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World Without End - Review

January 26th, 2009

Unto him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages, world without end. Amen. (Ephesians 3:21 , King James Bible)

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World Without End cover

A few days ago I finished the book World Without End by Ken Follett. It is the sequel to Pillars of the Earth (1989) and takes place in the same fictional town of Kingsbridge. The characters in World Without End are descendants of the main characters in Pillars of the Earth.

The book follows the lives of four main characters. Caris, an unconventional girl of her time. Merthin, a boy who is ahead of his time. Ralph, a boy who lives to fight. And Gwenda, a girl who has found the love of her life. These children witness a mysterious murder when playing in the forest, that will connect them to secrets that are best buried.

First impression is that World Without End is quite the brick. It weighs in at 1111 pages in the hardcover version, being justified that it delivers the story with no extra fluff or padding. The inside of the front cover features a map over Kingsbridge, and the cathedral grounds. Most of the events happening in the book take place in Kingsbridge, so it is quite handy to have some points of reference, even for those that read Pillars. Alot has changed in 200 years. The book also stands on it’s own feet, you don’t have to have read Pillars before picking this one up.

The personalities and traits connected to the main and support characters are apparent early on, and most don’t change much during the course of the book. But it doesn’t make them static or uninteresting. Some characters live the status quo of their social station, others go up against the system and the church. Some characters you love, some you despise, others you hate. In all of this, there is a power struggle, where lords rule over the peasantry, kings rule over lords and God rules over all mortal men and women. All of these small and large struggles are tied in to a truly engrossing plot.

Medieval life is illustrated down to the most painstaking detail. It shows how they lived, what clothes they wore, what they ate, how they bred and so on through all social classes. This level of detail is sometimes abit too much, but it does give a feeling that you are in a living, breathing medieval town.

The historical perspective is the most interesting one. It’s obvious that the author has consulted historians for events that could tie-in with the plot and characters. Historical events are taking place right before our eyes. The book depicts a phase in the Hundred Years War, namely the Edwardian War, where England and France are torn in to a war over the french throne. We get to see the devastations to the french countryside by English-led troops and it all culminates in the Battle of Crècy.

The coming of the Black Plague is something that haunts all the characters in Kingsbridge. The author depicts how futile the current medical knowledge is, where Humorism is practiced by the monk physicians and blood-letting the cure for most ills. The book draws a vivid picture of how society is depraved by the deaths of so many people, but yet the story shows that some will not let this happen.

Ken Follet has successfully painted an epic masterpiece, written on a thriller canvas and framed in a medieval setting.  The rich and colorful cast of characters combined with a level of detail makes this a book that appeals to everyone. The engrossing plot and subplots evolving around real historical events makes it an instant classic, even for those not interested in history. Summed up, this is a book that is not to be missed and a must read.

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New semester

January 19th, 2009
Study desk

Study desk

It’s that time of year. Holidays and New years is over, and your mind wanders into a vacation-like dream state. But in the back of your head, you know everything will soon return to normal. The start of the semester is when normality is restored. Wake up.

I’ve found a possible master thesis at Simula research laboratory within the field of interconnection networks, simulation and vizualisation. Visualisation of Network Simulation Traffic. When looking around for a possible thesis, I wanted to combine my knowledge and passion for the Java programming language, and combine it with the field of networking and high-performance servers. In the process learning new things and extend my knowledge. I’ve sent some mails saying that I’m interested and got some articles and books to read, which I found interesting and exciting. Especially when you think about what the present and future requires from high-performance computing and storage, for a broad spectrum of application areas.

Choosing a master thesis is not easy for many. For some it falls really easy, if they have a very small and specific personal interest within their field of science. For others it’s not too clear. Some think that they need extensive knowledge of the topics used in the master thesis to take it. Of course an healthy interest is important, but would a master thesis be any fun if you knew everything beforehand? It would be like doing a chore, not exploring or extending your existing knowledge. What advice I got, was to find what you are interested in, show interest in a research group that does research within that field and just go for it. One has to learn and fill the gaps anyways, the reason why we go to universities.

This semester I will be attending one course at the University of Oslo, and two at the research institute at Kjeller.

