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Here's the corridor outside our cell,
with a random inmate on the left and Joe relaxing in the chair.
Note the solid walls and strong doors - they just don't make them like that anymore.
There's none of the sheet rock wall and plywood door nonsense
that you'll find in the $120 hotels.
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Come inside, check out the accomodations. Bring a lock for your locker (under the bottom bed).
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Ratz even gets extra head room at no additional charge.
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Here's Joe at the front of the Ottawa International Hostel.
Ratz had brought with him the book on iproute2, "Policy Routing Using Linux" by
Marsh (Sams, 2001, ISBN 0-672-32052-5), which I didn't even know existed.
Previously Julian seemed to be the only one on the LVS mailing list that understood it all.
Get your copy now (for more info, see the HOWTO).
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We found Lars the first morning. Horms has proved
more elusive, and we didn't even see Horms at the free beer bash on the 2nd evening.
We've exchanged e-mail so he knows we're looking for him.
He's time shifted by 14hrs, having just arrived from Australia. This should
put a nocturnal hacker in perfect sync for a day conference, so the absence of Horms
is unexplained. He may be replying to e-mail from Sydney for all we know.
Not deterred by missing people, Joe (left) and Ratz (right), right away headed for the Byward Market to discuss the "ip" tools. Real beer at last. Stuff you don't see south of the border. (When I got back, I tried special ordering it, but they don't ship it south of the border. What ever happened to NAFTA? They can't withhold the stuff from us. The US should invade Canada.)
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Our lively discussion soon had other people interested
and we were quickly joined by Chantelle, who wouldn't believe that people like us would
choose to stay in a jail,
till Ratz showed her his Hostel ticket with the after-hours keycode.
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The evening's talk at the beer bash was given by Hugh Daniels, a politically active Linuxer, who leads (among other things), the IPSec FreeSWAN project. Hugh talked about the Russian coder, Dmitry Sklyarov, who has been detained without bail, in an unknown location, for coding something that is legal to do in his country and which allows people to exercise their rights under US Copyright law.
Hugh also took the Linux coding community to task for writing code that no-one can use. (e.g. clearly LVS can't be setup by the average person). Hugh's point was that the code isn't finished till anyone can use it and anyone can understand the docs. Until then Windows will dominate the market.
Other speakers during the day (eg Alan Robertson of the Linux-HA project) also addressed other manifestations of this problem - e.g. that commercial people are sick of porting to the ever changing Linux APIs. How many of us are looking forward to rewriting our working ipchains firewall rules for iptables, no matter how much better iptables is than ipchains? How many of our employers are looking forward to paying for the rewrite?
We found Horms. He appeared 5 minutes before his afternoon talk on
supersparrow.
Horms had already time shifted and was living his normal schedule - he just isn't normally up this early.
This is what a person who stays at $120/night hotels looks like.
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Here's the LVS people at the conference after Horms' talk - (L-R) Ratz, Lars, Horms, Joe.
No, Lars is not standing on a chair, he really is that tall. (I think he's a center in the SuSE basketball team).
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Drew was one of the people who started sourceforge, runs and personally funds a free indexing service and works closely with the EFF (which I find is in San Francisco and is separate from, but works closely with the FSF, which is in Boston). The FSF is Richard Stallman's group of software people. The EFF is a group of lawyers under John Gillmore interested in preserving your FSF rights.
I award Drew an honorary membership of the LVS community for his work with the FSG and EFF and also for his relentless determination to party. I usually get up about 4am and so am not used to the party lifestyle, but clearly Drew is. Last night he guided Ratz, Horms and myself through dinner and then to the bars in the Byward district in downtown Ottawa. At dinner Drew asked the waitress for recommendations for a place to have some fun. There we were, admittedly dressed a little strangley for some guys off to have fun (I was wearing shorts and because it was unexpectedly cold had underneath, long blue running tights covering my legs), clearly a bunch of wild and crazy guys. She looked at us, thought a minute and sent us off to what turned out to be a a gay bar. Drew chatted with a pair of females, while Horms and I discussed our high school experiences growing up in Australia. Fairly soon, Drew wanted to move on, so we set off for more fun. I know I get up pretty early, but I was amazed, wandering around at 11:30pm (4.5hrs before I get up) to see the number of people out and about. Canadians must get up really early. I was pretty much partied out by then and went back to the jail for the evening, while the other 3 guys headed off for even more fun than I could handle.
