On the back of a bus I saw an advert for the Apple Mac talking about its
ability to use face recognition when processing photos.
Is there anything like this in Linux?
It looks like Google had it planned for Picasa back in 2006:
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2006/08/better-way-to-organize-photos.html
.. but as far as I know it's not there yet?
--
Mark Rogers // More Solutions Ltd (Peterborough Office) // 0845 45 89 555
Registered in England (0456 0902) at 13 Clarke Rd, Milton Keynes, MK1 1LG
Dear All,
I usually operate my Gentoo netbook with one of two USB keyboards
plugged in - a Microsoft Comfort Curve keyboard or an Apple Pro
Keyboard. Usually, the computer responds to either of these, and its
built-in keyboard, as if they were PC-style keyboards, i.e. shift-2
gives ", shift-' gives @. I quite like it this way. Occasionally
(usually while the Apple keyboard is plugged in, although I've seen it
once while the Microsoft keyboard was plugged in), however, the
computer switches …
[View More]to responding to both the USB keyboard and its
built-in keyboard as if they were Apple-style keyboards, i.e. shift-2
is @, shift-' is ". There's nothing wrong with this in itself, but
unfortunately it coincides with the computer becoming very to respond
to keypresses, and frequently mistaking a single keypress for a large
number of multiple presses of the same key. It also coincides with
the second light from the left (of six) in xkbvleds coming on, which
suggests that the behaviour is switchable. Any ideas how to switch
it, please?
--
Thanks,
Dan
[View Less]
Doh! Well trust T-Mobile, aye?.. it's pretty iritating, so there's no flash
support in cupcake either?.. hmm I know (what I assume is version 2) the g2
has flash 10 support so it must be coming..
Just going to have either play the waiting game, or flash it with
JesusFreke's copy, then begs the question do you trust a guy who calls
himself jesusfreke haha
On 17 Aug 2009, 1:43 PM, "samwise" <samwise(a)bagshot-row.org> wrote:
Hi, Alex.
I have a Vodafone HTC Magic Android phone. …
[View More]Fortunately, for me, it
came with Cupcake (Android OS 1.5) by default, so I haven't had any of
the problems you describe. Although I'm pretty sure I don't have
Flash support - that's supposed to be on the way, but it's not in
Cupcake out of the box. October was the last date, I remember reading
...
I haven't hacked it much - I've installed some apps that weren't in
the Android market but, so far, I haven't seen any real need to root
it, tbh. Android is pretty flexible anyway, and does most things out
of the box or with apps from the market place so I haven't felt a need
to put Debian (or Ubuntu) on it.
Peter.
2009/8/17 Alex Scotton <alex.scotton(a)gmail.com>:
> Hi guys, > > I'm a relative new comer to the world of linux, I use Ubuntu
when I > can, however ha...
> _______________________________________________
> main(a)lists.alug.org.uk
> http://www.alug.org.uk/
> http://lists.alug.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/main
> Unsubscribe? See message headers or the web site above!
>
_______________________________________________
main(a)lists.alug.org.uk
http://www.alug.org.uk/http://lists.alug.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/main
Unsubscribe? See message headers or the web site above!
[View Less]
Hi
Anyone want a pcmcia-11 wireless card
dont need it any more it worked ok with Ubuntu 6.10
it is a Edimax turbo EW-7108Pcg
No charge, With Windows and linux driver disks
Barry
What are you guys using for media players?
Since getting an iPod, I've become fond of how iTunes manages music
collections, and I haven't been able to find a good Linux alternative.
Exaile comes close, but I'm still missing the following
iTunes had a lovely way of storing compilation albums separately, so
your main "list" of artists wasn't cluttered up by those on compilation
CDs. Exaile/Amarok seem to list everything by artist > album, and when
you have several compilations, this …
[View More]list becomes difficult to manage
Audio books, iTunes has a nice way of storing those "out of the way",
can't see anything in amarok to do this..
There's some other features I can't find good implementations of, but
these are my two pet-hates at the moment. I haven't heard of any iTunes
Linux versions on the horizon, and I don't think running under WINE
would be ideal
Any suggestions?
James Elsey
[View Less]
*(Sorry if this reposted; I keep getting mails about postponed posting
because of "suspicious headers")*
Putting all your eggs in one basket, aye? I want to do this too, currently
running a media server, wow server, ftp server on my windows box (hides head
in shame ha ha) and with 4 other pcs in the house all from time to time
using bittorrent (especially me hehe).. would love to set up a buntu box as
a server providing dns, possibly a few domain services (i.e. possibly
storing user info etc.. …
[View More]people in the house log onto the server not their
local account...) and in so doing provide an intranet possible of handling
the bittorrent web ui, enabling peeps to upload their torrent file to the
server and then leaving that to download the file and place it on a public
drive when it's finished downloading.. would love to have a service that
detects network load and adjusts bittorrent's bandwith allocation as
appropriate...
Would also love an app to sense new computers on the network and ask my
permission for it's access etc..