UNIK4280 - Performance analysis. Basic introduction to simulation, measurement methods, queue theory and stochastic  systems (random). Not many attending the course, so it will be intimate, but I think it will be useful things to know.

UNIK4660 - Vizualisation of scientific data. Basic introduction to computer graphics and how to visualize scientific data using various algorithms. I dread the mathematics in this course, as I’ve not a strong mathematical background. I’ll just have to pick up and read extra about it. Very relevant for the possible master thesis. Looks like great fun to be had.

INF5050 - Protocols and routing in the internet. Covers basic topics within internetworking. Not very relevant for the master thesis as most of that happens on the link-layer and is an entirely different architecture. But handy knowledge and it looks like an interesting course.

As a side dish, I will be a teaching assistant in the master course, INF5750 - Open Source Software Development. It gives some extra cash and I’ll be able to help other students with tools and frameworks such as maven, subversion, eclipse, Spring, Hibernate, jUnit etc. Pretty trivial stuff when you’ve had some hands-on time with them, but still a learning curve. Except for Spring. I don’t if anyone knows the entire Spring framework, it’s very big.

To sum it up, it’ll be a busy semester!

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Added books

January 9th, 2009

I got a nice book shelf for christmas (previously they were in a big box in the corner of my room). So I added all my books to the library (Now Reading plugin).

bookstack_2009-01-14Currently on the book stack:

World without End by Ken Follett (currently reading). The previous book, Pillars of the Earth was a very entertaining book about the people that built the cathedral in the fictional english town Kingsbridge during the middle ages. This time, we are taken back to Kingsbridge 200 years after the first book in a time of conflict and grief. Namely The Hundred Years War and Black death.

A Quiet Belief in Angels by R.J. Ellory. A mystery novel about the killings of young girls in a rural community. Reviews have been very favourable and I love mystery/thrillers books, looking forward to reading this.

Cruel and Unusual (A Dr. Kay Scarpetta mystery) by Patricia Cornwell. The fourth book in the very popular Scarpetta series. I’ve always had a knack for any kind of book series. The reason why this caught my eye was because the books are more about crime forensics (inspiring the CSI tv series).

The Missing Person’s Guide to Love by Susanna Jones. I stumbled upon this when browsing Amazon. It is praised for beautiful and intelligent writing. I bought it pretty much on impulse so I don’t know much about it.

The Book With No Name by Anonymous. Judging by the back-cover, it seems to be like a Quentin Tarantino film. One says that you shouldn’t judge a book by it’s cover. But that’s the main reason why I bought it.

Eve: The Empyrean Age by Tony Gonzales. The first novel set in the EVE-Online universe. It is about the events leading up to the Factional warfare expansion. Why the Amarr empire, Caldari state, Minmatar republic and Gallente republic go to war that throws the universe of New eden into the greatest conflict known to man.

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No authentication tab on network connection in XP SP3 for 802.1X authentication

January 4th, 2009

So, I got home yesterday. Turned on the computers and to my horrification, neither could connect to the internet. Not entirely sure why, but probably the gateway released my IP and authentication since it had been inactive for a a few weeks.

I also upgraded to XP SP3 on the computer I usually authenticate with before I left for the holidays. However when I tried to fix the problem, the Authentication tab on the connection was gone!

Now, I couldn’t troubleshoot the problem either, because well… :p

Anyways, my main computer does not have XP SP3 so I set up the 802.1X authentication there. After some googling the problem was a change in XP SP3: Changes to the 802.1X-based wired network connection settings in Windows XP Service Pack 3

servicesBasically they split the authentication for 802.1X into two services: Wirless Zero Configuration for wireless and Wired AutoConfig for wired ethernet.

To get authentication tab back on the connection:

Go Control Panel->Administrative Tools->Services

Right click Wired AutoConfig, click Start. That should solve the problem. Silly indeed.

18 days left until Darkfall release.

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Happy New Year!

January 1st, 2009

Happy New Year!

As the last two years, we’ve gathered at Johan’s parents place and had our new years celebration there. Like last year, we had turkey with garnish (potatoes, broccoli, green bean thingies, gravy). It was a great success. :)

New year promises:

21 days left until Darkfall release.

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