I subscribed to TekSavvy internet services before moving into my new apartment, not knowing how much they actually kicked ass! (Un)fortunately our super switched apts half way through the month after having my dry loop set up in the old apartment leaving us with a leeched wifi connection that was sketchy at best.
Today was pure shit so I decided to hit the subway and grab some KFC and find some alligator clips to mess with our demarkation box in our “bunker” (temporary apartment until ours is painted).
Got some clips and went one by one down the trunk until I found a loop with battery and 411 service – thank god no one heard me on their phone! Here’s a pic demonstrating tonights madness :
For some ridiculous reason I started from the bottom of the trunk… anyway the third last available selection happened to carry a DSL signal – Woohoo! Anyway I am celebrating my accomplishment with rum and a mess of downloads – hope you all enjoy your night, cheers!
PS : I am now enjoying unlimited bandwidth (avec MLPPP) at about 760 KB/s via usenet – Rod stewart playing all night!
My power supply came in the mail this week for my Toshiba A200 notebook so I decided to add Windows 7 to the installed OS list (currently booting Leopard 10.5.2 and Ubuntu 9.04). As always Windows hijacked the master boot record with it’s inferior boot manager – I had to fix this immediately.
GRUB is not as complicated as people make it out to be. In fact it is a very elegant solution to handling multi-boot platforms. Here’s a quick guide to steal your MBR space back from Windows :
- Boot into live CD such as Ubuntu or Knoppix – DSL works well and is fast.
- Open a terminal, if your live CD boots into a GUI – press ALT+CTRL+F2 to access a different console.
- type “cfdisk”
This part is tricky – you must find where GRUB currently lives – in the case of the image below (my rig) sda5 is where Ubuntu is installed – in GRUB this is equal to hd0,4 – since GRUB counts from 0, not 1.
Once you have determined what partition holds grub root files – close cfdisk (q) and type :
grub
root (hd0,X) <– where X is the grub count from 0 to your current Linux installation*
setup (hd0,0)
This will opverwrite Windows MBR installation and give access back to GRUB hooray! Next step would be adding Windows boot back to grub which has already been covered in my “How To Dual Boot Hackintosh + Ubuntu” article.
* I have a difficult time expressing this simple idea – if Linux is installed on SD5 then grub should say (hd0,4). If your boot partition is /dev/sda87, GRUB would be (hd0,86) – I hope this helps.
EDIT : I forgot to mention a huge congratulations to Microsoft for making an operating system that looks and feels like Vista with the intermittent stability of XP – huge upgrade IMO.. still far from Leopard.





