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Topics - Edvard [ switch to compact view ]

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101
Dammit... now I have to deal with yet another bootloader.  Hadn't even heard of Gummiboot until I saw this.  Damn UEFI, damn it all to hell!

The Linux Foundation is waiting for Microsoft to sign the newly submitted bootloader version and will offer the new version to users for free once released.
...
According to Bottomley's presentation slides, it takes a week or two for Microsoft to respond to bootloader submissions and provide a signature that is considered trustworthy by Secure Boot PCs.


As a side note, Microsoft being the de facto keymaster to UEFI/Secureboot implementations is just mind-fecking boggling.


from an email

102
Living Room / A tale of Apple greed, or a startup gone a-whoring?
« on: January 24, 2013, 12:12 AM »
Lala.com was the only music service besides 7digital I ever bought music from.  Why?  Because Lala was fecking AWESOME!  Until a fruity company with a bunch of money bought them out and shut them down, of course.  At the time I was angry and heartbroken, and the internet's reaction disgusted me ("ZOMG, maybe they'll use the tech to make iTunes better!! Squeee!!"... barf...).  Well, now some insider broke some news about how it all went down, and while I agree that Apple's motives were to squash some competition, there's apparently more to the story:
Lala was founded by Bill Nguyen, who went on to found Color. Both companies were purchased by Apple. Aubrey Johnson, a designer who worked with Nguyen at Color, wrote a blog post a few days ago in which he spilled the beans about the Lala deal. The post has since disappeared, with no explanation, but not before it made it into search engine caches. (Sorry, @aub, the Internet never forgets.)


So, after reading the whole piece, I've come to the conclusion that the reason Nguyen came up with such a killer service in the first place, was he wanted to be bought out; he never even intended to be the Web Mogul That Killed iTunes.  Nope, quite the opposite:

He called in a few favors and got a meeting with the leadership at Apple. He explained that he had offers from the largest mobile OS competitors and that they wanted to acquire his music startup. Cue knew if Google obtained Lala the ownership of the service coupled with search dominance could be disruptive to their stronghold. Bill was notorious at getting great deals with the music elite, usually through Lala's investor, Warner Brothers Music.

So there you have it.  At least I've still got Grooveshark and 7Digital:Thmbsup:


from an email from a friend, who got it from his aunt from Peoria, who thought it was spam and sent it to her nephew, but really it's from Mongolia or something. J/K.

103
Living Room / Why touch screens will never rule the world
« on: January 23, 2013, 11:43 PM »
Nice short article, with a simple reason that's hard to argue: simple ergonomics.

At first, you might think, “Touch has been incredibly successful on our phones, tablets, airport kiosks and cash machines. Why not on our computers?”

I'll tell you why not: because of “gorilla arm.”


Relevant reference material: http://www.catb.org/...l/G/gorilla-arm.html


from somewhar ah ferget

105
Living Room / Parallella, the $99 supercomputer
« on: January 02, 2013, 01:52 PM »
They've reached their Kickstarter goal, so I hope the goods appear soon, this looks simply delicious.

Parallella: A SuperComputer for Everyone
Inspired by great hardware communities like Raspberry Pi and Arduino, we see a critical need for a truly open, high-performance computing platform that will close the knowledge gap in parallel programing. The goal of the Parallella project is to democratize access to parallel computing.



from teh intarwebs

106
How ya like DEM apples, Apple?!

Samsung has filed with the court a copy of the recent decision by the USPTO that Apple's '915 patent, the pinch to zoom patent used against Samsung, is invalidated, all its claims, 1-21, in a preliminary ruling:



from an email I got

107
Living Room / The REAL reason Valve is developing Steam for Linux?
« on: December 12, 2012, 03:19 AM »
Total conjecture, but it's been whispered around for a while now...

Connect the dots: Valve’s Big Picture could be a Linux game console
When a game developer can offer their games directly through the Windows Store or Mac App Store that’s built into every new computer, why go with Steam?
Perhaps that’s one of the reasons that Valve co-founder Gabe Newell is calling Windows 8 a "catastrophe." Perhaps that’s why Valve is building Steam for Linux.

