How Do You Manage Your SD Card Library? [Slashdot]
txmadman writes "Like a lot of my colleagues and all of my three children, I have several SD , mini-SD, and micro-SD cards for various purposes: cameras, cell phones, my laptop, etc. These things are handy to have around, offer easy and significant storage, but are very easily lost. We have also have run into some instances where it wasn't clear whose SD card was whose, and have also started to see a need for a storage mechanism. I have seen SD card 'wallets' and such, but have never seen anyone actually use one. So: How do you manage and keep track of your SD cards?"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Oprah Sued For Infringing "Touch and Feel" Patent [Slashdot]
I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "Oprah Winfrey, or to be more precise, Oprah's Book Club, is being sued by the inventor/patent attorney Scott C. Harris for infringing upon his patent for 'Enhancing Touch and Feel on the Internet.' So Oprah's Book Club is now one of many people and entities being sued over this patent because they allow people to view part, but not all, of a book online before purchasing it. Mr. Harris also sued Google Books for infringing upon this patent. He actually was fired from his position as partner at Fish & Richardson for that, because Google is a client of that law firm and they had conflict of interest rules to uphold." It would be entertaining to see Oprah give very wide and mainstream publicity to the abuses enabled by our current patent system.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Obama Picks RIAA's Favorite Lawyer For Top DoJ Post [Slashdot]
The Recording Industry of America's favorite courtroom lawyer, Tom Perrelli, who has sued individual file swappers in multiple federal courts, is President-elect Barack Obama's choice for the third in line at the Justice Department. CNet's Declam McCullagh explores the background of the man who won the RIAA's lucrative business for his DC law firm: "An article on his law firm's Web site says that Perrelli represented SoundExchange before the Copyright Royalty Board — and obtained a 250 percent increase in the royalty rate for music played over the Internet by companies like AOL and Yahoo," not to mention Pandora and Radio Paradise. NewYorkCountryLawyer adds, "Certainly this does not bode well for CowboyNeal's being appointed Copyright Czar."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Chitlesh GOORAH: FEL: linsmith and electric 8.08 [Planet Grep]
The Smith Charting program, linsmith, will soon land on fedora repositories as new package.
Electric 8.08 will hit fedora-updates repositories as well in the upcoming hours.
Koen Van der Auwera: DebGem, gems for Debian [Planet Grep]
Een tijdje gelezen las ik bij Wouter hoe moeilijk / lastig het wel niet is om RubyGems te gebruiken op Debian.
Ik zou het zelf niet weten maar er liggen blijkbaar wel meer mensen wakker van want vandaag is er een oplossing de wereld in gestuurd. DebGem, nu nog in beta, zou toelaten om gems te installeren op dezelfde manier als al de rest op een Debian systeem.
Virtually all Ruby gems at your disposal as Debian packages!
Dat klinkt toch goed, niet? Hoe de gebruikers tegenover een subscription fee zullen staan, dat valt nog af te wachten mijn gedacht. Als het écht werkt en veel tijd bespaart, waarom ook niet?
via RubyInside
FOSDEM organizers: Main Tracks and Speakers published [Planet Grep]
The list of Main Track speakers for FOSDEM 2009 is almost complete and officially announced today, even though the website does not contain all the speaker bios and abstracts yet.
The keynotes will be highly interesting and entertaining, as always:
Keeping our tradition of high quality technical talks, the main tracks for 2009 will be organized around 6 topics and feature a wealth of project leads and core developers from all around the FOSS horizon:
Kris Buytaert: Buddylist, Buddlist2, Friendlist [Planet Grep]
Dear LazyWeb
Buddylist is aimed at Drupal 5, so when porting to a site to Drupal 6, you need Buddylist2. However the BuddyList page mentions one should look at FriendList as that project is supposed finished ..
At first sight it seems like FriendList indeed most advanced in its efforts
As I was also using Invite, which also is still under development for 6,
I was assuming that upon installing it the dependencies would tell me which one to use.. however it seems none of them already hooks into Invite
Am I overlooking a module that solves my needs . ?
Machtelt Garrels: HAR [Planet Grep]
The date and place for the next summer camp is known since a while. Organizing such an event costs lots of money. The organizers therefor ask that you pay your ticket in advance if possible. Prices are said to go up after the end of February anyway, so better get it now. More information can be found at https://www.har2009.org/.
In the share-and-enjoy spirit, and if all goes well, and if people are interested, I'll be doing an off-track beer-making workshop.
Phishing Is a Minimum-Wage Job [Slashdot]
rohitm918 writes "A study by Microsoft Research concludes that phishers make very little (PDF): '...low-skill jobs pay like low-skill jobs, whether the activity is legal or not.' They also find that the Gartner numbers that everyone quotes ($3.2B/year etc) are rubbish, off by a factor of 50. 'Even though it harvests "free money," phishing generates total revenue equal to the total costs incurred by the actors. Each participant earns, on average, only as much as he would have made in the opportunities he gave up elsewhere. As the total phishing effort increases the total phishing revenue declines: the harder individual phishers try the worse their collective situation gets. As a consequence, increasing effort is a sign of failure rather than of success.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A Peek At DHS's Files On You [Slashdot]
kenblakely writes "We've known for a while that the Department of Homeland Security was collecting travel records on those who cross US borders, but now you can see it for yourself. A Freedom of Information Act request got this blogger a look at DHS's file on his travels. Pretty comprehensive — all the way down to the IP address of the host he used to make a reservation."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Researchers Hack Intel's VPro [Slashdot]
snydeq writes "Security researchers from Invisible Things Lab have created software that can 'compromise the integrity' of software loaded using Intel's vPro Trusted Execution Technology, which is supposed to help protect software from being seen or tampered with by other programs on the machine. The researchers say they have created a two-stage attack, with the first stage exploiting a bug in Intel's system software. The second stage relies on a design flaw in the TXT technology itself (PDF). The researchers plan to give more details on their work at the Black Hat DC security conference next month."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
State Secrets Defense Rejected In Wiretapping Case [Slashdot]
knifeyspooney writes in with an Ars Technica report that a federal judge has issued a strong rebuke to government lawyers attempting to invoke the "state secrets" defense to quash a lawsuit over warrantless wiretapping. This is not the high-profile case the EFF is bringing against the NSA; instead the case is being pursued by an Islamic charity that knows it had been wiretapped. "At times, a note of irritation crept into [Judge] Walker's even, judicial language. At one point, he described the government's argument as 'without merit,' and characterized another as 'circular.' He also seemed impatient with the Justice Department's refusal to provide any classified documents addressing Al Haramain's specific claims for review in chambers. 'It appears... that defendants believe they can prevent the court from taking any action under 1806(f) by simply declining to act,' wrote Walker."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Groklaw Shifts Gears, Now Stressing Preservation [Slashdot]
dan of the north notes a change of direction at Groklaw. Pamela Jones (PJ) writes: "I think we need to use this time to perfect our work and ensure Groklaw's preservation. It will require shutting down the daily articles and News Picks, at least for the forseeable future, but I'm convinced it's important to do it. One of the core purposes of Groklaw has always been to create a reliable record for historians and law schools to use our materials to teach and inform. ... I choose to make sure our work as fully reliable, comprehensive and, to the degree humanly possible, permanent. ... Groklaw's collection of materials is really valuable. I'd like to ensure that it survives. ... We've covered the SCO litigations since May of 2003, and it's the only complete record of this important phase in IT history."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I will not throw paper airplanes in class [QED]
Toen een student als straf 500 keer “I will not throw paper airplanes in class” moest schrijven, krijtte hij het volgende programma op het bord:
#include
int main(void)
{
int count;
for(count=1; count <=500; count++)
printf("I will not throw paper airplanes in class.");
return 0;
}
Gevonden bij Tom Bonte.
