My Blogroll page and rssfetch 0.3.0

The reorganisation was successfull. I have now a seperate page for my Blogroll. Since this page required to have two lists of Feeds, german and english, I had to adapt my rssfetch again to use a configfile. Now the script requires p5-Config-Simple (which is really simple enough for my non-existing perl hacking-skills). 0.3 is the first version that does not require editing the source to add another feed.

de-bloat

New Blog Feature: “Most commented Entries” from Scriptygoddess. This is something I always wanted, because now the most popular entries are listed on the index page. Unfortunately the sidebar is now too bloated for my ADSL line. I am currently trying to move my Blogroll to a seperate page.

List-Id

Today the KDE Mailinglist Ids changed. I learned that there is an RFC about List-Ids, RFC2919, and that it discourages changes of the List-Id:

Although the list identifier MAY be changed by the mailing list administrator this is not desirable.

New world order

Since I have some time this week (no math this week, because Thursday is a public holiday), I catched up upgrading my FreeBSD boxes. tl, my machine at work, now runs 4.10-PRERELEASE and after beeble told me about mgadrm i now have dri/drm working. Riccardo, the Laptop, was upgraded to a recent CURRENT which improved ACPI a lot. The battery now finally seems to initialise correctly, and if i switch between battery and AC line, events get printed on the Console. I haven’t yet tested if cpu throtteling works. acpi_video also seems to work now.
I will probably not upgrade huckfinn, my Web/Mail/News/Backup-gatewayserver, because it is now has 97 days uptime, which does not happen often, because I usually update it once a month, or at least with every new 4.x release.
The biggest improvements have probably been made on amd64. According to the Mailinglist, Kernel modules now should work. But I was afraid to upgrade my main machine yet, since this probably will uncover new bugs. There haven’t been any reports neither positive nor negative from users yet.

spring-cleaning

Today was spring-cleaning day. I reorganized my “server room” and gained one square meter space for my hopefully soon arriving sparc64 machine. I will take a picture later.
As I had to move rfk’s DEC 3000 to the main room, I took the time to try booting the NetBSD/alpha ISO I burned a few weeks ago. Found out, that the Turbochannel-framebuffer is not supported. NetBSD immediately switched to serial console, which was a problem, because the alpha only has a DB25 serial port and i only have DB9 nullmodem cables. So I will have to search for an adapter at work tomorrow.

Wisdom tooth

My Wisdom tooth started moving today. Hopefully I don’t end up at the dentist emergency service over the weekend. My dentist wanted to remove it a year or two ago, but i declined and usually I know best about my teeth.
The Blogosphere today writes about MovableType 3.0 and its licensing. Looks like they are trying to dos sixapart with trackbacks. One of the more interesting articles was written by Timothy Appnel, who wrote the perl Module that powers my Blogroll. Luckily I am not affected by the License change, since I am running only one blog.

Pesthoernchen

Yesterday RMS spoke about software patents at wko.
To my surprise RMS talk was rhetorical better than the one from the member of the european parliament before. RMS satisfied his geek-image by unpacking his Laptop on stage and started hacking.
After that a small demonstration marched to the european patent office. The picture below is the only picture i found so far, where you can guess where I am. I am behind the Pesthoernchen, if you have good imagination, you can see the Beastie on my Shirt.

demoswpatent.jpg
© lynx of FFS

You can find more information on software patents on the FFII website.
More demo fotos from skunk, gst

First NetBSD package committed

Today I added my first package to pkgsrc-wip. scdp was also my first FreeBSD port in 2001. Only minutes later xtraeme moved my package to the real pkgsrc, so I am now a NetBSD package maintainer. If they are always that quick, we (FreeBSD) really have to improve our turnaround times.
My next package will be a bit more complicate, so I am not sure when I will get it ready.