There she goes again…scanning and assigning SAN attached storage as my first devices causing my mounting to “hork” and my partitions to be wrongly assigned….Will it ever end?
Posts and information from the SUSE world.
There she goes again…scanning and assigning SAN attached storage as my first devices causing my mounting to “hork” and my partitions to be wrongly assigned….Will it ever end?
gscan2pdf is a simple but a very efficient GUI to scan documents of multiple pages and convert them into PDFs or DjVu format. You can also import images from image files into PDF files and vice versa. gscan2pdf only takes two clicks are required to scan several pages and then save all or a selection as a PDF file, including metadata if required.
Let me know if you have any problems with the new entries on these machines. If you e.g. still need to calibrate the input devices manually tell me the BottomX/Y and TopX/Y values and I update SaX2.
You see it every day, you normally don’t think about it, but it is nevertheless important: Fonts.
Obviously we need fonts to communicate with each other, especially in digital media. A whole industry create thousends of fonts for different task: for books, magazines, headlines, comics, funerals, weddings, and much, much more.
However, these fonts are not free and as such cost money. Unfortunately, in the past there was a lack of good looking, professional fonts. The situation nowadays are getter better and better as we have very promising open source fonts: DejaVu, Gentium, LinuxLibertine, to name a few. Without these, our world of characters would be very small and we would have a limited choice only. It’s a pity that all these beautiful fonts don’t have a condensed monospace version. This would be very useful, for example you can have more characters on a line and you don’t have to break them into pieces.
As I haven’t found a suitable font for me, I thought why not create one? Of course, I could have used one of the above, apply some transformations and be happy (or not). But this is not really creative, so I thought why not design something totally new? So I have chosen this project for Hackweek.
Let’s make it clear: It is really hard and nobody really know the time and sweat that goes into a font. To create a really good looking font it is really a challenge—and obviously not possible during Hackweek. But I think, to create something new and gain some experience, this can be a lot of fun.
So here is the rough procedure that I used for this font:
As I learn more and more of FontForge, these tasks become (hopefully) easier. The font is similar to Dejavu Mono, but not identical. The result of all these steps is shown in this graphic (be warned, obscure text ahead):

As you can see I have drawn the majuscules only. I will try to implement the minuscles and other characters too, at the latest of the next Hackweek.
Funny, but jimmac is working also on a font too. Good luck to you!
I will publish the font when I think it is in a somehow useful state. It will be released under an open source license (probably Open Font License or GPL, I don’t know yet).
Feedback welcome! ![]()


and fix symbol size calculation.

Ah, no protocol backends get installed by default. Is that
really what I want? Well, let’s install some backends then.

Hmm, searching for empathy does not reveal any protocol
backends. Neither does zypper info.
Wow, I feel terribly clueless.
Are there any backends in the package repository at all or
would I need to download them separately? Naah.
Kindly ask Ubuntu
for a clue
and file n#420711.
This week is Novell’s annual Hack Week, where Novell developers and the openSUSE community have free reign to work on whatever open source projects and ideas they are most interested in. Participants can submit their project ideas at ideas.opensuse.org. Prizes are awarded for Best Overall Project, Best Cross-Pollination Team, and First Penguin (project that went out on a limb to try something difficult and risky? and probably failed. Named in honor of the first penguin to jump into the water when there may be predators swimming below.)
On the openSUSE news blog, Novell openSUSE Community Manager Joe ?Zonker? Brockmeier gives a good description of the week’s activities, how to get involved at the Utah Open Source Conference, and some of the exciting projects from previous Hack Weeks.
In an age where the Unix shell is more relevant every
passing minute, we need to have proper command line editing
tools everywhere.
For a project of mine, this weekend I put together a
command-line editing class for .NET shell applications. The
Mono.Terminal.LineEdit class can be used by shell applications
to get readline-like capabilities without depending on any
external C libraries.
To use it, just do:
using Mono.Terminal;
LineEditor le = new LineEditor ("MyApp");
while ((s = le.Edit ("prompt> ", "")) != null)
Console.WriteLine ("You typed: " + s);
It supports the regular cursor editing, Emacs-like editing
commands, history, incremental search in the history as well
as history loading and saving.
The code is self-contained, and can be easily reused
outside of my project. To use it, you just need to include
the getline.cs
file in your project. This is built on top of System.Console,
so it does not have external library dependencies and will
work on both Mono and .NET (finally bringing joy to people
using command-line applications that use Console.ReadLine).
It is licensed under the MIT X11 license and the Apache 2.0
license so there are no annoying licensing issues and can be
mixed with anything out there.
So, one of my friends and co-workers Eric, just came to my office and asked if I had a couple AA batteries that he could borrow. I searched and looked and finally found two in a Maglite flashlight I had in my backpack. I held the flashlight up and said “here’s a couple” and he said “Uh, you don’t have 4? OK, I’ll keep looking”.
I could have sworn that “a couple” meant two. I think he’s just focused elsewhere - his last day here is tomorrow.
Since a few hours it’s possible to install Shiretoko Alpha 1+ from the openSUSE Buildservice.
Warning:
These packages are just provided for testing and are nothing for the faint heart!
They are designed to be installed in parallel to other Firefox installations but it will use the same profile as your other versions if you don’t take care.
You should create an alternative profile by executing firefox31 -no-remote -p and remember using the correct one later using the parameter -P. (And create a backup of ~/.mozilla/firefox!).
I’m planning to do occasional updates but at least will try to follow the upstream milestones.
KMess is a MSN Messenger client for KDE Users in Linux. It enables Linux users to chat with friends online who are using MSN Messenger in Windows or Mac OS or Linux. The strength of KMess is it?s integration with the KDE desktop environment, focus on MSN Messenger specific features and an easy-to-use interface.
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