firefox

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I added a few bits and pieces to pimp my web experience, and i thought i’d document them here. First stuff that i added to Firefox, then two plugins i added to Wordpress.

Delicious integration

I’m a great fan of server based services. I like to have my data in the cloud so that i can reach them regardless of which computer i’m on, or whichever browser i’m using on that computer — or indeed, whichever operating system. My mail is at GMail and i read my feeds with Google Reader. I also have most of my bookmarks at Google Bookmarks (judging from this, you could also argue that i’m a Google fanboy — oh dear).

The other day, i finally registered to del.icio.us. I’m a bit undecided whether it is a good idea or not for me to use delicious bookmarks, since as i said, my bookmarks-in-the-cloud are on Google. The reason for having them on Google is that there was good browser integration for them using the (kinda scary) Google toolbar if you just remove all other whistles and bells except for the Goog bookmark star. The Google bookmarks will also show up in my goog web search results. But then i realized that an old friend of mine, the Flock browser, had updated and i decided to install it. But alas, while Flock has a bunch of nifty service integrations, Google bookmarks ain’t tere. So i reg’d to Delicious.

Truth is, i’m a bit disappointed. The plugin has a bunch of ways to browse your bookmarks, but the integration doesn’t just feel native. There’s a button to add the page to your local bookmarks and there’s one (well, three) to send your stuff to Delicious. Flock gets by with one button. Firefox could too. And i might be in for a short relationship with Delicious. We’ll have to see.

Sxipper

I stumbled across Sxip a few years ago when i saw Dick Hardt’s (yup) mind-shattering presentation slides on identity. Sxip, which despite the spelling is pronounced “skip”, have a vision involving OpenID, which i too think is way nifty, but never got around implementing. Well, now the sxip guys have released their Sxipper identity manager (effectively, a password manager) as a Firefox plugin. I’m still having it installed just on one box since i’m a bit uneasy about the idea of having a bunch of my passwords syncable on the web. But i’m considering it.

Read it later

This one’s a gem, and does exactly as prescribed. It’s (yet) a kind of a bookmarking service, but with the explicit intent that you put a page on the Read it later list and retrieve it when you have proper time. Read it later also syncs between browsers and computers using the magic of the cloud.

ClaimID

ClaimID isn’t a Firefox plugin, but an Open ID service “for the rest of us”. Basically it’s a melting pot for your OpenID identity and the stuff you claim to be yours.

A big question for me was which provider would be the one to host my online identity. In the end it became ClaimID, but i’m using my domain name so that my “vanity OpenID” actually is based on my name. Of course, i also have a few other OpenIDs from web services that boil it in to their package; technorati and yahoo!. And possibly a few more that i haven’t thought of yet :)

Share This

I installed the Share This plugin for my blog. Should i write anything of interest, you’re now able to send those immortal words to delicious, email, or the moon.  OK, not the moon, but just about anywhere else. Just in case, you know.

WP Mobile Edition

I would have thought that Wordpress in all its word-impressive-ness would have a mobile version of itself built in, but no. Then again, i never noticed it since i’m usually browsing stuff with Opera Mini, which munges any page into a mobile one… and if i’m reading feeds on my cell phone, the page is munged both with Opera mini and the Google mobile proxy.

Mobile Edition is a Wordpress plugin and iIt Should Just Work™ when you browse Navelfluff with a mobile client (or just claim to be one). Please inform me if there are any problems with the Mobile view!

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Download Day
Yay! Now i finally have the Firefox 3 downloading. The site has been bogged down since last night when the Download Day world record attempt campaign thingy started. You still have time until tonight at 18:12 UTC to join.

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How many times haven’t i come back to my computer and found that it has rebooted on me. At least KDE (and Firefox, and my pro-pimped IE) has session saving, but whatever was on the Windows desktop prior to the reboot … is no longer.

While Windows needs to reboot once in a while, the least it could do is do so on my terms. And my terms are “ask first”.

