THE NEED FOR NEW I'm in one of my frustrated apathetic moods today - don't want to do anything, but don't want to not do anything. Top of my priorities is continuing to go through and update all the internet-facing software and devices that are now besieged by various evils of the modern internet. Some of this post is actually recycled bits of an unfinished one from last weekend when I was less willing to waste hours writing it. I like messing about with software for sure, I've had good fun over the years setting up systems new and old in obscure ways. But I see them as creations, the goal is the reach the point where they do everything that I conceived for them so that I can slap on the label of "done" and walk away. This is a pain with internet-connected devices lately, with all of the encryption software demanding recent libraries to talk to, and even demanding encryption when it isn't even required. On top of that, security issues make me keen to at least keep updating OpenWRT on my router, but the current version is the last that will work on my model with only 32MB RAM and already some functions of the OPKG package manager are failing with "out of memory" errors. So even though that's working fine, and I've managed to collect two second-hand spares of the same model to ensure that I should be set for life (having figured out the serial port connections, and the TFTP firmware flashing procedure, and all the right modules to load), now I've got to go back to the start with newer hardware. I won't really get anything new from the effort of that, nothing to look back on and be proud of acheiving, just another device doing everything that my old router did, but with the continued promise of security. Actually with the last update it was worse because now the SSH server won't support the encryption cyphers that the old clients on my LAN use, and they don't package a telnet server anymore so I can't fall back to that even though nobody is spying on my LAN. So now I've got greater need to compile OpenSSH, which as I've already complained is giving me troubles because I want to do it in a way that fits best without changing too much of my existing "done" systems. Originally I researched and thought about everything and set everything up to work just how I wanted it to. I fixed problems along the way and got all these systems "done". Now it's all falling apart due to the influence of the internet, and I'm just not excited about going back and starting again. It's just not for me - I drive a car from the 80s, and listen to cassette tapes on an old boombox while cooking on a stove from the 70s or turning the clockwork timer on my microwave. If things work, I use them. If they break, I try to fix them, and I don't give a stuff about newer ways of doing them that have arrived since so long as they don't add anything for me personally. A resistance towards the concept of updating things goes back to my youth - I've writen before about the value that I attribute to engineered things, and by nature I resisted parting with them. Later I developed more rational objections to routine updates of machines and such. In getting a "new" item, it seemed so often the case that no true new value came from the exercise. There would be some significant expense, a fair degree of hassle in exchanging the new device with the old and setting it up, then always some learning and change of routine required to accomodate different methods of usage. In most cases no practical advantage was gained, in that any new features weren't applicable to genuine use cases or simply exchanged one design compromise for another. At the same time, a risk was always run that a design issue would cause the new device to in fact be less efficient to use than the old, yet never would the idea of returning to use of the old device be contemplated. It seems silly now. Not because I disagree with my reasoning, but because I realise now that it is such a fundamental and obvious characteristic of modern society that it should really go without saying. There's a blind faith in the new. A faith that goods will always improve in efficiency of use and cost, even though hardly anyone buying them really understands the characteristics that would contribute towards achieving those goals. Instead the buying public is driven by easily manipulated emotions, and some learnt desire to always find different ways of using machines, as entertainment if nothing else. Back to my software hassles, the other one that I'm dealing with now will be a particularly familiar topic here on Gopher. While minimal Javascript-free browsers are my preference, and all that I can and do use on this old Pentium 1 PC that I am typing from now, the fact is that the horrid bloat of the web and modern mainstream browsers are unavoidable for many tasks, especially for someone running an online business. Through wise, but I wouldn't say exceptionally difficult, software choices I have so far been able to keep using a Pentium 3 laptop made almost 20 years ago for this. It's a real IBM-made Thinkpad and for everything except the modern web it still performs fine, but as Firefox gets ever more bloated and the design of websites gets ever more insane, the limit has pretty much been reached. I have its replacement, still over ten years old and still a Thinkpad, though a Lenovo immitation by this point. I'll gain built-in USB 2.0 and hopefully be able to add an internal WiFi card, but loose the floppy drive for the ultrabay and the parallel port, both of which I still use. It's a better compromise than a new laptop, where the design changes would annoy me in countless new ways even if cost didn't put them beyond contemplation in the first place. But it's more change and complication just for for the sake of continuing to do what I was doing with the old laptop before. Which will be coupled with an OS update needed shortly before the last scraps of support for the Linux distro currently on my laptop end. It will surprise nobody at this point to hear that I'll be dodging the move to Systemd. It's the technological links to society as a whole that try to pull me into the endless upgrade cycle going on in the rest of the world. With the internet, much as I may protest, it's a battle that I'll always loose one way or other, especially with encryption spreading everywhere now. It's no different really to the car, where I rely on a long list of consumable parts and fluids to maintain it, and little hope of making do myself if they become unavailable. Or with the phone - 3G will be turned off in a few years and that will be the end of almost all my mobile network related devices (though I'm one of the few who don't actually carry a mobile phone, or own a smart phone at all). My landline will probably only last for as long as the ever corroding copper wires keep conducting back to the increasingly unreliable phone exchange, I can't see them being replaced now that everyone who matters is onto the NBN and voIP. It makes me angry frankly, but really that's pretty dumb of me. I get all of this old stuff for nothing, or next to it, because everyone in society is addicted to the need for new. I cling onto their coattails and grab at all the marvelous engineering that they constantly toss aside, cobbling together what things I can reach to build my own version of modern life. They don't care about me, why should they when it's mainstream society that probably makes them all of their money? Why should I care that they don't care? It's my own job to make what I can out of their technological scraps. I guess I just like to find something to blame for my own compromises in life. Now to not upload this post because I can't SFTP into anything anymore... - The Free Thinker