Valve Prepping Custom PC Hardware To Compete With Next-Gen Game Consoles
It’s likely that Valve will assume the role of a boutique PC manufacturer, taking standardized hardware and customizing it (as well as software) for a living room experience. This would entail pre-installing Steam, but I wouldn’t be surprised if, with Valve’s recent love affair with Linux, the company wasn’t neck-deep in developing a custom Linux distribution.
steamjoystick.png


from my friend who hates Linux, but likes to game, and may be changing his mind...

108
Living Room / Building a computer from the ground up - Nand2Tetris
« on: November 24, 2012, 02:52 PM »
The site contains all the software tools and project materials necessary to build a general-purpose computer system from the ground up. We also provide a set of lectures designed to support a typical course on the subject.

The materials are aimed at students, instructors, and self-learners. Everything is free and open-source; as long as you operate in a non-profit educational setting, you are welcome to modify and use our materials as you see fit.

The NAND gate is used as the basis to build a chipset.
The chipset is used as the basis to build a hardware platform.
The hardware platform is used as the basis to build an assembler.
The assembler is used as the basis to build a  virtual machine.
The virtual machine is used as the basis to build an operating system.
The operating system is used as the basis to build a compiler.
The compiler is used as the basis to build Tetris.

All this in a single semester.


So much awesome, so little time...  :(


from a video I saw somehrrs

109
Living Room / Retro educational videos
« on: November 24, 2012, 02:42 PM »
A free and fun way to support your K-12 classroom or homeschool curriculum using time-proven Educational Films, Newsreels, TV Shows, PSAs, and Movies from the past.


All this stuff is probably more educational towards history and cultural studies, but my generation was on the tail end of this kind of stuff.
Smells like second grade...



from the intahnet

110
Living Room / Linux users targeted by mystery drive-by rootkit
« on: November 24, 2012, 12:06 AM »
The malware is aimed at the 64-bit Debian Squeezy kernel and is distributed to would-be victims via an unusual form of iFrame injection attack


Article says it looks so far like a work-in-progress, but just a reminder that we Linux users are not and never will be completely immune.
Stumps me why they chose Debian Squeeze, why not Ubuntu for the newb user base?  Why not Red Hat for all the delicious server exploit possibilities?
... And Bronx cheers to Infoworld for getting the distro name wrong (Squeezy? Really? Research much?)


from sumwhar ah ferget
Rootkit Icon by ? http://thethreatvect...s-cybersecurity-101/

111
I only noticed this today, but apparently it happened 2 months ago.
The tools were very good, the community was huge, and the buzz was almost unstoppable.
Then came this blog post in July
Hi folks,

As you might know, Aviary officially changed directions in September 2011 to focus more on helping developers of photo apps. We currently power the photo-editing of third party apps on mobile and web through Aviary’s simple plugin for iOS, Android, Windows Phone 7 and HTML5.  Over the past 10 months since turning down this path, we’ve grown to 11 million active users, editing more than 150 million photos in Aviary, each month. And our tremendous growth under this new direction is showing no signs of slowing down. Even our developer showcase app “Photo Editor by Aviary” has been a smash hit, shooting up to #2 in iOS’s Photos category and breaking into the Top 25 free apps in the App Store (with a 5-star average rating).
...
We therefore have made the difficult decision to retire the advanced suite of multimedia Flash editors for artists (located at advanced.aviary.com) on September 15th, 2012.
Now it's just... gone.

OK, I understand, it cost too much money, Flash is going the way of the buffalo, etc., etc., blahblahblah, ad nauseum.

To those of you inconvenienced by this announcement, I am truly sorry. I hope you understand why this is necessary and will continue to support the company on its current path.
Inconvenienced?
Guys, you dumped an entire community of millions of musicians/students/teachers/artists/designers/regular Joes who came to rely on the ease of use and ubiquitous availability of your tools daily with no alternative path and you ask for support?!?!

