Posts Tagged ‘life’

Amazing Australian broadcasters

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Totally unrelated to anything, but it just came to my mind: Australian radio service is great. They’ve got great radio shows all through the night on a weekday presented by hosts with very strange Australian accents. I can get the whole Australian radio experience on a any European evening. In my bathroom. Or anywhere else. Australian radio: Amazing! The internet: Amazing! Australian radio and the internet combined: You guess what!

PS: I know that it’s early morning in Sydney right now. Never mind.

Printer-less printing

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Sometime in February I got rid of my ink-jet printer. Ever since I’ve spent a total of 3,15 EUR on printing the occasional file, form or letter at a nearby copy-shop. Way cheaper than the ink cartridges I had to buy regularly (while I didn’t print that much, the printer used a lot of ink during self-cleaning operations). And a lot friendlier to the environment. Yay!

New Mozilla.org

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Yesterday the new Mozilla.org site went live. I contributed to the redesign project by helping with the feed parser, that aggregates the Latest news from Mozilla and Community Ticker sections on the front page.

Greetings from Sylt

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

Sylt Ellenbogen (Denmark in the back)

A Thunderstorm…

Friday, August 21st, 2009

… at 7 a.m. in the morning. Something different for a change. Good morning everyone!

Where have all the records gone?

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

I’m currently working on a web application and I set up a development version of this application on my local box. For my convenience I set up a number of unit tests to ensure that I do not accidentally break stuff when implementing new features. A number of unit tests that involved DNS failed repeatedly with a time-out. For various different reasons I’m using a router provided by my telco. During my investigation of the matter, I found out that the internal DNS server of the router did only answer requests for A records. Requests for any other record types timed out. I wonder why they do this. The only reason I can think of is that it’s part of my ISPs fight against malware installed on their customers Windows boxes, so this is not exactly evil. On the other hand, it is not very nice of them, because I’m sure that it cost me a few hours to debug problems that resulted out of this. I think that I’ll call them and at least tell them that there are customers out there who really need the real, full, unfiltered DNS service to get their work done.

Tomatoes, mozzarella and radish

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

Once again a life sign to prove that neither this blog nor its author are dead as of yet ;). When I arrived at my flat yesterday evening, my fridge was of course totally empty. So the first thing I did today was to head out for shopping. Only to be greeted by a closed store. The local press calls this Netto-Umstellung. The store will open up again in August. With a new product line and a new branding. So I walked all the way up to the Aldi store, which is located right at the border to West Berlin ;). I walked out again with lots of tomatoes, mozzarella and radish. As usual, I made some mistakes: Back at home I had two packs of coffee left. But no filters for the coffee machine. Which is bad, because without coffee filters, no coffee. So I wrote Kaffeefilter on my list. But what did I buy? I’m sure you guessed it already. Another pack of coffee. Now I’ve got three packs of coffee and no filters for the machine. Sounds like (Greek|Turkish) coffee is the way to go.
I’ve got lots and lots and lots of things to do for this week. I hope that I can get some things done, finally. At the end of the week I’ll head to Hamburg for a short visit. I’ll be there from Friday night till Wednesday morning, so drop me a line, if you want to meet for a cup of tea. I’ll start tackling my overfull inbox from bottom to top, so chances are I’ll see your mail in time.

Returned from oblivion (and a lot of politics)

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Disclaimer: Skip this post, if you’re not interested in overly long and irrelevant personal and political posts. You’ve been warned.

