Posts for: #Our Updates

We moved from Wordpress to Hugo!

This site has now been changed, from Wordpress to Hugo!

Why?

  • Hugo is fast;
  • It’s easier to maintain;
  • Because, Go;
  • Easier to deploy (no DB to maintain), can easily go serverless;
  • Without a lot of bells and whistles, should be safer (and easier to maintain);
  • Did I mention Hugo is fast? ;)

Last post was ages ago, not necessarily will the move generate more posts, but it’ll surely save time without me having to make sure everything around WP was up to date.

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Ten open source projects I learned to love in 2008

As the last post of the year I wanted to sum up a short list of the best open source projects I met in 2008. Several from the list were created way before, but only got used by yours truly this year.

Without further delay:

  • Identi.ca which I’m now using way more often than Twitter;
  • Gwibber is pretty much the only way I’m using Twitter nowadays since I ditched Twihrl. This is a great project and best of all, I know it is under heavy development so more features should be added to it soon.
  • GnomeDo is installed in every Linux computer I get my hands on, makes working on a computer so much easier and faster.
  • Funambol is incredibly fascinating with their push-PIM technology, syncing Google Contacts really saved my week!
  • Ubiquity is my GnomeDo for Firefox, now indispensible for me. If I want anything translated, placed on a map, searched, … Ubiquity comes to the rescue.
  • Evolution actually suprised me quite a bit at how easy it was to use and at the same time incredibly resourceful for my emails, calendar, and contacts management.
  • Bugzilla, once I learned my way through it I can’t imagine working with a development team without it.
  • Gears has nicely bridged the online world with the offline world, with extreme simplicity for the end user.
  • VirtualBox made my life easier to test different Linux distros I wanted throughout the year and nicely allowed me to use Windows without having restart my computer.
  • Miro is what I use to watch several vidcasts, there is a plethora of channels subscribe to and the list is growing quite well.

With open source projects, you never know if there will be future releases but all of these projects seem to be quite healthy for now and hopefully next year will continue quite strong. Can’t wait to see what the open source world will bring in 2009!

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I love Linux! A true plug-and-play OS.

This post is a short note to express my appreciation to the entire community behind the Linux kernel (and Ubuntu).

I moved recently and have been working for 2 months on a laptop, waiting to get internet installed at home so I could turn on my desktop once again. Today I bought a Sitecom Wifi USB adapter, tried it on my desktop (still) running Ubuntu 8.04 and it didn’t work.

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We’re back!

Quite a long break, apologies, but since the last post I’ve changed countries (continents actually) and got a promotion at work. Even somedays that I wanted to post here, couldn’t because I didn’t have internet connection at home.

But, now we’re back. I’m not sure if as often as before but surely a couple times a week. Back to our wonderful world of open source. 🙂

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Opening Post!

OpenComputer.net is a project I’ll start on my spare time to help users gain familiarity with open source programs. I admit, not too long ago I wasn’t much aware of open source softwares and the benefit of using them.

With open source I’ve now been able to work productively between two operating systems, doing as much as I did before with freeware or proprietary projects. On a Windows machine, prefer open source since it is much safer from spyware and you can use many of the programs in Linux if you decide later to change (like I have). Added to that, you are using a software that is free for anyone to use.

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