Archive for the ‘Books’ category

San Francisco – Puppet Camp

September 28th, 2009

I am in sunny San Francisco for Puppet Camp.  Looking forward to meeting a whole bunch of Puppeteers in person finally. Woot!

Actually got a lot of work done on the plane – upgraded to business class – on Pro . Chapters 1 & 2 are pretty much done and I’ve made a start on Chapter 3.  Since I’m not actually technically scheduled to start writing yet that’s pretty damn good. I rock. :)

In the meantime here are two pictures that took my fancy – the cleverly named Urbun Burger – I bet the Urban Burger guys in Melbourne are cursing that they didn’t think of that… :) And a whole store dedicated to Halloween costumes…

Hot Library Smut

August 15th, 2009

I love books and so when I saw a post entitled - Hot Library Smut – well I had to re-post it.  It’s completely NSFW … nah I lie .. you might drool on the keyboard though. :)

P.S. One of the is Trinity College Library where the of Kells lives – interesting trivia fact – several pieces of the text are of the Gospels are wrong in the – this error I particularly like. In Matthew 10:34 the text should read “I came not to send peace, but the sword,” but the has gaudium (“joy”) where it should read gladium (“sword”) and reads as “I came not [only] to send peace, but joy.”  Whilst not a Christian I much prefer the latter version of this fairly controversial passage.

Pro Git

August 7th, 2009

Congratulations to Scott Chacon on his new book Pro Git. I am highly jealous – this was one of the things I’ve really wanted to write about and was on my list of things to pitch to my publisher. As is the nature of these things I am not as smart as I think I am and someone else also had the idea. :)

It’s a great little title and Scott being one of the GitHub guys is well positioned to right the definitive on Git.  You can find the whole under a CC license at the Pro Git site but if you love the then buy a copy so Scott gets some royalties and can afford to eat and all… :)

New home page

June 6th, 2009

The wonderful and highly talented Erin Knowles designed me a new home page – bio, CV, books, etc – that is very, very cool.  It looks very speck and is nice and simple.  I like nice and simple.

Erin also makes funny little things called efki star creatures which would seem to make perfect gifts for kiddies.

P.S.  This doesn’t mean this page goes away – that’s my “this is me the author page and the projects I work on ” page.  This page stays as the “this is my blog page” etc.

Pro Linux System Administration

May 28th, 2009

My new , Pro Linux System Administration, is coming out on June 22nd, 2009. It’s written with my friends Pete and Den. Here’s a little bit of a blurb:

“We can all be Linux experts, provided we invest the time in learning the craft of Linux administration. Pro Linux System Administration makes it easy for small to medium-sized businesses to enter the world of zero-cost software running on Linux and covers all the distros you might want to use, including Red Hat, Ubuntu, Debian, and CentOS. Authors, and systems infrastructure experts James Turnbull, Peter Lieverdink, and Dennis Matotek take a layered, component-based approach to open source business systems, while training system administrators as the builders of business infrastructure.”

Found in translation

May 14th, 2009

I love writers festivals – never get to go to enough of them and certainly when I do I never get to attend all the sessions I want.  Day job and all that.

One of the ones I’ve heard quite a bit about (all good) in the last couple of years is PEN World Voices in New York.  There is a great article talking about the festival and its running in the new Sydney Ideas magazine.  Its current director, Caro Llewellyn, was the director of the Sydney Writer’s Festival (another festival I very much enjoyed whilst living in Sydney – excellent crime fiction representation) and has now moved on to this new challenge.


Haven’t had a dream in a long time

March 18th, 2009

So the latest , Pro Linux System Administration, is almost done.  One chapter to submit and then the copy-edits and proofs and it’s a done deal.

Must admit this was a lot of hard work.  Incredibly unmotivated on a few occasions and whilst I think I need a little break from writing I’ve got another project to finish this year.

I’ve worked out I’ve written somewhere in the region of a thousand pages in the last five years.  Which is quite a bit really – somewhere in the region of 500,000 words.  Just thinking about it makes me tired.

