What Men Live By – 1


I

 Simon was a poor shoemaker. He rented a peasant’s hut, and lived with his wife and children. His pay was low, but bread was expensive. He spent the money he earned on food. Simon and his wife had only one sheepskin coat between them for winter wear. And that was torn and old. This was the second year that he had wanted to buy sheepskins for a new coat. Before winter, Simon saved up a little money: a tree ruble note lay hidden in his wife’s box, and five rubles and twenty kopecks were owed to him by customers in the village.

 So one morning, he prepared to go to the village to buy sheepskins for his coat. He put on his shirt, then his wife’s jacket, and over that he put his own cloth coat. He put the three-ruble note in his pocket, and set off after breakfast. “I’ll collect the five rubles that are owed to me,” he thought, “add that to the three I have, and that will be enough to buy sheepskins for the winter coat.”

 He came to the village and visited a peasant’s hut, but the man was not home. The pwasant’s wife promised that the money would be paid next week, but she could not pay it herself. Then Simon called on another peasant, but his one swore he had no money, and could only pay twenty kopecks of what he owed Simon for the pair of boots he had mended. Simon then tried to buy the sheepskins on credit, but the dealer did not trust him.

 “Bring your money,” the dealer said, “then you can pick the best skins we have. We don’t enjoy debt-collecting.” So all the business the shoemaker did was to get twenty kopecks for shoes he had mended, and to take home a pair of felt boots a peasant had given him to repair.

 Simon felt downhearted. He spent the twenty kopecks on vodka, and headed for home without having bought any skins. In the morning he had felt the frost, but now, after drinking vodka, he felt warm, even without a sheepskin coat. He walked slowly, stringing a stink on the frozen earth with one hand, swinging the felt boots with the other, and talking to himself.

 “I’m quite warm,” he said, “though I have no sheepskin coat. I’ve had some vodka, and it runs in my veins. I don’t need a sheepskin. I don’t need anything. That’s the sort of man I am! I can live without sheepskins. I don’t need them. My wife will worry, that’s for sure. And it really is a same-I work all day then don’t get paid. Hang on a minute! If you don’t give my my money, I’ll skin you, not a sheep. I mean it. How’s that? He pays twenty kopecks at a time! What can I do with twenty kopecks? Drink it – that’s all I can do! He says he’s broke! It may be true, but what about me? You have a house and cattle and everything. I’ve only got these clothes I wear. You raise your own corn, but I have to buy every grain. I have to spend three rubles on bread alone every week. I come home and find all the bread used up, and I have to pay out another ruble and a half. So just pay me what you owe, and stop fooling around!”

 By this time, he had nearly reached the chapel. he looked up and noticed something white behind it. The daylight was fading, and the shoemaker peered at the thing, but couldn’t tell what it was. “There was no white stone there before. Can it be an ox? It has a head like a man, but it’s too white. And what would a man be doing here?”

 He came closer, and saw to his surprise that it really was a man. Alive or dead, he was sitting naked, leaning motionless against the chapel. Terror seized the shoemaker. He thought, “Someone has killed him, strpped him, and left him there. If I get involved, I shall surely get into trouble.”

 So the shoemaker went on. He passed in front of the chapel so that he could not see thae man. After Simon had passed, he looked back, and saw that the man was no longer leaning against the chapel, but was looking toward him. The shoemaker felt more frightened than before, and thought, “Shall I go back to him, or shall I go on? If I go near him, something dreadful might happen. Who knows who the fellow is? If I go near him, he may jump up and strangle me. And if he doesn’t attack me, he’ll become a problem for me. What can I do with a naked man? I can’t give him my last clothes. I must get away.”

 So the shoemaker hurried on, leaving the chapel behind him. Suddenly, his conscience struck him, and he stopped in the road.

 “What are you doing, Simon?” he said to himself. “That man may be dying, and you sneak past afraid. Are you so rich that you are afraid of robbers? Ah, Simon, shame on you.”

 So he turned back and went up to the man.

아….정말이지..

 이런저런 핑계로 벌써 한달째 놀고만 있다…

 이럴때가 아닌데… 하면서도 이래저래 계속 놀고만 있는 나. 무엇인가 대책이 필요하다.

 예전에 동아리 선배가 내준 화두.

 ‘바이러스 분석하기’

 이름도 없고, 아무런 정보도 없이 단지 실행파일만 덜렁 던져준 선배가 너무하다 싶었지만 이것도 나름대로 재미있을 듯 하다.

 오늘부터 매일매일 공부한 결과물을 하나씩 올려야 겠다.

 그래야 조금이라도 목표가 생기겠지. 금쪽같은 내 20대의 시간을 더이상 낭비하고 싶지 않다. 🙂

새로운 넷북…. 웹머신즈 팬텀 V10HC

 3년만에 새로 생긴 넷북.

 비록 저사양에 저가형 넷북이긴 하지만, 가벼움과 단순함.

 이 두가지로는 최고인 것 같다. 🙂

 마음에 든다. 앞으로 최소 3년은 울궈 먹어야지. ㅎㅎㅎㅎ


 오른쪽이 이번에 구입한 웹머신즈 팬텀 V10HC.

 가격은 인터넷 최저가 398,000원.

installing ubuntu-9.10-netbook_remix on the webmachines v10HC

 이번에 새로 산 웹 머신즈 V10HC 모델에 우분투를 설치하여 사용하더 중 한가지 문제점을 발견하였다.

 바로 무선랜이 안된다는 것.

 구글링을 해보니 다음의 주소에서 해결의 실마리를 얻을 수 있었다.

 http://spac.tistory.com/66?srchid=BR1http%3A%2F%2Fspac.tistory.com%2F66

 하지만 내가 설치한 넷북 전용 버전에서는 약간의 수고를 더 해야만 활용할 수 있었다.

 즉, 다음의 작업들이 실행되어야 한다.

 먼저 아래의 주소에서 리눅스용 무선랜 드라이버를 다운 받는다.

 http://122.146.118.42/downloads/downloadsView.aspx?Langid=1&PNid=48&PFid=48&Level=5&Conn=4&DownTypeID=3&GetDown=false&Downloads=true#RTL8192SE

 그리고 콘솔창을 열어 다음을 입력한다.

 # sudo su –

 # apt-get install build-essential linux-source-2.6.31
 # cd /usr/src
 # tar xvfz linux-source-2.6.31.tar.bz2

 다운 받은 파일이 있는 디렉토리로 이동한다. 필자의 경우 /home/pchero/다운로드

 # cd /home/pchero/다운로드
 # tar xvfz rtl8192se_linux_2.6.0013.1204.2009.tar.gz
 # cd rtl8192se_linux_2.6.0013.1204.2009
 # make
 # make install

 이로써 설치는 끝이다. 우분투를 재부팅한 후, 무선랜이 활성화가 되는것을 확인할 수 있다.