Archive for the ‘Community’ Category

Arch FTW !

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

So finally Google got their act together and released a googletalk plugin for GNU/Linux systems – they released it for Ubuntu. A sensible option since a large number of desktop GNU/Linux users use Ubuntu. They might make an RPM available. So what about the Arch people ?

Aah. Thats the point :) cpcgm goes ahead and creates a PKGBUILD and puts it on AUR. You can look at it here and install it (if you have yaourt ) using

 yaourt -S google-talkplugin

This – the self dependence and readiness to understand and fix the systems – is why Arch has the best documentation around , and at the same time a small,close community. I love being a part of it :D

SRWare Iron

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

I have been using Chromium web browser on my Arch Linux, on which Google Chrome is based. It was a pleasent experience. It loads fast, hogs less memory and loads tabs very fast. On the whole, I liked it so much that I use it for most of my browsing except for online banking. I do miss the extensions , but the speed and responsivness makes up for it.

Since it was a wee bit older ( it didnt have the extensions feature ), I thought I would update it via Arch User Repository. I had forgotten the exact name of the package so I did a search for Chromium and the following entry popped up on my screen.

“aur/iron 4.0.227-1 (125)
A web browser based on chromium without Google’s tracking ‘features’”

It was then that I realized that even chromium has phone back home features built into it. But it was then that another facet of FOSS world showed itself . SRWare took the source code, removed those tracking features and added features ( like ad blocking and and a later version of webkit ). I uninstalled Chromium right away and replaced it with Iron. I must say that its sweeter than Chromium. I think people should give it a try.

Testing the new Pidgin ( with google chat / video )

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Great news . Pidgin 2.6.1 came out – this now means that I no longer will be forced to use proprietary software for audio chat.

I have started testing it on my Arch linux system. I have to try compatibility between the following : Pidgin, GTalk client, empathy. So far the results using pidgin 2.6.1 are :

Pidgin test results

  Pidgin Empathy GTalk
Audio Yes Yes Yes
Video     No


Remarks : So far , only GTalk has been tested.  Accepting calls initiated by GTalk doesnt work with pidgin. I cannot start my video while on an audio call with GTalk client.

I will update the rest of the columns as soon as I finish testing.

FOSS and my friends

Monday, May 4th, 2009

I am at a point in life where I can actually look back and see more than childhood and antics at college. I have few friends from college and from school. But then I realize that I now know a number of good, kind people. People who have been highly critical of my bad ideas and highly supportive of my good ideas. People who saw me for what i am and accepted me without any fuss. In short, very good friends. And they are all FOSS supporters.

The way I judge people who i am certain of being familiar and supportive of FOSS ideals is entirely different from the way i judge others. I trust them way faster than I trust others. No, I dont harbor a disliking to people who are not aware of FOSS or does not support it. But I trust and accept people who are in sync with that philosophy  a bit faster. And in all these years, I have done this without having to be afraid of misjudging people.

You share your joys, i.e) the good stuff in your life with your friends. This is a concept which defines FOSS. This sharing, hence, is naturally a trait of those who are attracted by it.

If anybody is reading this, and they dont know what FOSS is, read and learn about it , try to get involved. It might or might not reward you with opportunities and money, but it certainly will reward you with good friends.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

I know how to make a Plasmoid :D

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

I wrote a small plasmoid that will display fortune cookies from fortune-ml database for the fortune program. A new cookie appears every 30 minutes or on every click on the plasmoid.

Santhosh put the code into smc git yesterday. The plasmoid is written in Python and is generic enough that it will accept any fortune database. I have hardcoded it ( for now ) to use fortune-ml though. Until I figure out how to create dialogues in pyQT and learn to use the KDE configuration framework, its going to be just fortune-ml.The code is pretty straight forward. More time was spent looking up APIs and Python stuff than actually writing it down

Thanks to Praveen for testing the code and Santhosh for creating the fortune-ml database.

Summary : Plasmoid written in pyQT, depends on : KDE 4.2 , fortune-ml (available in SMC git )

FSUG-tvm and Installfests 2009

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

Shew. 2009 begins well for FSUG-tvm. We had four installfests planned this year.  One each at Barton Hill, Mar Baselios, SCT and LBSITW. The reason why there are no individual posts on each is because installfests have lost their novelty and has become generic. Nothing big to report you know. Routine stuff.  We have a set process now, and we can conduct an installfest anywhere, given enough notice. The toaster is helping us out too.