Let me know how your venture goes chris
Alex Scotton
[View Less]
http://maemo.nokia.com/
I've been tempted to trade in my old Nokia phone for a Nokia N97 but
have been put off by the reviews - and the £500 price tag. I've thought
about an Android phone and an iPhone but today I read about the Nokia
N900. It has a Linux OS but having downloaded an SDK for the N97 and
installed it on my Windows machine, am I likely to have problems trying
write something for a Linux OS on a phone?
I have to confess that my programming experience is limited to BBC Basic
…
[View More]on a model B back in the 80's and now that I'm about to retire I thought
I'd buy myself a new phone and do something useful with it.
So 2 questions really. One is about the thoughts of the people here
around Maemo. It's been used before on other devices but is the fact
that it's based on Linux that important and is it any good?
Second question concerns programming. Has anybody done any programming
for a Linux phone, other than tweaking? I wouldn't be pestering you for
advice so don't be afraid to answer ;-)
Just in case you're wondering what sort of thing I'd be programming
(more accurately trying to program), it would be a beer database. Just
the sort of thing to show off at one of the monthly meets in a pub :-)
[View Less]
Well I have my WD MyBook World Edition II now and "it just works"! :-)
To expand a little, I plugged in the power, connected the ethernet
lead and turned on. Using 'arp' I discovered its IP address and then
was able immediately to connect to its web configuration pages.
I have enabled ssh and nfs and am now able to log in to the WD box's
command line (seems a pretty standard Linux system) and can mount nfs
shares from the box. What more could one want? (Well, a little, see
below.... )
…
[View More]Now the question, I use dnsmasq on my desktop system (well that's
where it is at present) to provide local DNS on our little network.
It's set up so that DHCP clients can be accessed with just their host
name or with the domain suffixes. E.g. I can access 'maxine' or
'maxine.isbd.net', or C475IP or C475IP.isbd.net.
However the WD box registers with dnsmasq as 'garage.local' rather
than just 'garage' (which is the host name I have given it). Can
anyone suggest why this might be and/or how I can fix it?
--
Chris Green
[View Less]
With respect to small low powered linux servers - I did
come across this beastie courtesy of LXer Linux News:
"TonidoPlug is a tiny, low power, low cost home server based on 1.2 GHz Sheeva processor that allows you to access your applications, files, photos, music and media from anywhere (Powered by Tonido).
TonidoPlug comes pre-installed with powerful Tonido Applications - Photos, Jukebox, Webshare, Workspace, Thots, Explorer, Torrent and Search - all running on top of embedded Ubuntu Jaunty …
[View More]Linux OS. Additionally, TonidoPlug can be extended by installing new applications from Tonido App store."
It has a 512 Mb flash drive, Ethernet port and a USB port for additional storage for a $100.
Website says currently shipping only to US :-( but shipping to other countries will open shortly
(whatever that means).
http://www.tonidoplug.com/tonido_plug.htmlhttp://www.linuxpromagazine.com/Online/Blogs/Productivity-Sauce-Dmitri-s-op…
Hope that this is helpful,
Mark
[View Less]
If it were me I would certainly take the price into consideration, as it all depends on what you are backing up.
If you are running a small business from home, or have documents that you can't lose then this would be a viable option.
If its just personal files/photos/media, would it not be best to buy a spindle of CDs and come up with some rotation system for backup?
It would have its benefits.
1. cheaper
2. less can go wrong
3. probably less prone to weathering (does the garage get …
[View More]extremely hot during the summer?
4. less enticing to any thieves
5. doesn't cost anything to run!
Maybe I'm too naïve, but I'd favour CD/DVD media as backup over a server!
J
-----Original Message-----
From: main-bounces(a)lists.alug.org.uk [mailto:main-bounces@lists.alug.org.uk] On Behalf Of Chris G
Sent: 24 August 2009 13:39
To: main(a)lists.alug.org.uk
Subject: Re: [ALUG] A low powered backup solution probably/possibly.
On Mon, Aug 24, 2009 at 10:36:36AM +0100, Chris G wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 24, 2009 at 10:34:17AM +0100, Chris G wrote:
> > Synaptic, Qnap and IcyBox all offer NAS servers which handle NFS as
>
> Oops, that's Synology not Synaptic.
>
A little further research on Google (especially the reviews and comparisons
found at www.smallnetbuilder.com) has led me to the Western Digital
My Book World Edition II. Price for a 2Tb version of this is about
£215, it has ssh access built in, no hacking needed, power consumption
is 16 watts when active, 5 watts when idle. The performance is not
quite as good as the top of the range Synology and Qnap ones but it's
*way* cheaper.
£215 for a low powered Linux box with 2Tb of storage seems excellent
value to me.
So I'm off to buy one and will report back when I've played with it a
little (if anyone is interested).
--
Chris Green
_______________________________________________
main(a)lists.alug.org.uk
http://www.alug.org.uk/http://lists.alug.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/main
Unsubscribe? See message headers or the web site above!
__________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature database 4362 (20090824) __________
The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.
http://www.eset.com
__________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature database 4362 (20090824) __________
The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.
http://www.eset.com
[View Less]