GNU Media Goblin 0.3.0 Released 43
A mere year since the Mediagoblin photo/video sharing project was started, the project has hit version 0.3.0. Release highlights include: a rewrite of the database from MongoDB to SQL (via SQLAlchemy, making it much easier to install), audio support (using the HTML5 <audio> tag), a first take on a mobile interface, and smarter video buffering. Not content to sit idle, the developers are starting work on Salmon protocol support to federate with software like Diaspora in the next release.
Bad move (Score:5, Funny)
MongoDB is webscale.
Re:Bad move (Score:5, Funny)
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Does /dev/null support sharding?
Wonderful!
AND? (Score:3, Insightful)
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What else would you whine about? Oh that's right, anything.
Diaspora (Score:4, Funny)
Diaspora... theres a name I haven't heard recently. I checked the github and its certainly alive and kicking. Do many /.ers use Diaspora and could therefore use the Goblin?
I wondered about the license and had to LOL at the commit comment:
GNU-AGPL-3.0 2 years ago added license to every single goddamn file. also, put one in the root [Daniel Vincent Grippi]
Yes, that answers the licensing question quite firmly
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gives the impression the author is incompetent.
I remember reading some things back when Diaspora first showed up that suggested this is exactly the case, with both beginner mistakes in security and even the choice of Ruby on Rails for something intended to be run by 'normal users' (which, I've never used Ruby on Rails, but apparently has a habit of breaking applications with every upgrade).
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The security flaws, on the other hand, were a disappointment.
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The Diaspora people must be pretty incometent if it would take them more than 2 years to hit a version 0.1 writing it in C++. What exactly would make the task that hard? And if they are that incompetent why would you trust them with your security?
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And please don't give me the tired old crap about memory management (which is all but automatic with very few exceptions), or having to supposedly write everything yourself as if no libraries exist for C++, or how you have to use complex pointer manipulation (also bull crap), etc.
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If you're not experiencing the joys of doin' it the hard way, and you don't care if it can't be scaled above 200 million users per site, why not just string together a bunch of CPAN modules and be done in a weekend? That's the part I couldn't figure out.
RoR forces you into certain mindsets for doing things that may make life harder, and the ruby library infrastructure, while good, isn't as wide ranging or as well debugged as CPAN.
I kinda like all 3 languages mentioned, it just seems Perl would have been th
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Re:Diaspora (Score:5, Informative)
The funny part is RoR has recently (well, recent YEARS) gone thru the growing pains C++ suffered thru maybe a decade or so ago.
C++ used to be exactly the same way, you upgrade gcc/g++ and suddenly nothing compiles anymore.
I think you're pretty much past that with RoR so its safe?
I think they were also trying to make a political point about scalability. The point of the diaspora is not to centralize, not to scale. There were people who Just Didn't Get It about diasporas goals complaining about RoR "How you gonna scale one RoR site to over 500 million users" etc. Thats, um, kind of the point. Shouldn't have more than a household or so per server. Not enough people per server that the admin could make serious dough selling the private info of people he doesn't care about but are on his server anyway. A self correcting privacy policy, sorta, via dispersal.
Comment removed (Score:3)
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It's they fault, they moved from MongoDB to SQL, which isn't webscale.
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Wow, you really MUST be new here! You actually never heard of the "slashdot effect"? [wikipedia.org]
Vanity Site? (Score:2)
I have a vanity site with thousands of photos & videos. I have always just used a script + imagemagick & ffmpg to get things to a useable set of html files, but I keep hoping that there will be someting easier. Can anyone tell me if this would be a good way to dump a bunch of jpgs & video files to a directory & have all the pretty stuff happen in the background? I'm not interested in the social side so much, but I have yet to find anything which can handle large batches of files in a way tha
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Thanks! I guess I'll stick with my old scripts for now...
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Gallery 3 [menalto.com]
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Gallery is a poor choice unless you really need the features. Being an application, it's both slower and less safe (there's a reason the last release was a "security release") than a static generator.
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I have a vanity site with thousands of photos & videos. I have always just used a script + imagemagick & ffmpg to get things to a useable set of html files, but I keep hoping that there will be someting easier.
Can't f-spot make a bunch of static html galleries from a directory of photos?
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Perhaps you could share with Opera Unite and just mirror the automated pages online somewhere?
Fantastic (Score:5, Funny)
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Say what you want, but it's a better name than Media Dildo.
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Well, FOSS isn't the only entity that gives products stupid names. Wi-Fi, for example. Or Twain. Or the iPod (open the pod bay doors, Hal).
The KIA auto? No combet vet would ever drive a car that was the acronym for Killed In Action.
Dodge Startus... er, Stratus?
The band Oingo Boingo?
Windows Media Player (WiMP)?
MicroSoft? Sounds like a woman complaining about her boyfriend.
The list goes on.
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howdy mcgrew (92797),
actually, i always loved the name TWAIN. it's such a delightfully snarky acronym. as it was explained in the docs for the 1st scanner i ever set up it stands for ...
Technology Without An Interesting Name
i don't see the "stupid" here that you see. aint it nice that folks are so different? [*grin*]
take care,
lee
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aint it nice that folks are so different?
Yes, it is.
Try it out! (Score:2)
Sideways move (Score:1)
Did anyone send them the story a few above this one saying that the company that they're trying to compete against is going public in a month where they're expected to make billions of closed source dollars?"
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