Kasperian Moving Parts

kinda like Batman, but with a wife and 3 kids

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Author: Jason 'vanRijn' Kasper

freebsd nifty-ness

As I said, there was nothing wrong with Linux that made me start looking for fun elsewhere. Linux is a very good operating system. BUT. It is not the only good operating system out there. And as I have a rather annoying personal trait of getting bored with things that don’t challenge me mentally, I am constantly looking for things that stretch my mind. Enter FreeBSD–a UNIX Operating System that traces its roots back to the prestigious BSD4.4 UNIX OS (as oppposed to the Linux Operating System–which has no such claims to illustrious kernel heritages–the entire kernel is written from scratch by Linus Torvalds and a world-wide team of volunteers). Anyhoo, of the BSD variants out there in the wild Read more…


screenshots from days of yore…

kay! So here’s the part where I show you some examples of what my working environment looks like. =:) Mind you, these aren’t all THAT exciting, and are intended only to give you an example of the flexibility that you have in running FreeBSD/Linux/UNIX/anything other than Microsoft’s Windows (sometimes) Operating Systems. I say “(sometimes)” because they are as a general rule SO horribly unstable compared to FreeBSD/Linux/UNIX. Anyhoo, enough talking… here’s the pic’s. Feel free to click on the images and up will pop a new window with the full-sized graphic (1024×768)…. Let’s see…. In this shot, I’m developing the banner for my site in gimp while running artwiz‘s “cliche” theme for blackbox. And look, there’s my mutt e-mail client Read more…


window managers

Well, anyway, back in the days of hanging on on undernet’s #linux for far too many hours every day, Brad Hughes (who I used to know as nyztihke, and now goes by nyz) showed me some interesting code he was playing with–hand-writing his own window manager from scratch. At the time, you had to manually edit .Xdefaults and restart his code any time you wanted to change something. =:) Anyway, I was still so enthralled with all the neato options that the seemingly countless number of window managers for X offered, that I was switching window managers about twice a week. At the time, I bounced back and forth between AfterStep, that raster kid’s enlightenment window manager, the Ice window Read more…


emu – laters ?

Okay. I’ve just gotta say it. I am VERY impressed with vmware3. =:) For my work, there are certain things for which I simply have to use the below-discussed Micro$oft Operating (?) Systems. And I’ll be danged if I’m actually going to have to work inside the thing. That I simply can’t stand. I can’t explain it. Write it off to another one of those nutty UNIX geek things or paranoia or something. But I can’t stand being forced to work completely inside the confines of anything Microsoft dishes out. Anyway. So along comes the question… how do you do that? Especially when your job says that you have to work with Windoze. Well, you find an emulator that lets Read more…


filing cabinet? no. filesystem.

One of the coolest things about Linux is the amazing amount of configurability it offers. One of those things that you’re allowed to choose in your Linux machine is the type of filesystem that your Linux machine will use. Linux has, for the majority of its life, been tied to the ext2 filesystem. That stands for second extended filesystem, not that that means anything to you. But it’s a decently-fast filesystem that has done very well for Linux for a long time. Well, times have changed, etc., etc., and folks are desiring more reliability, fault-tolerance, higher performance, more security, and other valuable features from their filesystems these days. And this is a good thing! I have poked around a bit Read more…


note to self: um. I forget…

It’s an interesting thing to note–I’m still using blackbox. =:) Heh. I must be getting old…. Further note to self: put some newer screenshots up… sheesh!


toolbox… updates / whether you need them or not…

Hm. Much has happened since I’ve last updated this page. The toolbox project, that now will be pushed to its own page just for posterity’s sake, has been replaced by bbconf, the much-improved blackbox configurator. I’ve done more miscellaneous coding, some of which may actually be considered useful for people other than myself. I think I’ll list some of it here… =:)


over / haul

Well alrighty then… A design overhaul. Much needed and all. I’d love to think that this space could eventually be used to communicate with anyone who cares… sort of like that new-fangled “blog” thingey. =:) But being that I actually know me–and know just how little time I have… well, we’ll see how it goes…. =:) Let’s just say I’m not optimistic that I’ll actually have the time to keep it up… So life is interesting. Mine has taken turns that I’d never thought it would take. My Dad has passed away very recently. I miss you, Dad.


how does that song go again…

So not much has changed employment-wise in the last year+ that has gone by. =:\ I think that’s a good thing. I’m still working for Rite Aid. For the last year or so, I’ve taken on the lead-developer role for Rite Aid in their Internet/Intranet environment. I’ve had some really great opportunities in that role. I’ve lead my team in throwing out a really old, crappy frame-based *shudder*, NT-driven, antiquated web site that Rite Aid’s had up for at least 2 years. I’ve architected and implemented the first production Linux solution that Rite Aid has ever used–a fault-tolerant web environment that utilizes balanced clustering as well as director-level failover. And that was REALLY fun. =:) And the kicker is–we did Read more…


allow me to introduce myself

So. About me. I’m a Systems Engineer by trade. At heart, I’m an artist. A Renaissance man. I’ve always strived to be the absolute best that I could be. Not for anybody else, necessarily. Just because I enjoy seeing myself doing something that I can be proud of when it’s all said and done. I still remember my first “real” job. I worked in a library. I was the “book returner” guy. But, I quickly became valued as the quickest “fix-it-all” guy, the best and most knowledgeable computer guy, and the hardest worker. Well, maybe not the hardest worker, but you get the idea. =:) I was first given the title of “A True Renaissance Man” at that job. I Read more…