Friday, January 28, 2005
Mac Mini Fever
Do u catch fever of Apple's Mac Mini? It's really cute and duty cheap, compared with those bareone PC. Barebone PC is much more expensive than regular PC with the same specs, so, surprise about Mac Mini's price.
Before make a decsion to get one, read some more... For me, maybe, if compatible with Linux. Love it so much.
Saturday, January 22, 2005
A story on the road from handmade toy to today's propower
Five years ago, Linus Torvalds faced a mutiny. The reclusive Finn had taken the lead in creating the Linux computer operating system, with help from thousands of volunteer programmers, and the open-source software had become wildly popular for running Web sites during the dot-com boom. But just as Linux was taking off, some programmers rebelled. Torvalds' insistence on manually reviewing everything that went into the software was creating a logjam, they warned. Unless he changed his ways, they might concoct a rival software package -- a threat that could have crippled Linux. "Everybody knew things were falling apart," recalls Larry McVoy, a programmer who played peacemaker. "Something had to be done."
The crisis came to a head during a tense meeting at McVoy's house, on San Francisco's Twin Peaks. A handful of Linux' top contributors took turns urging Torvalds to change. After an awkward dinner of quiche and croissants, they sat on the living room floor and hashed things out. Four hours later, Torvalds relented. He agreed to delegate more and use a software program for automating the handling of code. When the program was ready in 2002, Torvalds was able to process contributions five times as fast as he had in the past. The Twin Peaks truce is just one of the dramatic changes during the past few years in the way Linux is made and distributed. The phenomenon that Torvalds kicked off as a student at the University of Helsinki in 1991 had long been a loosey-goosey effort, with little structure or organization. Young students and caffeine-jazzed iconoclasts wrote much of the code in their spare time, while the overtaxed Torvalds stitched in improvements almost singlehandedly. More...
The crisis came to a head during a tense meeting at McVoy's house, on San Francisco's Twin Peaks. A handful of Linux' top contributors took turns urging Torvalds to change. After an awkward dinner of quiche and croissants, they sat on the living room floor and hashed things out. Four hours later, Torvalds relented. He agreed to delegate more and use a software program for automating the handling of code. When the program was ready in 2002, Torvalds was able to process contributions five times as fast as he had in the past. The Twin Peaks truce is just one of the dramatic changes during the past few years in the way Linux is made and distributed. The phenomenon that Torvalds kicked off as a student at the University of Helsinki in 1991 had long been a loosey-goosey effort, with little structure or organization. Young students and caffeine-jazzed iconoclasts wrote much of the code in their spare time, while the overtaxed Torvalds stitched in improvements almost singlehandedly. More...
Friday, January 21, 2005
More wallop invitation available
Sorry, my wallop account expired!! Please do NOT ask invitation from me again"
Get one when it's hot. Plz leave ur email in wallop exchange forum if u want
From M$:
From M$:
Your Request for Additional Wallop Invites has been Processed
You recently requested more invitations for your wallop account. This request has now been processed. Please feel free to use these to invite new friends to wallop. However, please be aware that after 7 days any of your unused invitations will be recycled back into the system.Thursday, January 20, 2005
Set default application tips for debian
In debian, sensible-browser and sensible-editor point to default Web browser and editor. You can invoke differenct default browsers by set the BROWSER environement var. The problem is how to set.
The following method is due to Osamu Aoki. It works OK with xfce, and maybe with other desktop environments. The commands are, unfortunately, run before the window manager starts. This makes this method somewhat unsuitable if you have icewm.
More to read ...
The following method is due to Osamu Aoki. It works OK with xfce, and maybe with other desktop environments. The commands are, unfortunately, run before the window manager starts. This makes this method somewhat unsuitable if you have icewm.
Three steps:
- As root, create a file /etc/X11/Xsession.d/40xfree86-common_user-xsession with the following contents:
if [ -d $HOME/.xsession.d ]; then
UXFILES=$(run_parts $HOME/.xsession.d)
#or run-parts --list $HOME/.xsession.d
#read man page of run-parts or run_parts*/
if [ -n "$UXFILES" ]; then
for UX in $UXFILES; do
. $UX
done
fi
fi - As user, create a directory called .xsession.d in your home directory.
-
Put any commands you want to run when X starts (including commands for setting environment variables) in a file. Put this file inside ~/.xsession.d . Commands in any files (they do not need to be executable files) inside .xsession.d will be run on each X startup, provided the filename consists of aphanumeric characters, underscores, and hyphens only. So in particular backup files (filename ending in ~), and files with a dot in the filename will not be run.
export GDK_USE_XFT=1You can put these commands in a file called ~/.xsession.d/scim. The commands will be run when X starts. If you don't want these commands to be run anymore, you can re-name the file to e.g. ~/.xsession.d/scim.old. Because the filename now has a dot in it, its commands will not be run.
scim -d
export GTK_IM_MODULE="scim"
export XMODIFIERS="@im=SCIM"
Another example: to run skype (the Internet telephony program) each time X starts, you put a file (called, e.g., skype) inside ~/.xsession.d, just containing the command skype&.
Tuesday, January 18, 2005
Customize ur debian?
Since the arrival of the very first versions of Gentoo, some people have announced that "Debian is good, but that's not optimized for [distribution in which you run make all the time]". And this is wrong, you are free to recompile software you use on Debian, using the apt system. Downloading a tarball, uncompressing it, running configure scripts and make install, is an easy task for every Linux user, but this is not adapted for the Debian package management system. Stow was a way which worked without too much effort, but compiled programs were not really integrated in the apt dependancies. The ultimate solution is to use apt-build to recompile a software already packaged for Debian.
Read the article from Julien Reveret
Thursday, January 13, 2005
Potential of Blogger
As the easy of maintenence of blogger, I immigrated my research homepage to blogger yesterday. From now on, when i want to add some pages to it, i only need to create a new post via blogger.
Tuesday, January 04, 2005
C++ implementation of Ukkonen's Suffix Tree Construction Algorithm
A very fast linear time suffix tree construction algorithm is elaborately presented by Ukkonen. I like it so much. :-) I give my source codes of a C++ implementation here, under GPL license. Actually, many parts are borrowed from ANSI C Implementation.
What's interesting is the comparison between the C implementation and mine. I compiled both on my debian linux box using gcc 3.3. Without optimization, mine is about half slower than C. With -O3 for both, surprisely enough to me, mine is a bit faster than the C implementation. I like it. :-)
To compile
g++ treekits.cpp spattern.cpp -lpopt
enjoy it.
What's interesting is the comparison between the C implementation and mine. I compiled both on my debian linux box using gcc 3.3. Without optimization, mine is about half slower than C. With -O3 for both, surprisely enough to me, mine is a bit faster than the C implementation. I like it. :-)
prerequisite software
libpoptTo compile
g++ treekits.cpp spattern.cpp -lpopt
enjoy it.