To prevent Windows from auto-rebooting after applying, apply this handy registry hack (but do remember to reboot your computer eventually, or your sysadmin will be very, very annoyed).

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I ran into two usability problems today. The other one midly funny, the other outrageous. But not in the funy way.

I more or less depend on Firefox’s ability to automatically restore my tabs and windows between surfing sessions. I have a bunch of fun stuff open in a multitude of windows — i keep work related things in IE and personal stuff in Firefox.

I was checking on some personal thing during work today, so i fired up Firefox, did my thing and pressed Alt-F4, the Universal Chord to Exit a Program.

It didn’t.

Pressing Alt-F4 in Firefox closes the current window. Pressing Alt-F4 in IE and Word does the same thing, which is wrong, at least in my mental model of things. Alt-F4 means Quit. Exit. Throw everything away (but save them first). Good bye. Pasta la vista and auf wiederschnitzel. See you later.

I had now lost twelve tabs in one of my three open windows and they were not coming back. I was pissed, to say the least. And since i don’t know exactly which day i had visited which tab last, they wouldn’t be neatly sorted in my surfing history either.

Only later did i realize that that i could get back my beloved tabs by killing the Firefox process and starting the Fox anew. Smart one, boy, but too slow. When the Fox came back, some magic autosave had already saved the two window configuration, so my third window tabs are now in bit heaven. Damn.

Internet Explorer also has the ability to restore my tabs when i restart that browser, and it sucks even worse than Firefox. When i am about to close an IE window with multiple tabs open, i get a dialog box with two checkboxes. The other one to restore my tabs which i of course want restored (it’s like Word asking me whether i want to save all the text i’ve been editing for the last six hours). The other one, visually nearly identical to the first one, will not save the tabs but also never ask me again about saving tabs, until unset in Internet Options -> Tab settings -> uncheck Warn me when closing multiple tabs (i.e. backwards from the previous dialogue’s Do not show me this dialog again).

IE Close tabs warning dialog box

So it’s all backward. The close multiple tabs warning box has two options, one “safe” and one “dangerous”. The “safe” one is unchecked, the “dangerous” one has backwards wording (a checked-in checkbox should always mean “yes”, so “Yes, show me this dialog box next time too”)

And the fun doesn’t stop there. If i wanted to emulate Firefoxe’s behaviour of restoring the tabs of a window the next time IE starts … i can’t. There is no setting to do that. If i check in the second checkbox, Do not show me this dialog again, the upper one is magically unchecked and made unselectable! Way to go, folks! You Just Can’t WinTM.

The other usability problem of today comes from Skype and is merely confusing. I was sending a copy of my work-in-progress thesis to my sister.

Sending my thesis

Abort. Stopit. Cancel. Turns out i was sending the wrong version so i press the Cancel. Stop it now.

There’s a dialog box that asks whether i really want to cancel the transfer and, much to my bemusement, the options OK and Cancel.

Cancel the what?

Yes, cancel. I want to cancel, i want to cancel now. But which cancel? Do i press the cancel button to cancel the transfer or to cancel the cancelling of cancelling the file transfer? A simple Yes or No would have been better…

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Firefox, reloaded

Firefox 2 is out in the wild and on my computer. It’s more an evolution than a revolution this time (so why the major version number?) but it’s a nice one. The browser has received a little facelift, but the most important addition in my humble opinion, is a small one. Firefox now natively will remember which tabs and windows you had open and re-open them when you restart the browser.

Just like Opera has done for, uh years. And just like Internet Explorer does now with IE7. And just like the Google browser sync has done for a while, though Google browser sync can sync between browsers and computers and so has a few tricks that the aforementioned tricksters can’t.
To enable the session saver on Firefox 2, go Tools -> Options, select the “Main” options from there from the Startup box, choose “When Firefox starts: Show my windows and tabs from last time”. With IE7, the corresponding manoeuvre is to Exit IE7 and when the Really exit?-confirmation dialogue box pops up, click the little button to reveal the more options, then check in that you want the tabs to be saved and, optionally, that you don’t want to be asked again (since i’ve already chosen these settings, i can’t cite the settings verbatim, but you’ll get the gist).

