[00:26] woot, new zsh version [00:26] it supports vi like cut/paste [00:26] well v selecting etc. [00:46] Excellent. [03:13] *** LT has joined #arpnetworks [04:03] *** Hien has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 276 seconds) [06:14] *** Hien has joined #arpnetworks [07:20] *** tooth has joined #arpnetworks [07:58] now i remember why i like a litle harmless HAM [07:58] its when i dont get an email for a day i wonder... whats brooken [07:58] only to see most of the mail hitting the server is plain SPAM [07:59] and the occasional relay drone and popper [07:59] That's what she said!! [09:40] *** LT has quit IRC (Quit: Leaving) [13:58] what is the go to wifi utility folks use on arch linux laptops? [14:28] I was using wicd but recently switched to using NetworkManager [14:28] wicd was frequently having issues with DHCP (it would spawn dhclient, the wifi conn would be lost, it would reconnect and spawn a new dhclient, etc. All sorts of headaches) [14:29] Plus NM is no longer a horrible shitshow :) And supports things like setting certain wifi networks to then open a VPN connection automatically [14:29] (eg if I'm connecting to Starbucks' WiFi, automatically start the VPN to my home before the connection is made fully "up") [14:32] thats handy [14:36] I've always *hated* that brief overlap between some strange wifi and my reasonably secure VPN when whatever apps I have open still (syncthing, chrome, etc) are potentially exposed and may even open connections outside the VPN without my realizing it. [14:39] brycec: especially useful on actively hostile networks (countries that do censorship and what not) [14:58] brycec: yeh it's disconcerting. [14:59] wifi is really the only reason network managers are necessary for most people [15:00] Very true. VPNs too, but I guess that's a smaller subset of "most" people than I think it is [15:00] and i find i can't see a proxy server on linux per wifi connection the way i can on android :/ [15:01] depends if it's vpn for internet or vpn for network [15:02] s/see/set/ [15:02] and i find i can't set a proxy server on linux per wifi connection the way i can on android :/ [15:02] I assume [15:02] haha [15:02] yes you are right [15:02] i can't see properly :/ [15:02] And that's because Linux/* has no central network management :p [15:02] heh [15:03] OSX, Android, Windows all have a system-wide setting that most browsers can honour. On Linux though, it's barely there... [15:03] heck, Java will actually use Firefox as its network/proxy config source [15:05] yeah at least it's no big deal [15:06] it's so hard to guage thiings like how much more efficient explicit proxy over transparent proxy is [15:06] because it's things like dns you skip out on [15:06] and it's worse if you are at a distant shitty wifi link [15:07] which is when you care more [15:32] brycec, out of the box NM.. it has become quite good lately [15:32] It's highly decent :) [15:32] but on my boxes @home and laptops that are housebound all use rc scripts to bring up wpa_supplicant etc. so it's online becuase X loads [15:32] s/because/before/ [15:32] before it's things like dns you skip out on [15:33] hah [15:33] heh, yeah for sure. It's only my laptop(s) that I take places that have NM. No reason to go overboard. [15:33] i do have an older linux with wicd.. but thats because i cant really upgrade it and NM on that is shot to sh1t [15:34] oh i see.. i spelt beuase wrong [15:34] and again [15:34] im going to bed [15:34] That's what she said!! [15:38] ;) [15:41] it seems chromium finally fixed high dpi support. [15:42] it seems to work "normally" now. [15:58] he.net are weirdly cheap for colocation [15:59] i dunno how they can be so cheap, 42u cabinet with 15 amps power and 100 megabit bandwidth for $300/month [15:59] hot damn [15:59] 15 amps of power at 110v would be like 1650watts. [15:59] I mean, 100mbps is a bit stingy for 42U... but it depends what you're doing. [16:00] yeah well 15 amps power for 42u isn't much either. [16:00] you kind of want twice that with redundancy [16:00] and gigabit and cross connect to someone other than he.net [16:00] and it's in fremont. [16:01] which is alwayas having issues [16:01] I'd expect at least 20A, sure. Still depends what you're doing... [16:01] at least i think it's in fremont. [16:01] true, but servers normally use at least 1a per 1u? [16:01] Depends on the server [16:01] yeah it does [16:01] i'm just doing a rough ballpark figurue :/ [16:02] Company I worked at before sold 1Us with 300-400W PSUs, and typically only drew 200W [16:02] it's complicated because load vs idle etc. [16:02] 200w is 1.5 amp. [16:02] Oh and we had 1Us with 185W PSUs running Atom stuff [16:02] or a bit more [16:02] call it 2a. [16:02] i3s, i5s etc can easily draw only 50 watts of power [16:02] if idle [16:03] idle power usage is dramatically raised by chipset etc crap [16:03] which is what facebook etc are trying to improve with their own motherboards without ipmi etc. [16:03] well without kvm i suppose [16:04] linode had a huge outage at fremont recently, and afaik he.net are the only ones at fremont.. [16:04] 120V @ 15A is 1800W to distribute, or 9x 200W servers... [16:04] so i searched fremont data center and found this deal thingy. [16:04] ahh it's 120v not 110v? [16:04] I have no idea [16:05] and california is like 20c kwh? [16:05] * brycec never quite