Open Source @ Consolidated Braincells Inc.
This is a weblog I'm keeping about my work on Debian and any other useful Debian related info I come across. It is not meant to compete with other news sources like Debian Weekly News or Debian Planet. Mostly it is just a way for me to classify and remember all the random bits of information that I have floating around me. I thought maybe by using a blog it could be of some use to others too. Btw. "I" refers to Jaldhar H. Vyas, Debian developer for over 8 years. If you want to know more about me, my home page is here.
The name? Debain is a very common misspelling of Debian and la salle de bains means bathroom in French.
If you have a comment to make on something you read here, feel free to write to me at jaldhar@debian.org.
You can get an rss 0.91 feed of the blog here.
I've spent the last few days in Spain, representing Debian-IN at a meeting on Internationalization sponsored by the government of the province of Extremadura.
It has been very productive and informative. Debian should be proud of the attention we pay to internationalization (for the Indian languages at least we are ahead of any other distro and even Microsoft IMO.) If we keep up the effort we can truly deserve to be called the Universal OS.
Well it's in NEW anyway. It should arrive in unstable in a few days once the ftpmasters process it. For those who don't know SeaMonkey is the latest incarnation of the erstwhile Mozilla Internet suite. Apart from a web browser, it includes an email and Usenet reader, an HTML editor, and IRC client.
It's a big complex piece of software and I would like to get a packaging team going to look after it. My current work is available in SVN. There are a huge number of lintian errors most of which are probably bogus but still need to to be looked at. I'm sure there are other improvements that could be made too. If you would like to help, please contact me
In light of some of the FUD that's going around I should mention that this package was made possible by support from the good people of Linspire
Update: Ow the package was rejected. Apparently you're supposed to fix the huge list of packaging bugs before it gets distributed to millions of people. Back to the drawing board.
Update 2: SeaMonkey SeaMonkey SeaMonkey
Not mine, I got it via Boing-Boing but I had to link to it in light of the stupid new air travel regulations.
My lord Somerset was attending the theatre when a ruffian did assail him with an orange. Whereupon my lord remark'd, "'Twas not a Seville orange."
-- attributed to Algernon Sidney.
Duffman thrusts in the direction of the problem. Oh yeah!
On Debian Policy
When your package contains GDFL docs
or when it break other programs
it stores passwords in mode 666
has incorrect dependencies
that's RC.
When you think that rpath is justified
just because libtool inserted it there
and don't use -fPIC,
libtool is a fool
and you are retarded.
When you have to use Minix
and there are conf files in /usr/local/etc,
Lintian will say,
you had it coming.
John Goerzen professes not to understand the apparent inconsistencies in the Presidents positions on life issues. While I can't speak for him, I am as near to a "typical Republican" as you are likely to get around these parts and although I'm busy with other things I feel compelled to explain how they are in fact consistent.
The foundation is a belief in the innate dignity and right to life of Man simply by virtue of being a member of the human species. Therefore the default position in any case should be to protect against the unnecessary taking of life whenever there is a choice in the matter. Therefore abortion is wrong precisely it is as its defenders say a "choice." Stem cell research is also wrong on these grounds but as a clump of cells is not clearly a human being you can agree to disagree on that. Those who do think it is wrong should not be forced to participate in murder which is why the government is against Federal funding of embryonic stem cell research not against the practice altogether. (Also remember there are other sources of stem cells.)
The innate dignity of a person can be made forfeit by an act of will on the part of that person. Thus a murderer has no right to life, by his personal actions he has surrendered it. If fetuses started leaping out of vaginas and attacking people, they would forfeit their right to life too but they don't.
What John conspicuously fails to mention concerning the 30,000 Iraq civilian deaths is how they died and who killed them. In the vast majority of the cases it is at the hands of those who putatively were on their own side. So how is Bush or America morally culpable? In the few cases where Americans have deliberately caused civilian deaths, they have been punished for it. But where is the outrage when terrorists do not wear uniforms and deliberately hide amongst civilians and in religious sites? (May I note that such behavior is against the Geneva convention and UN resolutions though I'm aware such things only apply to Israel.) It is the Baath party and Al-Qaeda have right to life issues concerning the war in Iraq not the US.
You can disagree with any of these positions--even from a conservative or Republican point of view but my point is they are consistent. And I daresay being easier to understand, they resonate more strongly with the electorate than the muddled messages of the Democrats.
Hall and Oates in '08!
My son Nilu gave me the best possible Fathers Day present, he started calling me "Papa." Previously he called me either "Mummy" or "Bubble".
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