Monday, June 2. 2008Munin Node for Windows v1.5
I've posted v1.5 of Munin Node for Windows.
Summary Munin Node for Windows AKA munin-node-win32, is a Windows client for the Munin monitoring system. It is written in C++ with most plugins built into the executable. Which is different from the standard munin-node client, which only uses external plugins written as shell and Perl scripts. Change Log for v1.5 + Added readme documentation + Updated -install / -uninstall switches to handle Window Firewall exceptions + Added SpeedFan plugin + Added External Plugins plugin, external plugins are now supported + Added Generic Performance Counter plugin + Removed Uptime, Disktime plugins. Replaced with the Generic Performance Counter plugin + Improved error handling in Cpu plugin + Now Unicode compatible + Fixed memory leaks + Improved multi-thread safety + Added better Event Log support Download MSI Installer (225KB) Binary (135KB) Source Code (423KB) Monday, May 19. 2008foo_playcount_db v0.4 for Foobar2000
I've created a plugin for foobar2000 v0.9, it stores all your plays in a SQLite database.
In addition to storing details on every play, the time and duration, this plugin automatically scores every played track. It uses a formula similar to AmroK scoring with a range of 0-100. You can access the score for each track via the %score% title formatting string. I'm hoping to create a viewer for the database so that you can see detailed trends as every play is stored in the database. Here are the downloads, foo_playcount_db v0.4 Binary (253KB) foo_playcount_db v0.4 Source Code + Binary (1.31MB) Sunday, May 18. 2008Munin Node for Windows v1.4
I've released a new version of munin-node-win32 today.
It is an Windows client for the Munin monitoring system. It supports getting disk usage, HDD temperatures, memory usage, and uptime. If you have Motherboard Monitor installed and running, munin-node-win32 can query it for system temperatures, voltages, and fan speeds. The major new feature for this release is the addition of a cpu monitoring plugin and a configuration file that allows disabling and enabling plugins. Binary + Source Code ZIP (141KB) Beta MSI Installer (168KB) I'm current working on embedding Python so Python scripts can be used to write new plugins for munin-node-win32. Moved Blog
I've moved my blog to my primary domain, www.jory.info, with hosting by 1and1, a fairly decent host with good prices.
Tuesday, January 16. 2007Munin Node for Windows v1.1
munin-node-win32 v1.1 (30KB)
An Windows client for the Munin monitoring system. Supports getting disk usage, HDD temperatures, memory usage, and uptime. If you have Motherboard Monitor installed and running, munin-node-win32 can query it for system temperatures, voltages, and fan speeds. Binary and Source Code included. Use the -install command line switch to install as a service, -uninstall will remove the service. Tuesday, December 12. 2006Munin Node for Windows v0.1
munin-node-win32 v0.1 (30KB)
An Windows client for the Munin monitoring system. Supports getting disk usage, memory usage, and uptime. If you have Motherboard Monitor installed and running, munin-node-win32 can query it for system temperatures, voltages, and fan speeds. Binary and Source Code included. Use the -install command line switch to install as a service, -uninstall will remove the service. Friday, September 22. 2006Yet another new website
I've setup yet another website.
My previous host Dreamhost deleted my host account without warning and hasn't responded to my questions yet. Now I've moved my site to silenceisdefeat.org, which is quite an awesome free service ($1 donation required to get an account). They've been stable for over 2yrs and provide 50MB of free space. My site is also now in blog format, hopefully it will make it easier to update Sunday, April 2. 2006New Website
Well, I've redone my website. Gone is the Mambo CMS PHP and back to nice lean XHTML and CSS. The Mambo CMS was easy to use, but required being online to make any changes. It also was a pain to backup, you had to backup both the files and the MySQL database. Also it was exploitable, being PHP, I really should have keep it updated to the latest Mambo version but that was too much work for a website as small as mine.
Sunday, January 1. 2006The Life of Jory Stone in Pictures
Also called The Advancement of Jory Stone
Cicra Prehistoric times: An Amstrad, believed to have a 2x86 CPU. <No Picture> Cicra 1996: An IBM 486 50Mhz with 20MB RAM and a 2x CD-ROM. ![]() Cicra 1998: Then on a 6x86 133Mhz with 96MB of RAM. ![]() Cicra 2000: Now with a M2 250Mhz with 160MB of RAM. ![]() 2003: Then a T-Bird 650Mhz with 320MB of RAM. <No Picture> 2005: After that a Athlon 64 2800+ with 512MB of RAM. <No Picture> 2006: Currently with a Intel Core 2 E6300 with 1GB of RAM. <No Picture> Continue reading "The Life of Jory Stone in Pictures" Wednesday, July 27. 2005New Tires
Dad had new tires put on the van today. The old tires were well worn, one was balding so bad you could see the metal mesh underneath. Another slowly leaked air and had to be aired up everyday before driving anywhere.
I spent most of today outside cleaning Mom's AC and playing with Lily. I didn't plan on playing in the pool but I slipped and fell into the pool, and so since I was already wet I went ahead and played with Lily for a while. Took me quite some time to dry even though it was scorching outside today. I think a have a light sunburn, it doesn't hurt but my skin is visibly red. In the computer side of things, I setup my local Linux box to act as a caching http proxy using squid. It was very easy to configure and setup and it actually does seem to help. I expect with all four computers using the proxy we should benefit from visiting the same sites. After setting up the proxy I thought about RAID-5, the Linux box is also our backup server. Every night all our systems do a daily backup via ftp to the Linux box. RAID-5 would make me feel much safer and would actually be very easy to setup. After googling a little bit I found this interesting article on Tom's Hardware about using Software RAID-5 in Windows XP Pro, http://www.tomshardware.com/storage/20041119/. After reading that I think software RAID is much better than hardware RAID for the recovery aspect, as with hardware if your RAID controller fails you will need to buy another one of the same model if you still can. With software RAID all you need is a system that has enough IDE (or SATA) connections. The cost of software RAID isn't high either, just the cost of the hard drives. Buying three 160GB hard drives for a total of 320GB of storage in RAID-5 comes out to almost $200.
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