mdlbear: (hacker glider)
Important info for computer users at Grand Central Starport )

Having finally decided to find out whether Linux would handle two USB printers on the same machine, I tried it. It worked out of the box, so I was able to take down dantooine, the little Mini-ITX box currently being used in the office as a print server and guest machine.

This lets me put the [livejournal.com profile] chaoswolf's old HP desktop in place as the guest machine without having to resort to a KVM switch. So that's 40 watts I won't be spending. Having to get at the connectors on the back also gave me an excuse to take down nova, the main fileserver, and replace the UPS with a spare. I have a new battery on order, but meanwhile I won't have the annoying warning signal. Also it's been behaving oddly and not talking to the computer -- I may be better off simply replacing it.

Of course, bouncing nova also runs a fsck on all the disks, which have gone some 9 months without checking. It was time.

The next thing that wants doing is doing an upgrade dance with the routers.

The router upgrade dance )

Committed

2007-05-15 11:37 am
mdlbear: (abt)

Even as I type, the CD artwork for About Bleeding Time is wending its way through the bowels of ProAction Media on a chair in my office on its way to a rendezvous with me and my housefull of CD burners and fanatical minions on Monday. I will have disks to hand out at Baycon! This makes me a happy fractal bear, but it does mean that I'm going to be a bit busy during the coming 10 4 days.

to do )

5/28 -- stick a fork in it.

mdlbear: (kill bill)

In marked contrast to Windows, I rebooted the laptop into Linux, reconfigured security on the CUPS demon so it would talk to the network like a real print server, browsed to port 631, clicked the administration tab, and saw the printer there, correctly recognized. Added it and printed a test page. Total time, about 10 minutes. Would have been less if I hadn't had to read the documentation on the config file.

The driver doesn't know about CD printing, but if the Mac or XP can do it over a network, I'm in. Otherwise I can always use the Mac laptop with a USB connection. Not going to worry about it much; I think I can get ABT pre-printed. (00:33 as it turns out, it does appear to know about CDs -- it's right there in the Media box on the CUPS printer options page. W00T!)

OTOH, I'm still struggling to make a CD-Extra (2-session CD/CDROM). For some bizarre reason the drive objects to using disk-at-once mode in the second session, and if I use track-at-once mode it works but the CDROM won't mount. GAAARGH! It's conceivable that the new Samsung drive I bought today can handle it.

OTOH I may very well end up spending $20 on Nero for Linux. It even comes as a Debian package.

mdlbear: (abt)

Spent some time this morning looking at what remains to be done for ABT and realizing that, no, there's no fscking way I can have it done by Monday. And besides, I want the versatility of being able to have a mix of CDROM, CD-Extra, and pure-audio disks on hand. So I fired off an RFQ to proactionmedia.com (they're not open on weekends). Wish there was someplace local that did inkjet printing on CDRs.

After the usual weekend 4-mile walk I stopped by Staples, because I'd seen them on a web search for CD duplicators. What the heck; if they had the DupliQ I might just buy one. No duplicators, but they did have a shiny new HP D5160 that (wonder of wonders) prints on CDs! Apparently somebody's patent has expired, because it used to be an Epson exclusive. Filed the information away for future reference, and headed across the street to Fry's to see whether they had it for less.

It was the same price, $89, but there was somebody there from HP who, in response to my query, said that it worked fine in Linux. HP has been pretty good about Linux printer drivers, while the latest Epson (the R260, successor to the R200 that's been giving me grief lately) is listed as a "paperweight" in the linuxprinting.org database. That clinched it, and I brought it home just in time to spend the next hour trying to find some way of printing a character sheet for the Y.D. Turned out that not only was the Epson suffering from clogged jets, but the cheap print server it's attached to appeared to be hosed (or at least unresponsive, even after a power cycle), and the SMB server on Nova appears to be inaccessible to the Windows machines. Again. GAAAH! And in spite of having what I thought was a reasonably complete set of fresh ink cartridges, I was suddenly reminded that I couldn't find a magenta cartridge the last time I went ink shopping. Guess which one I need. Finally put the page on my keychain drive, hauled it over to the Linux workstation, and printed it on the laser printer.

