Posts tagged with ubuntu

Installed Ubuntu 9.10 into a VM

November 4th, 2009

I installed Ubuntu 9.10 into Virtualbox last night just to kick the tires so to speak.

The installation went very easily as to be expected from Ubuntu. There’s not many options to choose but even so it’s a very polished and smooth procedure.

My first impression of the desktop is that, like the installer, it’s very polished in appearance. I really like the new notification icons, they are very clear and more professional than before. My main comments are that it seems very responsive, there’s no delay when clicking on menus and applications open almost immediately.

I would say that Firefox opened from a cold start in about 2 seconds and even Open Office opened much quicker than I expect.

I tried to use bootchart to get a feel for how long the boot process took, but unfortunately even after multiple reboot it continued to report boot time of over 1 minute which I know must be wrong. My gut feeling is that the boot was around 25 to 30 seconds.

Having used Fedora for a few years now I don’t think I’m lightly to switch and I miss many things out of the box (there’s no GUI to control the firewall or services for example) that I’m used to in Fedora. Plus I like the ability to choose the install packages on the Fedora DVD instead of adding them later from the repositories.

Having said that, I think Ubuntu looks and performs great and the other distros can certainty learn a lot from Ubuntu 9.10.

Ubuntu 9.10 Boot Time

September 30th, 2009

After reading this article on optimizations made to Ubunbtu 9.10 in relation to the boot time I thought I would check this out in a virtual machine.

I understand that much of the work done will help when booting from an SSD drive and using a virtual machine adds an extra layer between the OS and the bare metal but I though it would be interesting to compare the boot time to Fedora 11, that I also have installed in a VM.

Setting Ubuntu 9.10 Alpha 6 and Fedora 11 up in identical virtual machines, both set to auto login with bootchart installed I was very surprised by the results.

Ubuntu booted in between 1 minute and 1 minute 6 seconds while Fedora 11 booted in between 32 and 34 seconds. This is by no means a controlled test and Ubuntu is still in alpha status but I was pretty shocked by the results. Hopefully by it’s release it will be booting in the sub 30 seconds range.

Synology Assistant Support for Linux

September 2nd, 2009

As much as I love Synology products one glaring omission has been the lack of Linux support to set up the Disk Station. Bearing in mind that the products themselves run Linux it seems very strange that you have to use a Mac or Windows PC to get them up and running.

Reading this announcement I’m pleased to see that they have a beta release that now supports Linux. Well it actually states that it supports Ubuntu but I really hope they work on releasing packages for other distributions or at least the source so we can compile it for ourselves.

In the worst case I can still install it using Ubuntu in a virtual machine, still miles better than having to have Windows around just for this.

3G Internet on Danish Trains

September 1st, 2009

The main train company in Denmark is called DSB and they have recently introduced wireless internet on many of their long distance trains.

In theory this is a great idea but in practice I can’t help but think they’re missed an opportunity. Remember when no so long ago you paid for your internet by the minute and so you connected, did what you had to do, and disconnected ASAP, well it’s the same for DSB.

If you don’t buy an access card then it costs 1 DKK per minute, even with a card it costs 299 DKK per month where I’m tied to using their WIFI hotspots.

Quite why I would do this when I can sign up for mobile broadband for between 200 and 300 DKK a month and have internet anywhere I go in Denmark (and abroad), even with unlimited use using the 3 network, is beyond my understanding.

Certainly last time I was on the train about a month ago the vast majority of people seemed to have their own USB dongles to access the internet. I don’t mind paying something (even though I really think it should be free) but this price is so uncompetitive as to be a joke. But then DSB was never known for good value or forward thinking.

On a related note the trains have their own computer that acts as a proxy server and gateway to the 3G network, users connect to this using an 802.11g connection. I didn’t pay for the internet but accessing the gateway I could see that it was running Ubuntu, the http headers are shown here.

Date: Thu, 13 Aug 2009 12:41:47 GMT
Server: Apache/2.2.8 (Ubuntu)
Accept-Ranges: bytes
Keep-Alive: timeout=15, max=100
Connection: Keep-Alive
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
Content-Type: text/html

Their on train solution I’ve translated from this DSB page and included below.

The chosen solution
DSB has chosen to offer wireless internet in the train, in cooperation with TDC. The solution is based on a combination of WiFi and 3G technology.

The train itself is thus a wireless WiFi solution. WiFi technology is the same as TDC for its Hotspot solutions, which are everywhere at home, at work, in hotels and elsewhere. The WiFi solution is based on a standard called IEEE 802.11g and has currently a capacity of 54 megabits per second.

Communication between the trains antenna and TDC terrestrial base stations / masts are using the latest 3G technology, called HSDPA (High Speed Downlink Package Access). Capacity as of early 2009 is up to 5.7 Mbits / sec. and will be expanded as the 3G technology is developed, and the need for higher capacity.

User’s PC communicate “WiFi” language to the trains Access Point. While the trains antenna communicates the “HSDPA” language with base stations / masts along the track and have a cable connection to the Internet.

The Train Access Point and the antenna are connected via cables to an Internet Controller. The Internet Controller is train solutions heart, and as such has 4 cardiac chambers. These are:

* An ethernet switch with firewall
* A mini-computer (which controls the particular capacity allocation among the users logged in)
* An HSDPA modem, and
* A power supply.

My Computer is the New Bottleneck

July 25th, 2008

I decided to download and install Ubuntu 8.04 into a Virtualbox virtual machine last night and something funny occurred to me for the first time.

In the past with slow internet connections it would take many hours to download a 694 MB iso file (even at 2Mbps it would take 46 minutes) but with my 25Mbps connection it took about 4 1/2 minutes! Then I stared the installation, my laptop hard drive chugged away at 4200 rpm while the processor struggled to uncompress the iso. In all it took about 30 minutes to install, so actually downloading the iso file was about 7 times faster than the installation procedure! How times have changed.

Systems always have a bottleneck and any system can only process data at the rate of the weakest (slowest) link. Upgrading computers and networks always involves replacing one slow link with another. In my own network I’m in a constant process of up replacing each new bottleneck as it appears.

Right now I have 2 devices with gigabit network cards but both my laptop and router are limited to 100Mbps so everything runs at 100mbps. The next step is to replace the router with a gigabit wireless N version (maybe the D-Link DIR-655) and then replace the laptop.