But the news here is not that.

The news is , we don’t get any install requests during our installfests.  All the installfests this year were more of public interaction sessions rather than extensive installation processes. In fact, only less than 5 systems were installed this time around, counting in all the installfests.

My theory is that everyone is now aware of what this whole “Linux” ( GNU/Linux) thing is about. GnU/Linux usage has risen so much that the curious ones , i.e) the ones who would have come to installfests , now have easier access to someone who knows how to install GNU/linux . They don’t need installfests now. They might have friends or relatives who will help them out. GNU/Linux users in Thiruvananthapuram are no longer a hobbyist crowd.

So FSUG-tvm will be moving on to the next stages. Giving hands on workshops. I don’t have a clear idea about how we will go about doing this, but the mailing list discussion seems to be evolving into something that will be viable.

Onward to a small report of each installfest

Barton Hill installfest borked. I think the event itself was cut down massively. I do not know the reason. And this was the only installfest in which I didn’t show up.

Mar Baselios installfest would have gotten more attention had we been placed a bit more closer to the main venue. We did get a few visitors and a bunch of mech students.  I can say that we did quite a lot of preaching there. Just four snaps, here.

SCT installfest : By far the best setup we ever got anywhere. Undeniable. Plus the organizers were very thorough. We could have handled a hundred installs in a day. We had enough (willing) volunteers. Anoop Jacob Thomas seems to have done awesome work there, motivating the students. The toaster was there too. But unfortunately, not many showed up. So we stood around watching people, chatting among ourselves, while the students handled the occasional visitors. Of course we preached to a few people there too.

LBSITW’s installfest was awesome in the sense that we broke through into a particular community which so far had not responded to all these happenings in technology.  LBSITW is the lone women only engineering college in India. And the fact that FSUG-tvm was able to reach into this women only community shows that women are interested in tech and they need only a venue which respects them.

The students at LBSITW who organized the fest were very motivated. While we expected these levels of motivation from any group,  LBSITW surprised us by exceeding them.  Hand drawn posters, a nicely positioned venue and well trained volunteers who really were eager and passionate about what they were doing.  And these students seemed to be loving the tech part too. The fact that all of them were women and they managed to arrange so much with little external support is appreciable.  I feel that everyone should learn from these students about how they approached the whole thingy. They knew exactly what they wanted and was ready to learn and work for it. Awesome job there, people. I expect them to carry it on and participate more actively in FSUG-tvm as well as other groups like Swathanthra Malayalam Computing . I took some photos of what they did.

Even though this post is about installfests ,  I would like to highlight one more thing. We managed to reach into CET. Contrary to what I expected, CET was the least enthusiastic student community when FSUG-tvm was started. They had stayed off even when the rest of the colleges took an active interest in FOSS. But now it seems that the sleeping giant is waking up.  When we went to give a talk there, we could feel it. I am hoping that they will gate crash the whole FOSS scene in Kerala and will take the lead when it comes to contributing code to other projects. They have that stuff in there. They just need some prodding :D .

Indeed , good things have been happening in Thiruvananthapuram  since 2009 began. I am happy to see a vibrant community in place of the ten member group that started off in 2007. Hats off to everyone.

English-Malayalam Dictionary beta release for Arch Linux

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

SMC released an English-Malayalam Dictionary for dict servers. I have made a package so any Arch – Malayalam (!!!)  users out there can use it. You can get the PKGBUILD from AUR.  If you have yaourt installed, you just have to run
yaourt -S dict-freedict-eng-mal
in a terminal.

I have also built a package that is available here. You can download and install it using
pacman -U dict-freedict-eng-mal-0.1-2-i686.pkg.tar.gz

The power of FOSS

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

The recent brouhaha over the government’s publication of a utility for Tax filing in Excel format, which goes clearly against the stated software policy ( link ) and community’s ( specifically, Anoop John’s ) response to it shows why FOSS should be encouraged.

When an issue like this occurs, if there is a healthy free software community in place, they will respond to it loudly and some actions speak louder than words. Kudos to Anoop for doing this. Anoop, your time was not wasted at all.