understood the difference between 110 and 120, why some things are labeled or the other... But everything works. [16:05] normally for power.. [16:05] (obviously I know the 10VAC difference, but... why is there a diff, etc) [16:06] 17.04c res, 13.80c commerical according to this [16:07] so it's about $160/month for power if you run it hard. [16:07] but yeah you'd have to delay server boots if you did that [16:08] so i suppose they wouldn't lose money at least. [16:08] they probably just have heaps of space. [16:08] that also doesn't include air conditioning cost. [16:11] i wonder if arp is using 110v or more. [16:11] it seems 208v is getting more common in the US for data centers. [16:13] we use 110 [16:19] do you have the option of using higher? [16:20] it seemed to be that things were first moving to hybrid.. [16:21] i suspect laptops etc don't always work on 208v [16:21] i haven't seen servers that aren't auto sensing in ages. [16:21] stuff here (generally) works anywhere between 110-240v AC [16:24] yeah i buy stuff from amazon, and most stuff will just work [16:24] it's anything with motors in it that won't work [16:24] like a blender isn't likely to work across voltages. [16:56] mercutio: yes, coresite is very flexible, they'll install damn near anything you want if you pay for it. The next April 1, i'm going to ask them for a tesla coil in order to harness wireless power transmission. [16:57] i'll bet $100 the change order will go through before the electricians send it back with a "WTF?!" stamp [16:57] That sounds fantastic. [16:58] LOL [16:59] "we need to know how many Tesla" [16:59] LOOOOOL [17:00] hahaha [17:00] lots of guys do 208v here, some even DC power [17:00] "Just enough to wipe out my competitors" [17:00] * up_the_irons slow claps [17:01] yeah dc is more popular amongst routers etc. [17:01] oh /colocation on arpnetworks web site mentions dc and 208v power available :) [17:02] i didn't check the page. [17:02] yup [17:03] everything is 240v or dc here. [17:04] i suspect dc is more efficient, but more pita [17:05] Yes, DC:DC is much more efficient (and cooler) than AC:DC [17:05] Which is a big part of why it exists [17:06] yup [17:06] Why have 1000 servers each incurring 50% (random number) loss on AC:DC when you can have 1000 servers incurring 1% loss, and a central AC;DC converter incurring a mere 10% loss. Plus it integrates with batteries easier. [17:06] (why ac-dc-ac for battery when you can just ac-dc-dc) [17:08] also, it's weird, I feel that I can "hear" DC. I used to often frequent the XO carrier suite on 600 W. 7th, and since that's all telco, it was all DC, absolutely everything. Gorgeous fibre all over the room, SONET switches, Juniper, you name it, it was there... and the room totally sounded different. It was like a low hum... [17:09] lights on switches also seemed different, like you weren't seeing the 60hz when they were "off" [17:10] yeah apparently it's really backuup power that puushes things to DC more [17:10] yeah [17:10] And telco... which is in part pushed by backup power [17:11] it's just a lower bill for DC vs AC monthly [17:11] Telco DCs are commonly DC-only [17:11] but it makes it much simpler having DC for backup power. [17:11] i can really notice a difference between 50/60hz for crt's [17:12] buut there's been a surprisingly high amount of discussion about monitors and pwm dimming and flicker recently [17:13] i think it's pretty well known now that 50/60 etc hz being on/off can do stuff to humans [17:14] i can "feel" wireless stuff sometimes it feels like. [17:14] like the big heavy wireless stuff [17:21] interesting [17:24] can always get one of these http://content6.flixster.com/site/10/27/01/10270124_ori.jpg [17:27] Because you're cold? :p I don't think a solar blanket would be as effective as the show portrayed... [17:29] *** meingtsla has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 252 seconds) [17:29] *** staticsafe has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 276 seconds) [17:42] *** staticsafe has joined #arpnetworks [17:51] *** meingtsla has joined #arpnetworks [17:55] *** staticsafe has quit IRC (Quit: WeeChat 1.2) [17:56] *** staticsafe has joined #arpnetworks [18:07] *** staticsafe has quit IRC (Quit: WeeChat 1.2) [18:08] *** staticsafe has joined #arpnetworks [18:41] woooo [18:41] <3 [19:48] * grody ♥ moah [19:50] for shits and giggles i thought i'd try running suricate on a small pfSense VPS [19:50] it was working brilliant, until i was downloading a few files over FTP.. it ran out of memory [20:09] *** milki has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 276 seconds) [20:17] i've never understood why triple has one p instead of two [20:19] s/becuase/before [20:24] ... http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/triple [20:25] latin [20:25] triplus [20:25] trippple.net is available [20:25] i wonder if it'd be useful [20:25] ppp huh [20:25] our guest on floss weekly today had a TLD of .works [20:25] like pppoe [20:25] yeh [20:25] and every time I sent email to them, GNUS said "are you sure?" [20:26] haha [20:35] .. http://weave.works [20:36] weave orchestrates docker instances [22:09] any idea what I need to do to fix a mutt error on centos? gnutls_handshake: A TLS packet with unexpected length was received. [22:09] my google foo has failed me [22:20] resolved - issue with my muttrc file