Bugzilla bug 51149

Bugzilla bug 51149

For those of you migrating from MacOS X to Linux, this is something that should be good for you. Get Evolution to import your vCard’s from the MacOS X Addressbook without my little perl script.

I’m full time on Linux these days, but it would be awesome for people to check that this is, in fact, working now.

Dear Senator Dumbfuck…

Frist

This made me laugh – largely at what is just a stupid situation I’ve had trouble putting into words.

All these people protesting could actually do something constructive like not putting up with government corruption.

Where are these people insisting on universal healthcare? Education on academic merit rather than ability to pay?

hrrm…

it’s somebody who’s been brain dead for 15 (yes fifteen) years that gets them out onto the streets.

pass the head reading machine, these people need it.

bluetooth is cool. phones suck donkey

Why do phones crash?

upgraded laptop memory

1.5GB is much nicer than 768MB. Makes running MySQL cluster tests a lot easier (doesn’t hit swap).

the same apps still hog memory though (and for no real good reason).

Yes, i’m looking at you Evolution.

what you don’t want to see from gdb

/build/buildd/gdb-6.3/gdb/linux-nat.c:1208: internal-error: wait_lwp: Assertion `pid == GET_LWP (lp->ptid)' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Quit this debugging session? (y or n) 
/build/buildd/gdb-6.3/gdb/linux-nat.c:1208: internal-error: wait_lwp: Assertion `pid == GET_LWP (lp->ptid)' failed.
A problem internal to GDB has been detected,
further debugging may prove unreliable.
Create a core file of GDB? (y or n) 

Westpac hasn’t changed anything

it seems. so they keep me as a customer. everything still looks the same, and seems to function the same.

maybe it was just a behind the scenes upgrade, and the support guy was just saying what’s on his screen from before?

Bblog: Westpac: standards avoidance

Bblog: Westpac: standards avoidance

Hrrm… I really hope that everything works fine in mozilla derived browsers.

Personally, I use epiphany. It was ready and working before firefox was (although I used it exclusively for a hell of a long time on IRIX last year). So, if it doesn’t work, and they’re not going to fix it – I’ll have to seriously consider switching banks.

This is an extra annoyance as Mark Tearle has gone through a fair bit of re-organising moving LA’s bank accounts over to Westpac (largely because their internet banking stuff made a lot more sense for us).

The old site was great. I only ever had one problem with it – mozilla based stuff rendered the page slightly wider than the screen. But, I’ve happily put up with that. Everything worked .No bloody java stuff required (this is due to the problems of getting a working java plugin on linux-ppc – i don’t want binary only stuff).

I could view things, bpay, export statements out into a format suitable for import into GNUcash.

So Westpac – will you loose a customer? I guess we’ll soon find out.

Airshow 2005

Was at the airshow yesterday – with all the benefits of knowing people in the business :)

Mad people doing airobatics, mad guy hanging upside-down off the wing of a plane while it then barrell-rolled so he was standing up. Pretty cool to watch.

Of course, then there was the fighter jets. fast, loud, and i swear the F16 can do a u-turn in less space than half the cars on the road.

Then, of course, there’s the air force supply planes that do crazy landings, take offs and can fly a few feet above the ground while dropping supplies/releif out the back.

When the US air force guy was saying what missions some of their fighters had flown in, notably absent was Gulf War II. Hrrmm… maybe a touchy subject? Who knows.

An F111 doing a dump and burn is always pretty to see.

arjen_lentz: Google Code

arjen_lentz: Google Code

their multithreaded core dump lib and their memory stuff looks interesting…

being able to core dump a multithreaded app *while running* would be so cool.

Hit an error condition, dump out a core file to send to engineers to fix it. even if it’s recoverable. rock.

Install Day (Semester 1, 2005) – Monash IT Society (Clayton)

Install Day (Semester 1, 2005) – Monash IT Society (Clayton)

So, back at uni (you know, that place you’re at when you’re a student), and back with the old computer science club (but under a different name… well… ah…urrr…because… who the fuck knows why) they’re having a linux install day next week.

i’ll probably go along for a couple of hours and hand out lots of ubuntu cds that i’ve got lying around and probably get asked a lot of mysql questions.

maybe it’d be cool to have a “MySQL CD” with all mysql stuff for all platforms on it (with lots of autorun stuff). esp if we could make them cheaply enough to give away at a bunch of events (like install days).

