/ #blog 

Teletext Porn

I already rank nr 3 on the google search for ascii porn, so I figured I could top this of with a link to a view on teletext found via marc’s voice: Teletext Porn. Oh – and those that have been waiting for some update on new HTML designs - bear with me. A project has been hitting the fan - and I’m facing the task of redoing some 15'000 links manually in an application, if I can’t find the cure to do it programatically… ...

Jens-Christian Fischer
/ #blog 

How-To: Install Lotus Domino Designer on Debian

I have bought and installed Crossover Office to run IE 6 and Lotus Notes on Linux. There is an installation option for Lotus Notes by default, but it failed me when I tried to install the Domino Designer and Adminstration clients. This is what I did to get it to work and to have a shared Windows / Linux Installation of Notes: I assume that you have a working Notes installation under Windows. Also you must be able to mount the filesystem that this installaiton resides on Install the Lotus Notes client only in CrossOver Office. Run it, and be sure that it comes up. You can try to configure the client but we will kill that installation in a minute. Exit Lotus Notes Drop to a shell and go to ...

Jens-Christian Fischer
/ #blog 

Compiling Debian on Inspiron 8200

I installed Woody (the “stale” release) on my Inspiron 8200 and followed both the link mentioned below and Stephan Wehrheims Instructions and got a running system fairly soon. After compiling the kernel (and flipping options rand^h^h^h^h with care and deliberation) I was left with a kernel that booted but didn’t have network connection. The ping command claimed: sendto: Network not reachable. Digging around on Google convinced me that my kernel compilation experiments had gone astray. After some consultation with working .config files, I ended up with this file: ...

Jens-Christian Fischer
/ #blog 

Where's the user-friendly text system?

My wife just called me - all up in rage. She just lost two hours of work. We are using Groove extensivly to distribute documents between ourselves and the different locations (at home, in the office, on the various laptops) we are using. After she had worked on a document in Word that she had opened from Groove she saved it. Groove detects the changes and asks you if you want to save the change to Groove as well. Now by mistake, she said “No” - and presto - everything was lost. Of course it’s easy to blame everything on the user. “You didn’t read the message when you clicked on No, so it’s all your fault”. But is it really that easy? Jef Raskin stipulates in his book The Humane Interface that computers should treat the users input as sacred - never putting it in jeopardy. That means, that a computer can undelete deletions at all times. To restore things, even - or maybe - in spite of - the user making the wrong decision about which button to press. We are humans, we make mistakes. So the question: Which programs are humane? Which text editor has unlimited undo/redo - even across sessions? What environement already has these features? Do you have any suggestions? ...

Jens-Christian Fischer