Home Blog Page 9365

An AbiWord to the wise: Wouldn’t you like to be a pepper, too?

Author: JT Smith

LinuxPlanet’s Brian Proffitt writes: “AbiWord, for good or ill, has clearly positioned itself in terms of functionality against the Microsoft Word product. Not that there’s
anything wrong with that. After six years of putzing around with different word processors, I have generally found that these
applications fall into one of three groups: Word-derivatives, WordPerfect-derivatives, and Everything Else. AbiWord falls into
this first group. It is, in this stage of its life, the Dr. Fresh to Word’s Dr. Pepper.

This may not be something we want to hear, since All Things Microsoft are Evil, blah, blah, blah. But, I figure if AbiWord wants to
be in this position, then its only fair to hold it up to the product its trying to emulate.”

MS attacks Open Source

Author: JT Smith

Interactive Week highlights the latest anti-Open Source silliness from Microsoft — a company, as one observer is quoted as saying, “seems to be going ahead as if antitrust doesn’t exist and won’t affect them.” Read all about the licensing changes to Microsoft’s Mobile Internet Toolkit that forbid the use of “viral” software and operating systems, and the new look-but-don’t-touch program of “shared source” that is supposed to prove that Windows isn’t closed source. Or something like that.

Review: PlayStation-to-USB controller adapter

Author: JT Smith

By Jeff Field

Many of the Linux users I know, myself included, are fans of classic gaming such as Nintendo, Super Nintendo, and classic arcade games. For the console fans among us, there are a
plethora of emulators out there, for every system imaginable, including Snes9x and RockNES. The chief complaint seems to be
that, even though the games themselves may function perfectly, it just doesn’t feel right to use a keyboard, or even a
gamepad designed for a PC. Now, there appears to be a solution to this input problem, and it even works on Linux!
Console input devices have followed a steady evolution, with the most popular systems playing off a similar theme. The SNES controller was an NES controller with four additional buttons. The original
Playstation controller was just an SNES controller with grips and a better feel about it, and the newest PlayStation 2
controller is the same thing with a small joystick (or “analog stick”). The PlayStation
controller has everything you need — enough buttons, a comfortable size, a familiar design, and ready availability (and cheaply, if
you find a used one somewhere, such as a local Funcoland). The only
problem is, how to hook it up to a PC?

Confronted with this problem, I went on a search. I knew someone must be marketing the converter necessary to
use the PlayStation controller on a PC. I found just such aPSX->USB converter at
Easybuy2000.com, a vendor I had not heard of. But for $12.50, I figured I’d take a chance, and see what
happened.

A few days later, the unit arrived, with a plain
(unlabeled) floppy disk loaded with Windows drivers. The unit itself is simply a tiny box
with circuitry to talk to USB, a PlayStation connector on one end, and a USB connector on the
other. Physical installation is as simple as plugging the device in, and plugging the controller into it. It accepts all
PlayStation-compatible controllers from the original gamepad to the latest PlayStation 2 Dual Analog Shock 2
controller.

Once I had it installed, it was a matter of getting the proper drivers — in this case, I had to get joystick/USB input
installed and working. I compiled the input and joydev modules under input core support, and made sure USB human interface devices were supported. I compiled the modules (make modules; make modules_install) and then loaded them with insmod.
Once you do this, your joysticks are assigned names like /dev/input/js0 through js31. The easiest way to tell if everything
is working at this point is to type cat /dev/input/js0, then press buttons on the controller. This should cause all
sorts of text to scroll down the screen. If you get results from this, the converter is set up, and you need only set up whatever game
you want to use with the device to see it at /dev/input/js0.

Conclusion
I have never been satisfied with the design of gaming controllers for the PC — they never seemed to fit quite right,
and their directional pads never worked right. The Legend of Zelda is tough to play when Link wants to go up and to the
left instead of just up.

The PlayStation controller is the best controller you can get — Sony has put a lot of time into
making them, as did Nintendo in the designs that inspired Sony. With the analog controls for things like flight
simulators or other flying games, and a D-pad for those old, but great, NES and SNES games, this is the ideal choice for gamers
today. At only $12.50, it is a steal, especially when you can get a used PlayStation controller for as low as $5. I recommend getting the newer analog models, which are still cheaper than some higher-end PC controllers that might not function as well. If you are in the market for a controller to use with emulators, or
any game for that matter, check out the PSX adapter, available at EasyBuy2000.com.

Category:

  • Unix

Minutes of the GNOME Board meeting 26 June 2001

Author: JT Smith

“Communication is really important for some of the key part of
the project and can only help the project overall. There is an
inherent responsibility of a project maintainer to ensure that
the people concerned by their work are informed of the direction.”

