Compiz Fusion on Ubuntu Hardy Heron

May 31st, 2008 | Category: Linux, Open Source

Due to a harddrive failure, I was forced to reinstall Linux on my aging laptop.  Previously, I had been running Gentoo which was built completely from source (if you want to learn about linux, building your own Gentoo installation from source is a great way).  Gentoo ran pretty fast on my old laptop since the only packages installed were the ones I had taken the time to build using Portage.  However, upgrades were always a pain since every package had to be built from source.  Yea yea yea, I know you can install pre-compiled packages from Portage, but what’s the fun in that, right?  Anyways, I’ve been running Debian on a home server and it’s pretty stable with no frills.  Ubuntu, being a quasi-derivative of Debian seemed like an attractive choice for a laptop.  Wow, is it ever.

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Smoothwall Express 3.0 Open Source Firewall

May 22nd, 2008 | Category: Open Source

As my crappy 802.11b wireless router gasped its last breath, I started looking for a suitable replacement. My home network includes a web/email server, a dedicated MythBox, my standard desktop tower, and a laptop or two. Naturally, I wanted to upgrade from a just a simple router to a more full-featured firewall without spending a whole lot of money. An old AMD Athlon 900MHz computer with 512MB or ram would become an excellent base for a Smoothwall Express 3.0 installation.

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Review of Bitwise System’s QuickUSB 2.0 Module

May 13th, 2008 | Category: Hardware, USB

I’ve been working on a project for about a year which requires a high speed digital data link between a GUI (running on a generic windows computer) and an Altera Cyclone II FPGA. I wanted to implement this link with a high-speed USB 2.0 connection, a hardware task I was sure I could undertake. However, I didn’t want to spend a whole lot of time writing windows USB drivers and implementing the USB standard in an FPGA. Enter the Bitwise Systems QuickUSB 2.0 Module.

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