Linux Journal Editors Choice Awards 115
An anonymous reader dropped a note in to say that the Linux Journal Editors Choice Awards have been announced. No real surprises in the list, except maybe giving RSS the award for best game.
"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts." -- Bertrand Russell
Firefox deserved the win for best browser! (Score:3, Interesting)
GG for the win!
I didn't checked the other awards, not being a Linux guy... (at least, not for now!)
Re:Firefox deserved the win for best browser! (Score:3, Informative)
Please RTFA next time :P
Re:Firefox deserved the win for best browser! (Score:2)
I love Firefox too since I started using it a few weeks ago. Only one question, though...to be considered in competitions like this, doesn't there have to be at least a 1.0 version? I mean, one could argue the playing field isn't level if it's not at 1.0 because it's not the officially, full-featured release version yet. What if Firefox 1.0 includes a bunch of bugs or implements requirements that make it far less desirable to use?
Re:Firefox deserved the win for best browser! (Score:2)
Anyone know how progress is going on a mozilla port to AmigaOS? There's tens of thousands more potential users out there, mozilla developers, who are clamo
Re:Firefox deserved the win for best browser! (Score:5, Funny)
I heard they finally shipped the T-Shirt.
Re:Firefox deserved the win for best browser! (Score:2, Funny)
Bearing in mind that it's still version 0.1, so it's still feature incomplete.
For version 0.2 the roadmap plans on adding holes for head and arms.
KFG
Re:Firefox deserved the win for best browser! (Score:1)
Re:Firefox deserved the win for best browser! (Score:2, Funny)
RSS -is- a game. (Score:5, Informative)
Yum, how many different implementations of RSS can YOU deal with? It is, in fact, a game.
[If you've never implemented a client, don't bother replying.]
Re:RSS -is- a game. (Score:5, Informative)
-1, Flamebait! :-) (Score:1, Troll)
Re:-1, Flamebait! :-) (Score:2)
Re:-1, Flamebait! :-) (Score:3, Informative)
RSS as in RSS 2.0 stands for Really Simple Syndication, while when the R in RSS stands for RDF, we're talking Semantic Web.
So, if you had mentioned the two in the wrong fora at the wrong points in time, it would invariably have set off a huge flamew
Re:-1, Flamebait! :-) (Score:2)
Re:RSS -is- a game. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:RSS -is- a game. (Score:2)
Re:RSS -is- a game. (Score:2)
As far as I could understand from the articles I needed to read so I coud create my own RSS feed, one of the standards is just plain XML (0.91, 2.0), while the other is xml-serialized RDF and they are also specified by two different groups of people.
And the end result is a really nice mess.
(But then, those articles could be wrong
RSS? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:RSS? (Score:2)
Freeciv? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Freeciv? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Freeciv? (Score:2)
Re:Freeciv? (Score:1)
Re:Freeciv? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ardour? (Score:4, Informative)
sure, i'm the primary author of ardour.
audacity is a soundfile editor, ardour is a digital audio workstation. you can do some of the same things in each - record audio, chop it up, apply FX and so forth - but they are not equivalent in a deeper sense.
ardour is modelled on proaudio apps like protools, nuendo and samplitude. its not intended to be used for simple editing tasks, but for complex multi-track, multi-channel audio work. we hope that its UI will evolve to make the simple stuff simple, but our initial goal has been to make sure we have an internal architecture that can do anything the high-end proprietary apps can do, and more.
if you don't know how the high-end tools work, ardour will seem very very complex (and the current lack of a manual won't help much with that). if you have used protools, ardour will seem relatively familiar to you, although we attempt to take best-of-breed features from all the other DAWs. otoh, DAWs have all pretty converged on the same core feature set, so the differences have more to do with GUI nuances than functionality.
Project of the year--- How can you tell? (Score:4, Insightful)
a) No manual. No usable manual anyway. I know no one who uses it, so I have no 'live' manual to get me going either. Lots of apps don't have good manuals, but this goes along with b...
b) 'Angry fruit salad' user interface. Lots of functionality [apparently] brilliantly obfuscated by a million buttons in every imaginable color grouped randomly with no real UI intuitiveness to make up for the missing manual. I'm no newbie to pro audio; recording and mastering soundtrack CDs for local theatre groups is one of my pasttimes. But I cannot figure out how to even get started. I spend about an hour on step one every couple of months and have never succeeded in getting it to do anything with the 400G of raw digital audio sitting on my box.
