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Thinking inside the box | |||||
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Bio
Code Linux Quantian About Blog |
R 2.9.1, CRANberries outage, and missing Java support
Speaking of broken, I had neither noticed that this R version now returns an additional field (for the repository) in the per-package metadata via available.packages(), nor that this change had broken my oh-so-useful and increasingly popular CRANberrries html and rss summaries of CRAN changes. So with the usual beta and rc releases or R 2.9.1 in Debian starting a week prior, CRANberries had been silent for six days from Friday the 21st to last Thursday. I rectified it once I noticed, and changed the code to no longer fall on its nose at that spot. Sorry for the few days without service. Sun, 31 May 2009
Ubuntu Developer Summit in Barcelona
All told, a well-organised conference in a nice setting -- two stone throws from the legendary Camp Nou. Unfortunately, I had to leave by Wednesday so I missed what was undoubtedly quite a scene in Barcelona following Barca's dismantling of Man U in this year's Champions League final. /computers/misc | permanent link Sat, 30 May 2009
JPM Chase Corporate Challenge 2009
We fielded a small but spirited team of nine runners. I finished with a decent (hand-stopped) time of 22 minutes and 27.93 seconds for the 3.5 miles -- or a 6:25 min/mile pace. That is among the fasters times but not quite the fastest compared to the other six times I have run this. Most importantly, everybody seems to have had a blast. And we did set a record for longer post-race party which sets a nice precedent for 2010. /sports/running | permanent link Sat, 23 May 2009
Temporary Debian mail outage
If you happened to have sent me mail to my debian.org address during that time period, you may have gotten a hard reject ('550 Administrative prohibition') as did a test mail of mine. In this case mail may not be respooled, so please do send it again. My alternate address, formed by my first name followed by the family name and the commercial top-level domain, remained functional as a fallback. /computers/misc | permanent link Fri, 01 May 2009
Brad Mehldau at the CSO
The first set was performed as a (strictly acoustic) trio with Larry Grenadier on bass and Jeff Ballard on drums. After several compositions by Mehldau and a brazilian samba piece, the first set closed with a rendition of 'Holland' from Sufjan Stevens' album Michigan which was truly beautiful. The second set had Mehldau performing solo, again with several compositions of his own as well as one from Neil Young's classic 'The Needle and the Damage Done' leading two two pieces from the Sound of Music including an amazing, yet really different 'My favourite things' that just hushed a piece of the central melody along with a strond rhythmic element. Lovely. And then to cap it all off, four encores. Highly recommended. /music/jazz/live | permanent link Thu, 30 Apr 2009
GSoC 2009 Chicago area meeting
/computers/misc | permanent link Wed, 29 Apr 2009
Slides from most recent R and HPC tutorial
This tutorial was a shorter format of just an hour which did not allow for any parallel computing with R. However, parallel computing with R via MPI, snow, nws, ... is covered in the slides from December's workshop at the BoC. Tue, 28 Apr 2009
Google Summer of Code 2009: R / Quantlib
We had twenty-two applications to review for the R project, including three for the RQuantLib topic I had proposed. Khanh's application was clearly among the best, and I look forward to helping him do cool stuff over the summer. He already posted two short emails on the r-sig-finance and the quantlib-user lists soliciting suggestions and comments. So if you have comments regarding R and QuantLib, please get in touch with him or me! /computers/misc | permanent link Mon, 27 Apr 2009
Review of 'Analysis of Integrated and Cointegrated Time Series with R (2nd ed)' in JSS
R / Finance 2009
We were fortunate to get seven outstanding invited keynote speakers, as well as eleven excellent presentations. This was preceded by four short tutorials (and I'll post slides from my Introduction to High-Performance Computing with R soon). With about 150 registered participants, plus keynoters, presenters, committee members, representatives from the sponsors (a quick shout of Thanks! to them), some folks from UIC (especially Holly without whom few things would have happened), we were probably around 200 people gathered at UIC. And then there was an extended social program at Jaks which is rather appropriate as we had numerous important committee meetings there over the preceding months. All in all it seems like a successful event. We may even do it again. Thu, 23 Apr 2009
Real nice Boston Marathon writeup
And so it is with regrets that I have to decline Christian's invitation to run Cologne with him on October 4. Another time, hopefully. /sports/running | permanent link Wed, 22 Apr 2009
Boston Marathon 2009
The race itself was challenging. Having done it once before, and having come off a really decent last marathon, I may have underestimated the impact of the famous hills. This really is a wonderful but challenging course. Combined with the poor training conditions during this last Chicago winter which forced us indoors for quite a few long runs, as well as a somewhat upset stomach which forced a two-minute break, I came up short and posted an underwhelming second half. The head wind was also a factor that was mentioned in a few reports on the comparatively slow times of the elite runners. So when all was said and done, I ended up with a time of 3:30:13 and 8:01 min/miles which is a little slower than last time. All in all a really great marathon weekend. As my time from Berlin qualifies me for Boston 2010, I may well be back next year. /sports/running | permanent link Fri, 10 Apr 2009
