Sun Blade 100 ATX Power Supply

Sun almost certainly won't like this, but I've found that the Sun Blade 100 does just have a normal ATX power supply, with only the ATX connector. Mine failed yesterday, so after looking at the pin outs, I realized that it's just a normal ATX power supply, and plugged one I "borrowed" from a co-workers PC in. Sure enough, it works, and is much quieter (and cheaper) than the crappy 200W power supply that Sun put in there. I'm going to order a modular ATX supply to replace it, as you only need the ATX power lead, and there isn't much room for the extra "standard" ATX cables in that Sun Blade case.

Local Man Writes Blog

A reporter from the Waterloo Courier contacted me today about being intervewed for a story she's doing about weblogs. I was actually in a story they did about blogs in January of 2003, but the Courier's search engine is so inept, you won't find the article. I linked to it back when it was published, but of course the paper broke the link too. The Courier is definitely not a blog-friendly web site. One thing that irked me at the time was that they didn't list the URLs of any of the sites that were used in the article, so if you were interested in reading what any of the interviewees wrote, it was difficult to track down their blogs. I'm lucky in that Seth Bokelman is a pretty unique name (there being only one other one, as far as I know) and his Google Rank is nothing compared to mine. :)

So, I'm not sure what the "angle" of the article will be yet, but I agreed to be interviewed. I'll just try to avoid using the word "incestuous" again, as my wife still teases me about that quote from the last one.

Lately, my biggest selling point for blogs is that they're an excellent resource for Google or your other search engine of choice. I've said recently to friends that Information isn't Information unless it's indexed by Google, as that's the way I feel. What good is it if it can't be indexed, searched, and shared? I'm a Google Junkie though, I bet I do at least 100 searches a day, but it's an extremely powerful tool, and the more bloggers you have feeding good information into that index, the better it becomes.

Arthur Hoeft 1907-2005

My Great-Uncle Arthur Hoeft died last night, he was 98. No details on the funeral yet, but the funeral home has a web page that lists the obituaries. Art and his wife Verona used to take care of me sometimes when I was a child, as their farm was just a few miles from ours. As a kid, I used to like going to their house since they always had Sugar Smacks and at home we rarely got sugary cereal, so it was a treat. The last time I saw him was at Christmas, and he was now in a wheelchair most of the time, having fallen last fall.

Update: The obit is now up:

GARNER – Arthur Hoeft, 98, of Garner died Wednesday (February 23, 2005) at the Muse Norris Hospice Inpatient Unit, Mason City.

Funeral services will be held 2:00 P.M., Tuesday at St. John’s Lutheran Church, east of Garner with the Rev. Carl Hedberg officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery.

Visitation will be held from 4 to 7 P.M., Monday at the Cataldo Funeral Chapel, 160 E. 4th St., Garner and one hour prior to services at the church.

Memorials may be directed to St. John’s Lutheran Church, Hospice of North Iowa or the Ventura Senior Citizens.

Arthur Herman Hoeft, the son of Herman and Martha (Reinhardt) Hoeft, was born February 8, 1907 at Fort Dodge. He was baptized and confirmed at St. John’s Lutheran Church east of Garner. He attended St. John’s Parochial School. Following his schooling he worked for various farmers in the Garner and Ventura area. On February 27, 1934 he married Verona Ann Schultz at her parent’s home near Forest City. They farmed in the Ventura, Garner and Clear Lake area. In 1957, they purchased their own farm and in 1966 moved to the home farm. After Verona’s death in 1986 he continued to live at the farm. In 1996, he moved to Prairie View Apartments in Garner.

He was a member of St. John’s Lutheran Church where he was a deacon, Walther League and the Ventura Senior Citizens.

Art is survived by two children, Darwin (Jerrilee) Hoeft of Custer, SD and Carolyn (Larry) Shadle of Carthage, MO; grandchildren, Ann (Tim) Hossler of Beverly Hills, MI, and Laura (Rev. Glenn) Niemann of Pekin, IL; step-grandchildren, Patty (Marty) Allen of Gresham, OR, Jerilee (Paul) Sever of Salmon, ID, Renee (Tom) Dickinson of Post Falls, ID, Dave (Jenny) Squire of Houlton, WI and Bob (Kathy) Squire of Peru, NY; three great granddaughters; eight step great grandchildren; a step great great grandson; two sisters-in-law, Irma (Henry) Bokelman of Ventura and Lucille Schultz of Mason City; and several nieces and nephews.

He was preceded in death by his wife, Verona, Mar. 23, 1986; his parents; a brother, Lester Hoeft; a sister, Edna Knopf; and a step great grandson, Mark Sever.

The last line of the obituary is especially sad, as Mark Sever died earlier this week in a snowboarding accident, he was 14. It's been a rough week for that part of my extended family.

Dovecot certificate problems on RHEL 4

If you've recently upgraded to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 and are trying to generate a new self-signed certificate for the Dovecot IMAP server, you've probably found that simply typing "make dovecot.pem" doesn't work. What you have to do is generate one "by hand" using this command:

openssl req -new -x509 -newkey rsa:1024 -nodes -keyout mykey.pem -out \ mycert-pem

Thanks to the folks on the Dovecot mailing list for helping me with that. :)