There are lots of reasons why I do most of my reading on the screen these days, but a well-founded loathing for printers and printing in general, and Windows printing in particular, is right up there.

Still haven't installed the HP -- no useable print server at the moment -- but I'm hopeful. I've never had particularly good luck with HP equipment, but I really like the fact that their ink cartridges include the nozzle assembly, so that even if you haven't used it for months, all you have to do is change the cartridges to get a totally new, clean, print head. Unlike the Epson.

Spent the rest of the afternoon fixing ABT's Makefile to correctly (I hope) write cd-extra (pressed-multi-session) disks, because although it's perfectly feasible to add audio tracks to a CD-ROM, I don't think most of my customers will be amused by 20 minutes of silence on track 1.

mdlbear: (abt)

I spent much of yesterday and today chasing down information about disk duplicators. (I'll be taking some vacation time for it. I don't feel too guilty, because I also researched some web-related stuff that will save us a world of hassle in our current project. But that's another post, and probably not for several months yet...)

There are two projects in the queue: the studio album, Coffee, Computers, & Song, and the mostly-live bonus album, About Bleeding Time. The former is not quite ready for prime time, and I figure it'll head out for the duplicator's either just before or just after Baycon. But I really need to have ABT done by Baycon. I'm already several months late, and if I don't have something in hand I can probably expect an angry mob with pitchforks and torches at my concert Sunday night. So I've been looking at fast-turnaround duplication, and full-color label printing on blank CD-R's that I can burn at home to save time.

About the best prices I've been able to find for 300 printed, blank CD-R disks are in the neighborhood of $450 with 5-7 day turnaround time. To which one adds shipping delay, and it starts to get pretty tight with Baycon two weeks away. Urk!

Then, thanks to a Google search for "cd duplicator bay area", we find New Cyberian: $400 for 500, full-color printed, replicated CDs and an easy walk from Fry's in San Jose. They're "no frills" -- none of the music-oriented extras you'd get from Discmakers or Oasis, and not significantly cheaper for runs of 1000 or more with packaging. But when you factor in the full-color disk printing, which is $200 more at Discmakers, they're cheaper than 300 blank disks anyplace I've found, and close enough that I can hand-carry a master in on Monday.

I was really kind of hoping for the added versatility of being able to burn disks if somebody needed a plain audio disk. But, y'know, for the extra $200, the time, and the hassle, I can go down to Fry's and buy an Epson printer and a stack of disks and still come out ahead.

(0512 9:06) On the other hand, I'm not sure I can get everything all together by Monday (especially since tomorrow is Mother's Day, with brunch and a zoo trip planned), and I really don't need to be stuck with an extra 250 disks. So ProAction Media, with a price of .84 for 350 disks (total $294) and 3-5 day turnaround, still looks like a very good bet. It means I'll be doing a lot of burning the week before Baycon, and maybe at the con as well, but I can deal with that.

mdlbear: blue fractal bear with text "since 2002" (Default)

Note: I'm terrible with phone calls. I put them off for weeks, sometimes. If I don't have everything written out ahead of time, I don't remember what to ask, and leave out important stuff.

So that's what I'm doing. This is almost entirely for my own reference; I doubt that anyone else will be interested. But I'm thinking about it now and it's after business hours on the East coast. )

Note: I'm calling discmakers, shortstacks, and Oasis; I'm mainly interested right now in printed blank disks and short-run CDROMs with added audio tracks. Any other recommendations?

mdlbear: (borg)

Stupid goddamn WinXP apparently doesn't know how to route LPR requests between subnets. Stupid goddamn WinXP stupid firewall apparently doesn't allow port exceptions for the same port on multiple machines. Stupid goddamn WinXP...

For the record, here's how you connect to a CUPS/IPP printer on a Linux box:

  1. Set up the firewall to allow a connection to port 631 on the machine you want to print on.
  2. Add a printer, telling the stupid wizard that you want a network connection. DO NOT browse for the printer, specify the HTTP address (third radio button down)
  3. Specify, e.g., <http://nova.thestarport.org:631/printers/lp> as the URL.

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