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Geoff

9 months ago

in Twessenger: Status Update… on Kunal.Kundaje.net
Do you know if the API removal is an intentional change or just one they've put in place temporarily during the beta process. From their point of view if they turn off plugins in the beta they should get less reports of issues which are not under their control.

9 months ago

in And there was bound to be another… on Kunal.Kundaje.net
Thanks, that was hilarious.

10 months ago

in Tina Fey plays Sarah Palin on SNL… on Kunal.Kundaje.net
Awww, hulu no workee outside US :(

11 months ago

in Introducing ActivePresenter: The presenter library you already know. on James on Software
This looks much nicer than the presenter plugin I slapped together, thanks.

11 months ago

in Introducing ActivePresenter: The presenter library you already know. on James on Software
This looks much nicer than the presenter plugin I slapped together, thanks.

1 year ago

in WebKit wins the Acid3 race… on Kunal.Kundaje.net
Now hopefully this revision of WebKit will make it into Safari and iPhone in not too much time. The downside is that even with Opera passing the "big two" Windows browsers still don't pass. Though the main parts that Acid3 tests that I might actually use is the CSS3 stuff which Firefox already supports to a fair degree. Now if only IE could catch up, and be as public about their development as the WebKit team.

1 year ago

in How software updates should work (Part 2)… on Kunal.Kundaje.net
Isn't Ubuntu able to do this because it builds and packages all the apps into their own universal package repository or something?

Would be nice to have third-party software updates provided through the OS update system, myself and Jan-Willem were talking about this a while ago wrt Apple Software Update (ASU) and how cool it would be if third-party developers could register an app with ASU either on installation or directly with Apple. Then the ASU program would also check for updates to your installed third-party applications.

This would also be really good for some development houses if it was registered directly with the OS vendor as then they might be able to akamize it or something thereby taking the bandwidth loading off the developer.

PS shouldn't firefox be updating itself instead of cheating and letting something else do it

*runs*

1 year ago

in How software updates should work (Part 1)… on Kunal.Kundaje.net
From the perspective of "just a user" sparkle is "pretty much like firefox update" in that it automatically lets you know when an update is available, downloads the update, extracts and installs the update and relaunches the application. I've never had a broken app after a Sparkle update either.

It would be nice if it could do binary patching so you only got what you need but the other features like handling 10k client updates are probably less required as it isn't employed by applications with that kind of size though again that would be nice.

1 year ago

in How software updates should work (Part 1)… on Kunal.Kundaje.net

On OS X there is a popular framework called Sparkle (http://sparkle.andymatuschak.org/) which a lot of apps include these days. Means a lot of applications have a really nice update system.


Its so nice to use, you setup an AppCast RSS Feed, then when the application checks for updates it looks to the AppCast feed and if there is an update it automatically downloads the file, extracts it, verifies it, optionally shows you a changelog or release notes, and gives you the option to install and relaunch or just install.


Clicking "Install & Relaunch" copies the new version to the same location as the current .app file and then relaunches it.


All in all pretty much the same as the Firefox one but any Cocoa application can make use of it.

2 years ago

in Notepad++ and the Ruby Blue style… on Kunal.Kundaje.net
I spend damn near every minute of everyday in TextMate staring at ruby code using Vibrant Ink

2 years ago

in Notepad++ and the Ruby Blue style… on Kunal.Kundaje.net
Have you tried 'e' the Windows TextMate clone?

Favourite editor is TextMate, with BitstreamVera (DejaVu basically) and the Vibrant Ink scheme. Used to be a big fan of ProFont but BitstreamVera is just nicer.

e: http://www.e-texteditor.com/
Vibrant Ink: http://encytemedia.com/blog/articles/2006/01/03...

2 years ago

in Quick notes about Twessenger… on Kunal.Kundaje.net
Cool stuff. I keep meaning to give Twessenger a try but I don't use win often enough, or twitter for that matter :P

2 years ago

in The Misadventures of my Gall Bladder on A Needle in a Haystack
We've had the uber-short bond villain cohort who chopped peoples heads off cause they were too tall. Surely a right-thigh stabbity villain is just what they need.

Course being female, forty and fertile you could be a hobbily bond girl.

2 years ago

in The Misadventures of my Gall Bladder on A Needle in a Haystack
I had an ultra sound once, the jelly is damn cold.

*moments silence*

Surely you could cross off more than just Fat from that list of things which give you gall bladder problems :P

2 years ago

in Thoughts on Safari 3 for Windows… on Kunal.Kundaje.net
You could pass on your thoughts to the webkit team at irc://irc.freenode.org/#webkit

2 years ago

in Thoughts on Joost… on Kunal.Kundaje.net
I'd absolutely love it for Comedy Central to go worldwide through Joost. Very cool system though. The beeb (aka BBC) has been pretty good at picking up on new technologies, maybe they will join with Joost, or produce programming for it. Get more of the new Doctor Who out to the world :D David Tennant rocks :P

2 years ago

in A Look Back at Uni on A Needle in a Haystack
The venus fly traps died. I miss Uni, I want to go back and do it all again. I hate this life of working.

2 years ago

in Ruby on Rails - avoiding browser timeout during long tasks on Jonesieblog
Browsing around for Timeout stuff with Rails I stumbled across this.

I have been developing a project with some fairly long running processes and found BackgrounDRb to be the best solution. I'm having to do SNMP scanning which can take a while ;)

I obviously don't know your system or requirements as well as you but BackgrounDRb might well be something to look at. But that would probably require storing the reports either on the filesystem or database then when complete sending the browser to a URL which dumps the reports from either FS or DB. Or you could store the reports in an array in the BackgrounDRb worker and then just request the array or part of it somehow.

Not sure how likely it will be that I'll pop back, but feel free to email me if you want.

Have to say, using Ajax is a pretty nifty solution to this type of problem.

2 years ago

in The Lost Posts of 2006 Part 1 on A Needle in a Haystack
ahhh, ok

sooooon though

2 years ago

in The Lost Posts of 2006 Part 1 on A Needle in a Haystack
give us more!!! such as how you've rectified your lack or internet

2 years ago

in Quotes of the Week on A Needle in a Haystack
Yay, a heroic return to blogging life, even if it is sporadic.
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