Kris Buytaert: Everything is a Funky DNS problem. [Planet Grep]
Nils has a good writeup of what Dan Kaminsky talked about at 25C3 Interesting read as after al.. Everything is a funky DNS problem.
Should send him a T-Shirt one day .. he seems to appreciate my site slogan :)
Dries Buytaert: Faster is better [Planet Grep]
Through a presentation from Nicole Sullivan, a former member of Yahoo’s Exceptional Performance Team and co-author of O’Reilly's upcoming book on performance optimization, I came across the following data points:
While we all knew this was true (and while I'd like more detail on these tests), it is nice to have some quantitative data from different sources. Long story short: even the smallest delay kills user satisfaction. Let's make Drupal even snappier! (Hat tip: Peter Van Dijck)
Ruben Vermeersch: Performance tip of the day [Planet Grep]
If your Firefox, like mine, insists on doing huge amounts of I/O when closing, as well as acts slow when using the awesomebar, try the following (close down Firefox completely first):
for f in ~/.mozilla/firefox/*/*.sqlite; do sqlite3 $f 'VACUUM;'; done
Israel, Palestine Wage Web War [Slashdot]
An anonymous reader writes "A war has erupted on the Internet between Israel and Palestine, alongside the war being fought on the ground in Gaza. A new report claims that a group called the 'DNS Team' has defaced an Israeli Website, with anti-Israel graphical images — one in a series of instances of 'e-vandalism.' This sort of e-vandalism, says the author, is not only an inconvenience for Webmasters, but many of the images contain malware links and 'redirects or Flash links to Jihadist forums or blogs.' However, while the Jihadist forums are registered in Saudi Arabia, they are hosted by companies like Layered Tech and SoftLayer in Plano, Texas. On the Israeli side, 'A fascinating approach over the last few days is being made by an Israeli Website, "Help Israel Win," which provides a download so your PC can become part of a worldwide pro-Israeli botnet. So far 7,786 have joined, already a fairly powerful global computing force...'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Apple Intros 17" Unibody MBP, DRM-Free iTunes [Slashdot]
Phil Schiller delivered the keynote at MacWorld, the first after the Steve Jobs era of keynotes. Here is Engadget's live blog. The big news, predicted by many rumor sites, was the introduction of the unibody 17" MacBook Pro. As rumored, the battery is not removable, but it's claimed to provide 8 hours of battery life (7 hours with the discrete graphics): "3x the charges and lifespan of the industry standard." $2,799, 2.66 GHz and 4 GB of RAM, 320GB hard drive, shipping at the end of January. There is a battery exchange program, and there is an option for a matte display. The other big news is that iTunes is going DRM-free: 8M songs today, all 10+M by the end of March. Song pricing will be flexible, as the studios have been demanding; the lowest song price is $0.69. Apple also introduced the beta of a Google Docs-like service, iWork.com.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Dr. Dobb's Journal Going Web-Only [Slashdot]
paleshadows writes "The first issue of Dr. Dobb's Journal (DDJ) was published in January 1976. A few days ago, Herb Sutter (the chair of the ISO C++ committee and a long-time DDJ columnist) announced through his latest blog post that, 'as of January 2009, Dr. Dobb's Journal is permanently suspending print publication and going web-only.' This follows an earlier announcement that PC Magazine is to become digital-only, too, as of February 2009. To those of us who enjoy reading such stuff away from the computer these are bad news, as there seems to be no other major technical programmers' magazines left standing."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A Look Back At Kurzweil's Predictions For 2009 [Slashdot]
marciot writes "It's interesting to look back at Ray Kurzweil's predictions for 2009 from a decade ago. He was dead on in predicting the ubiquity of portable computers, wireless, the emergence of digital objects, and the rise of privacy concerns. He was a little optimistic in certain areas, predicting the demise of rotating storage and the ubiquity of digital paper a bit earlier than it appears it will actually happen. On the topic of human-computer speech interfaces, though, he seems to be way off." And of course Kurzweil missed 9/11 and the fallout from that. His predictions might have been nearer the mark absent the war on terror.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Are My Ideas Being Stolen? If So, What Then? [Slashdot]
BinaryGrind writes "I just got started taking Computer Science classes at my local university and after reading Universities Patenting More Student Ideas I felt I needed to ask: How do I tell if any of my projects while attending classes will be co-opted by my professors or the university itself and taken away from me? Is there anything I can do to prevent it from happening? What do I need to do to protect myself? Are there schools out there that won't take my work away from me if I discover TheNextBigThing(TM)? If it does happen is there anything I can do to fight back? The school I'm attending is Southern Utah University. Since it's not a big university, I don't believe it has a big research and development department or anything of that ilk. I'm mostly wanting to cover my bases and not have my work stolen from me."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Apple Introduces "MacBook Wheel" [Slashdot]
CommonCents noted an Apple announcement a few hours before the anticipated keynote. He says "Apples' latest must have gadget does away with the keyboard. With the new MacBook Wheel, Apple has replaced the traditional keyboard with a giant wheel."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
DTV Coupon Program Out of Money [Slashdot]
Thelasko writes "It appears that the US Government's digital converter box program is running out of money. If you sign up after the program runs out of money, you will receive your voucher if the program receives more funding. Older analog televisions will no longer work without a converter box after February 17."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Using Your BlackBerry As a Modem On Linux [Slashdot]
