Ampeg Jet J12 Vintage Tube Amp

August 23rd, 2005

This past week, my family went up to Walton, NY, home of the Delaware County Fair. We spent the week visiting with family, walking in the fields, and having a blast at the fair. While I was up there I was told about an old amp that Anna’s grandfather used to play fiddle through that had been sitting in the family barn for over 15 years since he passed away.

Uncle Frank took me out back to look at it. It was covered in dust and grime but I could tell that it was an Ampeg:

Ampeg Jet J12 Vintage Tube Amp

It was so dirty that I couldn’t even make out what the knobs did on the thing:

A dirty Ampeg Jet J12

I figured it might still work so I brought it home and it cleaned up very nice:

A nice clean Ampeg Jet J12

Turns out that this is a vintage tube amp, the Ampeg Jet J12 (with tremelo). It SOUNDS FANTASTIC! The tremelo is soooo old school. As you turn the tremelo knob, there is a slight delay as it catches up, just adding to the analog experience of it all!

Sean mentioned that the company he is doing part-time work for, MOJO, can supply me with factory original parts for vintage amps, like this one! Wow. This amp is a keeper.

A solution to the iTunes 5 users per day restriction?

August 23rd, 2005

DuFF commented the other day on joehungry.com with a possible solution to the 5 users per day restriction on iTunes music library sharing:

# DuFF Says:
August 21st, 2005 at 4:24 pm e

I’m assuming they don’t have this restriction if you add a password. The easiest solution to me would be to add a password and then just put it in your share name so everyone knows it. I haven’t tested this though.

So, here are the steps you can take to test this:

  1. Open the iTunes preferences. (In MS Windows, Edit->Preferences)
  2. Click on the Sharing tab.
  3. Check “Share my music”.
  4. Check “Share entire library”.
  5. In the “Shared Name” field, type: password: no5userlimit
  6. Check “Require password”.
  7. In the “Require password” field, type: no5userlimit

Now, the password no5userlimit is just a suggestion. Feel free to use your own creative password. Make sure to tell all your friends to do the same, if this solution actually works. I will get around to testing it next week and report back.

Anyone else up for testing this and reporting back?

A possible EssPaul “mini-tour” next fall?!? Is this for REAL???

August 23rd, 2005

Rumors are floating around, and seem to suggest, that the two members of EssPaul, Paul Coleman and Joe Waddell, are secretly planning an eastern seaboard tour for the fall of 2006. Apparently it will just be Paul and Joe playing aqoustic-esque versions of their songs. I can only guess that this means Paul will play on a stripped-down drum kit and that Joe will exclusively play Fender Rhodes piano with minimal effects.

I can’t wait! I’ll let you all know more as it approaches.

Using Google to find out who links to your site

August 23rd, 2005

I was curious the other day to find out which webpages pointed (or linked) to joehungry. A quick search on google produced the answer. Here’s what you would search for:

link:www.joehungry.com

Just replace joehungry.com with your domain name (or IP) of choice. Enjoy!

Joe Chinnici and The Wankers

August 21st, 2005

Well we went down to the Daily Grind in Walton, NY last night. We saw an old friend, Joe Chinnici, and the new band he has formed, The Wankers. They were a blast! They had just finished their opening act for Sara Evans at the Delaware County Fair, when they hiked over to The Daily Grind and started setting up on the stage. Joe said they were exhausted, but they put on a great show regardless. Thanks, Wankers!

The Human Race Game

August 12th, 2005

Today, I had to fill out some paperwork that asked my race. The options were White, Black, Hispanic, Asian, and other. This was over the top. None of these are “races” as defined by modern day physical anthropologists. I wrote in my “Other” race as Caucasoid, which is one of the four main races accepted by experts in the field today. They are:

Australoid
Caucasoid
Mongoloid
Negroid

The attributes with which one is assigned to one of these races do not include external features such as skin color, in fact only skeletal structures and related measurements are used in defining the 4 human races.

DVDs of The McKees’ coming soon

August 8th, 2005

Wow. I recently saw some footage from The McKees’ shows in Mebane, Greensboro, and Chapel Hill. They were amazing. My friend Jason B. is recording them to his computer from Hi8. I’m going to then run them through some EQ tweaks and offer them up for download, or for anyone who writes I’ll send them a DVD over snail mail.

I’ll let you know when they are ready!

Getting information from the UNC-CH campus LDAP server

August 4th, 2005

I was using this a few weeks ago when troubleshooting my LDAP email address lookup function in Mulberry. I was wanting to see the fields that the UNC-CH LDAP server was serving out for me to use. Here is the command that worked for me:

ldapsearch -h ldap.unc.edu -x -b “dc=unc, dc=edu” uid=<username>

The uid is the same as the user’s ONYEN (Only Name You’ll Ever Need). If you don’t know the user’s ONYEN, you can use their last name (surname):

ldapsearch -h ldap.unc.edu -x -b “dc=unc, dc=edu” sn=<lastname>

Skebrown thinks this is all pretty crazy. So much information publicly available could be dangerous! Right? I’m not taking any chances. I just found a location on http://studentcentral.unc.edu where I can set my privacy flags. I just configured the LDAP server to just show my name and initials (no phone and address). But a quick check seems to show that the LDAP server is still handing out the address and phone. I’ll have to check into this.

