Diary of a Network Geek

iPod DJ Mixer

Written by Ryumaou Published:

Ever want to be a DJ?

Back in the day, when dinosaurs roamed the Earth and I was of an age to attend house parties, DJs spun records.  But, those days are long, long gone and everyone uses MP3 players now.  So, what's an aspiring DJ to do?  Hit UrbanOutfitters and grab a $120 iPod DJ Mixer.  I recommend getting a book to go with that called The Pocket DJ.  It's a little dated, but a good place for newbies like me to start.  The two are the key to your digital DJ success!

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Frank Lloyd Wright LEGOs

Written by Ryumaou Published:

Yeah, you read that right.

Frank Lloyd Wright LEGO sets.
Okay, they're kind of limited, but I have to admit, the idea of owning a LEGO Falling Water sort of appeals to the geeky, little kid in me.
C'mon, it's Friday!  Loosen up a little, okay?

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Pocket Universes

Written by Ryumaou Published:

Oddly enough, I'm not talking about physics here.

Thanks to my obsessive attention to Moleskine marketing, I found a link to the most interesting little looping vignettes.  And, yes, to those of you who are also rabid Moleskine fans, this won't be anything new, but, you have to admit, it is still pretty cool.

Actually, with having recently lost my main Moleskine, which I carried everywhere with me, I've been thinking a lot about notebooks and where and how I use them.  So, while writing this post, and thinking about the title, it did occur to me that I might set up a Volant, which is the pretty, soft-cover line of Moleskines, as a sort of fictional encyclopedia with which to imagine a whole science-fiction or fantasy world.  I may do it, and occasionally share pages.  We'll see.
Anyway, sorry for the tangent.  Now, go look at those loops!

Oh, and happy Friday!

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Fancy Jewelboxes

Written by Ryumaou Published:

Tired of boring CD cases for your self-produced work?

Try Jewelboxes.
They're easy to assemble and fully customizable.  Not quite on par with the big-budget commercial printing runs that someone like Microsoft or Sony or someone like that would do, but a whole lot better than a Post-It and a Sharpie!
Seriously, they're pretty cool, so check them out.

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Finding Jobs with SEO

Written by Ryumaou Published:

Search engine marketing for job search?

Sure, why not?
I mean, that is why I started this blog ten years ago.  I guess I'm a little ahead of the curve, though, because Channel Insider just recently ran a story listing 17 tips for using SEO and social media to get the IT job you really want.  Mostly, they're good tips, too, though for anyone who's internet savvy at all, they're also mostly common sense.  In fact, I think most real, good search engine optimization is just plain common sense.  Granted, I may be biased because of what I do and how I spend my free time, but, still, it's not rocket science, you know?

I'll grant you, this blog has wandered away from my original purpose a bit, but I still talk about technology and some of the things I do at work.  Initially, I started do this so I could drop buzzwords on my page, like "networking" and Certified Novell Engineer", with normal language to lure in the search engines.  It was easy, really, all I had to do was bore people with detailed descriptions of the IT stuff I did all week long.  Then, because that gets boring fast, I started to occasionally pepper those entries with more colorful personal anecdotes.  Not too colorful, though!

One of the best tips is, to me, one of the most obvious, too.
Be careful what you post.  People seem to quickly forget that the search engines find everything.  Every drunken picture you post or every off-color joke or skeevy thing you share on Facebook or Twitter or anywhere else eventually will get traced back to you.  Count on it.  So, be careful to share only the important information and just the details that relate to the image you want to project to get that job.  Treat the whole exercise as an extended digital job interview and put your best foot forward.

Oh, also?  Be honest.  Don't over-share, but don't lie either.  The other thing you can count on is that every lie you tell on-line will eventually be found out.

Other than that, though, the real secret is to just provide good content that people want to read.  That, by its very nature, will include all the SEO keywords that you'll need and give you all the right kinds of links, and, most importantly of all, the right kinds of readers.
Trust me.  I'm telling you this as a guy who once got a call from another city from someone looking for a Novell consultant and was hoping I could help.  Why?  Because I was the number one hit for CNE on Google and they could get to me, but they couldn't find similar help from Novell themselves.  So, yeah, I do know what I'm talking about and it really does work.  Just do the foot-work, and be patient while the rest happens.  It will.
Trust me.

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What, no superpowers?

Written by Ryumaou Published:

So, I almost didn't even mention this, but, I got scanned again today.

