Installing Fedora 9 Linux in VirtualPC

If you are using Microsoft’s VirtualPC 2007 as a host for installing Red Hat’s Fedora 9 Linux (aka Sulphur) distribution you may have run into a few problems.  The first problem that plagues just about anyone attempting to install the latest versions of Linux (not just Fedora) is that of auto-detected virtualization.  To overcome this problem we have to forcibly disable paravirtualization.  This is easier than it sounds.

When the initial Fedora 9 menu comes up after you boot from the install CD ISO image, that is the “Welcome to Fedora 9!” menu, you will need to press [tab] in order to be able to manually edit the boot options.  You only get 60 seconds to press [tab] after the menu comes up so pay attention.

If you pressed [tab] you will get a line that looks roughly like this:

> vmlinuz initrd=initrd.img

This is the boot options line that you can modify.  Simply add the option “noreplace-paravirt” and your installation will go much smoother.  The line should look like this when you are done.

> vmlinuz initrd=initrd.img noreplace-paravirt

In my own installation experience I had some problems with the native text mode of Fedora 9 not displaying correctly.  “Normal” X Window operations were not a problem.  Some installations, however, will go only in text mode which should work fine during initial setup but will then go to the bad screen modes after the installation completes.

If you set your memory level too low (I made the mistake of trying to use only 128MB) then full graphical installation mode will not be possible and the problem will arise.  Increase memory allotment to at least 192MB to allow graphical mode to be used.  256MB is recommended.  The graphical install should work just fine.  [All specs are for the x86 32bit architecture version of Fedora 9 as this is the architecture used for VirtualPC.]

Thanks to Sean of “The Sean Blog” over at TechNet for pointing us in the right direction on this one!

Installation requirements for Fedora 9 can be found at Red Hat’s Fedora 9 Architecture Specification page.

July 24, 2008: No Wonder the Housing Market is Tanking

Oreo made me walk him at almost two in the morning.  This late night walking is getting really old.  We had to go for a long walk too – out around the block.  Way more than I was wanting to do in the middle of the night.  Oreo’s routine is to wait until I am in bed, wait five minutes and then want to go out.  He never, ever asks to go out until after I am in bed.

We dealt with the official pre-qualification for buying a house today because we have a couple of prospects that we are interested in.  We went this afternoon to officially put in an offer on a townhouse in Peekskill but got a stern warning from our real estate agent that we needed to be prepared that our money was very likely to not be good enough for these people [downstaters.]

Apparently the pre-qualification that the banks in upstate New York use causes issues downstate because they want the same letter to be called pre-approval – even though the weight that the letter carries is the same.  They just sometimes refuse to sell houses to people because they don’t like the terms that we use, I am told.  And they may also refuse to sell us the house because they don’t approve of the type of mortgage that we are attempting to use.  This, I am told, is because there is no faith in our bank.

We are told over and over in the news and it is obvious when looking at homes that nothing is selling.  Nothing that we have been interested in has sold since we started looking and all of the prices have just been getting lower and lower.  It seems like people would be a bit desperate to sell.  At least desperate enough to not treat people like their money isn’t good enough down here is rich, snobby downstate New York.

Just getting warned that these are likely to become problems when buying a house (a house that will have been on the market for an entire year by the time we would close, mind you) really puts me off from the buying experience.  Dominica and I are nervous enough about spending this kind of money in such an unstable market but to the then be treated like we are dirt for offering to buy someone’s house that they seem pretty desperate to sell (their agent literally calls daily looking for a status update) is rude and insulting.  It took no more than that conversation for me to already wish we were renting this year rather than trying to buy.

With buyers being treated so poorly and sellers seemingly having no interest in unloading their homes it is no wonder that the entire housing market is completely falling apart.  How can anyone buy a house under these conditions?  Our bank was very impressed that we were doing everything right and felt that we were the perfect home buyers (great credit, cash reserves, low debt, previous mortage with the bank, etc.) and I don’t think that doing things considered “less conservative” for the sake of the seller’s crazy financial sense is a good idea.  There is a reason why they are stuck in a bad financial situation and are trying to dump their home at the trough of the market.

We got called within an hour or two of putting in the office.  The sellers aren’t even willing to discuss the offer with us – no counter offer.  Strange but true.  They are desperate and have been calling every day to find out where we are in the process of making an offer and once we made, what we and our agent thought was a very reasonable starting offer, they won’t have anything to do with us.  Rather cocky in my opinion.  So we just walked away.

We went ahead and put in an offer on another, more expensive, townhouse that we had been interested in.  We will find out tomorrow, I expect, whether or not they are even willing to talk to us about our price.  We had these two in mind and we had a bit of a problem deciding which one we were the most interested in.  The one that we didn’t get (and aren’t even going to attempt to talk to again) did have an extra full bath in the basement which was very cool but the one that we are looking at now is much nicer, newer and in a better location.  It has fewer rooms which makes it a little harder for us to use but it has more space so we will be able to figure things out.

It is hard buying a house without getting emotional about it.  You start to feel attached to the homes that you attempt to buy before you manage to actually buy them.  This can cause really bad buying decisions if you are not being careful.  We need to keep in mind that this is an investment and not something that we are doing for forever.

We spent the evening watching the first season of Frasier which is really interesting as neither of us have seen very many of the episodes from this season.  The sixth episode is the very first one that I can even be sure that I have ever seen.

Dominica picked up food from On the Border on her way home since she didn’t have to go get Oreo from daycare.  They have pretty good food and it is easy for Dominica to reach on the way home.

