Saturday, October 21, 2006

The Google Desktop

I always seem to find time to play with the computer, to test out new things. In the long run this habit causes an instable system and a lecture from Agnes about the time I spend behind the computer. She is right of course.
My recent project (small as it is) was signing up with all services that Google is providing. I had read the various articles about “Google now adding.. ” or “Google now has….”, but never really tried it. Signing up through the various offering is easy once you have a GMail account. From then on it is simple to create your own Google start page with links to the Google Desktop: documents, spreadsheets, notebook, creating HTML pages, chat, email, newsgroups, photoalbums and a weblog. Picasa gives the warning that it supports Windows only, but it is no problem to upload pictures to my album under Linux.

It is an interesting collection of web-based applications/tools, all accessible through one account and one password. Single sign-on all the way (except maybe for Blogger). The settings for each app/tool reveal functionalities that just beg to be tested. Like the ability to recieve notifications from your online calendar via SMS. I want to know whether it works and whether a price tag is involved (since I can hardly imagine it being free). The online help is not really helping since it states that it depends on the provider. “It could be free”. The Calender can be integrated in a personal website. Simple documents and spreadsheets can be created, shared and edited.

The Google Notebook is a fun little tool which embeds itself in Firefox. The right mouse button option to add text to your notebook only works when there is no other extension in FF claiming that (like Radial Context in my case). But the Add note button works just as well and this is great when surfing around and gathering information. The selected text is preserves as well as the hyperlink. You can create multiple notebooks for various projects.

Time to stop playing and start working again, but I can suggest you to Google Desktopping yourself.

Sunday, October 01, 2006

And back to Sarge again

After two days of attempting to solve the problems with Debian Sid I decided to delete the whole installation and revert back to Sarge again. The problem with the USB drive could be traced back to udev and the fact that a newer kernel needed to be installed. That’s what I did and upgraded the kernel from 2.6.8 to 2.6.18. With that came a full upgrade of Sarge to Sid again and when that was finished I had an inaccesible system again. Just like with Ubuntu. Why? Because Sid comes with a change in the xserver from xfree86 to xorg as well.

I did my Googling and asking around, but there doesn’t seem a clear solution to the issue. The boards are full of attempts, but nothing final. There were some posts that said that when it worked, it worked erratic. I don’t like erratic. I like stable.

For now I have to conclude that either the kernel or the xserver changes don’t go well with the iMac and that there is no easy solution in sight. So, while I am typing this the third network install of Debian Sarge is under way. That will leave me with quite a few dated packages, but I will give it a try to upgrade those on an application basis. As long as Synaptic doesn ‘t tell me it will uninstall gnome-development or do something with x there is little to worry about.

Am I disappointed? Yes and no. I did learn a lot again, but I there were other things I could have done with the time. The issue isn’t a new issue. It has been around for almost a year, but apparently it is not considered urgent enough (or not big enough in terms of userbase) to fix it. One thing is good though. When Debian tells you it is stable, it is stable. When it is unstable…. no warranty included. There is something to say for stability after all.

From Sarge to Sid

With the iMac almost ready it is timeto look forward to the real task of writing 100 pages on the day to day use of Linux. Not about geeky shellscripting, not about running Linux as part of a renderfarm, but plain simple effective day to day use. About the programs that make you forget the software you used to pay for.
I have been playing with computers since the Commodore Vic 20. No GUI in those days, but that was hardly needed. Wordperfect did the job just fine on the HeadstartII which sported two 5.25″ floppy drives and a 320 Kb virtual C: drive. Then came the windows era, from Windows 3.0 to XP and Vista. About seven years ago I was asked to help out by the it department to unlock the information from the students database. It appeared I was the only one with sufficient DOS knowledge to make that happen (long story, but it saved the school from a hefty fine. I got promotion after that).
Anyway, things have changed with even the more experienced users being used to sitting behind a nice GUI instead of a command prompt. That is the target audience. Adventurous enough to try a completely new operating system, but it has to work out of the box. Can Linux deliver? In the book we will make our case for it. On the level of applications I would say yes. For most people. The ones who run Dreamweaver to build simple websites, or use Word for straight forward text editing. And I am firmly convinced this counts for the majority of users.

On a side note. I decided to experiment a bit with the Debian sources.list and add the Sid source to it followed by a complete upgrade. It took a few hours and the system feels somewhat unstable (switching themes causes problems and Kde thinks it is running on laptop with an empty battery, hence shuts the system) the upgrade is worth it. The instability can be fixed, as well as some other issues (like a non-mounting USB drive), but I do have all applications on the same level as Ubutu now.