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The conference was so much fun!

Posted: - Modified: | conference, free and open source, presentation

My laptop wouldn't talk to the projector, so I did my Knoppix talk
without slides. I forgot to give people my e-mail address. Whoops.
Still, I have a few contacts, and I guess that's a good start. Most
people had already tried Linux, so I went for the
evangelization-of-others angle instead, although I threw in a few
benefits for newbies.

I misplaced Vahid's index card, but I know he's a Ma. IT student at
USC. I should write to him about repartitioning.

Chatted with Lawrence and Justin over dinner. Turns out they're both
into Stephenson and other SF stuff. (Thanks to Baryon for introducing
me to those books!) I think I convinced Justin to try out Emacs.

It was tons of fun geeking out and swapping stories. Lawrence is a
treasure-trove of business experience and geek stories. =)

Tired from a long but absolutely fun day. Good night!

Major new contacts from the open source conference

Posted: - Modified: | free and open source, philippines

Official website for OSC-Ph 2005

| conference, free and open source, philippines

Official website for open source conference to be held in Cebu on March 14 and 15:

http://www.secure.net.ph/ossa/

Clueful cybercafe in the Philippines

Posted: - Modified: | free and open source, philippines

Clair wrote:

Sessinet in Dilimall =) It's on the second floor of Dilimall. It is
across Red Fox (the photo shop). It's the net cafe with extra study
tables so students can study/do their homework while waiting their
turn in the net cafe.

They currently use Firefox as the default browser but they have had
customers who want IE. They plan to use Open Office soon. And after
a while use Linux for their OS =) One of the computers in the shop is
currently dual boot Windows XP and Debian Sarge.

E-Mail from clair ching

More Emacs evangelization: flashcard

| emacs, free and open source, japanese

Aris and I are both struggling with far too much kanji. I used a
combination of kdrill to gain familiarity with kanji and
../emacs/flashcard.el to drill the meaning into my brain, as
flashcard.el requires me to get a question right 5 times in a row
before considering it solved. Aris searched the Internet for flashcard
programs on Windows and played around with things like Kanji Gold and
King Kanji, but couldn’t figure out how to import our wordlist into
them. Kanji Gold looked promising as it also used EDICT, but I
couldn’t figure out the magic number at the end of the dictionary
entry. With over 200 words in our word list, there was no way we were
going to enter those things one by one!

I told him to download Emacs and grab Jorgen Schaefer’s flashcard.el
from my ../emacs directory. I then grabbed the dictionary file that
Kanji Gold couldn’t recognized, replaced [ with : to get flashcard to
recognize it without problems, then set up a deck for him. I tweaked
the default faces a bit—they’re horrible on light-colored displays. I
copied the suggested feedback config and explained the pigeonhole
method to him. I tweaked the checking function so that it checked for
substrings and treated empty input as a definitely incorrect answer.
He wanted the answers displayed all the time, so I coded that in as
well.

The initial word list was too big, so I copied 9 words and put them
into a file, then imported them into a deck. Later, when he finishes
this deck, I’ll show him how to create another colon file and import it.
I’ll also ask him if he wants to tweak the number of compartments.

He’s asked me if I can get YM working in the text editor as well. I’m
currently tunneled through Richi’s host, but I think I can open a
local tunnel for him as well, if he feels like using ERC. ‘course,
normal YM just might work, and chances are there’s a YM-specific
client somewhere in Emacs.

I’ve made no efforts to hide Emacs’ complexity. I lean over and drop
into Lisp code in front of him because I want him to have a working
environment up and running as soon as possible. Who knows? Maybe he’ll
use Emacs even after the internship. =)

He looks like he’s having fun, and certainly appreciates the fact that
I can hack the editor to fit how he wants to do things. He wants to
match the readings, too, which means I’ll need to figure out how leim
works under Windows. I’ll do that on Monday.

Back on ratpoison

| free and open source

xwrits can take care of my typing breaks, so I’m off
GNOME and back on Ratpoison again.

debian-installer Tagalog translation complete!

Posted: - Modified: | free and open source

([[OpenSourceInThePhilippines#note4][OpenSourceInThePhilippines:4]]”[[oss]]”[[l10n]]”[[Localization]])

Eric Pareja and other volunteer translators have finished the
translating level 1 of the debian-installer into Tagalog. Please check
out the completed file at http http://news.upm.edu.ph/~xenos/tl.po .
Comments and improvements would be very much appreciated.
Three more levels to go!

A glossary of terms can also be found at
http://news.upm.edu.ph/~xenos/debian-tl/kartouche .

Eric Pareja also invites interested people to participate on the
Debian Tagalog mailing list at
http://banwa.upm.edu.ph/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/debian-tl

E-Mail from eric pareja