March 7th, 2010 — Linux
I got a MCE remote and wanted to use it with my Antecct Fusion case. It has a remote of it’s own but it uses a stick for navigating and that really doesn’t work.
I found a great post about how to use the mce remote.
I only had to modprobe the lirc_imon module with some parameter (lirc_imon ir_protocol=1) and change the xbmc configuration. After that it worked perfectly!
Only my xbox 360 is right next to my media pc. So when I press a button my xbox 360 start
I tried to disable the ir censor of my xbox but I couldn’t find and option. So I covered it with some tape
February 2nd, 2010 — Linux
You have to also use “chage”:
sudo passwd -l root
sudo usermod -p ! root
sudo chage -E-1 root
So my previous post about this subject is now obsolete
December 2nd, 2009 — Linux, Other
I’ve managed to get XBMC running (and good!). It took me a while to get everything to my liking. Almost everything works perfectly! Except sound is still a bit of a hassle. Linux (with pulseaudio) only sends analog sound through my s/pdif connection (aaarghh… forgot to draw in the schema ->) and not digital.
Maybe I’ll switch back to alsa. But then again: maybe not. It’s only connected to an old Yamaha amplifier I had laying around so I don’t think I’ll hear the difference.
I have a draft blog post in which I explain how I got everything running on Ubuntu 9.10. I’ll try and publish it as soon as I can And then I’ll update the schema too.
November 28th, 2009 — Linux
As easy as:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-mozilla-daily
sudo aptitude update
sudo aptitude install firefox-3.6
November 22nd, 2009 — Linux
In reply to my last article about media centers.
Well, I installed xbmc this weekend and actually it kinda sucked. Installation was a breeze: kudos for that. But when I ran it, it hogged all of the cpu time of the second core. 100% constantly.
I’ve got an Ati hd3200 integrated on the motherboard and in combination with XBMC I believe that’s a bad choice. I’ve read numerous threads about people having the same problem as me I’m quite upset with this. I don’t blame the XBMC developers, they do a fabulous job, but still it sucks.
I hope that in the next couple of weeks this problem is solved but I don’t think it will. I’m now looking for an alternative but XBMC just looks so polished…. It’s too bad it’s not usable for me
I’m now downloading the live cd of XBMC and see if that works ’cause I dont know who to blame: me, ati, xbmc or ubuntu…
November 12th, 2009 — Linux
Well as the title says: the cronjobs of the root user didn’t run on one of my servers (MY MACHINE!) and it took a while to figure out why they weren’t running. It ended up to be something with locking the root account. These steps fixed the problem:
sudo passwd -l root
sudo usermod -p ! root
October 23rd, 2009 — Linux, PHP
One of our Joomla! sites was “hacked” with some stupid script and the fuckers put a iframe in every page
But with sed that was fixed in a matter of seconds:
find . -type f -print |xargs sed -i 's/<iframe.*iqdoza.ru.*<\/iframe>//g'
OR:
find . -type f -print |xargs sed -i 's/<iframe.*.ru.*<\/iframe>//g'
Searching for hacked sites:
egrep -lir "<iframe|hacked" /home/*/public_html/*index*
Drawback is that it doesn’t removed the inserted newline :S Because it isn’t the design of sed (wha-evah).
Also it doesn’t handle files with spaces in the filename. But that’s only minor because in my case I didn’t have any php or html files with spaces in them
October 19th, 2009 — development, Linux, python
I saw that there are python bindings for libindicate. They’re called “python-indicate“.
There’s also a wiki about this new feature from Ubuntu. I thought about creating a plugin for weechat that uses this library. Especially because the notify-plugins is useless if you’re away and somebody mentions you on irc. Libindicate would be perfect for this. First have to find out how the behaviour of the applet would be.
[update]
I asked my question on the libindicate launchpad so I’m very curious about the answer(s).
[/update]
October 18th, 2009 — Linux, python
Ubuntu 9.10 comes with an older version of weechat. So I downloaded the stable release 0.3.0 and installed it:
./configure --prefix=/home/leon/Software/local/ --enable-gtk --enable-demo
make
make install
Note: gtk is not very usable so you better use the ncurses interface!
I wrote a little plugin for it that autosaves the current connected channels and enables autojoin for them. It can be found on my github page and on the plugins page of weechat (if FlashCode aprobes the new version 0.2).
And here a nice plugin of weechat in action with the autojoin plugin (Nice!!):
October 15th, 2009 — development, Linux, PHP, python, Ruby
For php I use Zend Studio for Linux. We have a license at work for it and it is in my opinion the best editor for php. It’s relatively fast and you can use it to quickfix php over an ftp connection.
For Ruby I use netbeans. I would also like to use it for php but it doesn’t allow to quicly open a file via ftp/scp or whatever. And it can sometimes be sloooooowwww. I’ve seen netbeans used on a Windows platform and there it is much faster.
When I right-click on a project in netbeans for the first time, it takes 5 seconds (not lying!) to render the popup-menu. Come onm take forever!
And because I was now developing with Python I decided to try a new editor. Something more hardcore and lighter. Something nerdy So ofcourse I only have two decent options: Vim & Emacs.
I already had try them with Ruby. But I found good Ruby (& Rails) support rather lacking by both of them. I believe that the python comminity is more hardcore and therefore are using more arcane editors And maybe because they aren’t afraid to hack away in another language than their own (lisp, vimscript).
I think I have been comparing the two editors for nearly two weeks now. I have spent hours and hours comparing, trying and browsing for blog posts about the two. At the end, I really didn’t know which one to choose. I really suck at deciding something So I made a little list of what I find to be strong points of each editor:
VIM:
- Better syntax highlighting/theming supprt (wombat ftw!!)
- Faster/smaller
- No weird handling of new buffers like with emacsclient
- No daemon like: emacs –daemon
- Better python integration
- Easier to make extensions
- Preview of docstrings when using omni completion
EMACS:
- Better python-mode
- No commandmode/normalmode
- Directory browser/editor
- Debugger (better integration with external tools)
- easier to begin
- Everyting is a buffer™
And now I have chosen to be the editor with which I am going to work is…… (drum roll please) …….:
Gedit!
No, it’s (g)Vim
And while writing this article I was looking for a WordPress/blog plugin for Vim and Emacs. At a glance it looked like the wordpress plugin for Emacs was a little bit better. So already I was doubting my decision… So it could be that I switch editor in the next few months But I’m first going to really use gvim to see if it fits with my workflow and is really useable for me.
As cherry on the pie, a nice screenshot of my gvim in action:
[update]
I’ve installed Netneans 6.8m2 and it feels a lot faster than 6.7 but python completion is as bad as in 6.7.
[/update]
[update2]
Found out about Vim’s netrw. So Emacs no longer got “Directory browser/editor” as a strong point.
[/update2]