A blog by James D. Lainton
Work Related
Globe and Mail
Apr 14th
Okay people. I have been very quiet in regards to my new job since, well, 3 days after my last job, so its about time I tell people some information.
Late last year, I had made a decision to leave Tech Solutions Canada Ltd., the company I helped start, owned shares in, etc. I will not go into details on that. I dont want to be ‘that’ guy. Long and short of it, it was time to move on. As of beginning of February, all my shares were successfully sold, and have no ties to the company at all.
I accepted a position with Glacier Media Group based out of Vancouver. More specifically, the Prairie Newspaper Group (PNG), the group that looks after the Saskatchewan/Manitoba region. Even more specifically, Estevan Web Printing. I have taken up the position of IT manager for the PNG, where I am dealing with all the locations’ computers/networking/software/servers, etc.. Estevan Web Printing is the local company that runs the printing press that prints all the newspapers in Estevan, Weyburn, and about 30+ more per week. This is a very large, busy, yet very organized operation.
On top of that, there has been some recent news in regards to Estevan Web Printing that I have known about, but is finally public. This is from this article.
The Globe and Mail newspaper has hired a new company to print its Manitoba and Saskatchewan edition.
Glacier Media Inc. will begin printing the Globe starting this fall out of its printing plant in Estevan, Sask., the Globe said Wednesday in a news release.
For decades, the Manitoba and Saskatchewan edition has been printed in Brandon, Man. by the Brandon Sun, then trucked to various points in the two provinces.
The Sun is owned by FP Canadian Newspapers which also owns the Winnipeg Free Press and other publications.
According to the Sun, its contract to print the Globe expires at the end of September.
The Globe said the move to Estevan — 311 kilometres southwest of Brandon — takes place as the paper prepares for a “significant redesign” to take advantage of advanced printing technology.
It’s a multi-year agreement, the company said.
Yes, that right, Estevan Web Printing will be the location where the Globe and Mail for Sask/Man region’s paper will be printed, 6 days a week. In order to accommodate this, Estevan Web Printing is going through a 10.2 million dollar expansion of its current facility. My job is also to take care of the press’s electronics side. With new press technology, the press is very automated, and where there is automation, there is a computer part of some kind. From the servers, to the cabling, to the plate machines, right to the press, there is a lot of electronics that I will deal with on a day to day basis.
I am currently sitting in a hotel in Toronto, where we are for meetings with the Globe and Mail in regards to quality control and implementation details for the new equipment (and the ‘significant redesign’ details). This is the second trip I have been on, with my new position. I was sent to Vancouver the week after I started to meet with head office, and get to know some of the people and procedures.
Let me just say…its a whole new world. So far, I have enjoyed EVERY waking minute of it. I love to be in a position where I am learning something new 5 to 10 times a day – at least. I am honoured to be put in this position, and to be part of such a large, yet local, operation. The company that I am now with, has been GREAT to me, and I have no doubt that this will continue for a very long time.
Anyhow..thats the update. People keep asking me what I am doing, what happened at the last place, etc. So now that the Globe and Mail stuff is public, I figure now is as good time as any to let people know what I’m up to, other than taking pictures of my daughter.
Lacie Hard Drive Diagnostic/Replacement
Apr 28th
I have a Lacie Bigdisk Mini network drive, which I use for a form of network backup in my network at home. This drive was purchased off Ebay a good long time ago. A few months back, the drive started having some problems, so I diagnosed it as a dying hard drive. The replacement was nothing but ordinary. The unit comes apart to reveal a SATA drive burried quite deep in the unit. It was a little involved getting it apart:

That said, I figured once I replaced the drive, I would be good to go. But since its a NAS, it needs a mini operating system on the drive in order for it to work. Loaded up Acronis Trueimage, I see this as the partition table:

What a mess! Luckily, I put the drive in the freezer for a day, and was able to acronis the drive to a new one, popped it in, and was able to get a working drive. Had the drive failed completely, I wouldnt have been forced to throw the entire thing in the garbage. Case in point: NAS’s are not the best situation unless it comes with its OS on a secondary chip.
Upgrade again…
Apr 28th
Well in the past, I have hacked an Xbox to run a larger drive, and a Netbook to run Mac OS X. The last thing I have been working on is upgrading the AppleTV to a larger drive. The largest drive it ships with is the 160GB drive. I filled that up quite nicely already. So the quest was out to find a solution.
Most of the sites around the net state that the drive is a IDE (PATA) laptop (2.5) drive. Sure enough it is. The largest drive that is available is a 320GB unit. Not easy to find. I was able to find it through my supplier at the office, so I got one in. I fought with it for many a night, backing up the existing 160GB drive, and restoring it to the 320GB unit. I did it about 8 times, and finally on Saturday afternoon it took! The drive is wiped at the end of this, which is fine, since it sync’s to my Itunes server anyhow. I set it to sync overnight and everything is working great.
Final Result:

Upgraded AppleTV Drive
Mac OS Netbook
Feb 3rd
Posted by James in Work Related
I know what your thinking….new toy? Kinda.
Both Clint and I are to the point that we need to carry a laptop around on the calls, working on networks, troubleshooting wireless networks or dialing into servers. That said, we have both decided that we need a subnotebook…also known as a netbook. Clint settled on an Asus EEEpc which has a 9inch screen and he is currently running linux/windows dual boot (I beleive). I settled for a MSI Wind notebook. the machine comes preloaded with Windows XP Home edition. Gross. The reason I went to this netbook is because I can install Mac OS Leopard into it. The machine is 99% compatible with it (only thing I cant do is use the webcam….someone call the doctor). Its all loaded, works with MobileMe and is small and light enough to take pretty much anywhere. The best thing…did I mention I install the Mac OS on it? Its the full retail version (legal too!) All updates and everything…works great!

