Add some blog posts
Also an index page that automatically generates a list of all the posts available.
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101
site/blog/98_perfect_rss_solution.org
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site/blog/98_perfect_rss_solution.org
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#+TITLE: The 98% perfect RSS solution
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#+DATE: 2012-11-30 10:00
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#+TAGS: rss emacs gnus gwene tt-rss avandu
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* Test
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I've been looking for the "perfect" RSS reading solution for a while
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and I just got this idea for a setup that has to be about 98% of all
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I'm looking for.
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The things I'm looking for are:
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- Emacs interface. This isn't that big a problem since anything
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with an API can be made to have such an interface, and I feel
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comfortable enough with Emacs Lisp to write it myself if I have
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to, like I was doing with [[http://code.ryuslash.org/cgit.cgi/emacs/avandu/][avandu]], but then it /does/ need a(n/ good)
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API.
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- Unbound to a single computer. It's a hassle to have to remember
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what you have and haven't read. If it was easy your RSS reader
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wouldn't care about (un)read items, everything would just be
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"items". So sharing that state between computers is pretty
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important.
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- A server. Something that keeps running 24/7. Or at least the
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closest possible approximation of that. It's no good to miss
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everything that happens between 11pm and 9am just because you
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don't have your feed reader running. Of course this is only a
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problem if you're following some high-traffic feeds, but they
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exist too.
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- Runs locally. The nice thing about having shell access to a
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server somewhere that someone else keeps online for you is the
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possibility to run something like [[http://newsbeuter.org/][newsbeuter]] and just
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(de/reat)tach from whichever computer you're working on. The
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downside is, though, that this breaks pretty much all integration
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with your desktop. Opening URLs becomes a reliance on your
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terminal emulator's ability to parse and open them. Viewing media
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such as images, or audio files from a podcast, turns into ~Save,
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Transfer, Open~ instead of just the ~Open~.
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- Handles big feed lists. Even if you only read five feeds, the day
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may come you'll be reading fifty, or even much more. A piece of
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software that handles this well is a must. This is the problem I
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had with [[http://codezen.org/canto/][canto]] and Emacs' [[http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/NewsTicker][newsticker]]. *canto* looked awesome, the
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most interesting interface to RSS feeds I have come across so far,
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but back when I tried it trying to read my collection of feeds
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would lock-up my computer. *newsticker* would lock-up my emacs
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session for 10-20 minutes.
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Now though I have found something that does it all. It is actually
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a twist on something I used some time ago.
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*Emacs* + [[http://gnus.org/][Gnus]] + [[http://gwene.org/][Gwene]] + [[http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/][unison]]. Not the easiest thing to set-up
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perhaps, but once *Emacs* + *Gnus* is in place the rest is a piece of
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cake.
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*Gwene* is an awesome service that turns RSS feeds into
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newsgroups. *unison* is an awesome piece of software for
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synchronising files between different computers. *Gnus* is a real
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newsreader. *Emacs* is what *Gnus* runs on.
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So it's kind-of like cheating. *Gnus* is not unbound to a single
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computer and *Gwene* doesn't offer server-side state tracking either.
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But because *Gnus* uses a single file to store state about all of its
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subscribed groups, this makes it a good candidate for sharing that
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one file. This is not something unique to *Gnus*, at least [[http://www.slrn.org/][slrn]] uses
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the same kind of file, the ~.newsrc~ file (or in *Gnus*' case
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~.newsrc.eld~).
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So I register the feeds I want to follow with *Gwene*, if they aren't
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already registered. I subscribe to the resulting newsgroups on
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~news.gwene.org~ with *Gnus* and when I switch over to another computer
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I use *unison* to synchronise the ~.newsrc.eld~ file.
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An example configuration of *Gnus* could just be as simple as:
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#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
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(setq gnus-select-method '(nntp "news.gwene.org"))
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#+END_SRC
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*unison* just needs:
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#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE
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root=/your/home/dir/
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root=/your/server/root/
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path=.newsrc.eld
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#+END_EXAMPLE
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And that's about it.
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Now it's still not 100% perfect. I've seen that *Gwene* can't handle
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100% of the feeds I throw at it, but these can be fixed either by
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contacting the people publishing them or by improving *Gwene*'s
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parser. It also doesn't automatically check periodicaly, though I
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think *Gnus* can be set-up to do that, but since I also use it to read
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my mail (again) that's not really an issue. It also isn't
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accessible without *Emacs*, *Gnus* and *Unison*, but I hate web-interfaces
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anyway.
