Agreguesi i feed
Se shpejti ne treg celulari revolucionar Apple Iphone
Ringjallet Roma Antike
Lëshohet Emacs 22.1
Një programor i vetëm krijon drajverë për 253 ueb-kamera në GNU/Linux
Yahoo ofron hapesirë të pakufizuar për e-postë
Statusi i Pr-Tech
Dështojnë kompjuterët në Stacionin Ndërkombëtarë Hapësinorë
YouTube bën që përdoruesit të paguajnë. Duke filluar nga filmat video-star
Sharp do të fillon prodhim në masë të diodave për Blu-ray dhe HD-DVD
iGoogle, arrin Google i personalizuar
Canada's Internet Among Best, Report Says
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Nirbheek Chauhan: An unintended gem about usability
<UU> Somedays, I think why can't we have computers which just work.
<UU> But then I remember that I am a Computer Scientist.
<UU> So, yeah, I guess I understand why.
<Nirbheek> :D
Quite related to GNOME, really.
83-Year-Old Woman Gets New 3D-Printed Titanium Jaw
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Jani Monoses: Recent misc likes
* byobu - nicer than plain screen with good defaults, for example key binding for scrolling is like in a regular terminal.* sbuild - nicer than pbuilder, defaults to overlay directory instead of tarball, hence fast by default, nice colors, build summary. I have heard about it for a long time, but the recent mention during Ubuntu devel week made me curious. It is friendlier now - no need for LVM snapshots. http://wiki.debian.org/mk-sbuild* syncpackage - which now allows syncing from Debian if you have Ubuntu upload rights. No need to burden the archive team members anymore for every sync or go the roundabout way of getting from Debian and then uploading manually without changes.* Modern Debian packaging in the form of the 3.0(quilt) source format and the new dh tools. The former allows a cleaner separation between the upstream and distro bits while the latter makes the debian/rules file much shorter and cleaner even than with CDBS, let alone with the classic debhelper way.* Twitter Bootstrap - mostly unrelated to packaging or command line stuff, but very nice regardless. CSS+Javascript UI elements that for me at least make jQueryUI superfluous, while being promoted as 'oh, just a CSS framework and style guide, not much else'.
Lisandro Damián Nicanor Pérez Meyer: The license mess with serial port Qt-based libs
So I have found two libs which seemed to have the above mentioned features: QExtSerialPort and QSerialPort.
QExtSerialPort seems to be the most recommended lib in the web. It features polled and signal-based functionality; it uses Qt's standard types inheriting QIODevice. But it does not states the license in any file within the source code. The original project page at SourceForge says it's in public domain. And the newer project page at Google code says it's under the new BSD license. I have asked in the mailing list for a clarification. So far nothing has changed (although in further threads the authors showed some willing to change this). And then I got to the point of finding a bug, but I don't want to spend time to track it down and make a patch without a clear license.
QSerialPort it's another lib with more or less the same features as QExtSerialPort. It's main LICENSE file says it's under the LGPL2, but licensecheck will say that the present files are LGPL3. Also, on reviewing the code, I found some minor stuff that could be improved. Well, I could contact the author and see if [s]he would receive the patches... but his site seems down. And I could not find a real-person's name in the code so far :-/
So I made a last attempt to try to get QExtSerialPort in a suitable license. If it doesn't suceed, I think I'll have to start writing one myself. The downside: I only use Linux, so there will be no multiplatform features unless someone else contributes it. Of course, if you have another option or any idea to share, I'll be happy to know it :-)
By the way, this should be my first post on Planet Debian in english, so hello planet!
Lubuntu Blog: LxScreenshot
Seattle Library Lets Man Watch Porn On Computers Despite Complaints
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Lubuntu Blog: LxFind
Ian McIntosh: Zoom H1 firmware update 2.0 adds USB Digital Audio support in Linux
I’m so happy about this added functionality! I want to publicly thank Zoom for such a great free update.
The Zoom H1 makes super high quality recordings, and now also serves as a high quality digital audio mic while connected to a Linux computer.
Performing the Zoom H1 version 1.x to 2.0 upgrade in Linux
In short, this fails.
Something about writing the H1MAIN.bin to the Fat32 file system in Linux causes the very brittle upgrade process to fail. It will notice the file and begin the process, and end with “WRITE ERROR”. Thankfully it doesn’t brick the device.
The solution is to:
- copy your recordings off the device
- format the card inside the device: hold the Trash button while turning it on, then confirm the format by pressing the Record button
- copy the H1MAIN.bin file to the root of the device’s filesystem using a Windows computer (download Zoom H1 System Software Version 2.0 and unpack)
- initiate the upgrade: turn on the device while holding the Play/Pause button, then confirm the upgrade by pressing the Record button (twice)
Once upgraded, the mic functionality is detected and works automatically in Ubunutu (and presumably other Linux distros), and shows up in PulseAudio as both an Input and an Output. This means you also now have two audio outputs.
It even works in the Luz Spectrum Analyzer. Enjoy!
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