Linux

Some background information for those who don’t know. Linux is an alternative operating system to Windows. It runs all your hardware to do the things you want it to do. Getting it to run has always been a pain in the ass for me.

My initial stab at it was when I was got my first laptop. It was a 166MHz Pentium core (with MMX, like that makes any difference, heh) processor and a miniscule 1.44GB hard disk (in contrast to nearly 280GB of HD space available to me now). I tried to install RedHat Linux (as it was known back then) on my laptop (version 7.0 I think) and halfway through the install process I just gave up. I didn’t know anything about hardware architecture back then, so asking me what my monitor refresh rate was or whether it belonged to the x86 architecture tree of processors I had no idea really!

Over the years, I’ve tried Linux a couple of times. They mainly failed because something would fail to initialise, rendering my computer quite unusable. I only had Redhat Linux (version 9.0) installed for one semester when I needed to do Unix based scripting and server applications. Heh, it was pretty useless to me after that cause Linux doesn’t even use the same filing system as windows (and I couldn’t figure out how to mount a FAT32 partition back then, I still don’t) and all my multimedia files were inaccessible.

Fast forward to now, I’m trying a new branch of Linux again. This time I’m playing with Gentoo Linux, which is fairly efficient as you have to install everything from scratch. They have a pretty comprehensible manual online and since I bought my KVM switch a few days ago, it’s easier to install Linux through ONE set of keyboard and mouse. Plus the fact that I have more than one PC these days, I can boldly do whatever I wish with my other computer. Last time, I had to think for 10 seconds before pressing the Enter button to commit a process to work, which could irrevocably destroy all the data on my comp.

One thing I must point out about Linux. It’s quite unforgiving at times. If you screw up one variable, you can make your whole system unbootable. If you don’t know how to fix it, the easiest way is to go through the tedious task of going through the whole installation process again in the hopes that whatever scripts are performed overwrite the error you made.

Writing this post now while my Linux installation continues unpacking its Tarballs (or zip files for Windows users). Will see if I can get a nice looking KDE interface (basically one of the GUI modules for Linux) and actually be able to let my mouse do something useful.

Back to command prompts and hair pulling!

* Crap, looks like I have to recompile the lousy kernel tonight. Don’t know what this thing has against Geforce cards. :?

** Update – Apparently the script pointing to a non existent graphic file garbled my entire screen. Have X Windows running and KDE installed. Heh, don’t know if it will boot up with those settings the next time round though.

15 Minutes

The rain has finally let up.

I haven’t seen the blue sky for a few days now. Everyday, the sky feels like it’s always going to come crashing down and everything was a dull grayish colour. Today, it feels like a beautiful winter’s day. The sky is coloured with its rich, blue tones and walking down the streets, you could breathe in the fresh, frosty (it isn’t that cold, more like chilly, but just to give you a sense of imagination, heh…) morning air yet when you come into contact with the sunlight, it feels warm and comforting.

* * *

Was waiting for a friend yesterday after work for dinner. Haven’t seen him in a while. Was waiting at Nike Melbourne, which is the regular spot where people in Melbourne wait to meetup with friends. It’s been a while since I’ve stood there waiting. These days, there are less people around to meetup with for a social chat and meal. The friends I do meet up with I usually prearrange and meetup with them elsewhere, so there was a sense of nostalgia tonight.

Standing by the entrance, I watched the whole world go by me. I could recongise the working class from the students. The students were dressed in a motley of colours and various kinds of garments, it was like a mini fashion display. They idled around in big bunches, chattering and laughing at all the little things before deciding where to move on to. The working class had more sombre colours on, and seemed more hurried in their movements to get to places. They often travelled alone and had the look where they expected to be someplace else at that moment.

The 15 minutes I waited for my friend to turn up, I saw my last 6 years go past me. Melbourne is a truly small place, and you are bound to bump into someone you know sooner or later. That short time frame I saw at least 5 or 6 people I knew and some of them even walked right pass my nose and did not notice me. Heh, I blend into the background very well, and I’m not the sort of person you’d expect to see on the streets that much anyway.

* * *

Dinner with friend was at a Yong Tau Fu place I’ve never been to my entire 6 years in Melbourne. Heh, the food was okay, only because I have a prior benchmark set for these kinds of things. While I was still studying back home, my grandma would make the fishcake and dinner was a weekly thing at my uncle’s place. Hers was the quality stuff, with more fish than flour (or whatever powder they use to make the stuff) and it was a truly satisfying experience.

