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The ins and outs of Yvo’s life.
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16 Feb 09 All the right things in a week of hell.

Two weeks ago today is when reality caught up with my family and myself. Two weeks ago my dad had a heart attack on board flight DL162 over the middle of Montana. The crew on board that plane is what saved his life. The flight was JFK bound but was instead diverted to Great Falls, MT.

Flight DL162 diverted to Great Falls, MT.

Flight DL162 diverted to Great Falls, MT.

What came next were hours of getting the entire family out to Great Falls. After dropping everything at work I used my iPhone to find out he was in Great Falls, then did a Google search to look up hospitals in that area. In my favor, they only had one major hospital, which I called right when I got out of the car. By 3pm (plane landed in GTF at 2:02pm PST) I knew where he was and that they were taking care of him.

Made all the phone calls / flight arrangements while getting updates from the hospital which wasn’t forecasting a good recovery. By 6pm I had my brother driving from Pullman, WA in a rental (his car wouldn’t make it) from Hertz and 3 plane tickets ordered from Alaska Airlines with two hotel rooms at a local Marriott hotel.

By 11pm Mountain time (10pm Pacific) we were in Montana next to my Dad’s bed seeing him in probably the worst state I had ever seen.

Thankfully over the next few days he got better (faster then the hospital predicted) and we were once again reminded how lucky he was that he was at hospital (Benefis Healthcare) that is able to perform primary angioplasty.

On Thursday the media in Montana got wind of what was going on in their state and my dad was over the news. We also got to meet the entire staff that saved him.

The staff at Benefis.

The staff at Benefis.

By Friday he was allowed to go home and we took a Friday afternoon flight back to Seattle from Helena, MT.

I’m incredibly thankful for all the things that went right. Right flight crew, right doctor on board and an incredibly good hospital (all in the middle of Montana).

This experience also taught me how precious family is and that the time on this earth can be cut off at any moment but I’m glad to still have my Dad for what I hope is a lot more years.

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16 Oct 07 How I build my 2 TB NAS

I mentioned in my last post that I procured 4x 500GB at a very good price. The intention the entire time was to build a cost effective but reliable NAS in order to store my various files centrally instead of a copy on the iMac, a copy on the laptop and another copy elsewhere. Not to mention that all these systems only had one hard drive, meaning one single failure could wipe out some of my data (with exception to the iMac which has a 250gb firewire drive to which it syncs data every night with my own little written rsync script).

There are some software solutions that have been released that purely focus on the ability to quickly create a NAS. I had simple requirements. I needed Samba for my Windows based laptops, NFS for my Linux workstation and AFP for the Macs. FreeNAS was the first thing that came to my mind. Openfiler was out, one because it hadn’t been developed in over a year (doesn’t show developer commitment in my mind then) and NAS lite required you to have a hardware RAID controller. While ideally that would’ve been the nicest, there are some software solutions that do a very well job. Unfortunately FreeNAS was not reliable. The latest RC missed a ata.timeout flag, which caused my disks to get “detached” because the spinup too longer then my 5 seconds. I tried the beta which did include this functionality but after the loads were without any clear reason why at 2.x – 3.x and my file transfers were moving like molasses, I rebooted the machine. It never came back up. The restart process literally damaged the software based RAID. At this point I let the idea rest for 3 days until I decided that I didn’t need a dedicated NAS solution/package to get my NAS to work. I have enough experience now to get my own machine together and it’ll be exactly what I want.

My current job requires me to use Red Hat and Solaris. Both are very well developed operating systems (I’m even going to a Solaris training camp in December paid by my work) but they aren’t my choice of operating system. My last employment had me use Debian and I really like how Debian works and is setup. DEB packages are fantastic and aptitude (apt-get previously) makes it even better. It is, in my opinion, years ahead of RPMs and the Yum software. So I downloaded the 140MB Debian 4.0 Netinst CD and I was on my way to getting Debian rolled onto my old desktop.

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