon KDE should do nicely, I’ve found the right commands on the internet to get it using aptitude package manager, apt-get install kde kdm, wicked. It downloads and gives me some options, cool this is easy. Oh how wrong I was. In short I try installing KDE 4 times but it just doesn’t like me! I give up again and go to bed.

I talk to Jonny about it the next day and he gives me a hand, fires up openSSH and gets into my machine. He gives up and suggests Xubuntu. I decide it can’t hurt and go get the installation disk made. Another four hours or so and installation of Xubuntu is complete. I login and try download some packages using aptitude again but computer says no. It seems that this time there’s no network, it just tells me ‘Network is unreachable’, very helpful, thanks. So after two days playing with various commands and surfing the internet continuously I try the command ifconfig -a and everything starts to work. What? Never mind, progress and all.

So now I have a working up to date Xubuntu installation, get in! I install LAMP using four commands in the terminal and bam it works. Unfortunately the box it just too slow to use as a test server with an average of 20 seconds to return a page that normally take 0.9. Ho hum. It’s definitely been a learning experience and I’m determined to find a use for the poor little fella.

Weekend Roundup

Monday, September 11th, 2006

This weekend has been great. Claire and her parents took me to see Robbie Williams live in concert at Roundhay Park, Leeds and wow. I’ve never been a big fan, don’t get me wrong the guys got some great tunes to his name and I like quite a few(I’m loving rudebox at the moment) but I have to say that he was absolutely awesome.

We started off the day with a thirty minute drive to Leeds where we found a car park, paid and parked. We then walked a tiring two miles(:O) to Roundhay park with our picnic and blankets in hand, got our bag checked, our ticket torn up and in we were. The walk back after the show was much easier without a really heavy backpack. We then went and found ourselves somewhere to sit on the hill which provided a great view of the whole show. This was at two o’clock, nothing was to happen till six, ho hum. We sat, sun bathed, slept, ate and shopped our way till six when Orson came on to warm up the crowd. They were pretty good to be honest and Claire was kicking herself for not buying their CD so she could learn the word and sing along, he he.

After Orson left the stage and a small wait, on came Basement Jaxx who were fantastic. I’ve always been a big fan of quite a few of Basement Jaxx’ songs and I loved them. Claire was telling me that she’d read they were considering leaving the tour as they felt they weren’t being liked by Robbies fans. Well I think they got a pretty good reception and definitely got the crowd going in Leeds. They played most of their really well known tunes like Where’s Your Head At, Red Alert, Romeo, Bingo Bango, Do Your Thing and Good Luck and they were all great. I’m definitely going to buy their album when it comes out soon, Crazy Itch Radio, sounds good. Time to queue up some of their previous hits I think.

At half past eight lots of fireworks went off, fires blazed, Robbie Williams emerged from under the stage to be stood in the smoke with a microphone and started singing. A lot of people will have seen it on Sky One or if they’re fancy pants Sky OneHD so I won’t go into too much detail. I will mention that Robbie fell over whilst from what I can gather generally larking about during a song. It was funny, Robbie of course, however he made a joke about it and carried on. A true performer.

All together it made for a great day and one that given the chance I would definitely repeat.

Fixing ‘tings

Wednesday, September 6th, 2006

Yesterday I thought it would be a good excercise to gather up all the old peices of computers that we have lying around and build a little linux box but oh no! After I finally managed to get the correct jumper settings for the 10.2gb hard drive (guess work) I then find that the machine won’t boot from cd. Grrr. It’s some old motherboard that I only have a model number for and a Cyrix II 150Mhz proccessor. I’m not even sure it’ll take linux yet, it would be nice to be able to get that far!

I’ve decide to try DSL as it looks like it might be light weight enough for the 64mb of ram this thing has!!! I’m going to try and replace the cd drive to see if that will help it boot from cd and if that doesn’t work then it’s time to start thinking about destruction… I’ll let you all know how it goes.

Hungary for More

Friday, September 1st, 2006

Well, we’re back and I’ve had a fantastic time. Me, Claire, Mum, Steve and big Chris (He’s 6ft 7in(~2m!!)) went over to Papa, Hungary to help in the renovation of Kanaan Haz(Kanaan House) as a womens refuge. The building is fantastic and Brian (project manager) is doing wonders with the place.

All the work done to Kanaan is being done by Brian and volunteers, this is where we come in. My mum was introduced to the project through the church and has been twice already. Teams travel out, from what I can gather quite regularly but more teams are always welcome as there is still lots to do. So much has already been achieved and the first two living quarters have already been completed. Istvan the janitor, porter etc and his nine year old daughter Gina’s flat and the first family flat. We had the honor of being the first guests of Kanaan Haz and a pleasant place it is too, very peaceful.