Much of our night was spent in a back and forth bit of bidding on the second townhouse that we were looking at.  Around final bid was accepted at 9:20 this evening.  So it is “official”, we are now in the process of getting a townhouse in the Chapel Hill neighbourhood of Peekskill, New York.  Now we have to get the engineer and lawyer involved and get everything finalized with the bank and get all of the final ducks into a row.  We spent more than we had hoped but well within our predetermined “safety zone”.  The townhouse is nicer than we had planned but we got a good deal on it, we think, so we are happy.

July 23, 2008: Waffle House and Water Guns

“Stripes aims to provide an experience similar to owning Apple hardware, Sony TVs and luxury German cars…” – Stripes for Java Website.

I was not ready to get up when the alarm went off this morning. Oreo was very snuggly and I was still quite sleepy. Five thirty is too early for me this week.

I got up and started the shower – it can take up to thirty minutes for warm water to reach us when I get up this early in the morning. Then I hit the living room and uploaded the podcast and finished yesterday’s post. I didn’t want to leave them as it might be a whole day before they would get posted.

It was raining this morning which is a nice change from the haze.

I got to the office and discovered that IBM was giving a class on PowerHA (high availability clustering for IBM Power servers running AIX or Linux) which was not completely full so I was able to get in on it. It was a good session – lasting for four hours – and it covered a lot of AIX and IBM Power stuff that I was not very familiar with so it was worthwhile.

The weather was really crazy today. Tornado warning for much of Northern New Jersey – especially Middlesex County where Dominica and I used to live just two years ago. Very heavy rains hit the whole area on and off throughout the day. There was so much rain that it caused a low voltage issue to some of the New Jersey Transit lines making the commute rather rough for a lot of people.

I left the office in Warren at five in the afternoon to catch the shuttle to Summit in the hopes of meeting Dominica on her way home from picking up Oreo at daycare. I got to Summit just fine but the trains there were running very slowly and one was just sitting at the station. They announced that all New York bound trains were being rerouted to Hoboken because of the power issues. Luckily the Hoboken line is perfect for me so I was able to get to Newark Broad Street Station without any real problem. The train took quite a bit longer than usual but it wasn’t bad.

Dominica got to Newark a bit before I did but she parked by Washington Park for a few minutes to wait for me. It worked out pretty well. The rain stopped for the little bit that I had to walk over to the par, and then she was able to drive me back home to Eleven80.

Tonight was Dominica’s cooking for Oreo night. He has been on canned food since the weekend as she just hasn’t had the energy to cook for him.

We got dinner from the deli downstairs and watched a little of the first season of Frasier which I do not believe that I have ever seen. I have seen a lot of the show but the very early and late shows I am not familiar with very much.

By around nine o’clock this evening the storm really got heated up and it was just constant lightning all evening. Really heavy rain with just amazing levels of lightning. I spent a bit of time just watching out of the windows. The lighting, the heavy rain, the thunder. I love rain in the city. Watching the water pour down on the lighted streets. Cars plowing through the puddles. From our vantage in Eleven80 we are just close enough to the ground to be able to make out the fall of the rain but high enough to see the waves and changes from block to block.

We are really, really hoping that Oreo doesn’t decide that tonight is one of his late-night go for a walk nights. We will all be really sorry if he does.

I stumbled across an article about the Coco Bidet. I totally want one of these. Somehow the thought of how toilet paper works (or doesn’t work) is just kind of gross. Of course, if you want to be cheap you can always just get a water gun for your butt.

Katie was in Atlanta this week and shared her breakfast at Waffle House with us. Here is her chef.

I spent a bit of the evening working on getting my dual head monitor setup working on OpenSUSE Linux 11 on my HP dx5150 desktop.  I installed OpenSUSE 11 probably a month or more ago and never got the dual monitors working correctly so tonight I dedicated my time to fixing the issue once and for all.  It is working great now and I am very happy.  Having all of my monitors working makes getting work done so much easier.  It is amazing how quickly you become completely addicted to having all of that screen real estate at your disposal.

I also did some work on getting Red Hat Fedora 9 installed on to VirtualPC but I did not have nearly as much luck with that.

Tomorrow Oreo and I will be staying home as it is Thursday.  It is good that Dominica does not need to take Oreo to daycare as there is likely to be some serious flooding as northern New Jersey does not have good flood control and all of the streets are underwater whenever there is a good rain.  I am so thankful to not be commuting by car anymore.  Not having Oreo means that Dominica can leave earlier for work and only has to do about half as many total miles.

Sofia the Miniature Schnauzer Euthanized

I discovered tonight that Sofia, the miniature schnauzer that we got to know through emails when Oreo was in the hospital with pet food poisoning in 2007, was euthanized just a few months after Oreo recovered from his bought with pet food poisoning.  Sofia had to be put to sleep due to complications arising from kidney failure caused by the intentional inclusion of toxins in pet foods by a Chinese food product supplier.

I did not find out until tonight, I presume, because it was too hard for Sofia, who was only two years old’s, owners and they did not post the announcement of her passing on to her MySpace page until today.  I have been watching the page for over a year hoping that it meant that she had survived the poisoning but sadly that was not the case.

I’m sure that Adrienne Ostrowski, Sofia’s mom, misses her horribly.  I can only imagine how awful it would have been had Oreo left us.

R.I.P. Sofia.  July 5, 2004 – May 8, 2007.  Our thoughts are with you and your family.