You’re being watched! Some steps to find out who is behind an IP address on the internet…

August 3rd, 2005

I have recently been evaluating my website traffic in order to better serve visitors.

One line in the log evoked my curiosity. It was a URI from which someone visited my site:

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=%22sean ervin%22 %2B greensboro&btnG=Search

What this means is that someone searched Google for: “sean ervin” greensboro and it led them to joehungry.com because of the Just Juan content on my site.

I IM’ed Sean and told him how interesting I thought this was. Who in the world is looking for him? We both were curious to know who is trying to find more about Sean on the web. But all we had was an IP address of the machine that apparently was used to do this (152.2.39.222). I was determined to find out who Sean’s secret admirer was! Let’s go!

  1. I needed a fully qualified domain name. Perhaps that would give me some useful information. From a shell, I ran nslookup 152.2.39.222 and got back rm524c.sowo.unc.edu. Wow! A UNC-CH computer. I guessed this from the IP address (152.2) but this pretty much confirmed it. So where is this computer? What is SOWO? I figured that was my next step. It is probably a department at UNC-CH.
  2. Onward to Google! A quick search at http://www.google.com/unc/ for “sowo” returned some useful hits. Looks like sowo is the abbreviation for School of Social Work. Yay! We’re getting somewhere.
  3. Oh! And look at this part of the fully qualified domain name: rm524c. Might that be Room 524C? If I was naming computers, that seems like a logical naming convention. Cool. So who is in room 524C? Was it that easy?
  4. I went to the School of Social Work homepage: http://ssw.unc.edu/, which I was in the Google hits from a previous step. Oh, hey, a site search at the bottom! How convenient. Let’s search for 524. Many times, they’ll list faculty, staff, and students with their office room numbers. Oh Boy!
  5. Hey, it worked! Sortof… Here was the result: http://search.atomz.com/search/?sp-q=524&submit=Search&sp-a=00050d5c-sp00000000 and of interest was this snippet of text in the results: “Chair of Doctoral Program Rick Barth in Room 524”. I IM’ed the name to Sean. He didn’t know him. Well it said Rick Barth is in room 524, and not 524C. Hmmm… Perhaps one of the doctoral students near his office? I clicked on the search result. Wait a minute! What’s this? A building map in pdf form at the top of the page? This is too easy.
  6. The building map: http://ssw.unc.edu/currentStudent/orientation/Florplan.pdf was pretty useful. I noticed that on the 5th floor, there was a computer lab. Could be any number of people. But likely someone in the department. Even more likely to be a student of staff. A faculty member would have just used the PC on their desk.
  7. Well, let’s find their students and staff lists then. Another visit to the School of Social Work homepage gave the option of seeing “Faculty and Staff”. There I found webpages listing Faculty, Staff, and Doctoral Students. Excellent!
  8. I sent Sean the link to the Students, but he didn’t recognize any names. Second list I sent was of staff: http://ssw.unc.edu/people/prosupp.htm and he recognized a name. A likely candidate!
  9. Krystie Grubb. He thinks this could be a person he used to manage in Greensboro, but not sure. No problem. Let’s find out more about Krystie. Her email address is kgrubb@email.unc.edu. That information is available from the list we were just looking at. Now here is where my knowledge of the computing environment at UNC-CH helped. I know that folks at UNC-CH are given webspace on the campus servers. You can access a person’s webspace by going to: http://www.unc.edu/~. My space is empty, but it is at, http://www.unc.edu/~jwaddell/, for example. So, I visited http://www.unc.edu/~kgrubb/ and, OH!….perfect!
  10. On Krystie Grubb’s UNC-CH homepage the first link was to her Resume. Would we find that this was the Krystie Grubb who worked with Sean in Greensboro? Reeee Rawwwww! 404 errors all over the place. Not a single URI worked on Krystie’s webpage.

So that’s as far as we got. I did a few Google searches for “Krystie Grubb” and found some interesting stuff, but nothing like a resume. That would have been the ultimate find on this expedition. Absolute proof! Until then, we may never know. Oh, and if that mysterious person out there is still looking for Sean, you can find him at skebrown.com. Adios!

No viruses on Mac OS X

August 1st, 2005

This afternoon I upgraded Norton Anti-Virus (NAV) on my Mac, running OS 10.3. I upgraded to the latest version of NAV (version 10). Went through the list of viruses that NAV protected me against and the vast majority were viruses that only infected the Microsoft Windows operating system. It listed a few viruses that could infect Mac OS 7, back in the mid 1990’s.

I started looking around to find a list of current Mac OS X viruses. Symantec only listed two, and one was a “concept” virus that didn’t even exist:

http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/sh.renepo.b.html
http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/mp3concept.html