2006-09-24 05:08:14 CEST
$LightSideOfTheForce++
... & then they went off into the
setting sun: georg & chaussée, his shiny new laptop (a thinkpad
r51e) running a carefully tuned version of ubuntu. & they
seemed to like each other ...
$Microsoft-- $Linux++somehow related — more or less:
From The Devil's Dictionary (1881-1906) [devil]: LOVE, n. A temporary insanity curable by marriage or by removal of the patient from the influences under which he incurred the disorder. This disease, like _caries_ and many other ailments, is prevalent only among civilized races living under artificial conditions; barbarous nations breathing pure air and eating simple food enjoy immunity from its ravages. It is sometimes fatal, but more frequently to the physician than to the patient.
From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (19 Sep 2003) [foldoc]: love What many users feel for computers. "I don't really love computers, I just say that to get them into bed with me". (Terry Pratchet) [What did you expect in a computing dictionary?] (1995-05-10)
2006-09-12 21:44:29 CEST
new toy
since sunday I've been playing with a
new toy: last.fm & its
"scrobbling" feature. I've written a small tool to submit tracks
("scrobble") from the command line (in some lines of perl; not
published yet); I've created a last.fm account; I've patched
randomplay to make it use my lastfmscrobble
script (& in a meaningful way, i.e. submitting only after a
song has been played & if its score is > 0); & I've
played around with last.fm clients (I didn't get the new
one from the last.fm webpage to work but the old one from the
debian package
works if set to use OSS & invoked as aoss
lastfm).
& I've written a nanoblogger plugin (more perl than bash) to show the recently played tracks in the blog's sidebar — & then decided to use last.fm's status graphics anyway (after figuring out how to configure them).
& I've written a nanoblogger plugin (more perl than bash) to show the recently played tracks in the blog's sidebar — & then decided to use last.fm's status graphics anyway (after figuring out how to configure them).