The end result is that I've been unable to figure out how to find the most rudimentary starting-out functions. I already have all my audio; Ardour is too heavy to run on my portable recording boxes-- I have beaverphonic already doing my HD recording for the past several years-- so how do I do anything using Ardour with audio I already have? The manual's tutorials all begin with 'press the record button...' The FAQ says I can use it with my recordings, but the UI and manual conspire to convince me none of that functionality actually exists.
All this *is* a flame-- Ardour is supposedly good software but all it's done is waste my time and for that reason I'm annoyed-- but it's also a genuine request of the Ardour authors to help out all us poor folks that aren't Ardour hackers to get started. I'd love to see what this package can do and give it a fair shake.
Monty
Re:Project of the year--- How can you tell? (Score:2)
i'm not sure its worth going into this here, since monty and i have shared our fair share of flames and discussions on irc.
all i can say right now is that i don't like the fact that we have no manual, but that i have worked my ass off on this project for 4 years, and there is a limit to what i can do. and because i want to use the blender model (software: $$ free, manual: revenue source), its not really feasible for other people to write The Manual. however, i can't stop other people from writing manual
Re:Project of the year--- How can you tell? (Score:2)
the manual is not the only element in the revenue strategy - i would be stupid if i believed that could ever work. but its a significant element. i've already been approached by another moderately well-known open source-related publisher about doing the manual as "a book".
the main point of me doing the manual is to give people something tangible when they pay to get ardour. su
Re:Project of the year--- How can you tell? (Score:3, Interesting)
[also, a disclaimer. I'm only 'semi-pro'; I take money but don't pretend to live on it as a career. That said, I do have an annoying penchant for expens
Re:Project of the year--- How can you tell? (Score:2)
all true. but here's my favorite story for this department. pro-audio-engineer but non-computer user buys Digital Performer and a G5. installs RME hammerfall. tries to record 8 tracks straight in from an ADAT.
there's no audio signal.
to test, user drags audio file into session. cool, region appears. test playback. no signal and no meters. no amount of anything will produce output. user switches to builtin audio. still no output.
2hrs later, after a support phone call, it is revealed that regions der
Re:Project of the year--- How can you tell? (Score:2)
Re:Project of the year--- How can you tell? (Score:2)
I was complaining about one and only one thing: For the life of me, I can't figure out how to make it do *anything*. The number of buttons has nothing to do with this; most of my physical control surfaces have even more physical buttons than six copies of Ardour.
If I knew it would give me something my current tools don't, great! I'd happily buy the manual and figure
Re:Project of the year--- How can you tell? (Score:2)
Paul did actually say you could drag things in somewhere in this thread I think.
And while I have the chance, thank you for all the things xiph has done.
- Sharp
Re:Project of the year--- How can you tell? (Score:2)
there is no notion of "opening" an existing file, because ardour isn't a soundfile editor. you work with sessions, which may contain hundreds or thousands or files (or just one, if you wish). so the first thing you have to do, as indicated by the big message in the editor window, is to create a new session (Session->New).
because ardour (like other DAWs) uses a track-based metaphor, you then have to create 1 or more tracks in which to place the audio you want to work with. in anything less than curre
Re:Ardour and lack of originality? (Score:3, Interesting)
second, there is no "MS world" here - the flagship DAWs all started life on the Mac. hell, 4 years ago, PT was only certified to run on a *single* intel-based system (from IBM).
third, DAWs have
Re:Ardour and lack of originality? (Score:3, Insightful)
These are all things that, for the most part, people are no longer willing to pay money for. For that reason, yo
Re:Ardour? (Score:2)
BTW, I see you nicked the Ardour website style from my sample editors website (marlin.sf.net). But its okay, I nicked it from somewhere else too, and after all, you changed it a lot more than I did...
ClamAV (Score:2, Informative)
For my mail server, I use Qmail-Scanner [sourceforge.net], which does a very good job. Older versions had some issues with funky/broken MIME messages, but they seem to have been mostly resolved.