New Garmin Forerunner
But then a few days prior I had followed fellow Debian marathoner Christian and used my birthday at the end of this month (as well as the upcoming Boston Marathon) as an excuse for conspicuous comsumption. After some price comparison, I ordered a factory reconditioned Garmin Forerunner 405 from this web discounter at a nice rebate to the regular price. It arrived this afternoon, seemingly shining new and I have been fiddling with it for the last little while. This device features wireless data transfer to a usbstick. This meant booting the laptop in windoze for the first time in years to load the 'client software' after which data transfer proceeded. The Garmin Connect site has very slick presentation and aggregation of the data. The trouble is of course how to get the data there when running Linux... Christian had mentioned the garmin-forerunner-tools package. Unfortunately, this seems to really be written for the Forerunner 305 models as it doesn't see the device at all. Some more googling lead to this page and the gant tarball. All still fairly raw, but with some prodding in the settings of the 405 ('pairing' set to 'on', 'force send' set to 'yes'; which may have to be reset each time ?) I got my two xml files off the gps watch. Yay. We'll see what mode I will settle one. With the 201 and its ancient serial port, I basically just dropped the run and training histories which their fairly limited data collections. Last but not least, fellow Oak Park runner Peter Sagal had a humorous Runner's World column on the whole GPS geekyness. If he'd only known how to pair it with programming geekyness... Wed, 01 Apr 2009
Rcpp 0.6.5
/computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Mon, 16 Mar 2009
Dianne Reeves at Dominican
/music/jazz/live | permanent link Sun, 15 Mar 2009
2009 March Madness Half Marathon in Cary
So how did it go? Well, I had pretty low expectations. Training has been difficult with too much snow, rain and plain cold weather. So like most of my running friends, motivation ran pretty low of late. I was really only trying to set a modest pace, and to hope to hang on to it and run steadily. That worked: I didn't walk a single water stop, and while my legs were getting really tired and sore I carried through to the end. Final time was 1:36:08.57 per my stop watch. That's a tad faster than last year, a lot slower than 2007, just a tad slower than 2006, and quite a bit faster than 2005. Next stop: my second Boston Marathon in five weeks and given the underwhelming training this winter, it will be a challenge. /sports/running | permanent link Thu, 05 Mar 2009
Short introduction to R in Finance
I just posted my slides on my presentations page. The slides give a brief overview of R, the CRAN network and the by now over 1600 packages, mention the Finance Task View, briefly present four different packages (or package sets) and of course beat the drum for our upcoming R/Finance conference that will take place here in Chicago at the end of next month. Tue, 03 Mar 2009
RQuantLib 0.2.11
/computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Sun, 01 Mar 2009
Rcpp 0.6.4
This version changes how use the /computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Wed, 25 Feb 2009
Review of 'Applied Econometrics in R' in JSS
R/Finance conference in Chicago in April: Registration now open
See you in Chicago in April! Thu, 12 Feb 2009
New project: RInside
RInside makes it easy to embed R into your own C++ application by hiding the nitty gritty of initializing an R interpreter behind a simple abstraction. More information is at a (currently pretty simple) RInside page, and you may want to look at the related Rcpp and possibly littler projects. The former is helpful for data exchange, and the latter provided my first real use of R embedding which in some ways also lead to RInside. /computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Tue, 03 Feb 2009
Correct Datetime / POSIXct behaviour for R and kdb+
Anyway, the reason for this post was that the R / kdb+ glue code works well ... but not for datetimes. I really like to be able to pass date/time objects natively between systems as easily as, say, numbers or strings (and see e.g. my Rcpp package for doing this with R and C++) and I was a bit annoyed when the millisecond timestamps didn't move smoothly. Turns out that the basic converter function in the code had a number of problems: it converted to integer, only covered a single scalar rather than vectorised mode, and erroneously reduced a reference count. A better version, in my view, is as follows:
This deals with vectors as well as scalars, converts Kdb's 'fractional days
since Jan 1, 2000' to the Unix standard of seconds since the epoch --
including the R extension of fractional seconds -- and as importantly, sets
the class attributes to POSIXt POSIXct as needed by R. With
that, a simple select max datetime from table does just that,
and vectors of timestamped records of trades or quotes or whatever also
come with proper POSIXct behaviour into R. Note that it needs TZ to be set to UTC, though,
or you get a timezone offset you may not want.