Having two builders with us as well as Brian (also a builder, structural engineer and carpenter) was a great advantage is all I can say! On the Monday we got there we had a look around Kanaan and went to the co-op for some supplies after which we all slept for a while. On the second day we put a floor down in one of the first floor rooms. This involved Brian mixing the cement, Mum and Claire transferring it into buckets and using the pulley to send it skywards to Chris.
Image: http://www.dtgreenwood.com/images/Hungary/Hungary-2006-01.jpg
Image: http://www.dtgreenwood.com/images/Hungary/Hungary-2006-02.jpg
Image: http://www.dtgreenwood.com/images/Hungary/Hungary-2006-03.jpg
From there I carried it into the room, dumped it on the floor and Steve leveled it out.
Image: http://www.dtgreenwood.com/images/Hungary/Hungary-2006-04.jpg
Go team! For the remainder of the days we put up the ceilings in the top three rooms by making wooden hangers and screwing plaster board to them.
Image: http://www.dtgreenwood.com/images/Hungary/Hungary-2006-06.jpg
I also got to paint a bunk bed, all I can say is that gloss doesn’t like me and I’m defiantly not it’s biggest fan. That said I didn’t mind doing it at all, it needed doing and that’s good enough for me. However, my first attempt was shocking and had to be sanded and repainted, Doh!

It wasn’t all work though. On Saturday Zolly(Zoltan) the youth pastor from the church over the road from Kanaan who is heavily involved with the efforts of Kanaan House, took us to Budapest for a long day of touristic sight seeing. I’ve heard that it’s one of those places to visit in your life time and I can really see why, it’s a beautiful place.

First we went to Hero’s Square which has a brilliant set of statues of statues of the leaders of the seven tribes that founded Hungary in the 9th century and other important historical figures of Hungary.
Image: http://www.dtgreenwood.com/images/Hungary/Hungary-2006-07.jpg

We then went to look at a miniature castle which was a 10th the size of the real one, all I can say is how, I’d quite happily live in the miniature version, thank you very much!
Image: http://www.dtgreenwood.com/images/Hungary/Hungary-2006-08.jpg
Then Zolly took us to St. Stephen’s Basilica which is a stunning building, the inside is just so impressive, however they do have the “holy right hand” of St. Steven himself in a glass box, a bit freaky if you ask me. We went up the tower as well but cheated and took the lifts, hey it’s a long way!

After seeing St. Steven’s Basilica we had some lunch at a restaurant just round the corner, having voted very loudly for a restaurant and not McDonalds. After an hour long wait we got our food, Me and Steve had Rib steak in sauce with mushrooms and potato wedges, Claire and mum had Chicken in fruit sauce with rice and Chris had weiner schnitzel and fries.
Image: http://www.dtgreenwood.com/images/Hungary/Hungary-2006-09.jpg
Everyone enjoyed their food except Claire who didn’t like the combination and was expecting something different. I tried it and agreed, it was all wrong, winter berries with chicken… in summer? Who thought of that one?

After lunch we went and had a look at the Hungarian parliament building which is now free to enter for any EU citizen, we didn’t go in but that just leaves something to do next time I go.
Image: http://www.dtgreenwood.com/images/Hungary/Hungary-2006-10.jpg

Then we went on a boat up the Danube upto Margaret island. We saw the Parliment Building again and you can see where it’s been cleaned and where is still being cleaned.
Image: http://www.dtgreenwood.com/images/Hungary/Hungary-2006-11.jpg
We didn’t see much of it from the footpath that runs along it, it looks like non stop pools and liesure facilities. After we caught back up to Zolly in the minibus he took us to the maze under Buda Castle. The maze was created so that the king, knowing the route, could escape any attackers. We got to go round with oil lanterns and the lights turned off which was just great, me and Chris had a great time running off into the darkness and trying to scare the others.
Image: http://www.dtgreenwood.com/images/Hungary/Hungary-2006-12.jpg
After the maze we went to The Fishermans Bastion which gives some great views of Budapest over the Danube. By chance there was a choir concert at Matthias Chruch that we went in and watched, I’ll admit that by this point I was pretty tired and hearing some amazing singing sent me into a bit of a snooze. I find that there’s something very peaceful about churches which didn’t help keep me awake either. After the concert we wandered around and had another look at the views before setting off for some food and then home. All in all an amzing day, definitely worth it.

On Sunday we went to the church across the road which was an experience as the service was in Hungarian, Emisha however did a wonderful job of translating quite alot of it for us and made it a thousand times easier for us foreigners. After church we went to Brian and Julia’s house for some Sunday lunch. Brian has done alot of work to his house and it looks great. One of the things that we, and in particular Steve, found very exciting about Hungary was the buildings, they do things much differently but that’s to be expected. So after being given the official guided tour we sat down for some lunch. Julia made an absolutely fantastic chicken with apricot that was great (chicken and fruit done the right way!) with a selection of vegetables. And for dessert a cherry crumble with ice cream and cream, my idea of food heaven, fantastic!

Monday and Tuesday were spent finishing off the ceiling in the upstairs room and buying last minute food, presents and in Chris’s case cigarettes to take back home. The whole experience was extremely eye opening and was fantastic. Me and Chris are thinking of planning to go out for a couple of months next year, here’s hoping, I’d love to do it.

Most of all I’d like to thank Brian, Julia, Natasha, Istvan, Gina, Zolly and Timmy for their hospitality, patience and continuing efforts in the development of Kanaan Haz, May the lord bless you all.

If you’ve managed to make it to the end then, well done, this was a mighty long post, nearly three hours in the making. Goodnight.