Ten thousand

10.000 last.fm listenings! I registered on the 11th January 2009, since then it remembers my tracks, and I subscribed on the 1st May 2009, which is the day of work in Hungary and a perfect occasion to celebrate. In this period could I gather 10.000 listenings, which is 31 tracks a day. Depending on the viewpoint the milestone was Simple Plan – I’d do anything or Drumsound & Simon “Bassline” Smith – Get Through. About my genres:

udi86 genres

The punk label in the middle is really bold :D . But you can also see a tiny drum and bass too. The most listened artist list is altered due to that I lost some of my DVDs. I’m an album listener, which means I listen to a whole album, than comes the next. Since I listen to last.fm for a year the artists whom I don’t own an album have 30 listens too, and some previously favourite artists have also stucked on the 30 track level, and so they’re missing from the top20 list:

udi86 artists

For example there’s no Linkin Park, P.O.D., Papa Roach or NOFX. But Rise Against is really strong on the top, which is my new favourite and Kultur Shock is also there, because I like the wild balkan beats. The artist written with japanese characters is Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra, after them comes Flatliners who also play ska and on the 5th place comes Alvin és a Mókusok (Alvin and the Chipmunks) a Hungarian punk band.

Improvements of a self-drawing

I need it, ’cause it’s cool. I need it, ’cause people say I’m creative and good with my hands. I need it, ’cause while I draw it I do nothing else. And at last I need a new one. I need a new one because the old one was drawn in Macromedia Flash, and while I took care of the source file I was lazy to actually find it. I only touch commercial (now Adobe) stuff when I have to anyway. So I started to redraw myself in Inkscape. Here it is:

Udi self-drawing compare

Like oil and water. 4 years compressed into some lines and curves. I’m not quite satisfied with that either, it’s too thin and the shoes are lame compared to the other parts. But I thought I share it as a therapy method :) .

XHTML 2 discontinued

The W3C announced that it will drop XHTML 2 in favor of HTML 5. It’s a sad thing because the XML well-formedness could have spared a lot of effort and processing power on different platforms. It easier to write an XML parser, than an SGML parser and since Leonardo Da Vinci we all know that simplicity is the ultimate sophistication so I feel XHTML more symphatic. But we shouldn’t fear, the guys previously working on XHTML2 will boost the finishing of HTML5, and after it is finished, we will have an XHTML5 :) .

Projects for the summer

The university is over, and I still have 2 months left from the summer. I’ll spend the time in front of my computer working on the following projects:

  • move my site to the new 150 gigs storage (which sucks, because I have to migrate from Drupal to another CMS, maybe WordPress)
  • preparing the new storage to the collaboration effort of the new OpenArena website
  • migrate the Young Wind Ensemble of Tapolca site to Drupal
  • LilyPond Hungarian translation project
  • Hungarian Battle for Wesnoth site development
  • (planned) haXe Hungarian translation

That’s all. Every project is open source and a lot of fun :) .

Pro-poison

Note to self: it ain’t enough to leave a clan’s ranks, but you should never join another clan’s server! They are filled with ego and envy. I was just suspected of cheating on some [Z] server, but I wasn’t even powning.

Gnash Summer Project Seeks Donations

Open Media Now has the goal that Gnash gets support for flash 9 at the end of the summer. They will hire students, obviously just like the GSOC and will ran through the AS3 libraries. The project still needs 75,000 dollars, but you can help too. I’ve already donated, and now I’m making my blog readers aware of it.
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Drupal in the Deep

The Hungarian Wesnoth Community page was the first site, where I used Drupal. And it remains the first according to Drupal development too. We have a championship over there, which required some pretty complex moduls. But Drupal is the most logical content management system out there, so I thought anything will go like a breeze. Well, it didn’t.
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Bring back the little mouse!

In the late 90s there was a joke. Two CPUs talk:
– How much is 2+2?
– 5!
– Ain’t right, it’s 4!
– But I was fast, wasn’t I!
The same happened to the custom desktop environment I was writing about earlier.
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Leaving OpenArena pro scene

Alright, it will be a long one, so you’d better grab a beer, as I did.
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Quest for a fast desktop

I’m a Linux user for a little more then a year. I always favoured Debian and Xfce, but I really tried out a lot of distros, and some desktop environments. But I like Debian for it’s stability, and Xfce for it’s nice design but fast speed. Last month the Xfce team released the next stable 4.6, with a tons of nice features I wanted to try out. Debian still has no packages from that, but yesterday I felt really brave to compile it. I went for the graphical install package which is an easy way to install it. It had a few dependencies, but since I got Debian installing dev packages goes really fast. After 30 minutes or so, I had the 4.6 installed and running. Almost. Because the new settings manager didn’t worked, and that’s the same reason the xfconf package is missing from experimental I guess.

But the new desktop menu was working, the session manager noticed the non-responding apps and lot of plugin improvements were there! But it was slow. The one out of the two reasons is gone. The XFCE team is walking a path to get closer to GNOME, they have a settings daemon, they use gstreamer and they will port thunar to gvfs. It’s not bad actually, because the GNU system is fragmanted as hell, some co-operation and standardisation comes handy. But it’s not the Cholesterol Free Desktop Environment any more. And it’s time for me to move on…

The next stop is LXDE. The Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment. Modular approach, little dependencies, sounds good. But I wasn’t fully satisfied. First Debian got the GDM with it, which is quite useless for me, because I already had some other autologin and xstarting method. So no thanks! And the panel is just ugly. It has no padding between the icons, adding space between the elements is not an accaptable solution. But it’s fast as lightning, and it’s elements can be used separately. I think it will be more mature with time, but now I don’t really like it.

If the most barebone desktop environment won’t do the trick, your only alternatives remain the different window managers. I tried Fluxbox. I thought it would be cool to be a real Linux nerd with a pure desktop, but I realized it’s not for me. But it gave me a great idea. What if I would combine some different elements to mix the perfect environment for myself? Like Fluxbox too needs some other apps, LXDE’s apps can be combined too.

So here is my magical mixture: openbox, lxsession, fbpanel, pcmanfm. Lxsession is essenial to have some logout, shutdown, autostart functionality, openbox don’t has any bonus features I don’t need, fbpanel looks nice and pcmanfm provides desktop icons and wallpaper. It turned out that lxsession don’t really needs GDM to handle the session, so I got rid of it, I installed some configuration tools, some configurations by hand, some autostart applications, and an xcompmgr to give nice shadows which I liked so much back in Xfce. It required a whole day to figure out all this, but now I got a nice desktop which boots up in 51 seconds. (In comparison to LXDE from Lenny repo: 55s)

And yeah of course the screenshot:


Udi's desktop

Update: I actually figured out, that lxpanel is based on fbpanel, but it got improved. So fbpanel is out lxpanel is in.