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Friday, 27 January 2006
Wanna have regular regression builds ? Continous builds ? Continous unit testing ?
Well, if you want that, you can have it today for trunk/KDE/kdelibs/. The cmake ( http://www.cmake.org ) developers have been so nice to setup a dashboard for KDE: http://public.kitware.com/dashboard.php?name=kde If you build kdelibs/ using cmake, simply enter "make Experimental" and the results will end up there. As you can see, I just succeeded building kdelibs/ on FreeBSD :-)
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Thursday, 26 January 2006
"Summer of Usability" ?
El
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In my previous entry, I mentioned that there are still too few usability people involved with OSS usability - both in the scope of OpenUsability as well as in other efforts like the FLOSS Usability group.
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Thursday, 26 January 2006
Books
Some days ago I was talking with a friend and he told me I should read a book that talked about the subject we were talking about. I had to answer I have too many books in my queue waiting at home for me to find some time to read them. Maybe if I put them together in a list I'll realize that the list is growing too long and I start finding (or making) time to read them...
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Thursday, 26 January 2006
KDE talks
It's been a long time since I blogged for the last time, so to compensate I'll post a few blog entries today :)
First, it seems this year I'll be giving some more KDE talks than last year. For a start, there's the OSWC (Open Source World Conference), from the 15th to the 17th of February. I'll be meeting Till Adams, Alexander Dymo, Andras Mantia and Josef Spillner there from the KDE team, all signs are saying that the OSWC will be a good meeting point for long time not seen friends from other projects too, so it seems we'll have a good time there.
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Thursday, 26 January 2006
My nethack monster
If I was a nethack monster, I would be:
......| ..%d+.| ......| a little dog: Loyal. Friendly. Housebroken. Nice doggie.
Which NetHack Monster Are You?
Thursday, 26 January 2006
nethack monster
Chouimat
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|)?!)%+ +.@%/]? |!?[?[% If I were a NetHack monster, I would be a mimic. I can be whatever I think you need me to be - it might look like I'm here to help you, but really you're here to help me.
Thursday, 26 January 2006
New Camera
The 3 wise men (thanks Seele for the translation :) ) were wise and kind enough this year as to bring me a new camera that will replace my old (and broken since a friend of mine sliped it to the floor) Canon Powershot A70 that so many good moments has shared with me. After looking at many other cameras, I found that there were not many that matched the features I wanted and still were in the price range I could afford, and finally I chosed the Canon A620.
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Thursday, 26 January 2006
QOTD
Seele
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Since I havn't posted in a while, a quick QOTD:
kawakokappa (10:55:29 AM): could you imagine reproducing a series of steps with half of them missing?
seele varcuzzo (10:56:15 AM): no, and youre going to make me core dump if you make me
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Thursday, 26 January 2006
Ruby, Ruby, Ruby
Ruby is rolling. It's amazing how much enthusiasm it accumulates. There seems to be a broad movement of people exploring Ruby, using it and getting addicted. Especially because there is Rails. If there ever was a killer application for a programming language, here it is. Three examples for amazing Ruby adoption:
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Thursday, 26 January 2006
Trackballs and mouse wheel
Wow, I'm happy today.
The story starts some years ago (around 2001, if I'm not wrong), when I bought a trackball (a Trackman Marble FX from Logitech). This model has 4 buttons, the three usual ones on all mice, and a 4th button that (in Windows) was used to emulate a wheel (pressing that button and moving the ball, allows to have a mouse wheel that can pan freely, horizontally and vertically on documents, which, btw, is really cool when working with images). After some time, I grew tired of having that useless button there and added support for it in XFree86 and Qt. I sent patches everywhere, but the XFree86 patch was sent when they were in a freeze and somehow they lost the patch. Anyway it was working for me so I didn't care much and just waited until I found that they added a patch to support wheel emulation done by another person that I never heard of (credits go to Henry T. So.) His patch was definitely his work since it was different from mine, not worse, not better, but different so I didn't have any problem with that (except for thinking about how many other patches were probably lost like mine). The only problem is that that patch didn't work, so I submitted a small fix and finally linux had working support for wheel emulation.
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