Megaphone is now officially a project.
Why?
It has its own special page on my site.
Megaphone is now officially a project.
Why?
It has its own special page on my site.
Sorry for the lack of postings here for a couple of days, I’ve been busy with lots of stuff.
First of all, I’ve implemented a new download system on this site. Any stuff you download through /files goes through this new system. The new system helps me track and monitor downloads and make sure everything is going just great in regards to bandwidth/downloads.
The consequence of this new system means that every time you download a file from /files, the following information will be recorded:
Note that this is no more information than my server logs would tell me anyway, so it’s not really a privacy issue. However, if you do feel uneasy about that, don’t download files from this site. The purpose of storing this information, as I said, is for me to easily track what’s being downloaded so I can optimise the site and to make sure one person doesn’t abuse the download service for everyone else.
There are a couple of issues still unresolved with the new download engine, mainly concerning the WPGet old archives, but I’m addressing them and the archives will be back up pretty soon.
Second up, it’s Megaphone news. I’ve been working on it again, and we’re making good progress. I can’t give another source dump as there’s some ported stuff from other projects that is too messy and useless to open, so once I’ve been through and optimised that and of course, done a bit more, there’ll be a new release.
Also, I’ve been busy blogging at Gizbuzz and FOSSwire (both part of the Oratos Media network). I do hope you’re subscribed to them and of course all the other Oratos blogs and podcasts!
It’s here. I’m going to test it out shortly, but Flash Player 9 Beta 2 for Linux is here according to Adobe.
I’ve just finished a mammoth sized review of Mandriva Free 2007.
Steve Ballmer says:
“The fact that that product [Linux as an OS] uses our patented intellectual property is a problem for our shareholders. We spend $7 billion a year on R&D, our shareholders expect us to protect or license or get economic benefit from our patented innovations. So how do we somehow get the appropriate economic return for our patented innovation, and how do we do interoperability. The truth is, because of the complex licensing around the GPL, we actually didn’t want to do one without the other.”
I say:
Face it, Mr Steve. You’ve sold out and had to finally not only admit Linux is here to stay, but you had to do something about it. And go on, prove that FOSS violates your patents – give me some real evidence and I might be convinced.
Greed is a nasty human tendency, isn’t it?
UPDATE: It seems Ballmer really is off his rocker not in agreement with Novell on this, as this open letter from Novell tells us. I am slightly reassured.
As of right now, I’m announcing the immediate availability of the Megaphone source code in it’s current form.
Shortly, I’ll set up a project page on my site to house it, but for now, this blog post is the definitive source of information.
Please be aware – this is a development release. It will eat your computer up without warning, and will contain more bugs than Internet Explorer 6 – erm, I mean, an ant hill.
Do not run this on any production machines at all – just don’t, it’s only for testing and playing around with. Currently it doesn’t really do very much that other software doesn’t already, but I have to start somewhere don’t I? 😉
It’s only been tested with PHP 5.x on Linux, but in theory should work with other configurations.
Installation instructions:
As you can tell, the nice installation procedure hasn’t even been started yet. 🙂
Enjoy.
If anyone wants to use BoxCheck (a Firefox extension that allows you to shift-click to select multiple tick boxes on web forms) on Firefox 2.0, I’ve updated it to make it compatible.
Note that this is hacked – all I’ve done is change the supported versions in the script to work with 2.0. It works for me, but if it eats your Firefox, don’t come complaining (execute FF with -safe-mode to remove it if it kills it).
You will have to add me to the list of allowed sites to install software, but don’t worry, it’s pure BoxCheck just with a hacked install file (you can verify for yourself, just Save Target As the .xpi, rename to .zip and explore it).
Tutorial on how to hack your favourite FF 1.5.x extensions to work with FF 2.0 coming soon.
Thank goodness this is a spoof. I was scared there for a moment.
It’s a spoof people (under heavy traffic too at the moment, be patient).
Fortysomething.ca have a slightly different than normal Windows XP theme – Royale Noir.
UPDATE: Please note that the freely available Zune theme is very similar (and feels a lot more finished than this theme.
It’s not perfect – some bits like the scrollbars are still standard blue Royale, but it makes a change for those becoming-dangerously-rare times when I’m in Windows (without hacking uxtheme.dll).
And the reason you don’t have to hack that file is because this is an official signed theme by Microsoft – albeit one they hadn’t finished and didn’t intend to publish.
Yes, I’m slow to this. I saw it on Digg about a week ago and I downloaded it, unrared it and put it on my shared partition, but didn’t get round to actually installing it in Windows until now. 7-Zip will unrar it for you, don’t get WinRAR, it’s arguably evil (I shouldn’t have to pay to decompress files, it’s just ridiculous).
Apparently, Sun are announcing and releasing GPL’ed Java today (possibly at 16:30 my time, GMT, but I could well have done the conversion wrong).
This will be awesome and will hopefully not only strengthen Java as a platform as Linux developers move to Java and build cross-platform applications, but hopefully it will also get Linux working even better out of the box.