I was also made aware of the Download status bar extension, which shows download status information in the status bar instead of in a separate popup window. Aaah.

What more? Firefox 2 also has a built-in spellchecker (sorry, spell checker, or is it spelling checker?) so you don’t have to see so many of my errors in these entries. And it has the very nifty Undo Close tab command (which you needed the Tab mix plus extension for before).  Shortcut: Ctrl-Shift-T.  Very Mac-like.  Why they wouldn’t go for Ctrl-Z is beyond me.
What Firefox does not have, in comparison to IE7, is an overview of all open tabs. Press Ctrl-Q and you’ll see. It’s nifty.

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Whee! I have Firefox 1.5 installed! Celebrate celebrate! Except, i don’t really know what for. Sure it’s nice to have a fresh and updated browser but apart from the easy possibility to clear away your private bits from the cache (Simon Garfinkel will be happy) and a MacLike preferences interface, i don’t really know what’s improved. Maybe Firefox 1.0 was too darn good to start with :)

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Oho. Här var en grej jag inte visste om Firefox, och jag sitter här och undrar hur man ska förklara ett så snärtigt koncept som att "namnge sökningar". Det är bäst jag gör det med ett exempel. Gå till nån webbsida du frekventerar nästan lika ofta som Google, säj, Wikipedia, Verkkokauppa eller varför inte Navelfluff. Högerklicka söklådan och välj det där sista, svårformulerade menyvalet som på engeska blir "Add a keyword for this search". Ointuitivt nog, får du en add-a-bookmark-dialog, där du enligt bekant mönster får namnge bokmärket, samt ett keyword (nyckelord?). Tota i nån fin mnemon, typ "fluff" för Navelfluff eller "blog" för lämplig Technocrati-sök. Tryck OK. Et voila. Nu kan du med lämplig knappkombination (alt-D på Linux) nå adressraden, skriva blog navelfluff, eller fluff mnemon, och så hittar du hit! Själv lade jag in ett sök för Verkkokauppa så jag kan dregla efter vk nslu2 eller vk mediamvp alltemellanåt…

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How i use Linux

On a laptop from the second half of the last millennium, i run Linux. It is a Compaq Pressario 1700, it’s small enough, light enough, and the battery sucks. My system info reports it is running on 1.1GHz and ½GB of memory. Kudos to the Australian government for borrowing it to me while i’m here. While i have a desktop computer with a larger screen, the laptop is my computer of choise. Oh yes, and the desktop runs Windows.

It’s not that i have anything against Windows from a user’s point of view (except that it has biodegraded to the level that i manually need to start explorer.exe from the Task manager after i log in), but currently i use it mostly because i like the desk space; to have two screens for work instead of one. And the keyboard is better. But my Windows is b0rken. I can’t print or reach SMB shares (some virus, i’m sure). Spooler goes to 100% once in a while (but then again, i can’t print anyway so it doesn’t really matter). Even Firefox makes the procesor go go wild. Ungood. I use Windows these days to read RSS feeds and to skype.

I here present the moving parts of “my” laptop. People, meet aurora.

Linux distribution: Simply Mepis

I first read about Mepis maybe half a year ago when searching for interesting Live Linux distributions.

A “Live” Linux is one you can run straight from the CD, without installing anything on your hard disk, or even having one.

In what might seem to be a surprise ignorance, i don’t even know what version of Mepis i am running, but it was recent a few months ago. It runs KDE, version 3.3.2 (which i also had to check from the Control center). Fact is, my Linux runs so well, i don’t have to care which version it is. And this comes from a man who loves to tweak. I’ve spent nights tweaking the title bar on X-Windows, i speak from experience :) Installing Simply Mepis is so easy it almost hurts. Insert the Live CD, look around, be reasonably impressed, and click the Install icon. The installer formats your hard disk for Linux (I suppose the installer can re-partition your hard disk to retain Windows, but i couldn’t be bothered), copies the Linux stuff and helps you with the basic setup and all this happens in ten minutes. A reboot later, and you get to do some final installation steps, and a total of twenty minutes after hitting the Install button, you have a running Linux.

