I was running an OpenBSD PF firewall here at my office for several months, replacing a Cisco PIX with something I felt more comfortable with. The only issues I had with it, were that 1) AOL Instant Messenger stopped working, even after I opened the proper ports, and 2) Optimum Online’s Web Mail ceased to work (it would immediately log a user out upon login. These issues were very minor, and so I left it alone. Eventually the cause of these 2 issues lead to a similar problem, this time with software made by ACT called Work Keys. The Work Keys help desk insisted that the problem was being caused by caching (i.e. a proxy server). I insisted that I had no proxy server. I had no caching enabled anywhere… so what was the problem? Well thanks to this email I figured it out! It has to do with NAT address pools.
Linux vs OpenBSD vs FreeBSD (The Battle For My Desktop)
Although I still have windows on my machine (FL Studio is a killer app… can’t help it) my primary OS has been linux for a few years now. I use OpenBSD for firewalls at work, and have experimented with FreeBSD at home as well. After using linux from scratch for so long, I began to feel the itch for change. This is the beginning of a long story, which I’ll get to writing more of later. If the mood strikes me I’ll post lots of technical details and so forth, but as of right now I’ll say this… I wish OpenBSD had support for my sound card… *sigh* Stay tuned for more!
Rats On Cocaine
Wow Rats On Cocaine! Wow. LOL
Getting Started With Ruby
Linux Journal has a nice article introducing ruby and ruby on rails. Nice to see my favorite programming language get some press 🙂
Tri-Booting With Grub
I couldn’t help it, I love linux, I love OpenBSD (freebsd is teh suck, more on that in an editorial ) and I need to have windows if I want to run FL Studio (yeah it’s great). I found this article to be quite helpful. Specifically the portion about OpenBSD.