From:  Daniel Veillard 
To:    foundation-announce@gnome.org
CC:    foundation-list@gnome.org, gnome-hackers@gnome.org
Subject: Minutes of the GNOME Board meeting 26 June 2001        
Reply-to: veillard@redhat.com
Date:  Sun, 1 Jul 2001 18:36:16 -0400

                                                                                                                           




Minutes of the GNOME Board meeting 26 June 2001
                           ===============================================


                 Presents:
                 =========

                     Havoc Pennington (chairing)
                     Daniel Veillard  (minutes)
                     Miguel de Icaza
                     Bart Decrem
                     Dan Mueth        
                     Raph Levien
                     Owen Taylor
                     Jim Gettys

                 Regrets:
                 ========

                     Federico 
                     Maciej Stachowiak 
                     John Heard (regrets)


                 Decisions:
                 ==========

                    - Communication is really important for some of the key part of
                      the project and can only help the project overall. There is an
                      inherent responsibility of a project maintainer to ensure that
                      the people concerned by their work are informed of the direction.

                 Done stuff:
                 ===========

                   ACTION: Havoc to check with Martin and Sander on the Gnome-2.0 
                 roadmap
                     => let's say it's done :-)

                   ACTION: Havoc take the action to send a mail on Gnotice about 
                 fostering
                           the GNOME-2.0 work
                     => let's say it's done :-)

                   ACTION: Federico to draft policies for @gnome.org email aliases,
                           CVS access, and FTP access.
                     => done, sent, about to discuss it

                 New Action:
                 ===========

                   ACTION: Havoc to invite Sander and Martin

                   ACTION: Dan to mail Christian about asking the managers of the
                           various projects for updates and links to important threads
                           in the mail archives.

                 Actions:
                 ========

                   ACTION: Dan to work with Membership Committee to re-open the 
                 membership list.
                     => still pending

                   ACTION: Havoc send the AB list to the board looking for completion
                           of the member liasons.
                     => still pending

                   ACTION: John try to get a Copyright assigment form and procedure for 
                 the
                           GNOME Foundation
                     => still pending waiting on the FSF

                   ACTION: Maciej to email the Board the current draft of the platform
                           license policy for review.
                     => still pending

                 Discussion:
                 ===========

                  - Sander sent us a status update on GNOME 2
                    Seems Gnome-2.0 work has started seriously now, progresses are made.
                    Post mortem analysis of last weeks flamefest, we must improve our
                    communication !

                  - putting together a proposal to hire an program manager

                  - discuss proposed RFP procedure (no decisions planned)  

                    We need more communication and know where projects are heading.
                    Getting weekly status reports from the main projects sounds
                    a good way to improve this. This could inlcude links to important
                    threads in the mailing lists.
                    We would need the equivalent of weekly seminars where a project
                    is presented, how can this be done ? Features articles on 
                    developpers.gnome.org ?
                    The communication is really crucial for those project affecting the
                    core and potentially everybody.
                    
                    The member of the board present unanimously agreed that a mechanism
                    along the line of the proposed RFP procedure is a good idea. 
                 Discussion
                    will be fostered in the foundation list.

                 Daniel

Category:

  • Open Source

Tending the Microsoft flock

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET: “I’m not the first to notice that there’s a
certain relationship between Microsoft
and its customers-especially the
developers, who enjoy all the benefits of
being part of the world’s largest
computing community, one that is led by
one of the world’s richest and most powerful companies.
There are complainers in the group, but, overall, the
relationship is like a spiritual leader and his or her
disciples. The followers are loyal, hard-working and
justly rewarded.”

mnoGoSearch 3.1.17 released

Author: JT Smith

Dimitry writes: “The new version 3.1.17 of mnoGoSearch Open Source search engine software for intranet and web servers (formerly known as UDMSearch) is available from mnoGoSearch website at http://www.mnogosearch.org. This version includes several bugs fixes including some potential exploits fixes, ChangeLog is here.”

Mac OS X 10.1 not ready until September?

Author: JT Smith

The Register: “Mac OS X 10.1, codenamed Puma, may not ship later this month at Macworld Expo
New York as many Apple watchers are expecting.

However, long-awaited DVD playback functionality is likely to be released during
the show, which is set to kick off in two weeks’ time.”

Category:

  • Unix

Virus hoax aims to dupe napster, gnutella users

Author: JT Smith

BBC: “According to the message, a
“new hybrid computer code”
named MusicPanel has
been surreptitiously buried
inside MP3 files of 500
popular tunes and
distributed over the past
eight months among
unsuspecting “song thieves” using the popular Napster
and Gnutella file-exchange services.

The hoax goes on to say “those who have downloaded
any of the 500 most popular songs … will find their illicit
music unusable and their computers frozen due to the
time release of this bomb.”

Call my bluff – how smart is reverse engineering .NET?

Author: JT Smith

The Register: “So who’s calling whose bluff? An intriguing game of chicken is enveloping
Microsoft’s plans to port its C# language and run-time to BSD, with software libre
leaders vowing to give the Beast a taste of its own embrace n’ extend medicine.

How wise this high profile and risky counter attack will prove to be, we shall
examine in a moment. But first some background.”

Will Microsoft embrace or deface XML?

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET: “In my reviews of XML standards and
Microsoft’s .Net products, I’ve
consistently questioned whether
Microsoft will support the standards and,
if so, how fully. Well, just about two
months after the release of the key XML
Schema standard, it looks as if Microsoft is going for full
support of the standards, rather than its more common
embrace-and-extend strategy.”