QNAP TS-239 NAS update

As I mentioned the other day (Christmas project 2009: installation of a NAS...), I was spending some time over the Xmas break configuring a new NAS device.  This was set up as a two drive RAID1 array of 2x1Tb.  However, once I'd set up the rsnapshot backup system (which seems to be pretty efficient in terms of disk space and ease of setup), I turned my eye to the other uses of the device.  I've installed the following via the QPKG system or by activating the firmware options (during all this, I upgraded the firmware to the latest stable version):

MySQL - to enable this, I needed to upgrade the firmware.  Or at least that was what the system said, and who am I to object?  Administering MySQL databases is easiest using a GUI such as PhpMyAdmin, so I installed...

PhpMyAdmin - installed from the QPKG package.  Very easy, but I needed to tweak the configuration file config.inc.php to replace '127.0.0.1' with 'localhost' before I could login in as the MySQL root user.  Of course all this was so I could try setting up Joomla!...

Joomla! - I installed Joomla! 1.5.15 via the QPKG package (principally to check this was working just as I am used to).  Once that was done, I extracted the database and files from the Northwood Wheelers website.  I imported the database using phpMyAdmin, and copied over all the site files.  Lo and behold!  A mirror of the site functions!  You can see this version of the site here.  Of course I had to open up the router for http traffic and point it at the NAS.

AjaXplorer - I also installed an AJAX based file manager for ease of file management from a QPKG package, and...

EyeOS - an interesting cloud environment, including office type applications, also from a QPKG package.

All in all, the QNAP TS-239 is turning out to be a versatile and highly configurable little device.

If only Dell could pull their finger out and get me the replacement desktop PC I ordered a few days before Xmas within the next month...

The 2010 NBRC New Year's Day '10'

A bright but very cold morning greeted the five intrepid (or possibly foolhardy) riders who turned out for the 2010 edition of the North Bucks Road Club's annual New Year 10 mile time trial.  As last year, the event was run on the F5d/10.  I suspect it was actually colder this year than it was last year, but bathed in sunshine instead of the clammy atmosphere of last year, it almost seemed balmy. 

This was the first competitive outing for my new time trial bike, so I was bound to be a bit cautious as I made my way over to the club room.  I'll probably write some more detailed notes on the bike later, but two points for now - the steering seemed alarmingly twitchy as slow speed, but once down on the tribars and at racing speed, everything seemed very good; this was my first proper ride on Speedplay pedals, and I'm most impressed.  I had decided to try out the GPS receiver for the Polar bike computer, but I couldn't get it to work, so rode the event solely on heart rate.

I found the outward leg reasonably OK, once I'd recovered from those initial gulps of freezing cold air, and once my eyes had stopped watering with the cold!  After the turn, the gentle breeze (which Gilbert had confidently predicted was from a direction that suits the course) was quite apparent, lowering the effective temperature and noticeably slowing at least my pace.

Overall the race was surprisingly close, with a tie for first place

Results of the North Bucks Road Club New Year's Day '10', 2010

The riders seemed to be outnumbered by the combined body of helpers (many thanks to Tony, Bryan and Gilbert) and spectators.

Position Number Name Club Time
1 1 Lindz Barral iTeam.co.uk 24:25
1 4 Tony Parks North Bucks Road Club 24:25
3 5 Robert Saunders North Bucks Road Club 24:35
4 2 Steve Torley TeamMK 25:26
5 3 Dave Carrington TeamMK 27:20

Differently Innocent

The Conservatives, fired by the controversial arrest of their immigration spokeman within the House of Commons earlier this year appear to be somewhat exercised by the issue DNA sample retention by the police (Police policy on deletion of DNA records is shambles, say Conservatives | Politics | The Guardian).  The dear old UK Government appears to be fighting a rearguard action to evade the judgment from Europe that the retention of DNA samples and associated data on individuals who end up either not being charged or not being found guilty infringes human rights.

Freedom of information requests to police forces in England and Wales by the shadow immigration spokesman, Damian Green, reveal a huge disparity in the way records are treated. "The force most likely to remove your DNA profile is South Yorkshire, with 83% of requests granted," said Green. "However, of the total requests to 26
different forces, less than half were granted. Some forces, including Cambridgeshire, Gloucestershire and Nottingham, refused to remove any profiles."

What's even more astonishing is the Government's belief that an individual arrested but not found guilty of a minor offence is in some way more innocent than an individual arrested but not found guilty of a serious offence.  As the Guardian reports:

Home Office ministers now want to keep the DNA profiles of innocent people on the national database for six years, after failing to persuade MPs to back a period of up to 12 years for the most serious offences. But it is likely to take five or six months to change the law and the results of Green's requests show that in the meantime there are sharp variations in practice.

What kind of illogical thought processes go on in our Govenment?





Powered by ScribeFire.

Power training for cyclists

One would have to be a spectacularly unaware competitive cyclist to remain ignorant of the spread of power meters in the ranks of bike racers.  In the past I've not moved in this direction, for a number of reasons, some practical (e.g. typical power meters would be a faff to move from bike to bike, unlike the typical HRM), some more theoretical ( e.g. isn't it best to assess the physiological demands of a training session).

At the end of the 2009 season I bought a Polar CS600X bike computer with power metering capability.  I've written the first part of a review on the usage of power meter data (framed by a book review) over at the Team Grumpy website.

Systematic doping at Kelme?

So, the latest investigatin of an organised doping ring (Virú Investigation Turns Up Kelme Documents - Cyclingnews.com) appears to be turning up evidence that accusations of systematic doping were suppressed.

Wind back the clock a few years to 2004, and we find Kelme rider Jesús Manzano (who I recall collapsed from side effects of doping practices) made accusations of systematic doping in the Kelme team.  I don't however remember any significant action being taken.  Cyclingnews reports that

According to Tuesday’s edition of Spanish sports daily AS, among the papers found during a search of a Valencia clinic run by ex-Kelme doctor Walter Virú were records of doping plans and treatments. AS indicates that some of the plans could have been drawn up for riders who are still competing.
AS claims that these plans are exactly the same as those that former Kelme rider Jesús Manzano showed to the Spanish cycling federation and police investigators back in 2004 when Manzano alleged systematic doping had taken place within that team.

Even better is the secretive system of using code words to denote different doping substances.  My goodness these doping clinics do seem to fancy themselves as being in some kind of James Bond business.  I just worry that someone, somewhere will give them a licence to kill.



Powered by ScribeFire.