Recently in Blog Category

Stuart Langridge - Manchester Free Software

Our next meeting will be February 19th 2008, with Stuart Langridge (also known as Aq) of LUGRadio fame joining us for a talk about his experiences with free software.


The event takes place on the 19th of February at 7pm at Manchester Digital Development Agency on Portland Street.

How to get there

Manchester Digital Development Agency
Lower Ground Floor
117-119 Portland Street
Manchester
M1 6ED
UK

Forthcoming speakers also include Alex Hudson from Bongo and John Leach from Everybody Loves Eric Raymond/Brightbox Hosting.

In the past, we've had Matthew Bloch from Bytemark and Aidan McGuire from Blue Fountain.

Sun gets it


Simon PhippsI believe prefacing the term "Linux" with the term "GNU" serves the useful purpose of highlighting that GNU/Linux is a compound of many elements and has what many developers would term a "GNU Userland" wrapped around a "Linux kernel". That's why I have made it Sun's policy to refer to GNU/Linux when speaking of Linux-based operating system distributions, and it's why I encourage Nexenta to describe itself as "GNU/OpenSolaris"

Simon Phipps, Sun Microsystems (source)

James Blunt was taught not to steal sweets as a child, but he thinks it’s OK to steal your freedom with DRM.

Ugh.

Qtrax files contain Digital [Restrictions] Management software, allowing the company to see how many times a song has been downloaded and played. Artists, record companies and publishers will be paid in proportion to the popularity of their music, while also taking a cut of advertising revenues.

The singer James Blunt gave Qtrax a cautious welcome. “I’m amazed that we now accept that people steal music,” he said. “I was taught not to steal sweets from a sweet shop. But I want to learn how this service works, given the condition the music industry is in.”

How to block all Facebook application and message spam.



  1. http://www.facebook.com/privacy.php?view=platform&tab=myapps - remove everything apart from...

  2. Photos, Events, Posted Items, Notes and Groups.

  3. http://www.facebook.com/privacy.php?view=platform&tab=ext

  4. Remove anything here.

  5. Save

  6. http://www.facebook.com/privacy.php?view=platform&tab=all

  7. Select "Do not share any information about me through the Facebook API"

  8. http://www.facebook.com/privacy.php?view=search

  9. Under What Can People Do With My Search Results

  10. 'See your picture' and 'Add you as a friend' should be ticked. The rest not.

  11. Done.

My first article on BadVista

120 members, 17 days: Support user freedom and the FSF

In 2008, the Free Software Foundation will be fighting DRM, abolishing software patents, and defending user freedom. Benjamin Mako Hill presents the case for supporting the FSF in this fight. They are just 120 members short of their fundraising goal of 500 new members or $100,000 by January 31.

School fingerprints lunch pupils

School fingerprints lunch pupils

Catering staff at an Essex school are taking the fingerprints of pupils at lunchtime to ensure they get the meals their parents want them to eat.

You couldn't make this stuff up.

WTFlickrFan

Can somebody please enlighten me to this FlickrFan thing that Winer and Scoble are all over?

Tell me it's more than just some proprietary screensaver that downloads some photos from Flickr?

Please.

Best quote so far...

"Anyway, what does Dave Winer’s new software do? It puts pictures up on my HDTV. “Huh, that’s the lamest thing I’ve ever heard,” I can hear you saying. But didn’t you also say that about Twitter? About IM? About the PC itself back in 1977? Yeah, yeah, you did, own up to it." - Scoble

Um, no I didn't. IM has a really obvious use, as does the PC. In fact, I doubt anyone said this.
Twitter - I'm not so sure what the point of Twitter is, but people seem to be using it a lot. Good on them.

So, I have two questions:-


  1. Why is this so amazing?

  2. No, seriously. Why?


Flickr needs to provide me with a way to offer up an alternative image for people using this.

Please.

What really happens when Seaworld is closed


DO NOT WANT

DO NOT WANT

Publishing will set us free!

I have long longed for my dream publishing tool for the web. With the release of Movable Type under the GPL, I took another chance to evaluate it - I have a long and unhealthy relationship with it. It was
my tool of choice, but like many, moved to Wordpress when Six Apart fucked with the license. The free software release of Movable Type, or MTOS, as they're agonisingly calling, is a lot prettier than the last
MT I used - it's still a clusterfuck of Perl scripts, but either I'm better at installing it now, or the installation has gotten better. For years, I longed for it to come and be set free, and now it's here, I want so much more.

I spent today working on a website using Wikidot. Wikidot, for the uninitiated is a hosted wiki that does some other cool stuff. It's a bit Web 2.0, and uses a lot of Javascript, and is entirely web based,
and so it involves a lot of messing around in textareas to get any real work done, but it's actually simple, and more important, hackable.

In places, at least.

You can't change the page template. You can change the navigation, the sidebar, the content (of course), but for whatever reason you can't break out of this fixed construct. It's also proprietary, but
very soon will be released under the GNU Affero GPL, which wins a few points from me.

But it's not what I want.

Here's the rub with all of these systems - I have to learn new tools. As anyone who knows me will tell you, I don't take to new habits very easily. I still use GNU Emacs, and badly, when the rest of
the world moved to IDEs and GUI editors. I don't even handle my Emacs sessions properly, so at any one time, I have 11 copies of Emacs open and no idea what's going on in 9 of them. They also fail to have
version control - a latecomer to the merits of version control, I am now a fully qualified Subversion lover. I don't get distributed version control, so git and bzr people, you need to try harder to sell
your idea to me, cause I'm not smart and I don't quite get it.

Now, before you start emailing me with your suggestions, let me say this. I've heard of Ikiwiki. In fact, I use Ikiwiki every day, all day, for my Campaign Manager job at the FSF. It's alright, it serves its purpose as a wiki, but it doesn't quite fill my requirements.

I'm not even sure they're even implemented.

I'm looking for something with the ease of installation of Wordpress, that uses SVN as its back end, lets me maintain users in a simple text file or similar, and most importantly, will publish, via a templating system, to one or more locations on the file system, in static HTML. And I want to write things in Wordpress, but my colleagues might want to use a textarea, or a WYSIWYG editor.

I love static HTML.

Oh, and I want proper URLs - none of this cgi-bin crap or WiKiNaMeS nonsense.

I'm sure this tool exists. I really am. Without the SVN stuff and Emacs stuff, that tool is probably Movable Type, with some hacking.

Does the tool of my dreams exist? Will publishing set me free?

This tool will probably be the system that runs www.fsf.org some day. It'll be the tool that runs exploringfreedom.org as soon as it exists and it'll run all my other sites as well.


  • Can I write 'articles' in GNU Emacs on my local machine?

  • Can I check them into Subversion?

  • Can they appear on one, or more locations on my web server?

  • As static HTML on the file system?

  • Via a templating system?


One installation will set me free.