Lucid Dreams and Death By Techno
Hello, everyone. My name is Marcel and I'm a technology addict.
I stand before you today, naked (figuratively speaking, of course), laying my deepest, darkest, secrets out for all to see. You see, I love technology. All kinds of technology. Computers. Televisions. Cars. Smart phones. Computer programs. Airplanes. Linux distributions. Keychains with tiny screens to display family photos. Bluetooth headsets. Satellites. Video games. Coffee makers. Spaceships. Remote controlled toy helicopters. High speed networks. Model rockets. Timepieces. Microwave ovens.You get the idea. I've always felt that the problem isn't too much technology, but too little and insufficiently advanced technology. I'm also a believer that really, really great tech is what's going to save us and propel us to the next stage of human evolution. I love looking at new technology. Touching new technology.
Trying out new technology. I am forced to admit that I may have a problem.
Don't get me wrong. I still believe all those things. What? Did you think this was an Alcoholics Anonymous style confession? Nothing of the sort. The problem is that I place so much faith in tech that when it fails, I feel personally victimised, as though all those wondrous things I so love have betrayed me. This is especially true when it's something I think is really, really good. Yes, my 2000 Honda Accord blew a cylinder a few days ago, forcing me to abandon it (I donated it to the Kidney Foundation, actually) and forcing me to go out car shopping. I bought a new Nissan Altima by the way. And yes, it's got really cool technology on board -- I can't believe it took that long for me to get a car with a push button starter and no need to insert a key. But I digress . . .
My love for new technology was part of my downfall today. You see, because I so love technology, I might occasionally be a little too trusting of it and perhaps a little too casual in how I deal with it. Consider this foray into Lucid Lynx a cautionary tale.
Of course I knew that Ubuntu's Lucid Lynx was still Alpha, but it really bothered me that that my video resolution went poof with a recent update. It worked in Alpha 1 but by Alpha 3, it was broken. That was on a test machine so I was only so upset. It still hurt, just a bit. A few days ago, Beta 1 of Lucid Lynx, a.k.a. Ubuntu 10.04 LTS, was released. This morning, I did my 'apt-get dist-upgrade' and I get a nice, high resolution display again. Ubuntu and I kissed and made up. Figuratively speaking, of course. And I thought, "you gotta love great tech".
Then I decided to upgrade my production, day to day, working notebook. Now you gotta know it didn't all go according to plan. And so I opened up a terminal window . . .
sudo -i vi /etc/apt/sources.list :1,$s/karmic/lucid/g :wq apt-get update apt-get dist-upgrade
GUI tools? We don't need no steengkeeng GUI tools. Now let me finish before you point out my first mistake. The upgrade started and I continued working. At some point, network-manager crashed and I lost my wireless connection. Inconvenient, but I didn't worry a lot about it, but that's only because I was too trusting.
Before you tell me my second mistake, let me finish. Time passed and the upgrade ended. With errors. Without doing a lot of reading (what could possibly have gone wrong), I rebooted.
I know you're anxious to point out my third mistake, but hold on a little longer.
When the system came back up, I saw the following.
udevadm trigger is not permitted while udev is unconfigured. mission modules (cat /proc/modules; ls /dev) ALERT! /dev/disk/by_uuid/8blah-blah-blah does not exist dropping to a shell (initramfs)
Okay, now you can start beating me up.
So I took my notebook to my downstairs office where I still have a wired connection, booted into an older kernel, and proceeded to 'dkpg -i' packages from /var/cache/apt one by one until I was able to install the udev package. Eventualy (an hour or two later), I was able to restart the 'apt-get dist-upgrade' which then completed successfully. It's a good thing I know my way around these things othewise my reckless attempt to skirt the system in order to speed my upgrade along would have ended in totally botched system that needed a good reinstall before it would boot again. Nevertheless, I did learn some lessons; lessons I already knew but ignored because I trusted that nothing could go wrong go wrong go wrong og worng . . .
1) Use the proper tools to do your upgrade (Upgrade Manager or Synaptic) and leave the sources.list files alone.
2) Do not do a major system upgrade over a wireless connection.
3) Read, deal with, and otherwise respond to the error messages. Don't just close your session, and your eyes, and reboot.
Eventually, the upgrade finished, in spite of my efforts to help it along. I rebooted and you know what, it's a beautiful thing.
If you haven't already downloaded a copy of 10.04, it's probably time. At Beta 1, it's probably stable enough for those who consider themselves only 'mildly adventurous ' to give it a try. It certainly looks different. Gone is the staid brown (or orange) of old, replaced by a playful, somewhat seductive purple. The new colors frankly made me wonder what Ubuntu was promising with 10.04 LTS. Given that this is a long term support release, I have to think it's meant to be less of a fling and more of a long term relationship. You see, Lucid Lynx could also be called 10.04 SNR; the Social Networking Release. I'll cover that topic and some social networking dangers and pitfalls in my next post when I tell you why being too social can be a bad idea .
Until next time . . .
Comments
Lucid Dreaming
Monday January 23 2012 04:47:58 pm
Greek
Why *only* Ubuntu?
Monday March 29 2010 02:24:20 am
KenP
A lesson learnt
Monday March 29 2010 12:09:20 am
Patrick Elliott-Brennan
@ Ned Flanders
Sunday March 28 2010 11:59:32 pm
Chief Wiggum
you used 4.0, were unhappy and left: youre a moron
Sunday March 28 2010 09:22:19 pm
ned flanders
Updating over wireless. Doh!
Sunday March 28 2010 07:03:54 pm
LeeNukes
What?
Sunday March 28 2010 05:33:30 pm
alvare
Lucid Dreams
Sunday March 28 2010 04:43:28 pm
John Kerr
Old Machines Need Love Too
Sunday March 28 2010 12:30:13 pm
likemindead
True but checkout Kubuntu 10.04...
Sunday March 28 2010 11:51:49 am
ltorgo@gmail.com
Lucid Lynx: a great advance in Linux OS's
Friday March 26 2010 08:09:04 pm
Norbert Roche
Lucid Lynx posting
Friday March 26 2010 06:37:25 pm
Calvin R