http://www.ted.com/talks/thomas_thwaites_how_i_built_a_toaster_from_scratch
This blog exists purely as a place for me to dump random links and thoughts I have rather than emailing them to my friends. It'll have large amounts of inside jokes. Also there will probably be times when I write "you" or refer to an email. Just pretend that you are reading an email to you. If you don't know me you likely won't find anything here interesting. If you do know me you also will not find anything here interesting.
Saturday, March 29, 2014
Friday, March 28, 2014
Monday, March 24, 2014
Backups to/from a Linux machine from Windows
Intro
I'm currently using Windows 7 on a laptop and Linux at home on my PC. I plan on switching the laptop to Linux at some point, but for now I wanted to be able to back files up to my home PC over the internet. Now if you're a normal person there are plenty of services that do this for you (eg, Dropbox), but if you're me, then you insist upon doing it manually and having total control.
Linux on Windows
Step one is to get a Linux like environment on Windows. This means installing Cygwin. You will want to install openssh, rsync, git, and whatever languages you may want to program in.
With Cygwin you should be able to directly use linux commands in the Windows command prompt. Use '
SSH
SSH (Secure SHell) allows you to log in to a remote machine over an encrypted connection. Once logged in you have the same control as you would in a shell prompt on that machine locally. It supports public key encryption so that we can login without a password prompt.
As it is, you can log in with just the password using
Generate Keys
Now it is time to generate some ssh keys to allow you to log into your home computer remotely. There are two ways to use ssh keys. You can generate keys that require a password to use, or you can generate keys that do not require a password. If you use passwordless keys, then you will have a private key file that anyone could use to login to any computer where you've set it up to allow logins with that key. Of course, you can keep the key on an encrypted laptop, and if they laptop is stolen or you have reason to believe the key was stolen it's as easy as deleting the key from the remote computer.
Passwordless keys are nice, and I use one to admin my site, but for my home PC I didn't want to allow access with just the keyfile. This complicated the commands slightly, but I will get to that later.
Generating keys is easy. Just run
rsync
Now that you have the ability to log in to the remote machine you can make some scripts to move files between them. rsync is nice for this because it will automatically use ssh to tunnel the connections to hide the data on public networks, and it does a good job of only sending the data that has changed. Because I used a password with my key I wanted to combine the rsync commands into one, so I only had to enter my password once. I made 4 batch files. Two each to receive files, and to send files, and then one set for going over the local network, and one for going over the internet. My local receive command looks like this:
Closing
These are all pretty rudimentary, but they have been working well for me for a few months. As it stands, they never delete a file, so if you move something you must manually delete it's old location on both the remote machine and local between syncs. There are flags to do this automatically, but I kind of like it as is.
I'm currently using Windows 7 on a laptop and Linux at home on my PC. I plan on switching the laptop to Linux at some point, but for now I wanted to be able to back files up to my home PC over the internet. Now if you're a normal person there are plenty of services that do this for you (eg, Dropbox), but if you're me, then you insist upon doing it manually and having total control.
Linux on Windows
Step one is to get a Linux like environment on Windows. This means installing Cygwin. You will want to install openssh, rsync, git, and whatever languages you may want to program in.
With Cygwin you should be able to directly use linux commands in the Windows command prompt. Use '
ls
' to test this.SSH
SSH (Secure SHell) allows you to log in to a remote machine over an encrypted connection. Once logged in you have the same control as you would in a shell prompt on that machine locally. It supports public key encryption so that we can login without a password prompt.
As it is, you can log in with just the password using
ssh dale@192.168.1.123
. Replace dale with your account on the remote machine. You can use an actual IP to log in over the internet, but first you have to forward port 22 on your router.Generate Keys
Now it is time to generate some ssh keys to allow you to log into your home computer remotely. There are two ways to use ssh keys. You can generate keys that require a password to use, or you can generate keys that do not require a password. If you use passwordless keys, then you will have a private key file that anyone could use to login to any computer where you've set it up to allow logins with that key. Of course, you can keep the key on an encrypted laptop, and if they laptop is stolen or you have reason to believe the key was stolen it's as easy as deleting the key from the remote computer.
Passwordless keys are nice, and I use one to admin my site, but for my home PC I didn't want to allow access with just the keyfile. This complicated the commands slightly, but I will get to that later.
Generating keys is easy. Just run
ssh-keygen
, and answer the questions. You now have the .ssh
directory in your home directory. Inside, should be (at least) two files. First is id_rsa
, which is your private key and must be protected. The second file is id_rsa.pub
, and that is your pubic key. As the name implies there is no need to keep this a secret. You will place this file on any machine you want to be able to log in to.
To allow you to log in to a remote machine, find the .ssh
directory in your home directory, and then the authorized_keys
file in it. Copy and paste the public key text string into that file.