Maybe i’ll burn a couple of CDs to take along (windows, mac, linux binaries)

GCC4 in Ubuntu

… and not in debian.

so, can see if it makes a difference to performance on my desktop. should be fun!

1GB laptop ram sticks

are finally at a decent price! hopefully one should come in for me this afternoon. Would love an extra bunch of ram in my laptop…. should (by tonight) have 1.5GB instead of just 768MB.

FC4t1

tried FC4t1 on desktop – with SELinux. barely got anywhere. firstboot didn’t run, X config was strange (but that’s a norm, two monitors generally confuses things).

It also overwrote my MBR, despite being told not to. grr..

Beer sampling at the Belgian

Went to the Belgian Beer Cafe yesterday with daniels. Was good – good beer and good catch up.

Had lunch at Chocolate Budda in Fed Square too. Good food there.

This also marked the first time I’ve been to Flinders St station since at least the start of December last year. Went okay.

Ringu

Anyone who has seen Ringu will know what this looks like.
Ringu (Holiday House)

This is where we went for holiday.

Liferea Newsreader

I’ve just switched to using Liferea for my RSS feeds. It’s really quite sweet. Fast, categories, smart vfolders (e.g. ‘unread’), choice of Mozilla or gtkhtml rendering.

Funky, funky, funky, funky.

sometimes it’s scary when…

after lots of hacking and modifying and tweaking, something actually builds.

Of course, linking is another thing alltogether.

oh, and if anything remotely works.

OpenOffice.org 2.0

Well, I installed the preview packages in Ubuntu on my desktop this morning – just to play with for a few mins. Guess What? It looks like it doesn’t completely suck!

Some of the UI still feels/looks really weird – but that seems to be a legacy of the strange widget stuff that it used to use.

The “File->Send->Document as E-Mail” and “Document as PDF Attachment” are pretty funky things (assuming they link into evo properly).

The presentation module, Impress looks to have improved no-end. 1.1 was sucky (just like PowerPoint). If you’ve ever used Apple’s Keynote, you know how good presentation software can be. The new one looks to be usable and may mean I swear a lot less when preparing presentations.

Although why OO.org has it’s own package manager is totally beyond me.

I do wish the MySQL connectivity worked out of the box though… maybe it’s just this beta (or the fact that when you select OO.org in synaptic, it doesn’t load up all the Java stuff needed for JDBC connectivity, or ODBC).

Note that I still love Gnumeric and Abiword.

Building the MySQL GUI tools on Debian


sudo apt-get install libgtkmm2.0-dev libglade2-0 \
libglade2-dev libgtkhtml3.0-4 libgtkhtml3.0-dev \
libxml2 libxml2-dev uuid-dev libuuid1

Then, grab the source trees (mysql-gui-common, mysql-administrator, mysql-query-browser). You should probably grab source tarballs rather than using the BK trees… I had to edit some files to get it to build – but that’s probably just today. Tomorrow it will be a different story.

you’ll want to add the path to mysql_config to your PATH

cd mysql-gui-common; sh ./autogen.sh –prefix=/whatever/you/want && make && make install

cd ../mysql-adiministrator; sh ./autogen.sh –prefix=/whatever/you/want && make && make install

cd ../mysql-query-browser; sh ./autogen.sh –prefix=/whatever/you/want && make && make install

you should then be able to run them and connect to a mysql server

Epson C65 on Ubuntu Linux (and Debian)

Quite easy to get going under Warty (as well as Debian Sid).

Add a printer (System Configuration -> Printers, double click ‘Add Printer’). Select Local Printer, “USB Printer #1” as the port, then, select the model as Epson Stylus C64. Works fine.

I guess you can fiddle with quality settings and everything – but I haven’t yet.

This is the printer that was bought for mum – and it’s working fine for her.

now…. only to find a printer for me….

i print rarely, but when I do, i want it to work. Inkjets have not worked well for me in the past in this regard (spending 10 minutes running head cleaning and replacing cartridges because they’ve half dried up is not fun).

I’m thinking laser. Konica Minolta seems to have a 2430DL colour laser with network and GPL Linux drivers for $499USD (about $800AUD i think… finding prices today). You have to love it when they have a tux on their site :)

A duplexer would be nice too – i like having double sided print outs (yay – the greenie hippy in me is working hard).