Heh, mind’s been so blank these days it’s surprising so many memories I’ve forgotten have resurfaced.

One Can Only Hope

Friends my junior are fretting over exams now. Each one’s wondering if they will pass their papers for each respective subject. It’s the same issues, too much scope with too little time to cover it. Then there’s the exam day itself when you come out either knowing you’ve made it ashore or you’ve sunk to the bottom of the ocean. Heh, I’ve never really had an issue with passing exams, although no matter how hard I tried I could never score fantastic marks for them.

Looking back now, if I had known back then what I knew now (well, isn’t that always the case), I might have done things a little differently. These days I feel that there is a positive side towards an aggresive stance in seeking things out. My personal experiences over the last few months have taught me to take more proactive measures in doing stuff. Everything’s the same, it’s daunting when you first try it and gets frustrating because you’re never sure if you’re doing it the right way. After a while, everything seems to flow more with your own actions and you start to get the hang of things. On the other hand, if you were to change things about yourself in the past, you’d not be the person that you are today.

I’ve always wanted to define my own style but sometimes feel like I’m falling flat when I don’t know what the outcome is or when the outcome is totally something different from my expectations. Sometimes, it’s easier to just follow the trodden path that has been taken by so many. You feel more secure knowing that these routes will somehow lead you to some kind of personal satisfaction. That kind of thinking has prevailed throughout my entire life, so while I don’t make as many mistakes in life, I don’t really gain much experience outside what I’m comfortable with, hence there is a lack of confidence in things I’ve never done before.

I’ve seen people who take everything head on, regardless of whether they can do it or not. There’s never the negative attitude of saying ,”It’s too hard, I can’t do it” to begin with. That’s probably the one thing that a lot of people never do about themselves, assessing what their own strenghts and weaknesses are and modifying their own behaviour to adapt to it. It is a difficult process, changing habits and behaviours that you’ve grown used to. Somehow, forging new synaptic pathways in your brains for new experiences causes quite some discomfort in a lot of people. Reasoning and logic can’t oust habit and stubborness out the door. It is the classic case of fearing the unknown, as a lot of people would rather avoid the detrimental effects of something than weighing in the possible good that can come out of it.

* * *

I’ve been feeling depressed, really because I have no idea what I’m doing in life now. There is this pressure to get things done, for results. Somehow, life has revolved around moving onto the next stage in life. Since I was young, I’ve been motivated to do well in my studies. I’ve done this without questioning throughout my entire youth, up until high school. When you are 15 or 16, you get to the age of being impressionable. I was wanting more in life than just good grades that did not seem to bring anything tangible to life (well, again as I said, looking back now, knowing what I know now, I’d take a different attitude to that). I think there was probably a need for a mentor figure, but without one, the only thing you have as a benchmark as to whether you’re doing things ‘normally’ would be your peers and friends. While I’ve had good training towards self motivation in studying, it was only to get the results that would allow you to keep up with the rest. It’s been hammered into our minds that you need good results to get a good job as a professional.

Being a teenager, you tend to be stubborn and doing things the opposite way just to prove a point. I never rebelled much, I don’t know why, nor do I remember. I just did what I was told to do. Heh, now that I’ve graduated, there’s no one to tell me what to do anymore. In university, it was to concentrate on your studies, full stop. Had I been any wiser, I’d have spent more effort improving my chances of employment back then. Then there’s always the case of “I’ll worry about it when I have to.” That’s true, but you should at least give some consideration into improving your chances later on while you still have the opportunities at the given time frame. Then again, I wasn’t bright enough to give myself that kind of advice to begin with.

Back to the present. Everyone I know my age (as a benchmark) is happily (or at least grumblingly so) employed and at least draw a decent income. If not, they’re still studying some uber long course (like medicine or architecture) which would at least guarantee you something when you come out. I’ve graduated for nearly a year now, and if I don’t find a job soon, my degree would mean squat in Melbourne as prospective employers will question what you’ve been doing for the past 12 months. The journey now is like travelling uphill, and you have no idea what’s on the other side of the mountain, whether it’s a town where you can finally have shelter and food in, or more empty plains for you to traverse. Everyone is telling me that my opportunities will come, and that I should keep my spirits up. To me, it feels like a futile attempt waiting for something that might never happen, I’m really grasping at ether at the moment. Some have said for me to go home, where plenty of opportunities await. Either option sorts of determines the rest of your life, and with the lengthy post above, is something that yields an unknown to me. There are pros and cons to either solution, but the cons are worrisome. Perhaps I am afraid of what is to come, not knowing if I can handle it.