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So that's it. My 98% perfect RSS reading solution.
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22
site/blog/A_new_org-blog.org
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site/blog/A_new_org-blog.org
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#+TITLE: A new org-blog
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#+DATE: 2012-04-24 00:52:00
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#+TAGS: org-blog project
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I've taken it upon myself to update the ~org-blog.el~ that was written a
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long time ago. I want something other than an extra layer over some
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other system, ~org-mode~ has everything a blog needs, but it doesn't
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generate an RSS feed or a special index page.
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There was the ~org-blog.el~, but that uses some old functions that don't
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exist anymore, so I thought I'd try to update it.
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I just barely got it working, as you can see from this post. It
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generates an RSS feed, but the links don't work. It generates an index
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page, but no links to the individual pages (not that it needs it,
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really). It doesn't listen to some of the settings (toc, sections) the
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rest of the publishing projects do.
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I'd also like to have all posts in a single file and use things like a
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post's category and tags and such.
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It'll be interesting to see what else I can fix.
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26
site/blog/Another_way_to_get_a_selection.org
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site/blog/Another_way_to_get_a_selection.org
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#+TITLE: Another way to get a selection
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#+DATE: 2012-05-03 10:04:00
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#+TAGS: emacs elisp org-mode coding
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When I was first looking into improving my mailbox selection function
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I was looking at how to just ask the user for input with completions.
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Though now that I came across ~tmm-prompt~ I really prefer this way of
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working, at least in this case.
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However, today another function was mentioned, in response to someone
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pointing out ~org-completing-read~: ~completing-read~. Wow that's a far
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leap.
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Anyway:
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#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
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(completing-read "Your favorite color: "
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'("red" "green" "blue" "yellow"))
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#+END_SRC
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This will ask for user input and provide these options as completions,
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but it won't show a list of options, of provide shortcuts, like
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~tmm-prompt~ does.
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It's good to know these things, and I really should read both the
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emacs manual and the emacs lisp reference manual at some point.
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42
site/blog/Ask_for_selection_in_emacs.org
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site/blog/Ask_for_selection_in_emacs.org
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#+TITLE: Ask for selection in Emacs
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#+DATE: 2012-05-02 21:09:00
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#+TAGS: emacs elisp coding
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I came across an email on one of the emacs mailing lists today, where
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someone asked how to ask a user for input whilst providing
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completions. The first answer he got was to try =tmm-prompt=, so I
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looked into it a little.
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I use =mu4e= as my primary email program, but since it isn't designed
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(seemingly) for use with multiple accounts I've got some wrapper
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functions that set some variables according to my liking and then
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start =mu4e=. This works very well, but it's a pain to have to use =M-x
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view-ryu-mail= or =M-x view-ninthfloor-mail= and such, so I wrote a
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function to read a string from the minibuffer, which I then bound to
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the ~<XF86Mail>~ key, this turned it into, for example =<XF86Mail> ryu=
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and =<XF86Mail> ninthfloor= and so on, but this doesn't have any
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completion or notification of my options.
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So after looking at ~tmm-prompt~ I came up with the following:
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#+BEGIN_SRC elisp
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(defvar oni:mailbox-map
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'(("ryulash.org" . "ryu")
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("ninthfloor" . "ninthfloor"))
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"A mailbox map for use with `tmm-prompt'.")
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(defun view-ryu-mail ()...)
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(defun view-ninthfloor-mail ()...)
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(defun view-mu ()
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(interactive)
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(let* ((tmm-completion-prompt "Choose a mailbox\n")
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(inbox (tmm-prompt oni:mailbox-map)))
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(funcall (intern (concat "view-" inbox "-mail")))))
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#+END_SRC
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I've left out the definitions and some mail accounts for brevity.
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~tmm-prompt~ is usually used when using the text-mode menu with =M-` `=,
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but it works very well here too. This changes mailbox selection to,
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for example =<XF86Mail> r= or =<XF86Mail> n=.
