Which NAS Device, Revisited
Posted by Ryan Baxter Mon, 30 Jul 2007 02:49:00 GMT

A couple of weeks ago I decided that I needed a Network Attached Storage (NAS) device. To recap – a NAS device would provide me a better backup solution with the added benefit of a shared storage location on my home network. Given the criteria that I previously listed and a little bit of research, I purchased a Linksys NAS200 and a pair of 500GB SATA drives for a total of $350.18. This is about $150 under my $500 budget constraint.
Before my purchase I had been leaning towards the D-Link DNS-323, but secretly hoping the Linksys NAS200 would arrive in time. Sometimes it pays to wait. I don’t usually purchase hardware that is so new on the market, but a couple of factors persuaded me to make my decision. The Linksys NAS200 retails for about $40 less than the D-Link DNS-323 and packs quite a few more features. This combined with the NSLU2’s success and my overall good luck with Linksys hardware helped seal the deal. Since my home network runs entirely on Linux, I wanted a device that would work well in this environment. I’m not suggesting that I won’t run into problems, but with the NSLU2’s reputation I feel a little less worried. I’ll be sure to follow up with a full review once my new hardware arrives. To be continued…
UPDATE: My final review of the Linksys NAS200 has been posted.
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Code Snippet: Ruby Word Masher
Posted by Ryan Baxter Sat, 28 Jul 2007 20:54:00 GMT
I can be extremely indecisive about things. So much, in fact, that I even wrote a script to help me choose a name for this website. Is it strange that a random number generator can make me feel better about making decisions? My wife thinks I’m crazy, but she also calls domain names, donames. Besides, I think there is something novel in a computer choosing a name for itself. Anyway… Given some user input, the code below will read words from a file and then mash them together to provide unique combinations. Here is a words.dat file to help get you started. Happy mashing.
#!/usr/bin/ruby
words = Array.new
i = 0
def mash_words(words, mash_count)
new_word = ''
1.upto(mash_count) do
new_word += words[rand(words.length)]
end
return new_word
end
begin
puts 'How many mashed words would you like to create?'
word_count = gets.chomp.to_i
puts 'How many words would you like to mash?'
mash_count = gets.chomp.to_i
input_file = File.new("words.dat", "r")
while (line = input_file.gets)
words[i] = line.chomp
i += 1
end
1.upto(word_count) do
puts mash_words(words, mash_count)
end
input_file.close
rescue => err
puts "Exception: #{err}"
err
end- Posted in Code Snippets
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Code Snippet: Fibonacci with IronRuby & WPF
Posted by Ryan Baxter Thu, 26 Jul 2007 04:28:00 GMT
On Tuesday, John Lam announced the Pre-Alpha Release of IronRuby. To satisfy my curiosity, I downloaded and compiled the source code found on his blog. A simple Build.cmd file was provided and made the compilation a breeze. Rather than write another Hello World, I decided to kick the tires by writing a simple application to calculate Fibonacci numbers. I didn’t use many of the niceties that make Ruby what it is, but I did, however, uncover some oddities between Ruby and .NET types. I coded around a few of the problems only to find other features that were either broken or missing. The release was labeled “Pre-Alpha” for a reason so don’t be surprised if you have a similar experience with IronRuby.
I have to admit that I felt a bit dirty hacking together bits of the Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) with Ruby only to achieve a single, ugly window with one text box, some words, and a button. It wouldn’t have been so bad if only I could have managed to use the .NET HorizontalAlignment enumeration with the controls on my window. Every effort I made in aligning a control caused an Exception. Defining the Orientation of my StackPanel also resulted in an Exception. Taking input was easy. Performing validation on the input was not. I could not get a string comparison to work between .NET and Ruby string types. I tried a half dozen combinations of .ToString, to_s, and Convert.ToString with no success. I gave up and wrapped my problem expression in a begin-rescue block.
begin
fibonacci_label.content = fetch_iterative_fibonacci(Convert.ToInt32(input_text_box.Text)).to_s
rescue
MessageBox.show('Please enter an integer.')
endIf Microsoft creating their own implementation of Ruby isn’t interesting enough, John Lam has said that IronRuby will be hosted at RubyForge. His reason for this is simple. John believes that Open Source developers have more experience using Subversion rather than Microsoft’s Team Foundation Server. I agree and believe this decision will only benefit IronRuby by involving the whole Ruby community. This will most likely cause those non-Microsoft developers to contribute who otherwise wouldn’t if the project were hosted at CodePlex. Check out episode 254 of .NET Rocks! for more on this and John Lam’s work on IronRuby and the Dynamic Language Runtime.
I am not disappointed with the status of this release. Since IronRuby will be open for community contribution, the code will be reviewed by many eyes and the bugs that I did encounter will be fixed quickly. The integration of IronRuby and WPF was not pleasant, but I do believe that over time the two technologies could compliment each other nicely. The power of the presentation foundation combined with Ruby’s syntax sugar will undoubtedly make for an impressive stack that could give others a run for their money. Now can I have this in Mono please?
Both an iterative and recursive solution can be found within my source. I provided both in the odd chance that somebody reading this might want to try a rudimentary O(2^n) performance test between the Ruby interpretor and IronRuby. The source code for my Fibonacci example can be downloaded from the links below.
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