I’m Binaryape

About me

Photographer, software developer, sysadmin, startup-founder, atheist Buddhist, vegan and Green. Wears a hat.

This blog reflects my personal opinions only, although most posts are so old they might not even do that anymore.

Recent public projects

Status updating…

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Contact at

apetracks@binary-ape.org

Ecto and Wordpress 2.1

- - posted in Ancient Archives

Ecto looks like a convenient way to update weblogs, so I’m giving it a try. (If you can’t get Ecto working with Wordpress 2.1, try upgrading to Wordpress 2.1.1, which fixes xmlrpc problems fetching categories for entries - Ecto would hang with 2.1)

On the other hand Ecto seems unable to save any of my settings at the moment, which diminishes the convenience somewhat…¬† Update: It saved settings after I posted this.

RISC iX

- - posted in Ancient Archives

I own an Acorn R260, an early Archimedes designed to run a BSD variant called RISC iX. The installed OS is broken and I’ve not got round to fixing it. I’ve occassionally tried to find install disks on the net so I can reinstall from scratch.

Now I’ve discovered why. There were no install disks.

Legal versions of RISC iX either came pre-installed on a R140 or R260, or were installed by Granada Microcare. Acorn did not supply distribution media to customers (although in 2006 a set of 14 floppy discs with an installable copy of RISC iX 1.14 were sold on ebay). If you ordered RISC iX, Grenada Microcare would make an appointment, come along and install it from a tape drive, taking the tape away afterwards.

From Chris Acorn’s RiscIX

Thank goodness for Linux and FreeBSD.

MSX -> Wii

- - posted in Ancient Archives

My first computer, after years of hoping for a C64 (or anything really - I tried begging for a ZX81 at one point) was a Toshiba MSX. And it was good. The hardware itself was excellent, and the games were great: typically European games on tape and Japanese games on cartridges. Konami carts were particularly good but almost prohibitively expensive - £20 was an awful lot to pay for a game back then (most tapes were about £8 I think).

I’ve been hoping that MSX would join the old systems on the Wii’s Virtual Console service, and it seems I’m in luck - it’s going to happen. As well as giving the opportunity to play Penguin Aventure on a TV, the MSX will also be the first home computer on Virtual Console. Maybe we’ll be seeing BBC Model B games appear next :-)

Link: News: New formats confirmed for Virtual Console - ComputerAndVideoGames.com

(Beyond the rosy glow of nostalgia I have to admit the MSX standard wasn’t perfect: the built-in BASIC was full of useful, easy features but was horribly crufty and slow (thanks Microsoft!) All MSX systems (even the low-end Goldstar model) were much more expensive than the c64 and ZX Spectrum. Lower initial sales and uncopyable cartridges meant much less of the playground piracy that drove sales of Spectrums.)

It’s the Dog’s Scrotum

- - posted in Ancient Archives

Apparently there are people, librarians no less, who think that children between the ages of nine and twelve should not be exposed to the word “scrotum” in a book. Even if it’s a dog’s scrotum.

Link: librarian.net ¬ª scrotum! I originally rambled on here about the daftness of all this, but I’ve deleted it - Neil Gaiman has covered the whole topic very well in these three posts, so if you’re interested, read on:

  1. An Absence of Scrota – your guide to quality literature…
  2. A Special Obligation…
  3. The last last word

It’s not easy to be a brave librarian in areas where book burning mobs can camp outside your door.

Redecorating

- - posted in Ancient Archives

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