One Install Away? (Score:1, Interesting)
"Any hardware whose speed gets compared to greased rodents is at least worthy of an honorable mention, and Greg Kroah-Hartman made that comparison in his vote for the dual-processor version of the Apple Power Mac G5, which is one Linux install away from being a great system. "It's fast, quiet and pretty to look at. With full 64-bit goodness for a very cheap price, what's not to like?" he wrote. "
One linux install away? I realize this is the linux editors journal, but what about having OSX inst
About GIMP2 (Score:4, Insightful)
Is anybody else unhappy with some of the changes in GIMP2? For me, several useful things have disappeared (like ctrl-T to hide the layer's borders, now it's something else and I have to go in the menu), of the fact that the "anti" tool key modifier is now ALT and not SHIFT anymore (apart for the magnifier, go figure...) and so it creates problems with KDE, it doesn't save the tablet's device status,... the list is endless.
All in all, I wonder why they voted GIMP. It's become less good and less usable than GIMP1, and certainly less than Photoshop overall anyway.
Re:About GIMP2 (Score:2, Informative)
At least in X11, you can point your mouse at the option you
want changed, then press the key combination you prefer.
For example, open the menu at "Save as..", press Ctrl+A,
and now Ctrl+A is your shortcut for "Save as..".
It's what makes Gtk+ good
Re:About GIMP2 (Score:2)
that really is a necisarry configuration if you want nice integrate into different environments.
Re:About GIMP2 (Score:1)
Well, the constant crashes on the Windows version aren't an ideal advertisement for free software...
The interface seems about the same though... not particularly easier to use, not particularly harder to use... It's the same tools and panels that were always available, so I wouldn't really expect any great productivity gains from rearranging them.
It should really be... KolourPaint (Score:1, Informative)
Alternatives? (Score:1)
Best Game: Unreal Tourniment 2004 (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Best Game: Unreal Tourniment 2004 (Score:1)
Disclaimer: Not intentionally trolling.
IBM Thinkpad T41 (Score:4, Informative)
The box runs linux great, there is a great thinkpad linux mailing list, the battery life is amazing and it's fast as hell.
Good choice linux journal...
cuban
Re:IBM Thinkpad T41 (Score:2)
However, does anyone else find the design of all IBM Thinkpads to be absolutely butt ugly? Yes they're distinctive & not just another silvery Powerbook ripoff, but they just look so cheap and plasticy - like something out of the bargain bin.
Anyone else?
Re:IBM Thinkpad T41 (Score:2)
They are not cheap and plasticy. They are made of some sort of VERY sturdy material. I'm not sure what else to call it but carbon, but their are tough as hell. Especially the back of the LCDs.
That's actually the first reason I bought one. I travel around the city everyday and needed something that wouldn't break easily (like a Dell or HP, which ARE made of cheap plastic).
Re:IBM Thinkpad T41 (Score:2)
I totally agree (from all reports, I've no longterm direct experience) that they're sturdy, robust, of high build quality and generally good.
I just don't think they look it, to me the rubberised black with red trim looks awful - it reminds of how 'portable computers' looked in the pre-pentium days. It doesn't look the part compared to just about any other laptop.
Great laptops, just very bad looking.
Alex
Re:IBM Thinkpad T41 (Score:2)
Re:IBM Thinkpad T41 (Score:1, Insightful)
ThinkPad T41? (Score:1)
Re:ThinkPad T41? (Score:2)
Actually, that's a pretty good comparison (Score:2)
Re:ThinkPad T41? (Score:1)
Social networking sites are nothing new (Score:5, Interesting)
Bull. There's nothing older; a friend invited me to join friendster, and my first comment to her was:
"Jesus Christ, it's high school, all over again."
It's an electronic popularity contest, with a little bit of recruitment thrown in. Most of us sit on the sidelines and watch as the really popular people amass a huge collection of friends.
Not surprisingly, a huge number of these young 20-somethings were from NYC, and almost all of them were exactly the type I can't stand- drunk-every-night clubbers. My personal favorite was some rich-bitch french girl who was almost completely naked in all of her shots on some beach. Her profile was truly a piece of work. Example: "Things I enjoy: Not having to work. Ever."
Friendster attracts the biggest concentration of intellectual-stuck-ups, prisses, and vanity-obsessed people I've seen in my life. Given Orkut is higher profile and more exclusive, I would imagine it's even worse.
Re:Social networking sites are nothing new (Score:3, Funny)
You are so full of crap. Prove it. Show me a link. Let me see the pictures and judge for myself.
Re:Social networking sites are nothing new (Score:2)
Invite me! Invite me! Oh God, please invite me...
