About the author
Between 1998 and 1999, in anticipation of participating in project Kylix, I started learning Linux. My first Linux was SUSE 6.1, rapidly followed by Mandrake Linux 6, 7, 8, 9 and other Linux distributions (distros). That was when I encountered the GRUB project which is now known as GRUB Legacy. I remembered the years when I would use GRUB to switch between loading Windows, and Linux.
Around the year 2000-2001, when Solaris 8 x86 went free, I began learning it as well.
Around 2002, I stumbled upon the .NET project, and Linux and GRUB was quickly forgotten. Occasionally, I still worked on Linux, but no more on GRUB.
On 19 Jul 2005, I became aware of the Firefox project. And then I stumbled on VMware in Jul 2006(?) when it became free, and I moved all my various Linux distros into VMware.
For the past 2 days, after accidentally destroying an appliance, I've been fooling around with GRUB, and when reading up about GRUB 2, I read up the memory management section part. Looking at the various figures on the page reminded me of the original Turbo Pascal 4 manuals, which contained similar memory management figures as well.
While writing this blog entry, I just became aware that VMware ESXi 4.1 has become free, so I'll start learning that too :o)
Learn why the map is cool in Go!
A method to design records so that they're allocated on a specific byte boundary, such as 16 bytes, 512 bytes, 4096 bytes, etc.
Learn the command line used to compile System.pas in Delphi
How to free more space on your home drive by redirecting the location for SDKs in RAD Studio