A guy on Ubuntu Chicago sent this to our mailing list today. I thought maybe 
some of you would think this was pretty cool.

----------  Forwarded Message  ----------

In 2003 and 2004, Jeff Schroeder served in the Iraq war, flying a tiny remote
 control spy plane and servicing Unix and Linux systems on the battlefield.
 Schroeder learned a lot of technology in the desert, and now that his time
 in the Army is over, he's busy working as a Web administrator for Comair
 Airlines, and writing utility scripts for Ubuntu, his favorite distribution.
 He believes Linux is going to "take over the world."

A high school teacher introduced Shroeder to Linux in 1999. "It was in
 networking class," he says. "I had a guy who was a big Linux zealot, and he
 was like, 'This is the next big thing.' I deeply respected this guy."
 Schroeder took him seriously and started playing around with Red Hat at
 home.

In 2001 he enlisted in the Army as an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Operator,
 a.k.a. 96U. "I flew a remote control spy plane called the Shadow 200,"
 Schroeder says. When he was deployed to Iraq in 2003, he was happy to find
 that, even in the desert, Linux would still be a big part of his life.

The Shadow is a Tactical Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (TUAV) that performs
 surveillance using a liquid nitrogen-cooled camera. Operators run the plane
 from a ground control station that is a retrofitted Humvee loaded with a
 bank of computers running the Solaris operating system and "locked-down"
 Java apps. The Shadow sends pictures and video back to a ruggedized laptop
 video terminal that runs a custom version of Red Hat 9 Linux. "The laptop
 connects to a little directional antenna that tracks the plane," Schroeder
 says. "There were always problems with [the laptops]," and since Schroeder
 knew Linux, he was called on to detect and fix those problems. "The
 contractors the military hired weren't very Unix-savvy," he says.

Schroeder says that the military effort in Iraq is laced with technology that
 makes use of open source software. One example is the Army's Land Warrior
 program, in which soldiers will be "wired" with special embedded Linux
 computers that allow them to communicate with each other and track enemy
 locations.

Now that Schroeder is a civilian again, he says he is glad to have had the
 opportunity to serve his country and pick up some great skills at the same
 time, using his Army training as a stepping stone in his career as a Web
 administrator for Comair, a regional airline based in Cincinnati, Ohio.
 Schroeder oversees the operation of about two dozen application servers and
 a cluster of Apache servers, and he also performs day-to-day Unix and Linux
 systems administration.

In his spare time, Schroeder helps people install Linux on their computers.
 He's a big fan of Ubuntu. "I used Fedora before," he says, "and still use it
 for servers. But all of my desktops are running Ubuntu." To make Ubuntu even
 better, Schroeder's written several utility scripts, including a popular
 snippet he calls Faster Dapper. "I like things to be a little faster," he
 says. "I wrote the script for myself." Faster Dapper enables certain
 features of Ubuntu, such as preload, a daemon that analyzes file usage
 patterns and preloads the apps you use the most, and Faster Dapper disables
 lots of services that are enabled by default. "Bluetooth stuff," he says. "I
 don't use that on my laptop. It takes two seconds to load that daemon. If
 there are, say, 14 services loading that you don't need..."

Schroeder also created a script called Pretty Dapper that automatically sets
 up his preferred theme and desktop icons, and Secure Dapper, which results
 in "basic system hardening." He says that he plans soon to port Faster
 Dapper to Fedora and openSUSE. Examples of Schroeder's work are available at
 his Web site; http://www.digitalprognosis.com

link to the script:
http://www.dylanknightrogers.com/faster-dapper.sh

-------------------------------------------------------

-- 
Richard Johnson ~ [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ubuntu.com <> kubuntu.com <> edubuntu.com <> xubuntu.com
chi.ubuntu-us.com <> buntudot.org
online everywhere as nixternal
<><

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