Archive for the ‘Software’ Category

Google adds another search related feature

It may or may not be new (I surely haven’t noticed it before), but If you are logged in to Google, and also have a Google Notebook account, then for each link in the search results, in addition the “Cached” and other stuff there, you’ll notice a “Note this” link. Clicking on it will change the text to “Dully noted” and will add the link as a new empty note to your default Notebook (in addition to poping up a small AJAX box that allows you to do other stuff that I haven’t investigated fully yet).

I found its a great way to build a list of links to go over more throughly later.

ומנושא לנושא באותו נושא

גרסה 2 של הדפדפן המוביל מבית מוזילה – שועל האש (Firefox – או “השוא”ש” לידידיו הקרובים) – שוחררה שלשום להמונים.

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DOM Mayhem

Mozilla Gecko sucks, what’s new ? I’m doing some AJAX work for my web development framework (more about it much later), and one thing I encountered with the Mozilla browsers (which means mostly Firefox but also other Gecko based browsers such as Flock and of course SeaMonkey) is that they don’t handle the importNode() call that well..

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Nat Friedman spouts nonsense, or – Another Novell Open Audio review

Late as usual (but starting to catch up), I listened to Novell Open Audio‘s Ted Haeger interviews Nat Friedman, formerly co-founder of Ximian (The GNOME desktop company – bought by Novell and hence the link does a funny redirect) and currently Novell’s VP of engineering for Linux desktop (or something).

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The Fedora Core 6 disaster

I’ve been using Fedora Core for a while now on my laptop, and also on several computers at home and work. In the past I’ve tested Fedora many times, but only Fedora Core 5 was good enough compared to other major Linux distros that I thought it deserved to be run as a primary OS (mostly due to the GNOME 2.14 desktop, which despite still some annoyances matured enough to actually be a useful desktop). I’ve been running with rawhide – Fedora Core’s development branch for a few months now and I really liked the direction that Fedora was taking and I expected Fedora Core 6 to be even better then Fedora Core 5 – even though the latest GNOME, 2.16, isn’t so much different from 2.14 (as 2.14 was from 2.12) it does fix most of the problems that were still present at the previous version, but more so Fedora have introduced a lot of really interesting technology under the hood, from getting hardware to work better and easier, through kernel 2.6.18 the inclusion of Xen and other interesting tools such as the Sabayon user profile editor, to modern desktop compositing with AIGLX.

So when a friend asked me to help him install Fedora Core on his new laptop – a Lenovo 3000 N100 – I suggested he tries the Fedora Core 6 pre-release: 6 is scheduled to be released sometimes next week, and though he can’t wait till then due to external time constraints, I though that this late in the game there’s no reason the current rawhide snapshot shouldn’t be almost as good as the full release – I have a lot of experience with pre-release distributions – Mandriva and SuSE for example – and in my experience, as the products nears its release date (especially this close), there usually aren’t any major issues preventing a competent user who knows what he’s doing to install and use the product as a primary OS. So I was completely unprepared for what followed next.

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These weird open-source guys with their crazy antics.

I’ve been listening lately to a Linux oriented podcast called The Linux Link Techshow, which is rather interesting – each week they bring in new guests related to Linux specifically and open-source software generally, and they are usually rather interesting (and correction – its not a podcast – as they keep saying, its a live show that you can also download old episodes as podcasts).

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So what’s new with Window Vista ?

Apparently, nothing. Checkout the videos in tauquil.com‘s hilarious Re-Introducing the Real Windows Vista.

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How to install Fedora Core 5 on a new computer and get it to do something useful

The problem with most Linux distros, is that you need to do a lot of things after the install to get it to do something useful (say, connect to a wireless network, play multimedia, etc’).

So here is what to do to get FC5 up and running in no time 🙂 :

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Why web interfaces are cool

Web interfaces are cool because they allow one to easily experiment with new takes on common practices. The easiest example is of course GMail – Google’s email client. They have tons of neat features which are were never available for “standard” mail user agents.

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Sometimes, I don’t get them.

I have started listening to podcasts on my drive to and from work each day. It sure beats surfing the net on my phone while I’m stuck in traffic, or listening to corny political talk shows on the radio (I’m don’t deal well with the local stations music playlists, so tuning to all music shows is out of the question, and as I only have standard audio CD player carrying enough of my own music with me to keep me entertained is not feasable).

Anyway, currently I’m listening to TLLTS and its mostly very interesting.
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