Little Brother by Cory Doctorow

September 30th, 2008

Everyone should go out now and download or buy a copy of Cory Doctorow’s Little Brother and give it to a teenager. I don’t know a lot of teenagers (the court mandates that :P ) but I am going to seed a few copies about.

It’s not the world’s greatest novel – not even close – but it is an important novel. It’s also a little heavy on the rhetoric and I don’t know a lot of teenagers who talk like the main character (more’s the pity).

Much like the Max Headroom’s tagline of “20 minutes into the future”, Little Brother is set in a RSN San Francisco. A San Francisco that has a little of the smell of Big Brother. The same smell a lot of Americans, British and Australians can sense as our civil liberties are slowly eroded in the name of “national security”.

The main character, Marcus, is a 17 year old high school student interested in computers, gadgets, role-playing and girls. Shortly after the opening of the a major terrorist incident occurs: the bombing of the BART and the Bay Bridge. In the aftermath of the incident Marcus and three of his friends are detained and interrogated as suspected terrorists. After a week of detention all but one of them is freed but warned that the government is watching them and told to tell no one they were detained.

Marcus decides to take action and possibly revenge for his missing friend and that’s where the story starts getting interesting.

The main aspect of the that appealed to me is the first rate introduction to the whys and hows of privacy and security. An introduction that even paranoids like me can appreciate. Doctorow explains , RFID hacking and a bunch of other security mechanisms, counter-measures. Most importantly, Little Brother teaches the reader how to THINK about privacy and security.

This is the key thing missing from a lot of actual “grown-up” security books – thought leadership. A lot of these security books provide mechanisms and systems to measure risk and apply controls. Less often do they teach people how to think about threats, how to distil threats into risks and how to apply controls to mitigate those risks. Very rarely, if ever, do they teach you how to think like the attacker.

Little Brother is like a distilled HOWTO on being a sneaky bastard. It teaches you that paranoia, properly applied, is not only healthy but logical given the threats to our privacy and security.

Little Brother also demonstrates that sometimes attacking the control is almost as effective as attacking a target. Rendering the control inoperative not only lowers the protection of the target but can result in the target’s defenders being tied up trying to protect the control instead of the target.

Overall, an excellent that offers some really useful insights for both adults and teenagers. Go give it to a teenager and hopefully they’ll trust someone over 25 long enough to read it.

You can download the for free at:

http://craphound.com/littlebrother/download/

Or you can buy it via your store or Amazon.

On Posting

June 10th, 2008

I haven’t really done more than lurked in the blogsphere for the last 6-12 months. I don’t think I’ve commented more than a dozen times (excluding today where I went nuts – the recent tit-for-tat bullying revenge movie extravaganza has prompted some comments) on anyone’s blog. Ruth is the same – she has been a infrequent poster of late also – though she has less excuse than me – she camps with laptop on lap on my couch and should post every night. Unless of course she’s not funny anymore. Yep. That’ll be it. Not funny anymore. *Note to self – be on guard for retaliation tonight*.

Instead I do a lot of Twittering and IRC. Oh and work. Work has left little time to blog too. Some paid work but mostly work. Which I probably shouldn’t call “work” but sometimes feels like it is – truth be told I feel like a walking, talking support centre some days. And I cut a lot less actual than I’d like but rather shuffle tickets and triage things. But I have recently migrated a ticketing system for Puppet from Trac to Redmine – which I am fairly chuffed about and that is already making life much easier.

All in all I find the Twitter system of 140 characters updates a much smaller morsel to swallow rather than epic blog posts. Not that I wrote an awful lot of those. But I have decided to make some effort and try to blog at least once or twice a week. I don’t particularly care about readership – that was never this blog’s intent – but I do feel like the journaling/diary element of it has been lost lately as I meander along doing other things. A lot of things in my life I’d like to be taking note of for future posterity (my own future posterity – I am sure no one else cares :) ) have been happening.

So first piece of news – another in the offing/maybe/possibly – lots of issues around it and not feeling overly motivated but it’s a distinct possibility. A more Linux focussed title this time around – or perhaps more accurately back to my roots. :)

On Ruby: Book Review: Pulling Strings with Puppet

February 12th, 2008

An actual review!