Fri, 30 Jan 2009
State-of-the-art in parallel computing with R: New paper
New CRAN Task View on HPC
littler 0.1.2
This version adds two new command-line switches:
As usual, our code in our svn archive, on my r page, and in the local directory here. A fresh package is in Debian's incoming queue, and Jeff's littler page at Vanderbilt should reflect the new release soon too. /computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Fri, 09 Jan 2009
Rcpp 0.6.3
This version adds a fix to the OS X installation (thanks to Simon Urbanek), adds some 'view-only' classes for R vectors, matrices and string vectors (kindly suggested/provided by David Reiss) as well two shorter helper functions to derive compilation and linker flags for packages using Rcpp. /computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Wed, 07 Jan 2009
Google Summer of Code 2009
/computers/misc | permanent link
R featured in New York Times article
"I think it addresses a niche market for high-end data analysts that want free, readily available code," said Anne H. Milley, director of technology product marketing at SAS. She adds, "We have customers who build engines for aircraft. I am happy they are not using freeware when I get on a jet." That's silly on so many levels. A concise and rather appropriate follow-up came in early from Frank Harrell, a long-time S and R advocate: This is great to see. It's interesting that SAS Institute feels that non-peer-reviewed software with hidden implementations of analytic methods that cannot be reproduced by others should be trusted when building aircraft engines. Achim already added this (and two more posts from the aforementioned threads) to the fortunes package that collects such choice quotes. R in Finance (the topic of our upcoming conference) gets mentioned as well. Now, as editor of the Finance task view, I find that second half of The financial services community has demonstrated a particular affinity for R; dozens of packages exist for derivatives analysis alone.to be a little off the mark. But that's minor as the article is broadly sympathetic, and mostly "gets it" where it matters. Recommended. Sat, 03 Jan 2009
Multiseat setup via Userful
Shortly after Christmas, that computer suffered a catastrophic disk failure (and as an aside, I hate LVM when that happens...). So I reinstalled, this time using the Ubuntu rather Kubuntu variant. This should allow use of Userful Multiplier --- a commercial multiseat solution with free two-seat licenses. The base package even comes via the Ubuntu repos. I still had a couple of minor issues. One was possibly related to the Radeon card (as in: don't drive one monitor in dvi mode and one in analog mode but rather use both in analog mode via a dvi/analog dongle) so the live cdrom offered by Userful just went into a perpetual 'reconfigure, reboot, reconfigure, reboot, ...' loop. Another hitch was that their license manager no longer wanted to use the license key I had requested in November when I tried in vain to use Userful with KDE. And of course I wouldn't a new key as the home ip address hadn't changed... Now, with a newly requested key from another IP address, things appear to work at last using the default Gnome setup --- and the kids are back in proper 'parallel' use of their workstation. All in all, Userful Multiplier is a nice and useful product especially as long as stock XFree does them the favour of no longer competing in the basic two-seat case. /computers/hardware | permanent link Thu, 01 Jan 2009
