MTS sucks

No internet from 815PM August 31st to 12:15PM September 1st for my entire suburb. Makes me so happy that I am an MTS customer. :(

Update, September 2nd: Today I phoned them, and they have a recorded message: “Due to system issues we are unable to change or reset passwords”. What happened? They forgot root’s password?

Well, at the end of a week in Disney we got tired of hearing “Have a magical day”, had very sore feet and legs, and were sunburned. We did have fun though, despite the heat and all the happy helpful people that we encountered.

When we lived in Japan we went to Tokyo Disney once, and to Universal Studios Japan several times. At Tokyo Disney, even though we went in the off-season on a school day, the wait times for most rides were over 60 minutes. At Universal Studios Japan (unless you purchase their “Express Pass Booklet” which allows you to go into a faster queue) we have seen wait times of 180 minutes for popular rides. We also went to Disney Paris a couple of times in January, snow and freezing rain tend to keep the visitor numbers down, so we did not have to wait at all for most rides. My expectations for Florida’s Disney world were wait times similar to Japan. I was very pleasantly surprised. The longest wait times we saw were 60 minutes, and for those rides that did have longer wait times, we got the “Fast Pass” and went back to them. Jessica at a slide in

The flights were fine and we were able to get to the “All Star Music Resort” on the Disney coach fairly easily. Little did we realize that escape from Disney would be impossible for the next 7 days. This had us paying $14 for a six-pack of beer, and $2 for a bottle of water for the week. The $10 a day extra for a fridge in the room and $9.95 a day for internet access also made me feel that we were being gouged.

The food was better than I had expected. I had thought that we would be eating burgers and fries for a week, but there were delicious alternatives - the kids meals all came with a choice of 2 sides, Jessica usually chose carrot sticks to go along with her fries, and there were delicious salads available too.

Jessica loved the rides, especially the scarier, faster ones. Space Mountain 5 times, Thunder Mountain 4 times, Splash Mountain 3 times, Everest adventure 3 times, Tower of Terror 4 times, Fast Track twice and Mission: Space. Unfortunately she did not quite make the 48 inch height requirement for some of the water slides at Typhoon Lagoon.

I am glad to be back at work - now I do not have to walk miles every day in 90+ F temperatures :-) Hopefully we can avoid theme parks for a couple of years.

Whatever!

Jessica with attitude

I love this picture. We have to slick back her hair and put it into a bun for her ballet class. Of course, I have no experience in putting hair into a bun, so we decided to practice the other night. There were tears as I pulled at her hair, but afterwards she said “It’s ok, I have stopped crying now, and I really like my hair!”.

Hmm.

I got a commit bit for the gcc subversion repository yesterday, and exercised it for the first time today with this commit. Even though the number of patches that we have for gcc is very small, doing the commit beats heck out of begging on the mailing list for someone to commit for us :-)

Only a little late - it has been promised to arrive in the next couple of weeks for 4 years now, Gary released libtool-2.2 today. Thanks Gary!

One of the changes that we made in libtool-1.5.26 and cvs HEAD was to change the archive_expsym_cmds on darwin. With leopard the older method of creating the output and then using nmedit to reduce the exported symbols seems to work, but the dynamic linker then sometimes fails to load the resulting object. Both this apache bug and this gnome bug are fixed by using ld’s -exported_symbols_list flag instead. I am glad the change made it into 1.5.26 :)

Of course the reason that libtool did not use -exported_symbols_list in the first place is that Mac OS X 10.0 and 10.1 do not support it, and nmedit did the job just fine up to 10.5. Apple seems to have allowed nmedit to bitrot, it no longer does the same job that it did in 10.4. Filing a bug that you know in advance is just going to be closed with “use ld’s -exported_symbols_list flag” seems kind of pointless, but I guess I should do it anyway.

libtool releases

I released libtool-1.5.26 yesterday and Gary released 2.1b the day before. With any luck 2008 will be the year the 1.5 branch dies forever.

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