The ones who thought installing Linux is a complicated affair have not seen this.

I’ve installed a small bunch of other, more “proper” Linuxen, and while those installations haven’t been overly complicated, they have just been painstakingly long. Three CDs for Mandrake. Four for Red Hat. Eight for Debian. OK, one for Debian, and load the rest over the ‘Net. Sure, this is a desktop Linux, so it might be unfair to compare it to one of the above distributions, but it still is just amazing to see an installation to go this quickly and painlessly.

Internet applications: Mozilla, konqueror, KMail, Kopete

Mepis comes preloaded with Mozilla, so even though i love Firefox, i didn’t care to “update”. I use just one customization (again, oddly enough — my Firefoxen on other platforms have a bunch of them), and that’s mainly for eye candy. This all sounds very unlike me. Maybe an inner part of me just didn’t want to destroy everything again.

konqueror is the standard file explorer for KDE, but it also serves as a web browser and an sftp client (so i can easily transfer pictures and files to my blog). As a web browser it is quick and clean, as an sftp client it is very convenient and follows Nielsen’s Principle of Least Surprise (any application should always behave in a manner that causes the user the least surprise). It’s like good plumbing. It Just Works.

KMail is again the basic mail application for KDE. It doesn’t seem to sport a single whistle or bell and frankly, i wasn’t very impressed with KMail a year back or so, but here (and with the bandwidth we have), i just haven’t bothered installing Evolution or some other fancy mail client. And behold: KMail Just Works.

The two nicest features with KMail are integrated PGP support and “disconnected” or “cached” IMAP, which means that after dowloading, my mails are here, instantly. On-line or off-line. I had not understood to value this feature until i got connected here, with a connection that somtimes is slow and sometimes is off.

Kopete is an instant messager, which talks with Microsoft Messenger. And Yahoo!, ICQ, irc, and a bunch of other protocols. For me, the MS protocol is quite enough, even if i have a whole host of other IM accounts. I just don’t use them. Kopete also offers a no-surprises experience. It doesn’t support the fancier MS-messenger features like voice, video, file transfer, desktop sharing and online gaming, but frankly, in a situation like this, i can live without ‘em.

There is Skype for voice messaging (or Internet telephony, if you wish), but this i haven’t experimented with yet. I use Skype on my Windows box. And i am still missing RSSowl, which i am using on my Windows box.

Office applications

I use Open Office (dot org), version 1.1.something. I don’t do anything extraordinarily complicated from the user’s point of view, but technically speaking, editing Microsoft Office files with a non-Microsoft application is pretty impressive. Still, OOo provides text editing, spreadsheets and presentations (Word, Excel, Power point) well enough for me. The next OOo is supposed to include database features like MS Access, which should be fun.

For picture editing, i use Gimp, though not that much and just the simpler things like cropping, resizing and playing with colours and levels. For vector graphics, i use Inkscape, which is a very nifty SVG graphics editor. Give it another year, and you will have an Open source FreeHand or CorelDraw.

For writing blog articles like this, i use KWrite, basically notepad for KDE (with paren-matching, folding, auto-indenting and syntax highlighting for just about any language) and konqueror to sftp it to the server. Or i just copy-paste it to the ssh session on the other side.

One office application i am missing from my Windows box is FreeMind. This is a Java application that is supposed to work on Linux as well as Windows. I just have to install them.

Multimedia: amaroK, Xine, Kaffeine, Digikam, K3b

amaroK is a music player that strives to be a little different. This is to Linux what iTunes is for MacOS X or Windows. Except that this uses the Internet to look up music information (and album art) using samples of the music itself. It has excellent search/filtering features, an automagic facitily to rate the music’s popularity (that i haven’t quite grasped yet) and a fun info pane to show what other tracks the currently playing artist are available in your collection.

When i don’t use amaroK, i use JuK, which is another excellent music player, or good old xmms. Xmms i mainly use to play automagically downloaded radio shows from The Dividing Line, which aren’t officially part of my music collection until i get a proper vcut that can dissect the archives into songs and get them filed in their proper directories, based on ogginfo metadata. OK, enough geekspeek.

ine is a DVD player which is just as ugly as xmms, but it works. And after all, you’re not looking at the user interface but the movie. Xine is best used as a helper application for Kaffeine, which is a “meta-player”, meaning that in true Unix tradition, it uses other applications to do the actual work. I have also used mplayer, not to watch a DVD but rather to extract the sound from it. I have this Rush Cronicles DVD but none of my Rush music collection with me… :)

Digikam is a program to download pictures from the digital camera (duh) and organize them. It works almost as well as Zoombrowser for Windows, which came with my Ixus. Digikam downloads pictures into “albums”, whereas Zoombrowser puts the pictures into folders based on the current date. A question of taste, i guess, but i like Zoombrowser’s choise better. And there is always Flickr which combines these both and it’s online.

Finally, K3b is a truly nifty and well-executed program to burn CDs. And DVDs, if your hardware can. The features i’ve used are just audio CD and data CD, but K3b can also burn Live multimedia CDs using Movix. Haven’t tried that one just yet.

Anything else?

I do use a few other programmes above those listed here (Emacs, ssh, nmap, Tcl and of course the konsole for development and fun) and occasionally i play a game or two, but that’s the bulk of it anyway and it gets me through most of my waking hours. Oh, and i use Fuzzy clock to tell me approximately what time it is :)

I have constant problems updating the system, and this is probably because the network connection is not as reliable as back home. I guess it takes some more tweaking. Shortly before i had my R&R in Tokyo, i managed to break my system by manually editing the apt sources list to only one given directory where i had placed a package i wanted to install, and then pressed Yes, i want to remove the unused packages. Bad idea. I was without KDE for a while and felt utterly dumb. Thankfully, re-installing the KDE environment was as simple as selecting the KDE metapackage for installation (using aptitude) and pressing Go. And KDE came back, over the network (in Tokyo, not Dili, mind you), with all the updates, whistles and bells. Show me the Windows equivalent to that.

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Under det senaste året eller så, har jag mer och mer gått över till att använda Firefox som webbläddare (ha! där har ni ett nyord som heter duga!). Firefox är helt enkelt Bra. Den gör vad den bör, och det den inte gör kan man få den att göra med extensioner.

Nu har Firefox äntligen kommit mycket nära version 1.0, för idag publicerades nämligen Firefox 1.0 Preview Release (Greenlane). Beta, skulle det ha hetat tidigare, men nu är det ju fråga om en produkt som visat sej ytterst slagkraftig sedan version 0.6 eller så.

I samma veva körde mozillakören igång med spread-the-love-kampanjen Spread Firefox med mediastunten tio miljoner downloadar på tio dagar. Mätaren visade på dryga 6900 downloadar på fem timmar då jag sög ner min 1.0PR, så ännu har de en mil att gå.

Firefox har till version ett punkt noll fått ett mellanting till RSS-läsare och bookmarks, Live Bookmarks&TM;, vilka ger en lista på artiklar publicerade över RSS men visar fram sidan bakom artikeln. Ungefär. Vad jag fortfarande saknar är en teknologi där jag kan pusha mina bokmärken till en server nånstanns så att jag kan ha samma bokmärken hemma, på jobbet (rent hypotetiskt sett, alltså), på läppären, i skolan och, om jag så önskar, på bibliotekets almänna webb-termial. Nå, kanske sen nångång. Eller så får jag ta och skriva en extension själv :)

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