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18
site/blog/Ask_for_selection_in_emacs_addendum.org
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site/blog/Ask_for_selection_in_emacs_addendum.org
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#+TITLE: Ask for selection in Emacs, addendum
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#+DATE: 2012-05-02 21:52:00
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#+TAGS: emacs elisp coding
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I erroneously assumed (and thought I tested) that using ~tmm-prompt~
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could be done the way I described before. The ~oni:mailbox-map~ variable
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needs to be a little different from what I'd shown before, namely:
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#+BEGIN_SRC elisp
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(defvar oni:mailbox-map
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'("top" ("menu" ("ryulash.org" . "ryu")
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("ninthfloor" . "ninthfloor")
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("gmail" . "gmail")
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("aethon" . "aethon")))
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"A mailbox map for use with `tmm-prompt'.")
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#+END_SRC
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Without the ~top~ and ~menu~ items it will complain about wrong arguments.
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21
site/blog/a_simple_gnome-blog_test.org
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site/blog/a_simple_gnome-blog_test.org
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#+TITLE: A simple gnome-blog test
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#+DATE: 2009-11-09 15:23
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I've been looking for some way to post blog entries from my desktop
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for a while now, I've come across Drivel (which crashes when I try to
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log in to blogger with it), can't find a Bleezer package at work (just
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checked it, first time I heard of it today) and no other gtk/gnome
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client seems appealing.
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Let's see what this gnome-blog app does.
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Not much so far, bold or italic seems the be the only options
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available to me at the moment, let's see about HTML:
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to install gnome-blog in Ubuntu 9.04 use
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#+BEGIN_SRC sh
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sudo apt-get install gnome-blog
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#+END_SRC
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and the rest should then be self-evident.
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#+TITLE: Code::Blocks "process terminted with signal 255 (0 minutes, 0 seconds)"
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#+DATE: 2009-08-25 10:40
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#+TAGS: codeblocks fedora coding
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Yesterday after I came home from work I thought I'd try working on a
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project I've been working on this past weekend.
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I was away from home this weekend, so all the work I'd done had been
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on another computer, in a virtual Ubuntu installation, so I hadn't yet
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tried it at home.
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Trying to build it went fine. Running it from a terminal went
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fine. Even compiling and running on another Ubuntu installation (my
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work laptop, non-virtual) went fine, but Code::Blocks reported to me
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that whenever I tried running my application on my Fedora 11 home
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installation that it terminated with signal 255.
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I couldn't find what was wrong, I knew the application worked since I
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tested it in another terminal window and if I debugged it it'd go
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great up to the point where it met with a ~cin~ or ~cout~.
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Being tired from a really long day (getting up at 5:00am, get on train
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at 6:25am, get off train at 8:30am and at work 8:50am), I gave up
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fairly quickly.
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This morning though the itch got worse and I just had to investigate
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further.
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After about a minute of looking around I found someone at the Ubuntu
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Forums asking about the exact same thing and it turns out that the
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problem was that xterm wasn't installed. So a simple
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#+BEGIN_SRC sh
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su -c "yum install xterm"
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#+END_SRC
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was enough to fix the problem.
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Now I can start developing my application again!
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40
site/blog/gnome-shell_in_ubuntu_9.10.org
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site/blog/gnome-shell_in_ubuntu_9.10.org
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#+TITLE: Gnome-shell in Ubuntu 9.10
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#+DATE: 2009-12-11 10:35
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#+TAGS: gconf gnome gnome-panel gnome-shell linux ubuntu
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Even though ~gnome-shell~ is really only a preview of what is to come
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for gnome 3.0 and it's still buggy and sometimes not completely stable
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perhaps, I really like it.
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When I first saw the screenshots I was less then impressed, I thought
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it didn't at all look like anything new or innovative, but rather
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messy and confusing. But me being ever interested in new things and
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all I just had to give it a try (the ~gnome-panel~ look was starting to
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bore me).
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Installing was easy
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#+BEGIN_SRC sh
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sudo apt-get install gnome-shell
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#+END_SRC
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and starting it afterwards was easy too
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#+BEGIN_SRC sh
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gnome-shell -r
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#+END_SRC
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Though first I had to disable compiz, which I don't really use anyway.
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I was also using ~avant-window-navigator~, which disappeared on me but
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still kept part of my notification area to itself. So the time after
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that I first closed AWN and all was as it should be.