ruphus13 writes "Now, the suits and the geeks can unite — Barry allows BlackBerrys to serve as modems for Linux machines. From the news post, 'Barry, created by open source software vendor Net Direct, lets you not only sync your contacts and calendar but also use your smartphone as a computer modem. Sure, it's not as fast as T1 or cable, but you can't beat it if you're stuck somewhere with no Internet access. Currently, there are packages available for Ubuntu, Debian, Mandriva, and Fedora (although syncing is not supported on Fedora 9). Most older BlackBerrys work just fine with Barry, but the newest generation of devices — the Storm and Bold — are not yet fully supported.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
FreeBSD 7.1 Released [Slashdot]
Sol-Invictus writes "The FreeBSD Release Engineering Team is pleased to announce the availability of FreeBSD 7.1-RELEASE. This is the second release from the 7-STABLE branch which improves on the functionality of FreeBSD 7.0 and introduces some new features. Some of the highlights: The ULE scheduler is now the default in GENERIC kernels for amd64 and i386 architectures. The ULE scheduler significantly improves performance on multicore systems for many workloads. Support for using DTrace inside the kernel has been imported from OpenSolaris. DTrace is a comprehensive dynamic tracing framework. A new and much-improved NFS Lock Manager (NLM) client. Boot loader changes allow, among other things, booting from USB devices and booting from GPT-labeled devices. KDE updated to 3.5.10, GNOME updated to 2.22.3. DVD-sized media for the amd64 and i386 architectures."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Dag Wieers: Class not registered (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80040154 (REGDB_E_CLASSNOTREG)) [Planet Grep]
For those impacted by this problem, it helped to remove and reinstall the VMware Infrastructure Client in my case.
I think I caused this problem because I first installed VI Client 2.5 before removing VI Client 2.0. It worked without a problem directly after the VI Client 2.5 installation, so I noticed only the next day that it suddenly stopped working with the error:
Class not registered (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80040154 (REGDB_E_CLASSNOTREG))
The first reaction is that there is something wrong with the VCC, or with Windows. But I think the uninstall of the VI Client 2.0 simply removed stuff from the registry that was crucial for VI Client 2.5.
Genuine installer bug.
Dries Buytaert: DrupalCamp Köln [Planet Grep]
On January 17-18, I'll be in Germany to attend DrupalCamp Köln (aka DrupalCamp Cologne) and hang out with the German Drupal community. DrupalCamp Köln is organized by Thomas Narres, Daniel Niehaus, Jürgen Brocke, Torsten Zenk, Florian Latzel, and others in the Köln/Bonn users group.
The venue is sponsored by GFU, a leading German IT training organization. Other sponsors include Host Europe, the Kölner Internet Union, O'Reilly, Packt Publishing, APress, Martinsfeld and Acquia.
With so many good presentation proposals, it's hard to point out just a few. An incomplete list of sessions include SEO, fields in core, Acquia, SimpleTest, Ubercart, performance optimization, installation profiles, Solr, module writing, theming and many more.
This is the first ever Drupal-specific camp (or Drupal un-conference) that Germany has ever seen, and so far a little more than 150 people have signed up. The organizers are expecting to max out the venue with around 180 participants. Prominent German Drupalistas attending and/or presenting include: Konstantin Käfer, Hagen Graf, Daniel Juling, Ben Birkenhagen, Gerhard Killesreiter, and plenty of other great contributors. International Drupalistas coming include: Morten (King of Denmark), Mikkel Høgh (Denmark), Florian Loretan (USA / Switzerland), Roel Demeester (Belgium), Jo Wouters (Belgium), Damien Tournoud (France), Joeri Poesen (Belgium), and many more.
Three people from Acquia will be present; Robert Douglass, Jeffrey McGuire (aka Jam) and myself. I'll do a keynote on Drupal. Robert plans to demonstrate the latest ApacheSolr improvements and will give a first glance at Acquia's hosted search solution. Robert and I will also be holding an Acquia Q&A session, and Jam will be ready to help with your Drupal 5 to Drupal 6 upgrade problems, pesky Views 1 to Views 2 conversions and hosting a moderated discussion on Upgrade as a Barrier, and how to move adoption forward.
Two other things you shouldn't miss are the Drupal.org upgrade and redesign hackathon -- your chance to get your hands dirty with the big Drupal.org redesign project -- and the Ubercart workshop that takes place on January 19 and 20, right after Drupalcamp Köln. The Ubercart workshop is organized by Commerce Guys and AF83.
Philip Paeps: Remember Rule Number One [Planet Grep]
For the first time in years, it's finally winter in Belgium! Proper winter, with temperatures dropping firmly below freezing and white stuff falling from the skies and staying on the ground for a bit. Of course, it's not quite as properly winter as in - say - Scandinavia or Canada, but it's a step in the right direction!
I love winter. Cycling on snow and ice is lots of fun. Provided you remember Rule Number One, as carefully noted by Our Hero (Sir Isaac): Every body perseveres in its state of being at rest or of moving uniformly straight forward, except insofar as it is compelled to change its state by force impressed. Applying the brakes in a low-friction environment in other words is asking for trouble.
After brief amnesia earlier this winter, the reflexes of obeying Sir Isaac's laws have come back. I cycled to the station this morning in a pile of snow and ice without episodes of uncontrolled effects of inertia.
Let it snow!
Philippe Delodder: Set zsh title changing [Planet Grep]
Changing the title each time you type a command in zsh easy with precmd () and preexec (). You can find more about those commands here.
The precmd() is executed just before the prompt is drawn. The preexec() function is executed just before the command is executed. So with preexec () it could be possible to set in the the executing command.