Back from another (mostly ambulant, but exhausting) CC15 cycle. Back to work. Back to real life ;). As usual, I’ll need a few days to clear up the backlog so bear with me please. First thing I did today was attending a public expert hearing of a parliament commission. The gatekeeper greeted me with friendly words: Watt ham’ Sie denn jefrühstückt? Die Tür jeht uff, wenn ick dit saje un sons ja nich! (In English: What did you have for breakfast? The door will only open, when I say so!). I wont get into the details of this incident. Anyway, the correct answer would have been: Nothing. Just a few cups of coffee. Full CC15 impact, actually. While I might still have been a bit dizzy and random, it was the first day for me in a while where I could do something useful again. However, her colleagues treated me better and eventually I became today’s guest #38 of the Federal Parliament of Germany. I attended a few public hearings and commission meetings of our local Hamburg parliament. But this was nothing like it. At federal level, you have to go through a security check and trade your electronic passport for a parliament visitor pass. At our local city state parliament, you can walk in and out as you wish. And I remember times, when a commission meeting room was quite crowded, fellow interested citizens everywhere in the room – and even on the corridor in front of the meeting room. Although the outcome of a meeting might not always satisfy you and some processes could surely be improved upon, this feels very democratic. Not so at the federal level. Although a lot more people should be interested in the topics of those meetings (Hey, it’s federal policy after all, isn’t it?), there generally seem to be more delegates than interested fellow citizens at those meetings. While we talk of policy: After the meeting, I needed to buy a few things (mostly fair traded coffee and milk). Only to discover that the milk price decreased by 9 cent since my last visit to a supermarket a few weeks ago. And many products I used to buy were missing, due to the Netto-Umstellung (English: merger with another supermarket chain). E.g. there was no yoghurt and no corn flakes or muesli at all. Only butter milk. Lot’s of butter milk. Actually too much of it for my taste. I really liked the headline of Focus: Trotz Netto kaum Plus. Didn’t like the article that much, though ;). Also, for certain reasons I’d rather not buy from Netto. And now Plus will be Netto. I guess I’ll need to find another supermarket soon. Life is so unfair… In many different ways. Doh!

Better than coffee?

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

Just got an email, that really alarmed me. After that email, I don’t need to brew myself a coffee anymore. At least not now. The day really started nice and sunny. And now something like that. Argh!

Shoot All The Lights In The Cafe

Sunday, May 3rd, 2009

The first three sections in the README.Debian file of the software I just installed read This is not for the kids!, Size matters and User Manual — slightly obsolete. Should I be worried? Possibly. Am I worried? No. After two days at CC15 you’re keen to experiment.

The future lay sparkling ahead, and we thought we would know each other forever.

Sensitive electronic technology

Friday, April 24th, 2009

I just got my first biometric passport. It was a bit of a problem to collect the registered mail from the post office without a valid passport. If you need a passport, you have to open the letter, because my passport is in there. finally convinced the postie and she handed it to me anyway.

This passport contains sensitive electronic technology and should be handled with the same care as other electronic devices. To ensure that it functions properly, please do not bend, perforate or subject to extreme temperatures or excessive moisture.

This passport contains sensitive electronic technology and should be handled with the same care as other electronic devices. To ensure that it functions properly, please do not bend, perforate or subject to extreme temperatures or excessive moisture.

Now let’s hope that I never forget to handle my new sensitive passport with great care. It wouldn’t surprise me if I misplaced it on the heater in the bathroom one day… Also, I should not dump it down into a river like I once did with one of my other electronic devices. Or spill cold orange juice and hot coffee all over it like I once did with one of Muelli’s sensitive electronic devices. Just to be sure, I ordered a protective cover for it.

Remove pages from PDF files on Linux

Sunday, December 24th, 2006

Today I needed to remove some pages from a bunch of PDF files. In search of a tool, I came across the article Manipulating PDFs with the PDF Toolkit. To cut out pages 10-25 from a PDF type:

  1. pdftk old.pdf cat 1-9 26-end output new.pdf

If you don’t have it already, you need to install the Ubuntu/Debian package pdftk first.

In related news: It’s Christmas. So merry Christmas to everyone. I will be quite busy between the years (a translation of zwischen den Jahren, an expression used in Germany to describe the time between Christmas and the first day of the new year). I will participate in a bunch of Christmas-related events today and tomorrow and will be at the 23rd Chaos Comminication Congress in Berlin from December 26. See you there!