Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Submission Summary: 0 pending, 6 declined, 2 accepted (8 total, 25.00% accepted)

×
Operating Systems

Submission + - Fixing Linux: "The Space Between" (edropple.com)

Ed Ropple writes: "I was having some trouble with a couple of shell scripts I was trying to make work the other day. In an attempt to divert me from building up a head of steam and ranting for an hour or so, a buddy of mine asked me an interesting question: "so how do you fix it?" That question's the genesis of this blog entry, not-so-humbly titled Fixing Linux. In this article I look into three underlying technical issues I see with the progression of Linux/BSD on the desktop: the divide between GUI and command-line tools, the divergence of languages and libraries used on the OS, and the reliance on text streams and pipes as communication between small-function independent programs."
The Almighty Buck

Submission + - Creative Labs C&D's Vista Driver Creator (creative.com)

FishWithAHammer writes: For some time now, users of Creative Labs' sound cards have been almost entirely unable to use them due to Creative's lack of proper Vista drivers. An end user known as Daniel_K decided to take it upon himself to release working Vista drivers. Creative, apparently, takes a dim view of this, ordering him to stop distributing the only drivers that have made Creative hardware workable on Vista. Daniel_K, in his response, accuses Creative Labs of intentially crippling the Vista version of their drivers; other Creative customers have speculated that this is in order to sell new "Vista-compatible" cards in the near future.

I guess we know what companies care about keeping their customers, don't they?

Programming

Submission + - A Windows-Based Packaging Mechanism

FishWithAHammer writes: "As part of my Google Summer of Code project, I'm working with WinLibre to develop a vaguely Debian-esque software download system for Free/open source software on the Windows platform. My reasoning is that open-source software suffers from poor presentation. Most computer laymen, even those aware of open source software, often don't have any idea how to go looking for it — their Google-fu is lacking — but would use it were it easier to access. What I have proposed is both a Debian-style packaging mechanism (capable of using Windows Installer MSIs or not, as the user wishes) and a software "catalog" that takes the best aspects of Synaptic and Linspire's Click-N-Run system. Seamless, simple installation and removal of programs in as straightforward a way as apt-get (there will be a command-line tool as well). I'm posting to Slashdot to get the ideas of you lot who, while you may not be the target audience, can certainly provide insights that can be of value.

There are areas that I'm personally not familiar with, and while I have done some research I would like the opinions of Slashdotters on some others. While at first I intend to set it up so that WinLibre (and I) run only one repository, I am curious as to how this sort of tool could be most useful to network administrators. Customizable repositories will be available; the code will be under the GPL, after all, so it'd be a little hard for them not to be available.

I'm also interested in the ideas of those who might be in a position to roll together packages. I intend to package a number of open-source language interpreters with the core software to allow special pre- and post-install scripts, as well as removal scripts. C#Script, Perl, and Python are definites, as is a Cygwin sh interpreter. We will have some program requirements — chief among them that no registry changes may be made by the program — but some of them, I fear, will require some flexibility; some programs really do require a way to edit the registry, for example, and I am considering offering some sort of tracked way to make registry changes so they can be rolled back on uninstallation of the program.

I'd love to hear what Slashdotters think of this. Think of it as a wishlist, but you don't get any damn ponies.

Ed Ropple (FishWithAHammer)"
Microsoft

Submission + - Twelve-year-old Gets Porn-Filled Zune

FishWithAHammer writes: "Gizmodo has a story running about a twelve-year-old getting a Zune for Christmas — and finding homemade pornography on it. From the article:

Apparently the Zune, which Martin purchased at a local Walmart, came with a 1-hour and 44-minute homemade porn video. We're talking guy-on-guy action here. Walmart's response? After blaming MS for the porn, they refunded the Martins and gave them a $25-dollar gift certificate.

Fox Chicago has a video report as well."
Role Playing (Games)

Submission + - A Catalog of MMORPG Asshats

FishWithAHammer writes: "Wired should be immediately suspect under most circumstances, but Lore Sjöberg's column on "Complainers of the World" (you can hear the South Park reference) is pretty funny. Quoth:

If you play an online game that you enjoy, there's one surefire way to spoil the experience: read the forums on the official site. There you will find a vast underworld of lost souls keening their misery onto your screen. A game you thought was entertaining, well-balanced and attractive will be torn apart before your very eyes and pronounced lacking in every conceivable way.

And the punishments are appropriate."
Announcements

Submission + - Ubuntu 6.10 Edgy Eft Released

FishWithAHammer writes: "It's official — Ubuntu 6.10 Edgy Eft has been released! This version contains the replacement init daemon, upstart, GNOME 2.16, and a host of other new features, including GAIM 2.0 and Firefox 2.0 (not Iceweasel?!).

You can get the ISOs for the Canonical-supported Ubuntu 6.10 distribution here. It doesn't look like Xubuntu, Kubuntu (woot!), or Edubuntu have been posted yet, but they should be soon."

Slashdot Top Deals

"I've seen it. It's rubbish." -- Marvin the Paranoid Android

Working...