Jul 21 2008
Rubik’s Cube Robot
Every once in a while I run across something, that even in my advanced state of uber-geekness, puts me in a state of awe.
Behold, the lego-robot that solves the Rubik’s Cube.
Jul 21 2008
Every once in a while I run across something, that even in my advanced state of uber-geekness, puts me in a state of awe.
Behold, the lego-robot that solves the Rubik’s Cube.
Jul 02 2008
Darn. One of my favorite news-social-networking-aggregator sites (that’s my meme for it) has closed its doors. The landing page for http://rediggulo.us now reads:
Why end it? We’re moving on to greener pastures.
Anyways, thanks for coming and clicking an ad once in awhile.
Anyone interested in buying this domain, the code, database, etc, please contact “info” at this domain.”
Anyone game for snagging the domain and property? I think I’ve got somewhere to host it!
Jul 01 2008
I have been itching to get Time Machine to work over a (unsupported) network-shared volume since we’re unwilling to drop the cash for a Time Capsule. I’ve seen quite a few different posts on how to get it done, including the terminal trick to tell Time Machine to use unsupported volumes, but none of them quite worked.
The best I could get was Time Machine to begin to write the files to the share, but after a few seconds die with a vague “Backup disk could not be created error”. This stumped me for a bit until I came across this. Apparently sometime around 10.5.2, Apple introduced a new, undocumented “feature” to Time Machine that causes it to fail over network volumes when doing the initial backup. However, once the files are created it will work fine.
So, the magical combination is as follows:
Once that happened, Time Machine has begun to work great over AFP to our backup volume–even for multiple Macs connecting to the same share. Behold!
It probably doesn’t need saying; but this is clearly an unsupported way to use Time Machine. It has been running this way for me only about a day. If you’re concerned about having to troubleshoot problems that may pop up down the road, especially regarding backups; picking up a Time Capsule is probably a far better idea.