neverendingbooks

the cpu 2 generation

Never ever tell an ICT-aware person that you want to try to set up a home-network before you understand all 65536 port-numbers and their corresponding protocols. Here is what happened to me this week. Jan Adriaenssens returned from an extended vacation in New Zealand and I told him about my problems with trying to set up WebDAV securely. He stared at me with that look that teenage children have if they find out their parents dont know how to handle the simplest things on a mobile such as saving a number, writing an SMS let alone use the dictionary… and asked ‘now why would you want to do that??? I just use AppleTalk to connect to my computer securely’. Now I’m not such a fool that I didnt try this out but I didnt manage to get matrix mounted on my Desktop. ‘Oh, but thats probably because of the firewall’ Jan said ‘just send an email to Peter (the guy running the defenses here) and ask him to open up ports 548 and 427…’ And sure enough five minutes later the problem was solved and I could trow my WebDAV-plans in the dustbin (although, I think Ive found a use for WebDAV but will keep this a bit longer to myself until I checked it out). If you think that was the end of it, think twice. Never ever point an ICT-professional to your computer. They then start looking at its firewall-logs and find all sorts of things such as : ‘I noticed that traffic from port 53 was dropped to the firewall, could it be that you configured the firewall as DNS-server. If this is the case, you better remove it and it will increase your network-speed, I think.’ And sure enough that IP-address was set on my machine as one of two possibilities for the DNS-server so I quickly removed it and in the process thought that maybe I should also remove the other one so I did send Peter another email asking whether that was ok. It turned out that the second IP address was the genuine DNS-server so I got a sec answer back ‘You better leave this as it is otherwise not much will work…’ Oh, shame, shame eternal shame on me!

My only defense is that I still belong to what I would call the cpu 2 generation (I’m a few years too old to belong to the more computer-aware generation X). When I started out doing research in 1980 the single most important command was

cpu 2
which you had to type before you could run any program. By typing this you asked to be given 2 minutes of central processing time, so you had to write all your programs in such a way that either they gave a result back within 2 minutes or to include lots of output-commands giving you a chance to determine at which parameters you would restart the program for your next cpu 2. I once computed in this way all factorial maximal orders in quaternion algebras by spending a couple of days in the computer room. These days any desktop computer would finish this task in half a minute. Perhaps the younger generations will appreciate all the hard computer-work we had to do back then if they read a bit from the computer history museum page!

Leave a Reply