Today I was happy to read that Noblogs was migrated to WordPress!
Now finally the API to use Blogilo should be working correctly and I can finally use WordPress for my own blog!
Hopefully this will motvate me to actually blog more.
Today I was happy to read that Noblogs was migrated to WordPress!
Now finally the API to use Blogilo should be working correctly and I can finally use WordPress for my own blog!
Hopefully this will motvate me to actually blog more.
Now using a blogging client
Seems like blogging turned out to be too much work for a lazy guy like me. There is much I like tell the world my opinion on, but it seems I find logging in to the blog provider’s website and setting up a new post is too much of a hurdle for me.
Now is my second try with the blogging client Blogilo for KDE. Contrary to the trend of doing everything in the browser, personally I still prefer client software whenever I have the choice for three reasons:
That’s why I love desktop apps and try to support them. And for things like blogs which I want to publish on the web in the end, I love APIs. I find it really cool to be able to access my blog form a client software. This solves problem 1 and 3 and partly solves problem 2 (I still don’t know what happens behind the API, but that isn’t really a problem for blogging since I’m writing a blog precisely for anyone to read it and don’t know what others will do with what I write anyway).
So, long story short, yay for client applications and yay for APIs!
Hope I will be more motivated to post more often now.
I have one, I’ve paid 500€ for it (used, with hardware specs any owner of a current normal laptop would only laugh about) – and I love it. Almost like owners of any Apple product love their overpriced gadgets.
But there’s a difference: Apple fans love their stuff for the design as much as for the functionality. My tablet, on the other hand, doesn’t look cool. In fact, it looks like any other toshiba laptop on the market – until you flip the screen over!
For those of you – probably most my non-geek readers – who haven’t gotten their hands or even eyes on one of them yet, let me explain what a tablet PC is first.
A tablet PC – as the name suggests – is a combination of a pc – a latop to be exact – and a graphics tablet. That means that it has a "touch" screen. Although it doesn’t really react to touch at all. Unlike touchscreens on devices like PDAs or the iPhone which you can touch with whatever you like, the tablet PC’s screen only works with the associated touch pen. The "click" actually isn’t registered by the screen but by the pen’s tip itself, and the screen registers the pen’s position relative to it even while it’s stile above the screen. This allows for hovering, which is more important for GUIs like X.org or Windows than at least I had realized before using a tablet pc. You need it for highlighting menu entries before they’re clicked or expanding sub-menus, for tooltips and much more. And the pen can be equipped with extra mouse buttons. Mine has the right mouse button on it’s side whereas the middle button is placed at the back end. The latter allows for some a quite intuitive eraser-function, just like your good ol’ pencil. All those things allow using your standard operating system with touch input quite comfortably – something that can’t be done with a regular touch screen that recognizes only one thing – touch. The only thing that won’t work are keyboard-mouse-combinations such as "ctr-click" or "shift-drag". Depending on the application you’re using this might bother you a lot or not at all.
Most models also provide some buttons on the edge of the screen with functions like scrolling. Quite handy if you don’t want to always have your pen in hand while you’re reading large documents.
Most tablet PCs also offer the ability to rotate the screen to read documents in portrait orientation.
There are two different kinds of tablet pcs: Slates and Convertibles. Slates have no built-in keyboard at all, which means all text entry has to be done either via on-screen-keyboard or handwriting recognition.Their advantage is their often very small size and low weight. Convertibles are a combination of a full-fledged laptop and a tablet. You can flip and rotate the screen to either use the built-in keyboard or cover it with the touchscreen to use it like a slate. Those are mostly heavier and thicker but you don’t have to do entirely without your keyboard. I have a convertible, mainly because getting logon or password-entry for sudo on linux done without a keyboard is rather complicated. Writing longer texts also still works much better with a keyboard then with a pen.
Only when using the touchscreen does a tablet PC show the beauty that lies in it’s functionality. It’s functionality which is the closest one can currently get to the dream I had for years: Fully functional electronic paper. It’s not quite there yet, though.
But it also offers numerous advantages over paper:
And of course it offers many advantages over normal laptop computers:
If you want maximum computing power for your money, go get a normal laptop – or, for that matter, a desktop. Getting a state-of-the-art tablet will cost you at least 2000€ (a little less in the US, but still a lot compared to other computers). But if mobility is really what you seek, a tablet pc just does the job so much better than a laptop. I mean, come on! You sure can get used to touchpads or "IBM nipples", but you can’t tell me they can replace your good old mouse. A touchpen can. And you don’t need your lap as a base anymore, your forearm will do just fine. That makes you a lot more productive on public transportation or if you don’t have a seat reservation on a train.
This concludes my plea for the tablet PC. Now, people, buy more of those things so they may finally get cheaper (it can’t just be the touchscreen, that technology has been on the market for years now). An, to all of you Linux-fans out there: Let’s build a tablet edition of one of the big distros which has wacom enabled by default and offers presets for all the major models’ extra buttons and a rotate-script out of the box! It would make tablet owner’s lives so much easier!
Cheers,
Thomas
Dear reader,
I never thought I’d do this someday. Always thought blogging was for intellectual exhibitionists and people who don’t get enough attention. Well, I hope I belong to neither group.
So why am I doing this? Well, for some reason during the last few weeks I was thinking about some subjects and felt like sharing my opinion about them with anyone who cares. And that’s what blogs are for, right?