I hate when these things happen. :nono2:

112
My son picked up an inexpensive Mini-DVD recording video camera, and liked the DVD-VR format for it's flexibility, but didn't like that it couldn't be used directly in a video editor.  After some searching, I came across this:
DVD-VR ripper for Linux
http://www.pixelbeat...org/programs/dvd-vr/
dvd-vr is a utility to identify and optionally copy recordings from a DVD-VR format disc, which can be created by devices like DVD recorders and camcorders

Basically, it can rip the VR-format file into individual .vob files, which can then be imported into most video editing programs not written by Microsoft  :mad:, but it needs to be compiled in Cygwin to run on Windows, and then it's a command-line program.
My son being a fan of the Windows 7 that came on his laptop, I dusted off my XP partition, brushed up on my Autohotkey skills and came up with dvdvrGUI.

Screenshot - 10142012 - 11:27:35 PM.png

[ Invalid Attachment ]

Instructions I wrote for installing Cygwin, compiling and running dvd-vr and dvdvrGUI can be found here:
http://comments.pixe...d-vr/#comment-302522

Still working on a version for Linux, possibly written with Yad  :Thmbsup:

113
Pretty cool pair of vids by the same guy (clever trick).  You can form your own opinion (and probably already have).
I found myself mostly agreeing with what he says in the first vid (with a few caveats) and was entertained by the second one.
EDIT: It's this guy -> http://lunduke.com/

So, without further ado, and at the risk of scaring off potential new Linux users, or possibly gathering more in... enjoy:

Why Linux Sucks and How To Fix It
2012 is an amazing time for Linux. Huge changes. Amazing opportunities. ...And lots and lots of ways that using Linux just plain sucks. We'll look at some of the more interesting (to me) things that Linux sucks at -- and exactly how to fix them.

Why Linux Does Not Suck
Some bozo here at Linux Fest NW has a session called "Why Linux Sucks". Well, he's wrong. Not only is Linux great... but there is not one single thing that it sucks at. NOT ONE. And I'll prove it (and provide you with the ammunition needed to destroy any anti-Linux argument... IN THE WORLD).

114
General Software Discussion / Steam set to become app store
« on: August 08, 2012, 04:44 PM »
Hmm...  :huh:

The Software titles coming to Steam range from creativity to productivity. Many of the launch titles will take advantage of popular Steamworks features, such as easy installation, automatic updating, and the ability to save your work to your personal Steam Cloud space so your files may travel with you.



115
Living Room / Valve launches Linux blog
« on: July 17, 2012, 09:16 AM »
Along with their latest promise to actually start porting to Linux, Valve software has created a Linux team and posted it's first Linux blog entry:
http://blogs.valveso...nux/steamd-penguins/
The Valve Linux Team

Our mission is to strengthen the gaming scene on Linux, both for players and developers. This includes Linux ports of Steam and Valve games, as well as partner games. We are also investigating open source initiatives that could benefit the community and game developers.

Kudos, gentlemen, kudos.

116
Living Room / Animal Friends thread
« on: May 26, 2012, 01:49 AM »
As many of you already know, the animal world is not always "red in tooth and claw" and fraught with survival-of-the-fittest nightmare fuel suitable for a riveting National Geography documentary filmed in slo-mo; sometimes there's outright friendship, kindness, and empathy demonstrated by the fur-and-feathers set that puts us bipeds to shame.
So as a corollary to the Funny Animal Videos thread, post your cute, your sad, your outright squee videos of animal BFF's, and celebrate them.





From a conversation in IRC

117
Living Room / WTH, part Deu... Steam IS coming to Linux!
« on: May 23, 2012, 03:03 PM »
I realize I'm a little late reporting this (as of April 25) but...
As I lamented here, the head honchos at Steam/Valve announced flatly they wouldn't be supporting Linux.

What's that I hear?  Seems someone's tune has changed...

At long last, Valve has confirmed that Linux ports of both Steam and the Source engine are in active development, and should be released later this year. These are native solutions that run directly on Linux, without any kind of Wine-like emulation. Left 4 Dead 2 will be the first Source-based title on Linux, but once the engine has been successfully ported other AAA games will surely follow.


OOOHHH!! REAL PORTS, NOT WINE HACKS!! I'm as giddy as a school girl with a new iPhone!!  ;D

Perhaps they saw the writing on the wall with the advent of competing content-delivery platforms like Desura (Windows/Mac/Linux) and Gameolith (all-Linux) or maybe they finally woke up the the statistics the HIB's were showing about how much money Linux gamers were willing to spend, who knows?