You may need to restart some processes, but you should now be able to log in from the laptop to the remote machine. You use the same command as above, but with the username you put in the ssh key (which can be the same as you use on different machines, Linux will pair it with @host to make it unique).
rsync
Now that you have the ability to log in to the remote machine you can make some scripts to move files between them. rsync is nice for this because it will automatically use ssh to tunnel the connections to hide the data on public networks, and it does a good job of only sending the data that has changed. Because I used a password with my key I wanted to combine the rsync commands into one, so I only had to enter my password once. I made 4 batch files. Two each to receive files, and to send files, and then one set for going over the local network, and one for going over the internet. My local receive command looks like this:
rsync -ahvz ---progress --stats dale@192.168.1.123:/home/dale/Documents/ /cygdrive/C/Users/Dale/Documents/
pause
You can check the flags if you want, but I found those work well for me. Note that it takes all the contents of the Documents folder on the remote machine and dumps it into the Documents folder on the laptop. Also notice how cygwin handles drives. You use /cygdrive/C/ to represent C: all forward slashes.
For sending files it was a little harder:
rsync -ahvz --progress --stats Other Programming School dale@192.168.1.123:/home/dale/Documents/
pause
I can't remember exactly why, but I couldn't just use the whole folder. I had send those individual folders. It took a little while to get it, but this syntax works. Note that 'Other' 'Programming', and 'School' are each files on the laptop that need to be sent to Documents on the remote machine.
For over the internet versions, just replace the IP with your home IP, and make sure you set up port forwarding. If you plan on accessing the remote machine over the internet, it makes sense use the host file to create a shortcut for the IP. The host file is at: C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
, Simply add a line with the IP and then a name, like: 123.456.78.90 home
. Then you can replace that IP with the name in scripts or on the command line.
Closing
These are all pretty rudimentary, but they have been working well for me for a few months. As it stands, they never delete a file, so if you move something you must manually delete it's old location on both the remote machine and local between syncs. There are flags to do this automatically, but I kind of like it as is.
Sunday, March 23, 2014
2048
I never know what the world looks like outside my little internet bubble. I'm often surprised when I bring something up that has, from my perspective, been talked about constantly for weeks and people don't know what I'm talking about. I have a feeling this 2048 game is a case of this.
http://gabrielecirulli.github.io/2048/
It has spawned an absurd number of forks and variants. At one point there were 10 threads about it on the top 100 posts on hackernews. I thought it was some crazy new revolutionary technology. Nope, silly flash game.
Anyway, while I didn't care about the original that much, one of the clones has already eaten several hours of my (very valuable) time.
http://prat0318.github.io/2048-tetris/
In case you haven't played any of these, the point is to move squares with the same number together and they will merge into a single square with the sum. You end up with powers of 2, and are aiming for the highest possible value. The goal being the eponymous 2048 square.
In the tetris version the pieces will fold together due to gravity, and can be quickly moved left and right for unlimited length combos.
The key is a good organization strategy, that is robust enough to handle the 4s and 8s. I've gotten to 1024 a few times, but 2048 eludes me.
Another random variant, is this one where you are placing the blocks and the AI is playing against you collapsing them.
https://sphere.chronosempire.org.uk/~HEx/8402/
http://gabrielecirulli.github.io/2048/
It has spawned an absurd number of forks and variants. At one point there were 10 threads about it on the top 100 posts on hackernews. I thought it was some crazy new revolutionary technology. Nope, silly flash game.
Anyway, while I didn't care about the original that much, one of the clones has already eaten several hours of my (very valuable) time.
http://prat0318.github.io/2048-tetris/
In case you haven't played any of these, the point is to move squares with the same number together and they will merge into a single square with the sum. You end up with powers of 2, and are aiming for the highest possible value. The goal being the eponymous 2048 square.
In the tetris version the pieces will fold together due to gravity, and can be quickly moved left and right for unlimited length combos.
The key is a good organization strategy, that is robust enough to handle the 4s and 8s. I've gotten to 1024 a few times, but 2048 eludes me.
Another random variant, is this one where you are placing the blocks and the AI is playing against you collapsing them.
https://sphere.chronosempire.org.uk/~HEx/8402/
Sunday, March 16, 2014
The Earth and Moon
I stumbled upon this image of the Earth and the Moon photoshopped together to scale. I decided to make my own in 1920x1080. I took the images and the average radii, orbit, and inclination from wikipedia.
8 kB PNG:
28 kB JPG
8 kB PNG:
28 kB JPG
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
What’s gone wrong with democracy
http://www.economist.com/news/essays/21596796-democracy-was-most-successful-political-idea-20th-century-why-has-it-run-trouble-and-what-can-be-do
Yet these days the exhilaration generated by events like those in Kiev is mixed with anxiety, for a troubling pattern has repeated itself in capital after capital. The people mass in the main square. Regime-sanctioned thugs try to fight back but lose their nerve in the face of popular intransigence and global news coverage. The world applauds the collapse of the regime and offers to help build a democracy. But turfing out an autocrat turns out to be much easier than setting up a viable democratic government. The new regime stumbles, the economy flounders and the country finds itself in a state at least as bad as it was before. This is what happened in much of the Arab spring, and also in Ukraine’s Orange revolution a decade ago. In 2004 Mr Yanukovych was ousted from office by vast street protests, only to be re-elected to the presidency (with the help of huge amounts of Russian money) in 2010, after the opposition politicians who replaced him turned out to be just as hopeless.