R/Finance conference in Chicago in April: Call for Papers
Call for PapersSee you in Chicago in April! Mon, 29 Dec 2008
RQuantLib 0.2.10
/computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Thu, 25 Dec 2008
Rcpp now in Debian
/computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Wed, 24 Dec 2008
Very flattering
/sports/running | permanent link Tue, 23 Dec 2008
Updated 'Introduction to High-Performance Computing with R'
I just posted the updated slides from this talk, and there is also an updated live cdrom on the Alioth server. Also, it looks like the tutorial will be held again at UseR 2009 in Rennes, see here for a brief synopsis. It was nice to get back to Canada, even if it was a 24 hour whirlwind trip. Ottaws looked quite pretty in all the snow. And it seems that I got rather lucky with the travel dates as both the days before and after my trip had a large number of flight cancellations and delays due to snow storms. Tue, 02 Dec 2008
Rcpp relaunched with versions 0.6.0 and 0.6.1
Rcpp provides matching C++ classes for a large number of basic R data types. Hence, a package author can keep his data in normal R data structure without having to worry about translation or transfer to C++. At the same time, the data structures can be accessed as easily at the C++ level, and used in the normal manner. The mapping of data types works in both directions. It is as straightforward to pass data from R to C++, as it is it return data from C++ to R. Rcpp was initially written by Dominick Samperi to in the context of the RQuantLib package and later released on its own, but had not seen any releases in twenty-four months. I have substantially expanded the documentation, simplified the build structure yet made it easier to use Rcpp from other packages, and started to add some new classes (notably microsecond time types). Rcpp is supported on Windows, Linux and Mac OS X (with special thanks to Simon for some extended help). More information for Rcpp can be found at the package homepage, the R-forge repository or the package CRAN page. /computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Mon, 01 Dec 2008
CRANberries prettified
So I quickly put together some simple css formatting to make it look a little better than the default blosxom theme it sported previously. That said, you probably should read the rss version (more about rss here) anyway! Update: Oops. And it even works with a correct path to the css file. Now fixed. Mon, 03 Nov 2008
Multiseat update under Ubuntu 08.10
Somehow Otherwise, the tutorial referenced in my earlier post still applies. And the kids are very impressed with new eye candy in KDE 4.1.[server-Xephyr1] name=Xephyr1 command=/usr/sbin/Xephyr-path.sh -display :0 -br -dpi 100 -xauthority /var/lib/gdm/:0.Xauth -screen 1280x1024 handled=true flexible=false [server-Xephyr2] name=Xephyr2 command=/usr/sbin/Xephyr-path.sh -display :0 -br -dpi 100 -xauthority /var/lib/gdm/:0.Xauth -screen 1280x1024+1280+0 handled=true flexible=false /computers/hardware | permanent link Tue, 28 Oct 2008
Google Summer of Code 2008 Mentors Summit
I had a blast. Chris, Leslie and the rest of the Google's Open Source Programs Office facilitated a really nice unconference that spawned a few really nice sessions, and they took very good care of us. And just about everybody met a number of folks in person that were previously known only via email or irc. As the saying goes: nothing like the bandwidth of a face-to-face meeting...
Last but not least I should issue a health warning. Sharing a room with the
fearless Debian DPL is not for the faint
of heart: His snooring is truly world-class. /computers/misc | permanent link Tue, 14 Oct 2008
RPostgreSQL 0.1.0
/computers/misc | permanent link Thu, 09 Oct 2008
More running data visualization
This leads to a natural 'one-factor' model of pace as a function of race date grouped by race distance. And given how easy it is to do conditional plots in R, I quickly arrived at something that already resembled the following chart:
At first, some of the groups had too few data points to actually reliably construct regression lines, let alone non-parametric smoothers. But over time more and more data points were added as I kept running races. Including for example the somewhat disappointing result from last year's Chicago marathon in record heat that resulted in the outlier in the last panel. It actually made the smooth fit turn upwards! Luckily, the subsequent times in New York last fall, London in April, and of course in Berlin last month helped to dampen the effect of the one outlier, resulting in a more normal straight line for marathon performance that is comparable to the other four race lengths. All in all I am now quite happy with the chart. The combination of the non-parametric loess smoother and the robust linear regression (using The R script containing the data and code is available here but requires some familiarity with the lattice package for R (as the lattice book would provide). /sports/running | permanent link Sun, 05 Oct 2008
World Marathon Majors
The idea was born after having run Chicago a few times, qualifying for Boston and winning a New York lottery entry. With friends to visit in New York, London and Berlin, it became feasible. It's been a great experience to run these famous courses in front of large crowds. Conditions ranged from cold, windy and rainy in Boston to way too hot in Chicago, had mixed conditions including a solid rain shower in London and were just perfect in both New York and Berlin. The crowds were awesome in all five places. All in all, these races were a blast -- if you're into long-distance running, give each or all of them a shot. /sports/running | permanent link Wed, 01 Oct 2008
Berlin Marathon 2008
My race was pretty good too. I shaved over four and a half minutes off my own personal record (which was set in early 2006 at Sunburst) and finished in 3:13:09. That's a pace of 7:22 min/mile (or 4:35 min/km) which I am rather happy with. I held a fairly steady pace of under 7:30 almost all the way but but had to fight off the onset of cramps with some short walks about less than two miles to go. Coming back in Berlin after all those years is always a charm. The city has obviously changed a lot in some very visible areas. Yet it still recalls the Berlin of those years. The course was really nice, covering numerous neighbourhoods and starting and ending in Tiergarten. Lastly, it was also good to see old friends who have now been there since the mid- to late 1980s. And I managed to pack a quick visit to my parents in as they are just a good 80 minute ICE train ride away. All in all a very nice trip even though the travel from Chicago (without a direct flight!) is a bit of a hike. /sports/running | permanent link Sun, 14 Sep 2008
Chicago Half Marathon 2008
While the weather story of the weekend is obviously the aftermath of hurricane Ike in Texas and neighbouring states were millions of people are still without power, we were also hit in a surprisingly hard way here in northwestern Illinois. According to the Tribune all of Chicago had a rain record day and the Chicago River crested causing evacuations. Not pretty. The new race organisers (who had acquired the race since the 2007 event) were standing steadfast and guaranteeing the race 'come rain or shine'. Participation looked decent -- word was of a record turnout of sixteen thousand runners though I am sure some stayed home given yesterday's rain and the forecast for today. Given all that, it turned out to be not that bad. While we had steady rain the whole, it rarely rained that hard. Shoes and socks did get wet towards the end, but it was tolerable overall. I had been worried about the gross humidity we had yesterday --- but today was much better with temperatures in the sixties and little wind. As for the race, I went out somewhat fast but managed to hang on. The Garmin had every mile split below 7:00 min/mile, and I came in at a new personal record of 1:30:51.52. My GPS, an old Garmin 201, also showed the course long at 13.4 miles; a few other runners I talked to had it as correct or long by a lesser amount. The leaves the pace at 6:56 min/mile (or, for Christian, at 4:19 min/km :-) if the half marathon course length was in fact correct, and at 6:47 min/mile (4:13 min/km) if my Garmin had it right. And from now on it's all tapering for the the next big one in two weeks! /sports/running | permanent link Wed, 10 Sep 2008
RDieHarder 0.1.0 released
Version 0.1.0 extends the functionality of the
This new version should show up at CRAN and its mirrors in due course, in the meantime sources are also RDieHarder page. /computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Mon, 01 Sep 2008
Easy multi-seat (two screens, keyboards, and mice off one computer) setup
But two cards are not needed. As the machine is running a standard Kubuntu setup, I just followed this excellent three-part tutorial for Ubuntu multi-seat setup which describes the process using nothing but standard Ubuntu software. From setting up a 'big desktop' spanning two screens (which is easy enough using one card via the vga and dvi outputs), it is fairly straightforward to modify the gdm.conf setup to spawn two gdm greeter instances using the Xephyr nesting xserver. So far, all is well. We'll see what possible shortcomings we will find. The GL extensions are not supported, so some eye-candy will be unavailable. /computers/hardware | permanent link Wed, 27 Aug 2008
littler 0.1.1 released
The only new feature is due to a suggestion by Paul Gilbert: r now reports
the value of the optional
This can be very useful to signal exit codes and branching on those in
other scripts or Makefile. We also applied a patch to manual page which adds
some examples there (thanks, Seb!) and made some small changes to tests and
examples.
As usual, our code in our svn archive, on my r page, and in the local directory here. A fresh package is in Debian's incoming queue, and Jeff's littler page at Vanderbilt should reflect the new release soon too. /computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Tue, 19 Aug 2008
UseR! 2008 talk
The talk introduces and extends an example related to some of the material from the tutorial itself. The slides from the talk are a little rough as the talk was somewhat ad-hoc: As session chair, I was confronted with a fairly last-minute cancellation and a 15 minute hole, and thought this would make a good little talk. It does show a nice trick for using littler with Open MPI (via snow) under the powerful slurm resource manager and batch/queue engine. Tue, 12 Aug 2008
UseR! 2008 tutorial
In a nutshell, the tutorial covered
how to measure / profile R performance for
speed and memory use, how to accelerate R using vectorised expression and
tools like Ra / jit, how to add compiled code to R using either
the The final version of the slides is now available via my presentations page, and the live cdrom with software support for all the software used is at Alioth. Update: Corrected link to presentations page thanks to heads-up by Charles. Thanks! Sat, 09 Aug 2008
RQuantLib 0.2.9
/computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Sat, 07 Jun 2008
Into the sunset
Old computers, I hear you ask, well how old? Real old. The older two were from an age where the bios didn't yet boot off cdroms -- circa 1995. We had bought those in Kingston just off the Queen's campus. These were respectively a pentium 90 and a pentium 100, which still have traces on the web as miles.econ.queensu.ca (e.g. in a number of Debian changelogs) and rosebud.sps.queensu.ca which was of course Lisa's office machine and for a while the only internet address showing SPS. The next two were purchased around 1999 in Toronto on College St just north of U of T's main St George campus. Those, an AMD k6-2 300 and a Celeron overclocked to 450 MHz (woot :) lived happily in the basement of our Toronto home, forming the first lan I built. If I recall they were initially connected using a crossed ethernet cable and a second nic to the ISP. Oh boy. At least those latter two still boot off Knoppix. And do they ever feel slow. To think now just how many Debian packages I must have built on at least three of these over the years... And each machine must have gotten at least five decent years of usage out of them. One of the second generation computers eventually morphed into the kids play computer but even retired from that a while ago. In any event, it was good to have them recycled, and also good to have been able to do so without paying a fee as is increasingly common. So cheers to Triton. I may be back in a few years as there are still a few computers spread across the house. /computers/hardware | permanent link Fri, 06 Jun 2008
Wayne Shorter at the CSO
Shorter (ts, as) was playing with his quartet of recent years: Danilo Perez (p), John Patitucci (b) and Brian Blade (dr). And playing they did. Shorter has such a soft lyrical tone, which accentuates both the rhythmic and harmonic quality of the side men. Very enjoyable concert, fairly 'modern' and free in style. And no standards or old material. Oddly enough, not one spoken word: neither greeting nor good byes or just an introduction of the band. Recommended. /music/jazz/live | permanent link Thu, 05 Jun 2008
Adventures with Comcast: Part ohbynowIhavelostcount in an ongoing series
Anyway, yesterday's highlight was initiated with a mail, seemingly sent to all customers, informing me that ACTION REQUIRED: Comcast has determined that your computer(s) have been used to send unsolicited email ("spam"), which is generally an indicator of a virus. For your own protection and that of other Comcast customers, we have taken steps to prevent further transmission of spam from your computer(s).and the email went on to recommend some Windows anti-spam measures, including a reference to a page I could only open with IE at work and one URL to a page that doesn't exist. Nice. Not. Needless to say, there are now Windows computers sending mail (via Comcast) here (as the lone windows box, my wife's work laptop goes straight to her university webmail). And obviously, they blocked port 25, so no more mail sending from home. So I grumpily logged a compaint having been on hold and in telephony menu hell for fifteen or twenty minutes. I was promised to hear back in 72 hours. Hasn't happened yet, naturally, but we're only half way through... Anyway, to make a long story short and this post constructive: Here is what you do on a Debian or Ubuntu system running exim as your mail transport:
/var/log/exim4/mainlog for any
irregularities. Barring those, you should now be sending mail to you
smarthost using authenticated transfer over port 587.