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I didn't feel like having to manually start ~gnome-shell~ every time I
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logged in so I started looking into a way to replace ~metacity~ and
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~gnome-panel~ with ~gnome-shell~ and found that this could be done by
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editing your ~gconf~ (with, for example, ~gconf-editor~) and setting the
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~/desktop/gnome/session/required_components/windowmanager~ key from
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~metacity~ to ~gnome-shell~.
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Of course, since it is a composited window manager you need a video
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card and driver that can handle screen compositing.
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#+TITLE: Higher Resolution in Fedora 11 with proprietary NVidia Drivers
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#+DATE: 2009-09-22 23:51
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#+TAGS: fedora nvidia xorg
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Ugh... I have been screwing around with this since the beginning of
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time... Or at least since I installed Fedora for the so-manieth
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time. Finally though I found out what I had to do.
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Following [[http://forums.fedoraforum.org/showthread.php?t=204752][this guide]], I was able to easily and correctly install the
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drivers. I used to build them myself, but that got me worse results
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then anything.
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To sum up, though:
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#+BEGIN_SRC sh
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# switch to super user (root)
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su
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# install rpmfusion repository
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rpm -Uvh \
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||||||
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http://download1.rpmfusion.org/free/fedora/rpmfusion-free-release-stable.noarch.rpm \
|
||||||
|
http://download1.rpmfusion.org/nonfree/fedora/rpmfusion-nonfree-release-stable.noarch.rpm
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
# install the driver (I have an i686 pc, you might need a different architecture, like 64_32 or something similar)
|
||||||
|
yum install kmod-nvidia xorg-x11-drv-nvidia-libs.i586
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
# reboot to make changed take effect
|
||||||
|
reboot
|
||||||
|
#+END_SRC
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
This only got me a 1024x768 resolution, though... Which pissed me off...
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
I started looking around the internet for a way to fix it in the
|
||||||
|
~xorg.conf~ itself, which I'd done on Fedora 9 before, but didn't
|
||||||
|
remember how (the reason I'm writing this right now), but didn't
|
||||||
|
actually find what I was looking for.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
In the end I found 2 supposed fixes, one added a Modes option to the
|
||||||
|
=Display= section of the =Screen= section, and another was to add a
|
||||||
|
=DisplaySize= option to the =Monitor= section.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Well, I found out I needed both, so I added =DisplaySize 1280 1024= to
|
||||||
|
the =Monitor= section and =Modes "1280x1024"= to the ~Display~ subsection
|
||||||
|
of the ~Screen~ section.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Now it's working again, running at 1280x1024 with screen compositing
|
||||||
|
(so I can run ~gnome-do~ with docky theme, which I'm trying out for a
|
||||||
|
while).
|
21
site/blog/index.org
Normal file
21
site/blog/index.org
Normal file
|
@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
|
||||||
|
#+TITLE: Blog
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
* Posts
|
||||||
|
#+begin_src emacs-lisp :exports results :results list
|
||||||
|
(defun file-to-data (file)
|
||||||
|
(unless (or (string= file ".") (string= file "..") (string= file "index.org"))
|
||||||
|
(let (title date)
|
||||||
|
(with-temp-buffer
|
||||||
|
(insert-file (concat "/home/slash/var/src/orgweb/site/blog/" file))
|
||||||
|
(goto-char (point-min))
|
||||||
|
(re-search-forward "^#\\+TITLE: \\(.*\\)$")
|
||||||
|
(setq title (buffer-substring-no-properties
|
||||||
|
(match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)))
|
||||||
|
(goto-char (point-min))
|
||||||
|
(re-search-forward "^#\\+DATE: \\(.*\\)$")
|
||||||
|
(setq date (buffer-substring-no-properties
|
||||||
|
(match-beginning 1) (match-end 1))))
|
||||||
|
(list date (concat "[[file:" file "][" title "]]")))))
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
(mapcar #'cadr (sort (delete nil (mapcar #'file-to-data (directory-files "/home/slash/var/src/orgweb/site/blog"))) (lambda (el1 el2) (not (string-lessp (car el1) (car el2))))))
|
||||||
|
#+end_src
|
|
@ -0,0 +1,48 @@
|
||||||
|
#+TITLE: mod\_rewrite with Fedora 10 and ISPConfig for WordPress
|
||||||
|
#+DATE: 2009-12-09 10:33
|
||||||
|
#+TAGS: apache2 fedora ispconfig mod_rewrite
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
This relates to Fedora 10 and ISPConfig 3.0.1 set up as described in
|
||||||
|
[[http://www.howtoforge.org/perfect-server-fedora-10-ispconfig-3][this HowtoForge post]].