Either way... it's about damn time.  :Thmbsup:

118
Living Room / I'm Comic Sans, A**hole
« on: April 17, 2012, 08:04 PM »
After all the Comic Sans bashing around the web, this is a bit refreshing:  :Thmbsup:
...
You think I’m a malformed, pathetic excuse for a font. Well think again, nerdhole, because I’m Comic Sans, and I’m the best thing to happen to typography since Johannes f***ing Gutenberg.



from Timothy McSweeney's Short Imagined Dialogues

119
Living Room / Man rows across Atlantic... inspiring
« on: April 11, 2012, 01:27 PM »
I don't remember hearing about this in the news, but just ran across this video today.
I suddenly feel so much smaller...
Trying to row across an ocean has its own share of challenges. Firstly, the decision to do so and then planning, learning, training, logistics, equipment and a million other things before the oars first touch the water. Out at sea, you have to deal with exhaustion from rowing 10-12 hrs a day, the physical discomfort of living in a 6ft cabin, muscle fatigue, salt sores, sleep depravation, constantly being soaked by waves, navigating, fixing equipment - the list is endless.

Yet, every one of my 106 days at sea have been a privileged experience.



from wimp.com

120
Hello all, I've finally released something that is a product of my own two hands...

I remember my early days of learning Linux, my favorite mouse cursor was the Yellowdot set, but I always wanted something a little more... sharp.  So with a little learning about drawing with Inkscape, and reading xcursorgen man pages, I came up with a theme I called "SharpDot".  It wasn't complete, because lots of the cursors I just didn't get around to drawing, and I had no idea of the symlinking mess that is still required to get complete legacy compatibility.
It languished on my backup hard drives for a few years before I dusted it off, looking for something to post to my oDesk portfolio.

Voilà!

SharpDot cursors for X11 desktops
SharpDot is a flat-look cursor theme for X, inspired by Yellowdot.
Main cursors mostly named according to the Freedesktop cursor spec, with symlinks to satisfy legacy and hash names for maximum compatibility with applications that use xcursors.

https://sourceforge....cts/sharpdotcursors/

sharpdot_screenshot.png


Todo:
Replace the shell script build/install method with a proper makefile or more robust shell script.
Edit many of the SVG's for maximum compactness.
Make installable packages for systems that use Deb and RPM package management.
Multiple sizes (this would also pave the way for porting to Windows).

Many thanks to the authors and maintainers of Comix Cursors for the hard work gathering references for cursor names, hashes, and aliases needed to make the theme complete, and showing how the linking is done.

121
Living Room / Employers asking job seekers for Facebook passwords
« on: March 21, 2012, 02:30 PM »
As an unemployed job seeker, and a healthy proponent of privacy, this impacts me directly.
What will I say if (when?) I am asked this?...

When Justin Bassett interviewed for a new job, he expected the usual questions about experience and references. So he was astonished when the interviewer asked for something else: his Facebook username and password.

N.
O.
Period.
My Facebook password is the functional equivalent to the front door to my house.
You do not have any right to come through it unless you are invited by me or are a vetted authority with the proper search warrants.
As bad as I'd like a job right now, I'm with the first guy; do I really want to work for somebody with a cavalier attitude about invading my personal space?

I just told you the answer.  :mad:


from the Seattle Times

122
Living Room / OpenDNS updates their censorship policy
« on: February 24, 2012, 09:09 AM »
Oh, this is rich... can't ask for any better

Today we published a new policy. It’s something we’ve always honored, but we’re so firm in our convictions about this particular topic that we felt it necessary to share our stance officially. OpenDNS does not provide content filtering services to governments or Internet Service Providers that contribute to oppression by censoring the Internet for their people.


As of today, I will never use another DNS service.
:Thmbsup:

123
Living Room / How to destroy yourself on the internet in 24 hours
« on: December 29, 2011, 03:08 PM »
Not hard, actually... but this guy shows how it's done.