In the meantime, it looks like they unblocked port 25 at some point today... /computers/broadband | permanent link Sat, 31 May 2008
Accelerated R in Debian
In a nutshell,
Ra provides
a modified
R engine
so that code preceded by all Ra offers to pick the low-hanging fruit for users as loops can be a bottleneck. Of course, as shown in Stephen's case study, using appropriate vectorised expression will often be faster still. That said, for a certain class of problems, Ra should offer a decent speed boost. Debian users can now just say
sudo apt-get install r-base-core-ra r-cran-jit
as the
Ra and
jit
packages in Debian's unstable
distribution (and in the case of jit, even in testing).
Lastly, version 1.1.0 of Ra was released by Stephen yesterday and is now also in Debian unstable. /computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Sun, 25 May 2008
Bike The Drive 2008
/sports/cycling | permanent link
smtm bug fix release 1.6.10
/computers/linux/debian/packages | permanent link Thu, 22 May 2008
JPM Chase Corporate Challenge 2008
This time, two colleagues and I tried to make it close enough to the starting line to not waste too much time 'surfing' around slower runners who for whatever reason think they have to be up at the front. And that seems to have worked: despite a still crowded start, I ran even, steady and fast enough to beat the PR from 2005 by a decent margin with a (hand-stopped) time of 20 minutes and 46.65 seconds. That yields 5:5619 min/mile (or for Christian, 3:4132 min/km) which seems too fast given the splits I saw at miles two and three. Oh well -- same cours as as the other five times that I've run this, so I trust the course is USATF certified. And as always, good to hang with folks from work for a cold one or two afterwards. Given the temperatures, I didn't last very long though. /sports/running | permanent link Sat, 10 May 2008
Quarryman Challenge 2008
Three of us ran the 10 mile race, which was nicely organised. But is it ever friggin' hilly there: the race course takes three turns from the lower levels near the canal up towards those hills. As the elevation chart (that I cut out of this pdf file with the course map) shows, it is not so much the total elevation but rather how steep the incline is.
That said, I did okay: even though the legs were really tired throughout from those inclines, I finished in 1:12:08 for a pace of 7:13. And given the reasonably small field, that yielded 34th place overall and third in my age group. /sports/running | permanent link Fri, 09 May 2008
On modes of transportation
I have had this foldable bike for nearly two years, and used it almost (work-)daily, even in the Chicago winters. 'Almost' because I did suffer from broken parts on a few occassions: a pedal broke (easy replacement), the axis in the front wheel broke (a good week for a new and inexpensive wheel) but the bummer was that a part of the frame-folding mechanism broke last fall. Given that the bike, which I bought used via craigslist, is a few years old, the part was no longer standard and so we waited for it to be shipped from the manufacturer. And waited and waited some more until Dan's decided to give me a matching part from a bike in their inventory. But apart from that episode, and the occassional problem with conductors on the Metra commuter trains, it has been a smooth ride. Highly recommended, and I do see a few more foldable bikes downtown.
/sports/cycling | permanent link Sun, 04 May 2008
On soccer, promises and hair cuts
As the attentive reader may have guess by now, that day finally came. This weekend saw a suburban tournament in nearby Oak Brook, and lo and behold Anna scored three goals in the first game! So home we went, out came the tool and she rather professionally separated me from my hair. So today on day two of the new look, a friend took this picture of me (scaled down from 2.4mb to around 80kb) at the same tournament:
They actually played just about the best soccer I have seen them play, won their group (with three shutouts!) and lost a hard-fought and well-played final 2:4. And today the weather even cooperated as one can see from the photo. Nice weekend, all told. And yes, the head feels kinda nice ;-) |
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