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
One of my colleagues recently got interested in offering our clients
|
||||||
|
Wordpress as a content management system, so he's been trying it out.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Yesterday he found out that if he wanted to change the permalink style
|
||||||
|
in Wordpress he needed write access to =.htaccess=, which he didn't have
|
||||||
|
because the user rights haven't been set up very well there.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
So I gave him write access by using
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
#+BEGIN_SRC sh
|
||||||
|
chown apache:apache .htaccess
|
||||||
|
#+END_SRC
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Unfortunately this resulted in a 500 Interal Server Error.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Looking at the error log for the website I tried this for it let me
|
||||||
|
know that =RewriteEngine= directives were not allowed in the =.htaccess=.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Since I didn't want to mess with the base configurations of ISPConfig
|
||||||
|
I started looking around for other options. Eventually I found that I
|
||||||
|
had to add something similar to this to the Apache directives field
|
||||||
|
under options under the website's settings
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
#+BEGIN_SRC text
|
||||||
|
<IfModule mod_rewrite.c>
|
||||||
|
<Directory /var/www/[sitename]/web/>
|
||||||
|
Options +FollowSymLinks
|
||||||
|
RewriteEngine On
|
||||||
|
RewriteBase /
|
||||||
|
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
|
||||||
|
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
|
||||||
|
RewriteRule . /index.php [L]
|
||||||
|
</Directory>
|
||||||
|
</IfModule>
|
||||||
|
#+END_SRC
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Of course ~[sitename]~ should be replaced with the name of your website.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
It all works after I restarted the apache server myself, but I do not
|
||||||
|
know if that is completely necessary. Also it might take a few seconds
|
||||||
|
before ISPConfig finishes editing the configuration file.
|
30
site/blog/not-as-perfect.org
Normal file
30
site/blog/not-as-perfect.org
Normal file
|
@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
|
||||||
|
#+TITLE: Not as perfect
|
||||||
|
#+DATE: 2012-12-01 16:01
|
||||||
|
#+LINK: emacs http://gnu.org/software/emacs/
|
||||||
|
#+LINK: gnus http://gnus.org
|
||||||
|
#+LINK: gwene http://gwene.org
|
||||||
|
#+LINK: unison http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/unison/
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
* Unexpected
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
I thought that the [[emacs][GNU Emacs]] + [[gnus][Gnus]] + [[gwene][Gwene]] + [[unison]] solution would
|
||||||
|
be near perfect, but it seems that it is, unfortunately, not
|
||||||
|
entirely the case.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
* A problem
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
It seems that there is either something wrong with [[gwene]], or with
|
||||||
|
my connection to the [[gwene]] and [[gnus]] server.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
The problem is that I'll add some RSS feed to [[gwene]] and it *will*
|
||||||
|
get registered and tell me it will be filled in a few minutes, but
|
||||||
|
then even days later they'll still not be available in the group
|
||||||
|
list.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
I haven't found any reason why, they're not crazy feeds, I do get
|
||||||
|
other new groups (so it's not all of them), but it's annoying.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
* Next
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
I think I'll start looking at other solutions again. Too bad,
|
||||||
|
because the feeds that are working are working really well for me.
|
|
@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
|
||||||
|
#+TITLE: Removing a service manually in Windows Server 2008
|
||||||
|
#+DATE: 2009-11-09 12:24
|
||||||
|
#+TAGS: services windows
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
I was writing a test Windows Service and accidentally removed it
|
||||||
|
through the Programs and Features dialog, which removes the files, but
|
||||||
|
doesn't actually remove the service from the service list. So when I
|
||||||
|
tried to install the 2nd version of this test service it was
|
||||||
|
complaining that it already existed.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
I looked around a little and found that I could delete the Service
|
||||||
|
from the registry in
|
||||||
|
~HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\[YourService]~. I
|
||||||
|
deleted the key (the little folder thingy) and it did show some
|
||||||
|
change, but my service was still there and the newer version still
|
||||||
|
wouldn't install.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
After a little more looking around I found out that to fix it I could
|
||||||
|
use ~sc delete [YourService]~ to fix it. And it did!
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Next time, though, I really should use the installer I used to install
|
||||||
|
it to remove it...
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue