As some of you who follow me on Twitter know, I ran into frustrations a few days ago with WPA. In Kubuntu, the distribution of Ubuntu I had installed, the WPA-enabled Network Manager isn't installed by default (or at least it seemed not to have been installed when I did it - could have been my fault.) I knew that I should do it at some point, but I hadn't encountered a WPA network until last week, so I hadn't bothered. Needless to say, I'm doing that right now.
But what I realized was that the whole WPA thing with my laptop added to the pile of "little problems I haven't solved yet." Now, of course, as a techie, and someone with a home network, and multiple computers, and varied projects, there is always a list like this. But I've come to realize that now that I use Linux as my primary desktop, this list has grown much, much larger than it ever has been.
- After spending close to five hours on the X windows/driver problem I vented about last week. I gave up. I attached the nice brand-spanking new monitor to my Mac Mini, and have been quite enjoying using it. Needless to say, I did absolutely nothing to get it to work. Plugged it in, and it just worked.
- It took me a couple of frustrating hours or so to configure samba (editing the samba.conf file and testing) so that I could share my home directory, with music and video, with my other computers, and share my printer. Of course with my mac, I opened up the system preferences, checked a button, and, voila! Directories were shared.
- I have outstanding issues or decisions to make with my kernel not seeing all the memory I've given it (therefore requiring a recompile, which I have been postponing for weeks) sound, a webcam, a scanner, and accounting software. And there were several problems I never solved - including syncing calendars and addressbooks, finding a good time tracker. The problems I "solved" by offloading the functions onto the web.
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