Here is my version of zsh to set a title it’s almost identical to the one found on the site. But here I make use of preexec (), here is my version:
case $TERM in
sun-cmd)
precmd () { print -Pn "\e]l%~\e\\" }
preexec () { print -Pn "\e]l%~\e\\" }
;;
*xterm*|rxvt|(dt|k|E)term)
precmd () { print -Pn "\e]2;%n@%m:%~\a" }
preexec () { print -Pn "\e]2;%n@%m:%~\a" }
;;
esac
Just put the code in you .zshrc file and reload the config file with this:
source $HOME/.zshrc
NZ File-Sharers, Remixers Guilty Upon Accusation [Slashdot]
An anonymous reader writes "Next month, New Zealand is scheduled to implement Section 92 of the Copyright Amendment Act. The controversial act provides 'Guilt Upon Accusation,' which means that if a file-sharer is simply accused of copyright infringement he/she will be punished with summary Internet disconnection. Unlike most laws, this one has no appeal process and no punishment for false accusation, because they were removed after public consultation. The ISPs are up in arms and now artists are taking a stand for fair copyright."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A TV Show Based On MAKE Magazine [Slashdot]
ptorrone writes "Make: television debuted online and on public television (broadcast / cable tv). The series encourages everyone to invent, reinvent, recycle, upcycle, and act up. Based on the popular Make magazine, each half-hour episode hopes to inspire viewers to think, create, and, well, make. Each episode can be viewed or downloaded DRM-free, in HD on makezine.tv — the show is also available on Vimeo, YouTube, blip.tv and iTunes."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
How the City Hurts Your Brain [Slashdot]
Hugh Pickens writes "The city has always been an engine of intellectual life and the 'concentration of social interactions' is largely responsible for urban creativity and innovation. But now scientists are finding that being in an urban environment impairs our basic mental processes. After spending a few minutes on a crowded city street, the brain is less able to hold things in memory and suffers from reduced self-control. 'The mind is a limited machine,' says psychologist Marc Berman. 'And we're beginning to understand the different ways that a city can exceed those limitations.' Consider everything your brain has to keep track of as you walk down a busy city street. A city is so overstuffed with stimuli that we need to redirect our attention constantly so that we aren't distracted by irrelevant things. This sort of controlled perception — we are telling the mind what to pay attention to — takes energy and effort. Natural settings don't require the same amount of cognitive effort. A study at the University of Michigan found memory performance and attention spans improved by 20 percent after people spent an hour interacting with nature. 'It's not an accident that Central Park is in the middle of Manhattan,' says Berman. 'They needed to put a park there.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Joeri Poesen: Drupal + Ubercart training right after Drupalcamp Cologne [Planet Grep]

DrupalCamp Cologne is coming up in a few weeks, on January 17 and 18 to be precise. Robert and the German Drupal Community have been working hard to get the show on the road and it looks like we won’t be disappointed!
If a whole weekend of Drupal talks and workshops is barely enough to get you warmed up, you might want to check out the Drupal + Ubercart training on January 19 and 20 in the same venue, right after the camp.
The training is lead by CommerceGuys and AF83 and covers setting up and configuring Ubercart, dealing with the added theming complexity and integrating with the Acquia Network.
Do Twitter Phishing Scams Herald the End of Microblogs? [Slashdot]
An anonymous reader writes "Twitter's been hit by a big phishing scam. Culture Crash blogger Dan Tynan says this is the end of Twitter's innocence. Will tweets become like email, with two out of every three just worthless spam?"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Milky Way Heavier Than Thought, and Spinning Faster [Slashdot]
An anonymous reader writes "The Milky Way is spinning much faster and has 50 per cent more mass than previously believed. This means the Milky Way is equivalent in size to our neighbor Andromeda — instead of being the little sister in the local galaxy group, as had been believed. One implication of this new finding is that we may collide with Andromeda sooner than we had thought, in 2 or 3 billion years instead of 5."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Tooth Regeneration Coming Soon [Slashdot]
Ponca City, We love you writes "For thousands of years, losing teeth has been a routine part of human aging. Now the Washington Post reports that researchers are close to growing important parts of teeth from stem cells, including creating a living root from scratch, perhaps within one year. According to Pamela Robey of the NIH. 'Dentists say, "Give me a root and I can put a crown on it."' In a few years dentists will treat periodontal disease with regeneration by using stem cells to create hard and soft tissue; they will take out a tooth that is about to fall, and reconnect it firmly to the regenerated tissue. Although nobody is predicting when it will be possible to grow teeth on demand, in adults, to replace missing ones, a common guess is five to ten years. Baby and wisdom teeth are sources of stem cells that could be 'banked' for future health needs, says Robey. 'When you think about it, the teeth children put under their pillows may end up being worth much more than the tooth fairy's going rate. Plus, if you still have your wisdom teeth, it's nice to know you're walking around with your own source of stem cells.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Damien Sandras: Ekiga 3.1.0 available [Planet Grep]
The first beta of Ekiga 3.1.0 is now available on GNOME FTP.
Please note that I started the development of Ekiga 9 years ago.
Here is the list of changes :
The Ekiga developers team is also working on interesting new features that should be available after the 3.2 release :
Stay tuned for more news!
Thanks to all contributors and welcome to Eugen Dedu, our new release manager!
Koen Van der Auwera: 365 Days Of Flip Joy [Planet Grep]
We hebben goed gefeest, gerust, gevakantiet en veel cadeautjes gekregen. Maar, nu zijn we terug. Vandaag was de eerste échte werkdag van het jaar 2009 en die kwam geen dag te vroeg. Mijn gedacht.
Vlak voor Kerstmis vorig jaar is mijn Flip toegekomen en het is een ongelooflijk fijn toestel. Dat, samen met Clopin’s 365 dagen project heeft voor de inspiratie van mijn 365 days of Flip joy project gezorgd. :)
Elke dag een filmpje. Max 90 sec lang. Het doet er niet toe wat, maar het komt van mijn hand. Ik neem aan dat kwaliteit van filmen wel zal beteren in de toekomst. Hoop ik.
Voornemen voor 2009: bovenstaande volhouden. :)
Lionel Dricot: The aristocratic desktop (part 2) : Home is Desktop [Planet Grep]
Part 1 : Introduction
Part 2 : Home is Desktop
After I installed Ubuntu for Marie, she quickly grasped a lot of things and I discovered that she was really bright. She quickly organized a lot of folders for all of her project, downloading a lot of file and putting them in a lot of place. On the opposite, Jean had a lot of difficulties to understand the file concept. Well, in fact, he understood the document concept he was not seeing where those documents were.

How can I make things easier ?
One problem Marie had was to find back documents spread in multiple folder in her home folder and the desktop. Jean always forgot that his files are in his home folder. Both of them were perplex when they discovered that their home folder contained a desktop folder with a content similar to what they had on their desktop. Marie was afraid of recursion (remember that she is a mathematician) and Jean simply said that he never created a desktop folder in his home so it has to be deleted.
Then, one day, I enabled the "desktop_is_home_dir" option (in gconf->apps->nautilus->preferences).
For Jean, I simply created a folder called "document" on his desktop. And he was happy with that. He finally only save pictures of his nephew and nothing else.
To Marie, I explained that the "root" of all of her documents was the "desktop", the icons she was seeing on the wallpaper. And that there, she could create folders with subfolders. "It makes sense", she said.
After a few weeks, Marie told me that she had done a lot of folders. Those on the right side of her desktop were work related and those on the left side were home related. She also told me that she created an "archive folder" in the bottom of the screen. When a project is finished (or not anymore used everyday), she simply take the folder with her mouse and drop it in the archive folder. And if the project becomes active again, she open the archive folder and put the project folder back on the right side of her desktop.

A desktop like Marie's one. Here, she was working on a blog post...
Jean told me that now, he was not loosing files anymore.
- You know, when I saved a picture that I received, I disappeared forever. Now, the saved picture is displayed in small on the desktop. So I can see it all the time. I like that. I just have to click on it to see it larger. If I don't want to see it all the time, I just take it with my mouse like you told me and I push it in the orange thing called document. It's like a drawer : when I want to see the picture, I click on it. Now, I also save some funny picture I found on the Internet. Do you want to see them ? Some are really funny. Like the one with that guy on the bicycle with stuffs on his head. Do you know it ?
I showed to Jean how to change the size of a picture on his desktop by right clicking and changing the size of the icon. He was impressed but I'm not sure he will be able to do it alone. It will takes some time.

Seems nice, isn't it ?
I decided to enable this option on my own computer as well. And, since then, I'm not able to use the standard setup anymore. It is just so easy. When I use the command line, I know that what I see is what is available through a simple "cd". Also, my home is not a mess anymore. Of course, I have a "messy" folder but is it better to have all your crap somewhere in a drawer or on the floor of your room ?
Part 1 : Introduction
Part 2 : Home is Desktop
You might not like them. You might fight against the idea that those option are useful. I met some really hard resistance when trying to convince hardcore computer users. But normal users were all delighted. Remember : it's not about you, it's not about your computer usage. It's about having a sensible default.
Bruno De Wolf: Nic Baltazar: 3 to 9 years to save the earth [Planet Grep]
It's only now that I've had some time to watch the "The Big Ask's" movie lobbying for a climate law in Belgium. The movie is very adorable with cute kids and I remember the following hard scientific facts:
Dries Buytaert: Twitter is viral [Planet Grep]
Twitter is viral -- and getting in the way already. Anyway, you can now follow me at http://twitter.com/dries.
Frank Goossens: Onbeleefd met blues [Planet Grep]
Billy Billie Holiday met wat blijkbaar een all-star jazz-band was. Maar vooral; mooi dat dat is!
Mogelijk over net niet hetzelfde op blog.futtta.be:
Carefully Timed Jerks Could Power Space Elevator [Slashdot]
Hugh Pickens writes "BBC has an interesting article on the long-standing issue of how to power the 'climber' that would ascend a space elevator into space. Previous ideas have included delivering microwave or laser power to the climber beamed from the Earth's surface, but now European Space Agency ground station engineer Age-Raymond Riise has demonstrated a device that could provide a "lift into space" for cheaper space missions along a 100,000-km long tether anchored to the Earth. Riise demonstrated sending power mechanically by providing carefully timed jerks of the cable at its base with a broomstick to represent the cable held in tension, an electric sander to provide a rhythmic vibration to the bottom of the stick, and three brushes representing the climber with their bristles pointing downwards allowing the climber assembly to slide upward along the broomstick as it moved slightly downward, but grip it as it moved slightly upward. 'It would be possible to make a suspension system that completely decouples the cabin where the passengers are,' says Riise. 'For them it would be a linear movement with very little disturbance.' Riise says that he has been approached by commercial elevator companies, who are researching new ideas for elevators in superscrapers where the simplicity of the approach makes it attractive when compared to other ideas for powering lifts, such as compressed air."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Employees the Next (Continuing) Big Security Risk? [Slashdot]
surely_you_cant_be_serious writes "A nationwide survey finds that most companies consider their systems vulnerable to attack. Historically, crime rates increase during recessions — and some believe that cybercrime may well follow suit, especially given massive layoffs and the dim prospects many laid-off employees face in finding a new job. 'One thing companies can start doing is monitoring their networks on an ongoing basis so that they understand the normal pattern of data flow and usage, Brill said. In many cases, companies may not have the internal capability to do this, but outsourcing options are available. Kroll Ontrack, for instance, will be rolling out a 24/7 monitoring service for its global clients manned from a US location by professionals in early 2009.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A Hacker's Audacious Plan To Rule the Underground [Slashdot]
An anonymous reader writes "Wired has the inside story of Max Butler, a former white hat hacker who joined the underground following a jail stint for hacking the Pentagon. His most ambitious hack was a hostile takeover of the major underground carding boards where stolen credit card and identity data are bought and sold. The attack made his own site, CardersMarket, the largest crime forum in the world, with 6,000 users. But it also made the feds determined to catch him, since one of the sites he hacked, DarkMarket.ws, was secretly a sting operation run by the FBI."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Distributed "Nuclear Batteries" the New Infrastructure Answer? [Slashdot]
thepacketmaster writes "The Star reports about a new power generation model using smaller distributed power generators located closer to the consumer. This saves money on power generation lines and creates an infrastructure that can be more easily expanded with smaller incremental steps, compared to bigger centralized power generation projects. The generators in line for this are green sources, but Hyperion Power Generation, NuScale, Adams Atomic Engines (and some other companies) are offering small nuclear reactors to plug into this type of infrastructure. The generator from Hyperion is about the size of a garden shed, and uses older technology that is not capable of creating nuclear warheads, and supposedly self-regulating so it won't go critical. They envision burying reactors near the consumers for 5-10 years, digging them back up and recycling them. Since they are so low maintenance and self-contained, they are calling them nuclear batteries."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
ESA Embraces Open Source With New SAR Toolbox [Slashdot]
phyr writes "The European Space Agency (ESA) has released its Next ESA SAR Toolbox (NEST) freely as GPL for Linux and Windows. It provides an integrated viewer for reading, calibrating, post-processing and analysis of ESA (ERS 1&2, ENVISAT) and 3rd party (Radarsat2, TerraSarX, Alos Palsar, JERS) SAR level 1 data and higher. ESA has chosen to distribute the software as fully open source to allow the remote sensing community to easily develop new readers/writers and post-processors for SAR data with their NEST Java API. The software provides both a command line interface and GUI for all features including data conversion, graph processing, coregistration, multilooking, filtering, and band arithmetic."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Lorin Ricker writes "Back in the dark ages of windows-based GUIs, corresponding to my own wandering VMS evangelical days, I became enamored of a series of books jauntily entitled Xxx Annoyances (from O'Reilly & Assocs.), where "Xxx" could be anything from "Windows 95", "Word", "Excel" or nearly piece of software which Microsoft produced. These were, if not the first, certainly among the most successful of the "tips & tricks" books that have become popular and useful to scads of hobbyists, ordinary users, hackers and, yes, even professionals in various IT pursuits. I was attracted, even a bit addicted, to these if only because they offered to try to make some useful sense out of the bewildering design choices, deficiencies and bugs that I'd find rampant in Windows and its application repertory. Then I found Keir Thomas, who has been writing about Linux for more than a decade. His new "tips" book entitled, Ubuntu Kung Fu — Tips & Tools for Exploring Using, and Tuning Linux, and published by Pragmatic Bookshelf, is wonderful. Having only recently wandered into the light of Linux, open source software, and Ubuntu in particular, this book comes as a welcome infusion to my addiction." Read below for the rest of Lorin's review.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
New Method To Revolutionize DNA Sequencing [Slashdot]
Anonymous Coward writes "A new method of DNA sequencing published this week in science identifies incorporation of single bases by fluorescence. This has been shown to increase read lengths from 20 bases (454 sequencing) to >4000 bases, with a 99.3% accuracy. Single molecule reading can reduce costs and increase the rate at which reads can be performed. 'So far, the team has built a chip housing 3000 ZMWs [waveguides], which the company hopes will hit the market in 2010. By 2013, it aims to squeeze a million ZMWs [waveguides] onto a single chip and observe DNA being assembled in each simultaneously. Company founder Stephen Turner estimates that such a chip would be able to sequence an entire human genome in under half an hour to 99.999 per cent accuracy for under $1000.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Amazon S3 Adds Option To Make Data Accessors Pay [Slashdot]
CWmike writes "Amazon.com has rolled out a new option for its Simple Storage Service (S3) that lets data owners shift the cost of accessing their information to users. Until now, individuals or businesses with information stored on S3 had to pay data-transfer costs to Amazon when others made use of the information. Amazon said the new Requester Pays option relieves data providers of that burden, leaving them to pay only the basic storage fees for the cloud computing service. The bigger question with the cloud is, who really pays? Mark Everett Hall argues that IT workers do."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Ruben Vermeersch: Version Control Choices [Planet Grep]
What baffles me the most about the DVCS flamewar currently going on (remember, we were already there at GUADEC 2008, anyone want to bet if we'll manage to keep this going until GUADEC 2009?), is that there's an apparent lack of sysadmin manpower to do a migration to git, but we do have sufficient manpower to develop an entirely new system that unifies two version control systems and do the migration to that git+bzr combo.
Can somebody clarify this paradox for me?
Kris Buytaert: Everything is a funky Twitter problem .. [Planet Grep]
When your favourite ex yahoo employee and mysql guru blogs about a "dns problem" and how he solved it using Twitter you can only smile ;) At last some useful use for Twitter .. when it's up at least ..
Dries Buytaert: Acquia supports everything Drupal 6 [Planet Grep]
Last year, Acquia opened for business, offering commercial support for a defined software distribution called Acquia Drupal. One could purchase commercial support for all the modules in Acquia Drupal. As I mentioned last week in my 2009 predictions for Drupal, one of the things we learned relatively fast is that people wanted more than just Acquia Drupal. They wanted support for all modules, themes and custom code.
No surprise, but when we set out to build Acquia little more than a year ago, we weren't quite sure how we'd go about supporting everything with the limited resources we had available. We have since learned and grew a lot, and we decided that we're finally ready to start providing technical support for all of Drupal 6.x -- not just Acquia Drupal but all modules and themes available on drupal.org, as well as custom code.
So last week we rolled out a big release of the Acquia Network, the new Acquia Network connector (available from drupal.org, see Gabor's blog post for details), a 156 page "Getting Started Guide" on Drupal, and a ton of new content on our website. Starting today, we're ready to give many more customers what they want: support for everything Drupal 6.
We'll continue to tweak and experiment with our offering in 2009 so we didn't make a big deal out of this change (i.e. no press release, no analyst briefings). However, I wanted to bring this to your attention because I'm really excited about it. It means it will be easier for us to help take Drupal to the enterprise, and that Acquia will contribute to more and different parts of the Drupal project.
While Acquia Drupal no longer defines our support boundaries, it is still a great on-ramp for people getting started with Drupal. We are continuing to invest in Acquia Drupal so watch this space for more Acquia Drupal announcements.
Kudos to the entire Acquia team for making this milestone happen. Thanks!
Fabian Arrotin: Using ‘compiled from source’ software on CentOS ? [Planet Grep]
Right after Jim posted a link on his blog (appearing on http://planet.centos.org too) regarding software installed from source, we talked about that a little bit in #centos-social. In fact that’s a common thing that we see with people entering #centos irc channel and looking for advice after they broke their CentOS installations. Don’t get me wrong : I don’t say that ‘installing from source’ will automatically ‘break’ your CentOS setup but usually people following such advice don’t understand what they are doing, and so have to keep the pieces once that it’s done …
A lot of tutorials written “for CentOS” on the web in fact completely deviate from the CentOS philosophy. For example i’ve seen a lot of tutorials from Howtoforge advising to disable selinux and compile from source. More recently we found a new website securecentos.com explaining how to use a vanilla kernel patched with grsec, and installing everything else from source (or from third-party rpms provider like for the MySQL rpms) . Sorry, but I don’t get the point ! Why use CentOS if 1) you don’t care about the provided kernel 2) you don’t benefit from all the security patches that Upstream backports to the provided RPMS 3) you don’t have a setup that you can easily upgrade for security reasons (try to explain that to me because none of the tutorials i’ve seen advicing to install from source explain how to maintain the server) .
Of course everybody is free , it’s a free world but then why installing CentOS if the server doesn’t look like a CentOS anymore ? i don’t have a clue … If you’re looking for good advice, why not start by reading the official documentation or on the official wiki ? Some wiki articles explains how to install packages not present in the core distribution and the pros/cons of installing from source .
And what about missing packages ? if none of the third-party repositories provide the rpm you’re searching for, ask them if it’s possible to add it to the list of rpms they’re providing .. Even better : write and submit a spec file that can be used ..
And what if [base] repo provides a package but that you need a specific option to be turned on at compile time ? Once again you can benefit from the rpm package management : instead of installing it from source, rebuild the SRPM by changing the options that need to be turned on or a patch that needs to be inserted .. one example is the postfix rpm sitting in the [centosplus] repo : it’s the same as the postfix rpm from [base] except that some options were enabled (mysql and postgresql support).
Just my two cents, but i hope that it clarifies the situation a bit .. but long story short : feel free to do what you want (it’s a free world after all) but if you really want to install from source, why not then really install *everything* from source and install Linux From Scratch ?
FOSDEM organizers: FOSDEM Beer Event [Planet Grep]
As every year, there will be a FOSDEM beer event on Friday night before FOSDEM (6 February 2009).
Like last year, this year's event will take place at the Delirium Café, in a beautiful gallery near the Grand'Place in Brussels. In addition to the enormous variety in beers, the location also has enough room to accomodate the enormous crowd of geeks we tend to be.
While coming over to Brussels to attend FOSDEM, don't miss this great opportunity to taste some of the finest beer in Belgium (and, hence, in the world).
Friday 6 February 2009 from 18:00(-ish) onwards, but feel free to join the party at any time of the evening. We will be there until the bar closes (well after midnight).
Beer at the Delirium Café is significantly cheaper than at our previous location. We are also negotiating a discount on all beer again and discussing sponsorship opportunities to be able to offer some Free Beer. There are 25 different draught beers available. In addition to these, there is a cellar full of normal and specialty bottled beer. The beer menu on the Delirium website, while perpetually out of date, gives a good indication of the wide selection available.
A significant problem at previous beer events was keeping the beer distribution going during rush hour. Last year's v3.0 distribution algorithm fixed many of the bugs in the system. We are currently working on v3.1 of the algorithm. We expect to be able to publish this in the course of January 2009. Watch this space!
Unlike some other beers, Belgian beer is not just coloured water. Some beers contain significant quantities of alcohol and will give you a pounding hangover. FOSDEM staff is not responsible for any hallucinations you may experience as a result of this event. :-)
A lot of work has gone into making this beer event the best ever. We've taken into account the suggestions from previous years and are confident that this edition will be a blast. Bring your friends and join us for a great evening out!
If you manage to get lost somehow, despite this handy little map, call Philip. He might not be able to help you find the way, but he should be able to find someone who can! :-)
FOSDEM organizers: FOSDEM 2009 Lightningtalks [Planet Grep]
These are the projects that are participating in FOSDEM 2009 with a lightningtalk, in probable sequential order.
Saturday afternoon:
Sunday morning:
Sunday afternoon:
Review of 'MacHeads' Documentary [Slashdot]
An anonymous reader writes "Just prior to its premiere at MacWorld later this week, CNet has a review of MacHeads, the new documentary film covering the obsessive world of Apple fanboyism. MacHeads features commentary from original Apple employees, the self-confessed Apple-obsessed and girls who claim they'll never sleep with Windows users. Summed up by CNet: 'MacHeads is a superb film that will give Apple haters a few cheap laughs, and Apple fans a few cheap thrills. But it'll entertain both equally, while educating everybody else.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Microsoft Rumored To Lay Off Thousands Worldwide [Slashdot]
nandemoari writes "It seems not even Microsoft is impervious to the effects of this increasingly painful recession. According to reports, the Redmond-based company is preparing to lay off about 17 per cent of its entire workforce in the coming months. Despite its portfolio diversity — including operating systems, antivirus software, and video game consoles — Microsoft is clearly feeling the pressure applied by a tightening global economy. In fact, there seems to be a sense of emergency to the massive cuts (about 15,000 workers out of 90,000), which rumors suggest should be made official by January 15."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Perils of Simplifying Risk To a Single Number [Slashdot]
A few weeks back we discussed the perspective that the economic meltdown could be viewed as a global computer crash. In the NYTimes magazine, Joe Nocera writes in much more depth about one aspect of the over-reliance on computer models in the ongoing unpleasantness: the use of a single number to assess risk. Reader theodp writes: "Relying on Value at Risk (VaR) and other mathematical models to manage risk was a no-brainer for the Wall Street crowd, at least until it became obvious that the risks taken by the largest banks and investment firms were so excessive and foolhardy that they threatened to bring down the financial system itself. Nocera explores the age-old debate between those who assert that the best decisions are based on quantification and numbers, and those who base their decisions on more subjective degrees of belief about the uncertain future. Reliance on models created a 'false sense of security among senior managers and watchdogs,' argues Nassim Nicholas Taleb, who likens VaR to 'an air bag that works all the time, except when you have a car accident.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
LG High-Def TVs To Stream Netflix Videos [Slashdot]
DJAdapt writes to tell us that LG has launched a new line of high definition TVs that will be capable of streaming Netflix videos with no additional hardware. This is just another in a long line of expansions from the once DVD rental service, which has expanded to the Roku set top box, Xbox 360, PC, Mac, and Linux platforms recently. "Piping movies directly to TV sets is the natural evolution of the video streaming service, said Reed Hastings, the chief executive of Netflix. "The TV symbolizes the ultimate destination," he said. That idea -- shared by Sony Corp., which already streams feature films and TV shows directly to its Bravia televisions -- is still in its early stages. Netflix's streaming service taps a library of 12,000 titles, while the company's DVD menu numbers more than 100,000 titles. Hastings expects that gap will "definitely narrow" over time, but he noted that DVDs maintain an advantage over streaming, which is that "they are very profitable" for film studios."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Steve Jobs Issues Update On His Health [Slashdot]
i4u writes "Rumors about Steve Jobs' health have been flying high again after Apple announced that he will not be holding the keynote at the Macworld 2009. Today Steve Jobs issued a letter with a rather personal update on why he was losing weight in 2008. The reason for losing weight in 2008 is a hormone imbalance that has been reducing proteins. The remedy for this nutritional problem is relatively simple and straightforward according to Jobs. Steve and his doctors predict that he will have normal weight again by Spring. So stop the rumors and enjoy Macworld 2009."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Energy Scale of over 100 orders of magnitude [Talk Like A Physicist]
I know, there are a lots of things that are wrong in this image, but as an illustrative example of energy associated with different phenomena that we observe, it is an interesting read.
For example :
A photon from cosmic background has energy of 10^(-22) Joules,
X ray photon has energy of 10^(-13) Joules
ultra high energy cosmic ray could be about 100 Joules,
first atomic bomb was about 10^(13) Joules,
annual US energy consumption is 10^(20) Joules
yearly output of Sun is 10^(32) Joules,
total yearly output of Milkeyway is 10^(47) Joules and
recent Gamma Ray burst from a Supernova had the energy of about 10^(50) Joules.
Player Piano Roll Production Ceases [Slashdot]
boustrophedon writes "The Buffalo News reports that QRS Music Technologies halted production of player piano rolls 108 years after the company was founded in Chicago. QRS continues to make digitized and computerized player-piano technology that runs on CDs. 'We're still doing what we always did, which is to provide software for pianos that play themselves. It's just the technology that has changed. But I would be lying to say [the halting of production] doesn't sadden me,' said Bob Berkman, the company's music director. Piano rolls can last for decades, but not forever. Volunteers at the International Association of Mechanical Music Preservationists build piano-roll scanners to scan rolls optically and convert them to MIDI files. The IAMMP archive and others contain thousands of scanned rolls."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
How Web Advertising May Go [Slashdot]
Anti-Globalism sends us to Ars Technica for Jon Stokes's musing on the falling value of Web advertising. Stokes put forward the outlying possibility — not a prediction — that ad rates could fall by 40% before turning up again, if they ever do. "A web page, in contrast, is typically festooned with hyperlinked visual objects that fall all over themselves in competing to take you elsewhere immediately once you're done consuming whatever it is that you came to that page for. So the page itself is just one very small slice of an unbounded media experience in which a nearly infinite number of media objects are scrambling for a vanishingly small sliver of your attention. ... We've had a few hundred years to learn to monetize print, over 75 years to monetize TV, and, most importantly, millennia to build business models based on scarcity. In contrast, our collective effort to monetize post-scarcity digital media have only just begun."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Software Development Predictions For 2009 [Slashdot]
snydeq writes "Fatal Exception's Neil McAllister lays out his development predictions for 2009. These include further struggles from Microsoft in retooling its image, a more open source mindset for Java, twilight for Sun, the Web as platform of choice, and a dearth of innovation due to dwindling economic prospects. 'When customers aren't buying, tool vendors don't innovate — so don't expect many groundbreaking new technologies to debut this year,' McAllister writes, adding that smart companies will realize that 'process automation is one of the best ways to reduce costs in any business,' making 2009 the ideal time to 'revisit old software schemes that got shelved back when staffing budgets were flush.'"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Dries Buytaert: Brocolli cream soup [Planet Grep]
I have never done much cooking in my life. I prepare the occasional spaghetti bolognese, but that is about it. And when I say "prepare", I mean that I heat up pre-cooked bolognese sauce. Well, sue me.
Either way, to start off the new year in style, I set out to make my first soup ever. From scratch. I decided on broccoli cream soup as that is one of my favorite soups, and it only involved vegetables.
Guess what? The soup was delicious. There might be a chef in me! ;-)
Wouter Verhelst: Quake I [Planet Grep]
Years ago—I think some two years after it was released—I bought me a copy of Quake. I found the original box in a shop that had just one left, and was selling it at a serious discount; I still have the box, with the original artwork.
I didn't have Internet at the time, though, so I never played it online. I did finish the game at one point, though I don't remember whether it was with or without cheatcodes. I'm certain I got very far, though I had a tendency to start using cheatcodes when the monsters I had to pass got too hard for me to actually be able to pass them.
When I did get an Internet connection, Quake III Arena had just been released, so not many people still played Quake I. However, my very own ISP then did have a QuakeWorld server still running, and I fondly remember playing a lot on that server. Since I hadn't heard of +mlook, which enables modern-style mouse-based movement in quake, I was still playing with doom-style controls, that is, keyboard only. At first I got fragged all the time, but it didn't take me long to master this method. I got so good at it that I've won some deathmatch games, with keyboard only. Seriously.
Eventually, however, I migrated to a state where I did not have any Microsoft operating systems installed on my system anymore; and while Debian had a 'quakeforge' package in potato, it was rather buggy; I remember it would reproducibly crash when you would load a particular level from the third episode. I did think about fixing the code, but then I didn't really have the time or expertise to do so, so that never got anywhere. Eventually, it was pulled from the archives; and after a while—around the time when my ISP shut down their quakeworld server—I stopped playing Quake; and though I was sad about it not being installed anymore, I just forgot about it.
Recently, however, I somehow stumbled upon this 'Linux Quake HOWTO' over at tldp, and noticed that apart from Quakeforge, there really are other engines, and there really still is a Quake I community around. With quakeworld servers and everything.
Oh boy.
So I installed this 'tyrquake' a few days ago, and I've now already reached episode 3. Some things are coming back, but others aren't really...
Of course, when I connect to one of those quakeworld servers, I get fragged all over. I'm lucky when I end up with a positive frag count. For reference: in Quake I, you only lose frag points when you kill yourself...
Hah.
To be continued, I guess...
Ciaran O'Riordan: Changes for me in 2009 [Planet Grep]
I look back on 2008 as a year of personal achievement. I worked hard at learning French and Dutch, and having passed various exams, I'm now studying for a law degree through French. The course involves a lot of work, and with exams in January, I had to make a very hard choice: after three and a half years with FSFE, I decided to not seek renewal of my contract for 2009.
My primary interest is still free software; legislation and policy in particular. In the long term, I think a formal degree in law will be very useful for this. This needs my attention in the short term, so I'm prioritising it now.
I'm proud of what I've done with FSFE, from fighting EU software patent legislation, through driving community participation in GPLv3, to helping to build the Fellowship community. I also feel I've had positive influences on general aspects of the organisation such as communication and legislative policy setting.
In turn, I've gotten to work with some very talented, very dedicated people. The staff and board of FSFE are people who really care about free software, and I continue to recommend that people donate to FSFE and join the Fellowship.
I see a sturdy future for FSFE and I'm happy that building the Fellowship community is a top priority. The two Fellowship seats on FSFE's General Assembly is one sign of this, and the upcoming software overhaul of the Fellowship website (including a wiki) is another.
Community building is essential because knowledge, experience, and contacts must remain connected after any particular campaign ends. We can't start from