'Enterprise Lab'

[LAB] Osiris EOL

Elon had to shut down the Osiris webserver. The HTAgil documentation can now be found under HTAgil

[OpenSource] Free mathematical program

Hello Together

We used a lot of proprietary CAS tools during our studies. There was Maple, Mathematica, Matlab and so on.
I just found out that there’s an open source CAS program. It’s called SAGE and you can get it on http://www.sagemath.org/download.html .

In Windows you would need VMware player, which is also free.

Give it a try ;)

[Enterprise Lab] R.I.P iServer

Today we finally took down the old iServer. With a little smile on our face and a little teardrop in our eyes, we take farewell from our good old friend.

root@iserver / # shutdown -h now “So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish”

Broadcast message from root (pts/1) (Thu Oct  9 17:02:00 2008):

So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
The system is going down for system halt NOW!

We will always keep you in good memory.

PS: If anybody had data on the iServer which he didn’t backup so far, I have a USB drive with all the data on it.

[Enterprise Lab] public_html now ready

Hello

I’m proud to announce, that it is now possible to create your public_html to be displayed on the web.
It’s really easy to get it work:
Just create a directory named public_html in your home directory on enterpriselab. There you can put your web page (html, php possible). Your page should now be accessible through:

http://user.enterpriselab.ch/~<yourusername>

If you encounter any problems, feel free to contact me.

[Enterprise Lab] Spam protect your blog

Hi folks!

There’s now the possibility to activate a Spam Plugin for your blog(s) if you encounter problems with comment spam.
Please see our wiki for more information.

[Campus Report] Students providing services on Solaris

At Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts, we built a team of students providing services for other students on Solaris OS.

A need of urgent action

In the past, some students I was leading, provided different services like svn, wiki, forum, webserver, etc. for other students on a single server
called the iServer. As this server was not firewalled by our IT Service and not officially supported by them, we had to take urgent action as
the IT Services told us that they will take down the server in this summer because it didn’t fit their SLA and IT rules.
So we had to hurry building a new team of fresh students (most of the students in the old team are leaving this summer).

Why not using existent infrastructure?

We came up with the idea, that our Enterprise Lab (www.enterpriselab.ch) could be the best place to provide such services. With the agreement
of the labs head Bruno Joho, we could easily keep the services up. Of course he agreed, as this finally could be a big improvement on the
visibility of our lab. So we decided to migrate all the services to the Enterprise Lab.

That is hours of work! Who can the whole task until summer?

As the idea was up we started to think on who could do all the work. And we came to the great idea: Why not let do the students the work?
It’s a win-win situation for both: the students and the Enterprise Lab staff. Students can improve their knowledge on Solaris and on how
to keep a service up and running. So we decided, the whole task from planning, over migrating to actually providing the service should be
done by individual students who are interested in such topics. As we couldn’t expect the students having much knowledge of Solaris and
the infrastructure of our lab, we decided to assign mentors to each service. A mentor is a person which has knowledge on Solaris and on a specific
Service. So the students could ask them if they run into problems.

Whats next?

Finally, after 3 weeks of recruitment of new members we had built a team with 20 students. Now we started to migrate the following services which
can be used by students, staff and professors:

- a forum with user authentication over ldap (in the past we had to set up each user separately) – forum.enterpriselab.ch
- a blog space with ldap auth (blog.enterpriselab.ch)
- a place for subversion repositories
- a place for public/or private wikis (students mostly use this for learning for their finals)
- a web space (public_html of users home will be available to the world)
- a bug tracking system (where students can maintain their projects)
- a database server (where students, staff, etc. can play with databases, mainly mysql)
- and maybe much more services to come

The goal is, that we can start providing those services this summer. Some services are already up and running.
The second goal is to let the students improve their knowledge in Solaris and other Sun technology as their services
all run in our lab. So they have to deal with zfs, zones, ldap, apache, php, mailman, wordpress, dokuwiki, bugtrak, svn, mysql,
ssh, … and much much more.

This way I hope we can build a big Solaris community on our campus.

Kind regards from Switzerland

2nd TechTalk at HSLU – T&A

Hello Together

Next Friday im going to hold a presentation about the Sun SPOTs, an experimental technology from Sun Labs.
The preso will be held, Friday 9.05.08 5pmin room D300 at Hochschule Luzern – Technik und Architektur (map).
Poster Sun SPOTs

Please sign up here to get your free sandwich ;)

For more information about the Sun SPOTs, go to www.sunspotworld.com

Found a picture

You can see me sitting in front of the Enterprise Lab. The picture was taken a couple of months ago.

Me

Netbeans 6.0 Final Release

What a birthday present SUN gave me ;) Netbeans 6.0 has been released tonight. So switching to the brand new stable IDE should now be done. Learn more about the new features here. Happy Coding!

SUN Campus Ambassador

Yesterday I started officially with my job as SUN Campus Ambassador at Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts. I’m very glad to have this position and will do the best. My main responsibilities with this job are:

– Lead the Sun open source developer community on my campus
- Run Sun Technology demo sessions on my campus
- Promote Sun training events on my campus
- Promote Sun’s open source platforms and development tools to professors and researchers

I’m working part-time about 5 hours a week. I’m very excited to hold my first tech demo before the end of this year. More information about this will follow. Also I ask all the students, professors and researchers here on the campus to contact me if they  have any questions to SUN related products and technologies. At this point I want to thank SUN for this great opportunity and my employer, the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts, for giving me the chance to combine my studies, my employment at Enterprise Lab and my position as SUN Campus Ambassador. As soon as I have my SUN blog working, I will also post a link here.

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