And what can you expect to read about here in the future? The answer is: Anything I want to share my opinion about. So you might ask "What kinds of things does he have an opinion about?" Answer: All things I am interested in. "Ahaa", you might reply, "and what precisely is that?" Okay, I admit, this simulated dialog is getting stupid. So I’ll just tell you what you might find here in the future. Things like
Hardly any of that will contain inside or thoroughly researched knowledge. It’s mostly my own personal experience and opinion. Feel free – or, let’s say invited – to discuss about all I write.
Why am I – being German – writing in English? There are two reasons:
I might write about some more personal topics in German since only my German friends would care about them anyway, but I’m not sure about that yet.
So I hope you’ll find something interesting to read about here every now and then.
Enjoy!
Thomas
(P.S.: Test…)
Gestern rief ich eine frühere Kommilitonin zurück, die versuchte hatte, mich zu erreichen. Ich ahnte bereits etwas Negatives, hatte aber eher befürchtet, es gäbe Probleme in ihrer Schwangerschaft (ihre erste Schwangerschaft war bereits problematisch verlaufen). Als sie dann sagte, sie habe mir etwas Unerfreuliches mitzuteilen, fühlte ich mich bestätigt. Aber ihre Nachricht hatte nichts mit ihr selbst zu tun, war aber dafür umso schlimmer: Eine andere frühere Kommilitonin, mit der wir aufgrund des gemeinsamen Schwerpunktes auf User Experience während des Studiums öfter zu tun hatten, Steffi, ist an einer Lungen-Embolie aufgrund einer Thrombose gestorben.
Niemand "verdient" meiner Ansicht nach den Tod. Dennoch gibt es Menschen, die ihn noch weniger verdienen als andere. Und zu ersteren gehörte Steffi. Sie war immer nett, hilfsbereit, vertrauenswürdig, zuverlässig. Ich habe nicht mitbekommen, dass sie sich je etwas hätte zu Schulden kommen lassen. Man kann ihr nicht einmal Unvernunft vorhalten, denn sie ist wegen Schmerzen im Bein nach einem Flug nach Australien sogar extra zum Arzt gegangen. Der schickte sie weiter zu einem Facharzt. Und dieser meinte, alles sei in Ordnung, sie könne wieder fliegen. Und der darauf folgende Flug war ihr letzter.
Das Leben ist nicht fair, und der Tod erst recht nicht. Steffi hätte ihr Leben zum Guten genutzt, da bin ich sicher. Aber sie darf nicht weiterleben, im Gegensatz zu vielen Menschen, die ihr Leben zum Schlechten nutzen.
Dieses schreckliche Ereignis hat mir wieder einmal brutal vor Augen geführt, wie sehr wir uns damit belügen, das Leben für selbstverständlich zu halten. Wir leben unser Leben in der Annahme, 80 Jahre alt zu werden. Wir verschieben Dinge auf unbestimmte Zeit in die Zukunft, weil wir für sicher halten, dass es diese Zukunft geben wird. Und dabei ignorieren wir, dass das Leben morgen zu Ende sein kann. Wir verschwenden unsere Zeit mit unwichtigem Mist, weil wir denken, sie wäre im Überfluss vorhanden. Steffi hat nicht einmal 30 Jahre gelebt. Und sie hatte sicher genauso wie die meisten anderen gedacht, sie würde alt.
Und das Schlimme daran ist: Obwohl ich mir immer wieder versuche, mir meine eigene Sterblichkeit bewusst zu machen, schaffe ich es trotzdem nicht, mein Leben bewusst zu leben. Ich verbringe den Größten Teil meiner Zeit trotzdem mit Dingen, die nur dem Geldverdienen, dem Spaß oder gesellschaftlichen Zwängen dienen. Ich fülle mein Leben nicht mit Inhalt.
Mein Plan ist, meine Ersparnisse am Ende meines Lebens (welches ich irgendwann in mehr als 50 Jahren sehe) zum Großteil an einen guten Zweck zu spenden, um nach dem Tod noch etwas Positives zu bewirken. Und was ist, wenn ich nicht die Zeit habe, solche Ersparnisse anzuhäufen? Ich will Organspender werden, um mit meinem Tod einem anderen Menschen Leben zu schenken. Noch habe ich mich aber nicht aufraffen können, einen Organspendeausweis zu beantragen. Was ist, wenn der Tod schneller kommt als der Organspendeausweis?
Das einzige, was mir die Bewusstheit der eigenen Sterblichkeit bringt, ist ein Prinzip, das ich weitgehend durchhalte: Ich setze alles daran, mit Menschen, die mir wichtig sind, nicht im Streit auseinander zu gehen. Und falls das doch passiert, versuche ich, diesen Menschen so bald es geht zu erreichen und den Streit beizulegen. Denn ich denke mir dann immer: Was ist, wenn dieser Mensch plötzlich stirbt, ohne dass ich die Chance hatte, mich mit ihm zu vertragen? Ich könnte es mir nie verzeihen.
Deshalb hoffe ich, dass Steffi allen Menschen, die ihr wichtig waren, in rein positiver Erinnerung bleibt. Und ich hoffe, dass ihr Tod zumindest andere Menschen dankbarer dafür gemacht hat, dass sie selbst noch leben.
In Trauer,
Thomas