Here's something I liked - a helical footbridge.
I was perplexed. The steps are cantilevered from a central pole and I had a hard time
calculating the load bearing moment as a function of step number.
(I still don't have an answer I'm happy with.) On the right across the road is the conference center. In the background on the left is parliament house. On the immediate left is the Rideau canal. Is has trendy outdoor restaurants (that no-one seems to be using). It was built following the 1812 war, when Canadians realised that the Americans could blockade the St Lawrence River and force Canadians to drink American beer. It's several 100km long, took many years to build and used a considerable fraction of the country's money to build. It's never been used to defend the country, and now is used for boats to get from the inland lakes to the St Lawrence. In summer, a festival is held on the canal where people race rubber duckies, and have marathons. Considering it's bitterly cold in winter and Canadians are excellent ice hockey players, I would have explected that they'd have a Hans Brinker type skating marathon in winter, but they don't. They don't have a canoe race or a log rolling race either. |
The photo is looking in the same direction as the photo of the helical stairs
and is about 100m further behind the stairs.
You're looking down the locks to the St Lawrence river.
The river has parks on both sides of it and you can walk for serveral
miles in both directions on both sides of it. It's very nice. Few cities
have preserved land like this. The long building to the right and below is the old train station. The trains used to go across the bridge (across the river). Now the train station is an art museum.
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Small craft seem to be going down the locks all day (none seem to come back).
Park staff release the water by pulling a plug on the end of a chain.
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The water level adjusts in only a minute or two...
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and the boats come through. The boat owners pay, the tourists like it and come back and spend more money next year. Ottawa makes money at both ends of the transaction.
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On the slope overlooking the River next to Parliament house, one of the citizens keeps
a little zoo/hospital for recovering injured animals. I can't even remember what these are and
can't identify them from the photo I'm sorry to day.
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Here's Ratz(L) and Harald Welte(R).
Harald works in the netfilter project and gave a presentation about iptables and netfilter. You'll be pleased to know that after ipfwadm for 2.0, ipchains for 2.2 and iptables for 2.4, we'll be still having iptables with the same syntax for 2.6. Horms and I grabbed Harald about the 2.4 transparent proxy which no longer works for LVS (it's all explained in gory detail in the HOWTO). This is because (as Julian explains in the HOWTO) the incoming packets come through the nat input chain and have the dst_addr changed. Harald showed Horms the relevant code and Horms is thinking about writing patch which restores the original dst_addr. Julian thinks it still won't work properly. Since fwmark seems to handle the things we did with transparent proxy in 2.2 kernels, we may just forget about transparent proxy for 2.4 kernels.
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I also noted that batteries are labelled by the number of maHrs in them, unlike in USA. I remember 20yrs ago writing to my senator (Leon Panetta), Ralph Nader and a few other people, that when I bought a pint of milk, I would get a pint of milk, but when I bought a battery I didn't know how many electrons I was getting. Only Leon replied and he said that he didn't think congress was ready to handle this problem.
The big bash of the conference, on the last night,
was sponsored by Ximian.
Ratz didn't get back till the early (maybe even late) hours of the morning and
found negotiating the buttons on the front door of the Hostel
more trouble than it was worth and since the weather was pleasant
and the grass soft, he curled up on the front lawn for a snooze.
The staff came out eventually and asked if he wanted to come in.
He didn't but they helped him in anyhow. Here's Ratz the next morning at one of the side entrances to the jail (there's no lock on the gate, the photo is staged).
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