While everyone is making good use of WordPress 2.5.x, development continues apace for future releases of the popular blogging platform and there are some goodies coming through on the functionality front. Google Gears are being brought into play for speeding up the administration dashboard; this started out being more prominent before being made more unobtrusive. The other big change has been an overhaul of the theme gallery and, if the theme is compatible, an overview facility has been added too. So WordPress is being tweaked and improved in the background to make 2.6 an interesting release.
Topics Discussed
Adobe Blog Blogging Canon Command Line CSS Debian Fedora Firefox GNOME Google hard drive Hardware HTML Installation Internet Explorer JavaScript Linux Microsoft MySQL openSUSE Opera Operating System Perl Photoshop Photoshop Elements PHP SAS Software Ubuntu UNIX upgrade VirtualBox Virtualisation Virtual Machine Vista VMware Web Browsers Windows Windows XP WordPress WordPress.com WordPress plugins XHTML XP
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Archive for May, 2008
A reasonable requirement of an IDE
I have been having a play with NetBeans
On a similar note, I recently dispatched Quanta Plus from my system for sluggish start-ups and will not return to it because other alternatives such as Bluefish and Eclipse PDT fit my needs much better. I like my editors to be slick and responsive and Quanta has been around long enough for any slowness to be knocked out of it. However, I get the feeling that the extras have added bloat while I expect any additional functionality that I never use not to get in my way. It is for the latter reason that I was always able to get on with Dreamweaver and even run it on Ubuntu using the WINE library. If I really wanted a stripped out yet functional editor, Gedit would do most of what I need – it colour codes syntax for a variety of languages for a start - but it’s always handy to have a file system explorer window incorporated and I value any syntax checking and auto-completion as well. So, it looks as if Eclipse and Bluefish could be serving my needs for a while to come alongside so use Dreamweaver for online editing of website files.
Tags: Bluefish, Dreamweaver, Eclipse, Editors, IDE, Linux, NetBeans, PHP, Quanta Plus, Ubuntu, WINE
VirtualBox OSE and 64 bit Guest Operating Systems
I have gone and downloaded the next to four gigabytes of the 64 bit variant of Fedora 9 using Bittorrent and so thought that it might be a good idea to set the thing up in a VirtualBox virtual machine. However, that stratagem got scuppered by VirtualBox’s not supporting 64 bit operating systems. I do have VMware Workstation and, since that supports what I was doing, I resolved to set up Fedora there. After my plan’s getting shelved, my trying out VirtualBox is a matter that remains outstanding…
Tags: 64-bit, Fedora, Linux, VirtualBox, Virtualisation, VMware, VMware Workstation
VMware Workstation in full screen mode hobbles my keyboard
I have recently encountered an odd situation following my recent upgrade to Ubuntu 8.04: when I use VMware Workstation to run Windows XP in full screen mode, the keyboard no longer acts as it should. For instance, Caps Lock and Num Lock keys stop working as does the Shift key. Logging out and back in again is the least that’s needed to set things right but there has to be a better way to fix the problem. I am not saying that it’s limited to the scenario where I saw it happen but it’s still very odd behaviour. If you have a solution, please let me know. Of course, I’ll keep you posted if I find one. In the meantime, I’ll be avoiding full screen mode with VMware as much as I can.
Update 1:
I have done a spot of digging on this one since and gained the impression that there might be a conflict between VMware and the version of X.org Server that comes with Ubuntu. A restorative trick that I have seen suggested is to issue the following command in a terminal, replacing "gb" with your own locale, but I have yet to see if it works:
setxkbmap -rules xorg -layout "gb"
In any case, it looks as if it is not a permanent fix but just a way to keep working without resorting to system restarts, logging off and back on, etc.
Update 2:
I can now verify that the comand quoted above works for me. Of course, it would better to find a permanent fix and even better for the behaviour never to occur at all but any fix is better than none whatsoever.
Tags: Hardware, hardware support, Keyboard, Linux, Ubuntu, Virtualisation, VMware, VMware Workstation, Windows, Workstation, Workstation 6, XP
A NetBeans 6.1 Review
I have been thinking of sharing my thoughts on using IDE’s such as NetBeans, Eclipse and Komodo Edit from a web developer’s point of view for a while but it has still to come. In the meantime, Java Boutique have shared their thoughts on NetBeans 6.1 and I think that they are well worth a look. In fact, I downloaded a copy for my own use off the back of this. MySQL capabilities look especially intriguing.
Tags: Eclipse, IDE, Komodo Edit, MySQL, NetBeans