played with garys xmlrpc interface but failed to break it :)
played with garys xmlrpc interface but failed to break it :)
house. Rather than deal with things in a civil manner the builder forced our hand. Lawyers are now involved :(
Home automation. Now the TiVo is hooked up to the network so it can be controlled from any room, installed some neat touch dimmer/timer switches for the en-suite bathrooms. Now to buy a Fujitsu Point 510 from ebay so I can control everything from the hallway.
builder: Did I mention I was having some teething problems with the house? Now I'm having teething problems with the builder too.
bryce: you could move back to the UK or you could buy a GPS unit ;)
work: been putting in long hours to 1) forget about the builder and 2) theres a lot going on. Need a holiday soon.
Whilst replacing yet another set of lightbulbs that had blown after only a week I thought I'd look at the supply voltage into the house. My UPS logs the voltage so this was easy. 253 volts.
The UK used to be 240 volts (+/-10%) but quite a few years ago the nominal voltage was changed to be 230 volts (half way between the UK 240 and the European 220). In practise I read that this meant very little, they just continued to supply 240v which was within the tolerance. 253 volts is also just within the tolerance, but annoyingly causes my UPS to alert me every few hours. I also read that in 2002 the tolerances are going to be adjusted to +/-6%.
Armed with all this information I called the electricity company who actually said 253 volts was an emergency situation and someone will be with me shortly.
Played around with the Linux IBM ViaVoice SDK so my UPS can speak. "Help, the voltage is too high, I'm frying,l arrrrgh"
Played around with the alarm system (well the 'tamper' system works) but need some opto-isolation before I dare connect it up to the gateway. Got the gateway to SMS me when there is a power failure, which is semi-useful but really freaks out guests when I switch off the master power and my phone beeps a few seconds later. Took a few pics of the setup so far here.
I'm trying to stay away from coding for work for a month or two, just to see if it can be done. I've found it hard the last few years as I moved away from doing coding on a day to day basis; you tend to judge your week by how much code you've achieved. This of course doesn't scale when you get to be a manager and the temptation is to try to do a bit of coding for work every week in order to feel you have 'achieved something'. Last week I couldn't resist and ended up recoding some pages and scripts that were in PHP to work with AxKit. Doh.
In other news: Sonik
Now my days and evenings are spent working and my nights trying to learn DIY as quickly as possible. I fixed a few electric points that were wired incorrectly (several had no earth connection!). Also I was expecting the light switches in the house to be wired conventionally (which at least in the UK means you run the mains to a junction box in the ceiling, then run a two-core cable with live in and out to the wall switch). In this house each switch has three twin+earth cables. Mains in, mains out, and switched mains to the lights. I've yet to find out why. Actually this turns out to be rather cool as in most UK houses you don't get neutral in the switch boxes which sometimes limits the fun you can have with home automation. But it does mean that one particular place has five mains wires competing for space behind a single gang triple switch
Currently working out the best way to connect up the heating system (one input) and alarm system (lots of triggers) to the network; I don't want to trust X10 for those.
More CVE fun and advocacy
So having cable internet throughout the house is cool; having water coming in from outside through the plasterboard is not so cool. A highlight of my week in North Carolina was meeting up with some of the IBM Apache folks, especially RoUS, almost made the 4 hours stuck in Newark airport worthwhile. Also got to spend some time with Bryce, shopping, and other Red Hat folks.
32 snagging list items left for the builder to fix (down from nearly 200). Never buy a new house, not if you are already working >>40 hour weeks.
Continuing my quest to add CVE details to all Red Hat security advisories, working my way through 2001.
house: Gave up trying to find an f-connector (or even bnc) patch panel, looks like I'll have to buy a drill and make one. Planning how to deal with various cool home-automation stuff for the house, but now wishing that I'd taken more time to help out and plan when they were doing the wiring; would have saved a few of the bodges that are going to be necessary. Hopefully in by Christmas!
New HTML Parser: The long-awaited libxml2 based HTML parser code is live. It needs further work but already handles most markup better than the original parser.
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