Defect

defect

Root cause: powdery snow
Resolution: usage error

Concerning intermittent things, I am still tickled by the old Microsoft Word tip of the day, “Things that go away by themselves can come back by themselves.”

Concerning intermitten things, it seems prudent to assume that things that go away at great speed can come back at great speed.

Work

I was amused to find this in my fortune cookie last night.

For most of the last thirteen years, I have worked on IBM’s z/OS Communications Server mainframe networking product. Over the last two years I have still reported to Comm Server management but have been on loan to other IBM product areas as part of helping to lend our networking, security and high-availability expertise. I’ve only had three managers in the last thirteen years, which I think is fairly unusual.

But now I’m making the move to the IBM PureApplication System organization, where I have been working for the past year. You can think of it as “cloud in a box” (although this is both a little inapt and also oversimplified).

I’ll miss working with all of the wonderful folks in Comm Server. But I’m looking forward to wrestling with a new challenge.

Cube

While growing up there were a few issues of technical magazines that really captured my imagination. In the basement of the music store where I took flute lessons, there were some old Byte magazines. I remember being captivated by an article about OS/2 and Taligent, asking permission to take the issue home with me. Byte also sparked my interest in NeXT. For better or worse, this had the ultimate result that I was inspired to huddle over my PC for months to write a graphical file manager for the QNX platform. I’m not sure that anyone ever used it, but it’s still available for download.

Often we would go to the Hershey public library’s annual library sale. Several times I scooped up batches of Scientific American issues. The March 1981 issue occupied many hours of my time. In this issue, Douglas Hofstadter’s “Metamagical Themas” column addressed the Rubik’s cube, and I was hooked.

Hofstadter’s article was a brisk introduction to cubology. But instead of giving a quick how-to on solving the cube, he described the underlying concepts and patterns for manipulating the cube. No solutions: only a framework for building a solution piece by piece. But this only whetted my appetite to struggle on to understand what he had to say about group theory. Hofstadter did teach me how to disassemble and reassemble the cube, which was a great help as I stumbled along. (This is not only less destructive than peeling stickers, but is actually much easier.)

Hofstadter introduced a notation for operations on the cube. Each face had a letter: F, B, L, R, U and D for front, back, left, right, up and down. Any operation on the cube could be expressed in these terms, with exponents to indicate repeated turns of the same face (positive exponents for clockwise turns, prime symbol indicating a counter-clockwise turn). So, for example, to go from Start to a simple cross pattern on each face, you could execute F²B²L²R²U²D². Another pretty pattern, which Hofstadter calls “Dots,” can be reached from Start with BF’UD’LR’BF’.

My first excited discovery was a move that swapped two pairs of edge pieces: F²U²F²U²F²U², alternately (F²U²)³. From this one operation I was eventually able to derive all of the operations I needed to solve the cube.

These are not the shortest operators by a long shot, but these are the ones I came up with. I use Hofstadter’s notation for the cubes that are affected by each operator. These rather awkwardly tend to focus on solving the bottom face; I may take the time eventually to rewrite them in terms of the upper face. And thus we come to my motive in writing this post: I can never find my “cheat sheet” when I want it.

  • Edge operators
    • Double edge pair swappers
      • (dr,dl)(df,db) — L’RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’L
      • (dr,dl)(df,db) — F²D²F²D²F²D’F²D²F²D²F²D
      • (fr,fl)(dr,dl) — F²D²F²D²F²D²
      • (fr,fl)(br,bl) — F²D²F²D²F²B²D²B²D²B²
    • Double edge flippers
      • (dl)+(dr)+
        F’L’R’B’FD’F’LF’D²F²D²F²D²
        F’L’FDF’BRLF’D²F²D²F²D²
    • Three-cycles of edges
      • (dl,df,dr) — L’DLF²D²F²D²F²D²L’D’LF²D²F²D²F²D²
      • (df,dl,db) — F²B²DR’LF²RL’U²D’F²B²
  • Corner operators
    • Double corner pair swappers
      • (dlf,drb)(drf,dlb) — L’RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²
      • (dlf,drb)(drf,dlb) — F²D²F²D²F²D’F²D²F²D²F²D’
      • (dlf,drb)(drf,dlb) — L²R²D²L²R²U²DL²R²D²L²R²U²D
    • Meson makers (quarkscrews)
      • (drf)+(dlb)
        F’UFU²F’U²FL’RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²
        F’U²FU²F’U’FL’RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²
    • Three-cycles of corners
      • (dlf,drb,drf)+- (introduces a quark)
        RUR’BLB’L’RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²
        BL’B’L’RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²RU’R’
      • (dlf,drb,drf) —
        R²DF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²R’D’R²DUL’UL
        RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²L²U’LU’D’R²DL’

Hofstadter’s article inspired me to put in the effort to read his fascinating book Goedel, Escher and Bach. It is not an exaggeration, as I do here, to describe it as a romp through a variety of fields. Perhaps second only to my high-school programming mentor, I owe Hofstadter my interests in math and computer science.

If you’re interested in Hofstadter’s article on the cube, you can find it online in this anthology: Metamagical Themas.

Kindle

I bought a basic Kindle recently and I’m enjoying it. I don’t currently plan to buy many e-books, but rather use the Kindle as a better tool for existing reading compared to my computer and phone. Here’s what I’ve discovered so far:

PDFs

PDF’s aren’t the best format for reading on Kindle. I’ve found two tools for converting PDFs to e-books and uploading them to my Kindle. For simple PDFs (e.g., single column, and not a scanned image), Calibre is great for converting and uploading. However, Calibre does a poor job with PDFs that are scanned copies of books (this applies to many of the books linked above). For these I use a two-step process: first, I run the PDF through the K2PDFOpt tool (at the time of this writing, version 1.63 crashes for me on some books, but 1.51 is stable). This increases the size of the PDF file significantly, but it organizes it in a form that Calibre is much better able to handle. Then I use Calibre to convert these PDFs to e-books, and upload them to my Kindle.

Articles

Until now, I saved longer articles and blog posts for later reading using open tabs in my browser. This quickly grows unwieldy. The Instapaper service allows you to save web pages for later reading, and it integrates with Kindle. Now when I run across a longer article, I click a button to send it to Instapaper, and by the next morning the article is ready to read on my Kindle.

Blogs

The Kindlefeeder service allows you to send blog and news feeds to your Kindle. I’ve selected several of the blogs I read (ones that tend to have longer articles) to be sent to my Kindle, and now I read them there rather than on my computer.

Other

If you have any other tips and tricks I’d appreciate hearing about them.

All of the above should work with e-readers other than Kindle. In the case of Instapaper and Kindlefeeder, you may need to upload a file manually to your reader instead of having it automatically sent there.

z/OS Communications Server V1R13

I’m very pleased to see the release of z/OS Communications Server V1R13, for which I served as the chief programmer. Here are some resources for this release:

The IBM Education Assistant contains a number of presentations on what’s new in V1R13.

The V1R13 documentation is available in the IBM Knowledge Center.

I contributed to our four IBM Redbooks on the implementation and management of z/OS Communications Server V1R13:

I presented an overview of the enhancements in V1R13 to the customers participating in our lab advocate program: