Random thoughts from Jeffrey RSS 2.0
# Wednesday, December 15, 2004
There have been a few things I've never managed to get working at all with Windows:
  • RPC over HTTP/S
  • VPN Server (although I haven't tried recently, with the ISA 2004 changes)
  • IPSec (I always seem to only be able to get all communications to stop)
  • EFS (it works, but the key recovery stuff doesn't, and not in the way I'd expect it to)

That's my list of things to try and get working between now and the beginning of next semester.

Wednesday, December 15, 2004 20:40:00 UTC  #    Comments [0] -
IT
# Sunday, December 12, 2004
Paper (was) done on time!  Yay!
 
Now just to face finals week...
Sunday, December 12, 2004 22:05:00 UTC  #    Comments [0] -
Purdue
# Friday, December 10, 2004
I have a paper for my history class due in 14.75 hours.  I'm at about 40% completion.  I'm averaging about 20% every 3 hours.  It's going to be a long night...
Friday, December 10, 2004 03:15:00 UTC  #    Comments [0] -
Purdue
# Wednesday, December 08, 2004
My roommate, Taylor (http://www.cs.purdue.edu/~tvenable/), runs Linux exclusively on his system.   Last Thursday, the following conversation occurred:

Taylor: "I sat here moving files around my computer all day."
Me: "That's because pushing the little pile of sand from there to over there is more interesting than watching the pile of sand."

Wednesday, December 08, 2004 23:55:00 UTC  #    Comments [0] -
Purdue
At work I've been doing validation paper work (see https://www.ntldr.net/Lists/Blog/DispForm.aspx?ID=11), but that changed this Monday.  We've had some "productivity committees" working on making the company more productive since the spring.  Apparently, the latest finding of one of these groups is that we need better access/search to old reports and data summaries that are stored on one of the servers.  Ut-oh...that means these silly (waste of time, imho, since they don't seem to be addressing the real issues) things now affect IT.
 
So I've been reprioritized to be SharePoint-Intranet-Search development guy.  I started working on the intranet site during the holiday season last year, as a low-priority, "do this when you've got nothing better to do, like reimage perfectly good PC's", type of task.  Prior to my taking over, we had a basic intranet site that didn't work, and wasn't being worked on.  So my first task was to bring it forward 4 years and sit it on modern technologies.  Which is part of the reason I chose SharePoint.  I also chose it because I hadn't worked with it before, but had seen some interesting demos, heard some stuff about it, and figured I'd treat it as a learning experience.  As it turns out, SharePoint also had just about everything we needed in a Intranet site builtin, but the IT Director didn't like the UI, so I customized that a bunch, and got it looking decent.
 
So everything was going along great with the site and the test server it was on (our production webserver was still on NT4 with IIS4 limping along), until an instrument PC died.  The instrument actually makes money for the company, so I made the call and the test pc got appropriated.  This wouldn't have been a problem, except that the backup I shot of the test system, including site config, etc. turned out to be corrupted when I went to restore it after the instrument pc problem was permanently resolved.  I know, I know, VERIFY backups...
 
In any case, shortly thereafter it came time to upgrade the servers, and then do the validation, so work on the site got pushed back a bunch.  About a month ago I started work back up on the site, basically getting it back to where I was before the whole loss of the pc.  This included getting  the few custom apps I'd written (software inventory search, computer location on map, and basic document search) back up and running.  The one issue that I ran into here was that Kerberos seemed to not be working...impersonation was always failing when connecting to the db server.
 
It turns out Kerberos is completly broken in our AD domain.  I HAVE NO IDEA HOW THIS HAPPENED.  The network admin is going through the troubleshooting guides now and should have some answer for me soon.  In the meantime, it's back to Basic auth and debugging of the search stuff.
 
The current search mechanism uses the Indexng Service builtin to Windows Server 2003, and seems to do a fair job providing search results.  Large result sets do cause perf to take a bit of a hit, but I'm hoping that those wont be the normal search types.  Profiling and focus group testing should help clarify the extent of this problem.  The biggest problem isn't going to be coding related though, it's going to be dealing with the management personel who are advocating the search, since I get the feeling that this is more a reaction to the whole search phenomena going around the web right now.  Time to go get specs locked in...(but that needs to wait until finals week is over).
Wednesday, December 08, 2004 05:51:00 UTC  #    Comments [0] -
SSCI
# Tuesday, November 30, 2004
Today at work I just filled out more paperwork.  It was fun!  Look at screen showing report my custom data tools generate.  Copy column 2 to column 3, put a P or F in column 4, then initial and date column 5.  Oh the fun!  But it gets better!  If I put a F in column 4, I got to put a number next to it too.  Then at the bottom I got to write the number a second time (yes!  repitition!), and write a description (copy column 1, inserting "not's" every so often).  To finish it off, I got to sign and date each page.  The magical wonder of paperwork!
 
That process was repeated for ~50 pages.
 
And more pages to come next Monday.
 
And people wonder why I've come to think the FDA and drugs are evil conspiracies.
Tuesday, November 30, 2004 01:15:00 UTC  #    Comments [0] -
SSCI
# Thursday, November 25, 2004
Note: this post is primarily intended for my parents, who keep asking me about it, but may be of brief informational use to those who keep asking we for it out of curiosity's sake.
 
Anyway, here's my list of desired birthday presents:
  • CD: Dido, Life for Rent
  • CD: Swankz & Verbrilli, Lifesavers
  • DVD: The Bourne Identity
  • DVD: The Bourne Supremacy
  • Microsoft Optical Mouse by Stark (orange)
  • Cheap 802.11g router from Thanksgiving sales

If that's too unclear, drop me a line and I'll provide URI's.

Thursday, November 25, 2004 23:20:00 UTC  #    Comments [0] -
Personal
# Wednesday, November 17, 2004
Well, it's been a couple of days since the last post. I'm striving for 1 post/day, but that hasn't been going too well. Too much work all the time. Plus, I'm still trying to figure out what to blog about. I read mostly technical blogs, so I tend to associate "blog" with technical stuff. Unfortunately, I don't have that much technical stuff to talk about. Any thoughts on what to write about? (ha! now I'll find out if my email server is really working, since the only way to send comments is to email me!). In general, I'm somewhat qualified to talk about IT stuff, CS at Purdue University, and misc. windows-centric user type stuff.
Wednesday, November 17, 2004 15:55:00 UTC  #    Comments [0] -
Personal
# Tuesday, November 09, 2004
Okay, the post at the end of this deserves a link (hyperlinks not supported here?).  Anyway, this way I've actually posted content after having been WAY too busy for the last two weeks.
 
Tuesday, November 09, 2004 19:05:00 UTC  #    Comments [0] -
Personal
# Saturday, October 30, 2004
A couple of people (well, one) have asked me for my feed list.  Say without further delay, I've attached my OMPL file.  Enjoy!
 
Import Note: 2006-10-03:
It appears that the attachment has been lost during the migration.  Which pretty much renders this post useless.  Meh.
Saturday, October 30, 2004 20:45:00 UTC  #    Comments [0] -
Personal
About the author
Jeffrey Stults
Jeffrey Stults is a software developer currently in Portland, Oregon. He is contactable at:
stultsj@ntldr.net
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Disclaimer
The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in any way.

© Copyright 2012
Jeffrey Stults, Jr.
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