Wednesday, 3 September 2008

Lotus Notes forced from above - quirks that the support people didn't know

Assorted notes about the forced use of lotus notes for email and calendar

Can't send email as "group webmaster" with webmaster's email address from my usual account.

Even setting reply to address is a major task.

One option is to create a role account (and make me the delegate so I don't have to recall all passwords) for each role I send email for.

Better option is to use thunderbird and standard smtp/imap mail for real sysadmin work.


Role accounts and Delegates:

It turns out that the lotus web client works really well on a mac.

If you open the url of someones lotus notes and then log in as the delegate (who has permission for calendar access, you can control their calendar and see only their meeting invites in the mail tab - as expected.

One complication is that the real users preferences are what is seen by the delegate - so the OWNER of the account has to set all preferences that relate to display or working hours for the calendar.

Web client on late 2006 intel imac MUCH quicker and nicer than lotus client on p4 win laptop.

Wednesday, 18 June 2008

Finally connected at home

Not really worth a blog entry!
iinet adsl2+ works first go - even with 1950's wiring and old fashioned telephone jacks and wires.

Now I need to do a speed check.

Will update this sometime

Tuesday, 3 June 2008

Recreational SCUBA and equity

The SDFV was formed back in the 1960's to promote safety, protest competition spearfishing and promote education of scuba.

It's had a long and fruitful presence in the arena of marine parks, fisheries (abalone, cray or sourthern rock lobster), access, safe diving.

It's organised a variety of events, including the Sunken Assets series of seminars.

The SDFV codes of practice govern diving in shipping channels in Port Phillip Bay, and also while the channel deepening project is on.

A recent arena that will need to be watched is the ex-hmas canberra - a ship to be scuttled as a tourist destination.
The SDFV is involved - having provided seed money to the VARS organisation, as well as having member club members on the committees.

The biggest issue to come about with the ex-hmas canberra will be the question of equity of access. The company line (that VARS committee has agreed to and proposed from the start) is that there will be equitable access for all.

Now the definition of equitable access and access methods will be interesting - I read it as: No limitations on what a recreational group want to do - so they can use all bouys if they are provided, have same mechanism to access permit system if it exists for bookings. That there is a realistic way for small groups (say 3 guys in a private boat) to suddenly decide conditions are perfect to get thru the heads and go dive it.
So it needs to be flexible access and acknowledge that there are few if any physical limitations on accessing a scuttled wreck in the water.

Department or Central computing resources?

The title says it all - what's better in the Monash Uni environment?

Central Computing Resources - Monash now has an eResearch Centre complete with projects to provide (or take over, depending on your viewpoint and knowledge of the history of facilities) disk, tape and compute resources like the monash sun grid.

ECSE dept. has the CTIE Pizza Cluster - which for most of it's life hasn't run as a grid cluster, but as a convienient set of compute nodes running specialist software and simulations.

So here we are with the chance to make changes:
Do we buy a few more rack mount boxes (perhaps sun x4150 dual quad core xeon's) or do we try and get the eResearch mob to provide boxes for our use resourced up to the level required by our non-grid software requirements?

Time for meetings and more meetings.