First, be an arrogant tool with a marketing company.
Then, deliver product late and react like an asshat when a customer calls you on it.
Finally, watch your world crumble before your eyes when that customer takes to his favorite forum with the emails.

http://penny-arcade....urces/just-wow1.html
http://penny-arcade....rces/an-update1.html
http://penny-arcade....e-as-on-the-internet
http://kotaku.com/58...-just-has-roid-rage/
http://www.techdirt....nternet-infamy.shtml
http://www.thegaming...-of-ocean-marketing/

trainwreck2.jpg

As much as I hate watching train wrecks, this one just amazed me.
It all happened in a little over 24 hours, and he even got his own memes, and a Wikipedia entry.
Read it before it gets baleeted:

http://en.wikipedia....iki/Paul_Christoforo

 


124
Living Room / Community outsourcing... Awesome idea
« on: December 08, 2011, 01:48 PM »
So I'm going to be laid off at the end of this month, and I've come to the conclusion that short-term contracting is my best bet in this economy until I can rack up a few certs.
As experienced as I am with many things, I don't have any real marketable skills or fancy pieces of paper to impress potential employers on places like ODesk or Guru.com, BUT...

Looky what I found...   :tellme:

TaskRabbit
http://www.taskrabbit.com

taskrabbit.png

Get just about anything done by safe, reliable, awesome people.
...
1. Post a Task
    It’s free to post a Task! Include all the necessary info for the TaskRabbit to do the job.
2. TaskRabbits make offers
    The background-checked TaskRabbit who makes the lowest bid will automatically be assigned and run your task.
3. Pay when Task is done
    Pay the TaskRabbit conveniently online; no cash needed.
Fees run around 15%, and folks can get paid via check in the mail, or PayPal.
If you are a good TaskRabbit, you can gain reputation and do pretty well.
The top guy on there is making ~$5000 USD a month  :o
Too bad they're not in the Seattle area yet...   :(



DoMyStuff
http://www.domystuff.com

domystuff.gif

Too Much Stuff to Do? Not Enough Time? Let Other People Do Your Stuff!
...
The tasks you post can range from the mundane, such as mowing the lawn or picking up dry cleaning, to the extraordinary, such as arranging dinner with a celebrity or chartering a private jet. Don't limit yourself. Post anything you need done, and get back to living your life!

1. Post your day-to-day chores, errands, and other tasks that clutter your life
2. Choose the bidding duration for your task
3. Limit bidders based on location, rating, and more
4. Assistants bid to do your task
5. Review bids for your task and choose an assistant
6. Communicate with your assistant
7. Leave feedback for your assistant
Very similar with a feedback system and reputation building, and they have a private message board for communication between employers and bidders.
Says they charge a "small fee" to get contact information for the prospective employer. :huh:



Zaarly
http://www.zaarly.com

zaarly2.png

Zaarly is changing how the economy works. That's all... just a little global economic disruption.

Zaarly enables people to ask for anything from people nearby.
A simple idea; but when it takes root in a community, the impact is profound.
Buyers decide what they want and the price they want to pay and someone from the community makes it happen, creating a job and keeping money local.
Zaarly helps anyone invest directly into their local economy.
Zaarly seems more informal and kinda like an open market; stuff you want to buy or sell are mixed in with job offers.
They've got a mobile app, and you can sign up through Facebook.
They only charge a fee if you do a credit card transaction (10%) and they use PoundPay for all their transactions, though the Help says you can get paid via direct deposit or PayPal, or even cash from the buyer.



Neat ideas, I hope these catch on.
I like the idea of community-level economy building like this, and just like they say in the spam ads, I can set my own hours and work from home (more or less...).  :Thmbsup:


125
Living Room / Stormdriver: blue pill or red pill?
« on: November 15, 2011, 12:57 PM »
Anybody going to check this out?

StormDriver is a web app that provides a single interactive overlay for the whole Web without the need to install anything. For the first time ever, social interaction is not restricted to the walled garden of a social network. In StormDriver you can instantly see who else is on the same website as you, where people came from and where they are going.

You can interact and exchange ideas whenever and wherever you want, whatever the website architecture.


Mashable business reported on this before the site officially launched, where they stumbled upon a mystery site that closely resembled (to me, at least) a rabbit hole for a new ARG:
http://mashable.com/...nspired-mystery-site

Color me skeptical...
http://www.stormdriver.com/


from Mashable business

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