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Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Head East
Our trip to ministries east of Niamey in early April went very well.
Some of what we did can be seen at my daily
(well when I have the time) blog. We were able to deliver and setup
5 new computers to Galmi Hospital, install new antivirus there, work on
getting backups to work (still some work there to do that needs to be
done), and tried to splice together a network wire that a mouse(?) had
been nibbling on. (Didn't work, they'll need to run a new cable :-( )
In Maradi we setup all the machines to be one the same workgroup, and then set up a systematic backup system that will run automatically every 3 hours, only backing up the files that have changed. This makes the backup jobs pretty small after the initial backup, and gives pretty good "realish" time backups. We used Karen's Replicator, a free (VB6 source code downloadable too). It does many of the things I do with xxcopy backup scripts on the command line, but Karen's Replicator has a fairly user friendly GUI. In Maradi also I was able to convert one of the last Pegasus mail holdouts to Thunderbird, which can be a time consuming process. Unfortunately, the other users there are still using Outlook :-( We were also able to rescue one Australian family's computer that they use for home schooling. Got everything straighted out on it, did a full new install of the OS and the applications and installed some web filtering software.
Danja was many little tasks, getting antivirus on a couple of machines and trying to update those without an internet connection manually (we could not get that part to work, and I need to get back to them with a better procedure looking over the network changes they have made since my last visit, and made a couple of network cables for inside of one of the houses. The Danja compound always strikes me as a combination of wide open spaces and stark beauty.
I was also blessed to be able to visit many of Issiakou's family across Niger, from Dogonduchi to Maradi. One of the places we greeted family was a small village where I met many people and had some millet porridge (sort of like watered down oatmeal but made out of the grain we use for bird seed.) Other places, part of the hospitality included baked yams (white, not orange) with a few pieces of beef , rice and sauce, cabbage with a spicy peanut based powder, masa, which are small, not sweet, (pan)cakes made out of millet flour, and other Nigerien foods.
We did have one problem on the way back. We had stopped to look at the
progress of a Christian conference center being built near Maradi, and
as we were going around the buildings we ran into an old piece of iron
and ruined our tire. We changed it with the spare, figuring on getting
or borrowing one in Galmi to get us back to Niamey. Unfortunately, Galmi
did not have our size tire and we had to go on another 50 km (approx 30
miles) to another larger town to get one.
The experience was a typical Nigerien transaction. Not finding what we wanted right away, we stopped to ask a place that fixes tires (they do not sell them) if they knew where we could find a new one. One of the guys there said sure, and he would show us. He hops in the van and directs us through narrow streets, over piles of refuse, and I am wondering if this is the route you go to see if you can sell 2 tires, not just one!
Finally, we arrive at an intersection, make our need known, and with in 2 minutes we have 4 different vendors trying to sell us 8 different kinds of tires! All of them lauding their particular tires traits. "This one is from Thailand, not China!" boasts one. "Steel Belted!" "Radial!" "Tubeless!" shout others. Eventually, even separated by this almost throng we are able to decide on one. The price is reasonable, and we negotiate adding removal of the old tire and mounting of the new one included in the price. No problem.
The tire gets changed, put back up under in the spare rack, we pay the man and get a receipt. The man who showed us the way to the "tire intersection" wants a little stipend for his part in the escapade. Ok. As we are ready to pull away, the man who actually did the changing of the tire, came up to us to get money for his part, even though we had negotiated that as part of the price with the guy we bought the tire from. Here Issiakou did a very smart thing. Instead of arguing with the man, he took him the the first guy, and told them this is what we negotiated, it is now your issue. Very smart! We got in the van once again and headed back to Galmi.
Before we were half way back, it was dark, and driving after dark in Niger is almost impossible. The road we were driving is a series of potholes interrupted occasionally by just enough smooth road to make you think you can go faster, only to be interrupted by cratered road once again. On this tableau are motos with few, if any rear lights (one with out any lights, front or back), overloaded trucks going very slowly, and dark shadowy donkey carts. Thankfully, the Lord guided us back to Galmi safely, ready to return to Niamey the next day.
All in all a good but exhausting trip. We got most of our tasks done, the Lord blessed us with time to greet many people throughout Niger, and He gave us safe travels in potentially dangerous conditions.
Monday, March 09, 2009
90Days - A daily task blog
We invite you to take a look at Randy's daily task log at http://dustypenguin.blogspot.com
It is an daily log that will help answer the question, "What do you do?"
Categories: Computer, Links From The 'Net, Linux, M$Windows, Ministry, Missions, Niger, West Africa
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Portable email across operating system platforms
New entry in the tech blog. See http://dustypenguin.com/techpenguin/#[[Portable%20email%20across%20operating%20system%20platforms]]
I hope to add more entries soon. RRP
The tech penguin
Part of what I've wanted to do with this site is create a place where I could share computer ideas and solutions with you. In order to do that I am starting a secondary blog as part of this site called tech penguin. Right now it is pretty bare, but I hope as I add contec.nt it will be one of those places you can go for solutions for your computer questions and problems
The blog is here or at http://dustypenguin.com/techpenguin/
Thursday, January 31, 2008
TAMB posts from emails too!
Another nice feature of TAMB is that you can send posts to an email address and as long as your email is in the authors list, it will be added to the blog posts when you upload to your blog using TAMB. So potentially you could have many authors and they could email posts to the predetermined address and one person could upload everyones posts without having to retype them.Back to the blog
Thingamablog is a great piece of software. Thingamablog is offline
blogging software
that allows me to compose and create blog entries while not connected to
the internet. This is particularly useful with the sporadic connections
we have here in Niger. I can compose material and upload it in the
evenings or early mornings when our connections are faster.
The other thing that Thingamablog (or TAMB as it is also known) gives you is a web blog composed of entirely html pages. No php, no databases, and less of a possibility of hackers compromising your site. This really became an issue a few months ago when someone hacked another site I administer through a php exploit. They were able to insert a "phishing" file on my site. The worst part was that a representative of a bank soon contacted me telling me to kill my site or else! I did, but the feeling of insecurity was less than enjoyable!
You can find more information at the Thingamablog website . Since Thingamablog is a Java based application, it is cross platform. I have used it on MS Windows and Linux. It should also run on Mac, other Unix variants and any operating system that will run the Java runtimes. The friendly people at the Thingamablog Forum can answer many of your setup and usage questions. Give it a try!
All content contained herein are the views and opinions of Randal Potratz and are not necessarily
the views or opinions of SIM, our church, our school or any other institution we maybe affiliated
with. In fact, my own family may disagree with some of them. Don't dis them. I have wide shoulders.
Let me know of your disaffection.