MyPostgreSQL (Score:2)
He should take a look at the list of new features in the upcoming version of PostgreSQL which includes savepoints, point in time recovery, tablespaces and a bunch of smaller stuff. Meanwhile, MySQL folks are still struggling with some features which were supported by Postgres almost a decade ago. I'd say the gap is getting bigger, not smaller. Much bigger!
Sure, MySQL is great for what
Re:MyPostgreSQL (Score:2)
If you ask me the people at mysql should abandon their quest to make mysql into postgres. Every feature you add is just going to make it slower and more complicated so why not leave mysql as the lightweight, fast alternative to full featured databases I listed above.
Re:MyPostgreSQL (Score:2)
I haven't seen much evidence that MySQL wants to be like PostgreSQL.
My impression is that MySQL outright rejects many fundamental philosophies of PostgreSQL. For instance, in MySQL, it's legal to enter the date Feb 31st. I'm confident that the MySQL developers could fix that, but their philosophy is to put the responsibility into the application. MySQL also has the philosphy that if an error is encountered, keep going.
Contrast with Po
Re:MyPostgreSQL (Score:2)
Re:MyPostgreSQL (Score:2)
(1) PostgreSQL will have a native win32 port
(2) It has a new caching algorithm which should significantly improve the cache hit rate in most real-world situations. Specifically, they are changing from a "least-recently updated" algorithm (LRU) to a system that accounts for how often the page was accessed. In the old caching system, if a large table scan was done, the cache would be polluted and your small, frequently-accessed table wouldn't be in cache.
(3) point-in-ti
Congrats to GnuCash (Score:5, Informative)
Nice to see some recognition for one of the most unglamorous and underappreciated of all the major free software projects. Originally a Quicken user, I started feeling disempowered by its mandatory activation/registration (in the Australian edition) and reports from other users that the next version displayed advertising (of Quicken's services). It made me angry enough to search for alternatives, and I was sufficently motivated to create a partition for GNU/Linux specifically so that I could use GnuCash once a week. Not something I'd expect Joe User to do, but experienced Windows tinkerers like myself can certainly handle it, and the experience will also make my eventual switch to Linux easier. I've seen where Windows and proprietary software is pushing the industry (toward DRM, software patents, more products needing activation, etc.) and I don't like it one bit. But I digress...
I would like to comment that GnuCash is frequently criticised as being too difficult for personal finances because of the "double-entry" system it uses. People who don't know better see the words "double entry" and the first thing they think (incorrectly) is "WTF, I have to enter each transaction TWICE?!". Please stop scaring people away with this FUD because, in a practical sense, GnuCash's double-entry foundation is of little consequence to former users of Quicken or similar programs. All it means is that everything that Quicken calls a "category" is an "account" instead. The power of the centuries old accounting practice is there if you need it, but in day to day use there's hardly a difference. Some people believe that GnuCash is more difficult to use than Quicken, but this has more to do with others things (perhaps its interface and the fact that it's also intended to cater to business users).
Re:Congrats to GnuCash (Score:1)
Translation (Score:1)
Our editors are all business and turned up their noses at selecting favorite games. These are the kind of people you want to hire to roll out your company desktop systems.
Translation:
"We didn't want to do any research. That doesn't make us bad journalists... does it??
Game award is a disgrace. (Score:3, Insightful)
I think Linux game developpers, that are fighting one of the most ungrateful tasks to make a Linux desktop a reality, should not be thrilled by being blantantly ignored by people that are suppossed to be knowledgable about Linux.
If the LJ editors do not use games, then the honorable choice would have been to either not to give an award or to delegate the selection on people knowledgable about this field.
Of all the possible choices they took the worst: to insult the intelligence of their readers and of Linux game developpers.
Best Laptop (Score:2)
Re:Poll: WHICH IS BETTER (Score:1, Offtopic)
CB
crap (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I would've liked to see MySQL win (Score:5, Interesting)
Funny how MySQL releases even the client libraries as GPL instead of LGPL.
That means you can't even ship your non-GPL product with MySQL support unless you buy a commercial license from MySQL AB. Commercial databases such as Oracle don't even have this restriction!
Re:I would've liked to see MySQL win (Score:2)
postgresql and firebird are both free for personal -and- corporate use, as I recall. they're both slower for the sorts of things mysql users usually want (retrieve by id, grab entire slice of the db to post-process in app code), but both enforce constraints, have stored procedures, good transaction handling (a comment above says