<p>Modded to be slightly more useful as I wrote the other one while slightly delirious.</p>
Rainy day
You can still play outside. They spent half an hour out there, then Cub came in as he was cold. The big two followed 15mins later, tired and happy and telling me that it was awesome and I'd missed out :) They've had a nice warm bath and are now playing video games and looking forward to sausage stew for dinner. The end of the world is nigh and it's a great time to be a kid.
Skate ramp tests and the first honey harvest
The skate ramp is skatable!
Okay so this is a slightly older picture but it was a good opener :P
All but one of the backs are up (the thing that will prevent skaters and skateboards from ending up in the raised bed or in the neighbour's yard) and the whole thing is now covered in both layers of skin and has been reinforced and all those good things. Now it just needs a paint job (and I know someone who is good at painting that I would like to rope in to help).
Little Big Boy getting used to the ramp
Six
Very Small Small Girl is 6.
She woke up the morning of her birthday, came running into the computer room and announced, "I'm SIX!"
She wanted to go to the zoo by public transport for her birthday so that's what we did.
Critical error #1: do I need extra pants for Cub? Nah he'll be fine and we're running hellishly late.
Chicklet season at Wannabe
First 11 chicklets of the season have hatched. Few more clutches coming.
There's a blue chicklet!
This one was smart and set up in The Brooder
Two mums and their babies (yes they are co-parenting). There's also a black naked neck chicklet under the foreground hen.
bek's guide to paranoid internet computering
Update 20180202: I didn't realise this was still coming up in search results, but it's been brought to my attention from a couple of sources that TrueCrypt seems to now be defunct and a lot of the Firefox add-ons now won't work with the most recent versions of Firefox. So please keep this in mind if you're reading this now.
For good results do levels 1 and 2. I highly recommend level 3. 4 is optional extra and 5 if you're extra paranoid. In a section after level 5 I also include some slight modifications to the installation guide for Ubuntu because I believe making the switch to Linux is really worthwhile if you don't need a program (or suite of programs) that doesn't have a Linux version. If you find any of "free", "secure" and "probably ethical" (I think) desirable in an operating system (all at once even!) hit up the Got Linux? section first and then come back to top. It's at the bottom because I was building up from pretty-easy-to-do to requires-a-bit-of-effort.
Note: most of the instructions are MacOSX Lion and Firefox-centric as that's what I use. Firefox is the same across all operating systems. The only difference is the location of their preferences panel; in OSX it's in the Application menu (it's right next to the Apple menu in the top left hand corner and will say "Firefox" when Firefox is in focus) and in Win7 and Ubuntu it's in Edit -> Preferences. Other browsers should have similar settings about the place but you're on your own there :)
Note 2: this is a GUIDE not an instruction set. You do not have to do everything laid out here exactly as stated. You can skip things or modify them to suit your requirements.
Note 3: the guide focuses on privacy and security, NOT anonymity. Privacy in this case means giving information to people you want to give it to and not having anyone else snoop in on it and use it for whatever they want. It may make your browser stand out a bit, which is only a concern if someone is targeting you specifically. The stuff outlined in here will help you avoid trackers and keep some control over where your data is going, but it will not magically make you safe and/or anonymous. You still need to be conscious of what you're doing and why, and you still need to monitor your kids while they're online.
Disclaimer: I'm a hack not an expert, and I'm using/plugging stuff I'm familiar with. You can do your own research. You do not have to trust me. Even if you do trust me, read up a little bit on some of this stuff anyway. Just don't bubble ;)
Update 0000F14x | 2013-05-23: made a collection called Fortifox with most of the extensions used in this guide.
Full disk encryption and "large files" - a loose experiment
So apparently full disk encryption is not the best idea for people who work with "large" files (where "large" was loosely defined as "multi-megabyte" in one of the threads I skimmed through). I couldn't find anything informative never mind definitive on how full disk encryption would affect 3d and large digital painting work, so decided to run some experiments particular to my usage. These are not benchmarks in any way, shape or form, I was entirely too lazy to do things properly.
System:
quad core 3.4Ghz Intel Core i7
16Gb 1333MHz DDR3 RAM
AMD Radeon HD 6970M with 2Gb on board RAM
250Gb ssd
2Tb hdd
No hardware problems as far as I can tell.
Normally open:
A hundred billion things running simultaneously. At the very least:
- Adium
- Skype
- iCal
- Firefox
- Sophos
- iTunes
Plus all the system and background processes.
Drupal notes: backup process with drush
There's probably a script for this. Or maybe drush is the script. Is all good, some things are done much faster with commandline :)
drush vset maintenance_mode 1
drush cc all
drush arb default --destination=../[site]-[date].tar
And if there's updates to be done:
drush up -y
At the end:
drush vset maintenance_mode 0
!schooling -0001 Jung 10-14 | 10-14 Sept 2012
Maths
Forgot Tao already had a maths book so he's continuing on with his old one. He got away with doing only one page instead of two as I also made him read the thing by himself which taxed him quite a lot as he was already a bit tired and we started later than we should have. Kumon book is much too easy for Ru so will have to get another one that's slightly more challenging. Seems like it would be a good thing for Cub so either he will get Ru's book or I'll get him another one like it.
English
Socially acceptable !schooling: 3-7 Sept 2012
In which I once more attempt weekly updates on the homeschooling side of things. Going to see how I go just writing about the bookwork and if I remember to add the Other Stuff we do as I go (and I found out after reading the curriculum outlines that we actually do most of the stuff in the curriculum without making much effort to do it, wonder how long I can get away with that... :).
Also I changed the generated url as punctuation gets dropped.
Maths