I'm on a six-month rotation now for my cancer re-staging scans.  For those of you who might be relatively new to this blog, that's a CT scan to check and see if my diffuse, large "B"-cell lymphoma has become active again.  To see if I'm still in remission or if I'll need treatment again.  And, I can tell you for certain, as much as I piss and moan about having to go get this very comprehensive, very invasive, very uncomfortable scan, it still beats six months worth of chemotherapy.  Trust me on this.
Now, I won't say that I'm getting used to doing this, but, well, I sort of am.  If getting a barium enema, however, becomes something that I start to think of as "normal", then it'll be time to put the old dog down because something truly terrible will have happened to my life.  I don't want ingesting radioactive materials, or having them injected, by any method, to ever become something I get real casual about, because it is a pretty serious thing, and being done for a very serious reason.

Of course, that's not to say that the entire day was torturous.  For one thing, I did get to spend the day with one of my very most favorite people.  In.  The.  Entire.  World!
Seriously!  I adore her and hardly get to see her or talk to her even.  She's working and in school and, before you ask the question, dating someone who is most certainly not me at all.  And, of course, I tend to be going a zillion miles a minute, so we tend to have some trouble connecting.  I miss her, in short, and today was a fantastic opportunity to catch up with each other a little bit.  Though, I have to admit, I'm afraid I may have been a little distracted by the aforementioned radioactive material and, so, I don't think I was as fully present with her as I might have liked.
But, outside of that, it was as good a day as it could possibly be.

Though, I am starting to wonder just how truthful all those comic books I read as a kid were.  After all, with all the exposure to radiation that I've had, I really feel like I should have developed some kind of super-mutant-power by now.  I mean, I don't turn green when I get mad or have any early warning of impending peril or anything!  I figured that I'd at least be able to function as my own night-light by now!
*sigh*
Well, maybe in six months when I go back again something will finally happen.
I guess I'll just have to check with my new oncologist in three weeks when I go see him for the results of this test.  Maybe he can shed some light on just how many more times I have to do this before I can start picking out my costume for my super-identity.
Until then, though, I'll just try not to set off any metal detectors at the airport....

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Windows 7 Virtual Machine

Written by Ryumaou Published:

I probably should have posted this last week, when it was fresh, but...

So, I have this issue at work.  We run an older version of Autodesk Inventor.  Actually, Inventor 10, which we really only use for AutoCAD 2006.  But, this presents a problem.  You see, this version of Inventor won't install on Windows 7.  Might work on Vista, but who in their right mind would run Vista?  Right, so, I've got a problem.  If I want to upgrade someone's Windows version, or even their whole machine, I can't.  So, what to do?

Well, as it turns out, if you get the super, ultimate, Professional version of Windows 7, it comes with a Windows XP "compatibility mode", which is really just a virtual machine.  If you crank up that virtual machine, it will install that old version of the program my engineers and draftsman absolutely must use.  What's cool, though, is that once you install it, it makes short-cuts on the Start menu that let you launch the old program encapsulated in that virtual machine.  How cool is that?!  So, problem solved, right?

Well, almost.  Turns out the one guy I installed it for, as a test, is having some issues with adding text to a drawing.  I haven't quite figured that bit out yet, but, still, I'm working on it.  And, all things considered, it's a small glitch in an otherwise very clean solution.

Uh, yeah, so you may now return to your regular Memorial Day Weekend time-wasting on the Internet.
That is all.

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Futuristic Concept Computers

Written by Ryumaou Published:

Oh, if only these were real!

Of course, while these potential/concept computers showcased on WebUrbanist are very cool, I'm sure they'll be a bitch to work on.

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I Don't Live Here Anymore

Written by Ryumaou Published:

Wow, after ten years, it really seems like I've run out of words here.

I lost my idea notebook the other day and, while I'd like to use that as an excuse for being out of words, that's not really it.  Actually, I've probably written more in the two or three days since losing it than in the more than eighteen months of recording stray thoughts in it.  Thoughts, incidentally that never made it out of that notebook and into any other form.  Sort of was defeating the purpose of keeping a notebook, wasn't it?

So, now, the question is, what to do next?
I don't seem to be doing too well writing here, do I?  And I'm certainly not writing anywhere else, so, what to do?  I suppose, out of habit, I'll keep trying to write here, though God only knows about what.  After ten years, it's almost impossible to stop writing here altogether.  Maybe if I can get back in the habit of it, the words won't seem so hollow and shallow and wrong.  Maybe something will eventually ring true.

Or not.
Sweet Jesus, I thought I'd outgrown all this angst as a teen-ager.
Well, maybe next year.

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Keep Theives From Preying On Your Laptop

Written by Ryumaou Published:

Pardon the pun, but I hope it got your attention.

If you're like most people who read this blog, you probably have at least one laptop.  Now, it may run Windows or Mac or even Linux, but, you likely have one and you wonder what might happen if it gets stolen.  Wonder no more.

Now, there's free, Open Source software called Prey, hence the pun, that will track your stolen laptop.

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