Feb 15
This post is rather unique in that it is being written using SeaMonkey and within Puppy Linux. PupEEE to be exact, a customised version of Puppy 3 for the ASUS EEE.

The one problem with most distro’s on the EEE is getting the Wifi working, pupEEE made it dead easy. Opened the Network Wizard and it automaically recognised my ath0 as being wireless, next step was to configure it with my WEP key, test it and done! Hence why I can write this post!

I’ve tested it with MP3 and XVID files and both worked flawlessly in the XINE player that is installed by default.
As ever with Puppy, it is blazingly fast, according to the memory status on the taskbar I have 243mb free from my initial 256mb RAM. In his case, pupEEE is initially loaded via USB stick but pretty much everything is in memory ready to rock so clicking any app makes it load almost instantly.
I’m very impressed with it and seriously thinking of ditching my eeeXubuntu install for this pupEEE.

UPDATE: eeeXubuntu now gone in favour of the stupidly fast pupEEE…
Feb 15
<rant>
A while ago I bought an Epson Stylus C44UX nice and cheap, £30.
Few days ago it was flashing its little red and green lights at me. I hadn’t used it for a while so I changed both the black and colour cartridges.
Still flashing red and green lights.
After some Google research it turns out that most Epson printers now have a counter built in to them. The idea being that when you’ve done x amount of print outs or used x amount of cartridges the printer effectively disables its self and signals you to take it to an Epson certified engineer to have it serviced! It signals you by flashing red and green lights. Well that’s just fan-tastic…
Turns out you can open up the printer, clean out the waste tray and sponges then run an application to try and reset the counter. That is of course assuming you have several long screw drivers and six hands to unclip the damn thing…
Screw that. The damn thing only cost me £30 and I can get another printer for that, where as I’m quite sure it’d cost me more than £30 to have the thing ’serviced’ by an Epson rep.
Whatever next: disabling hard drives because of too many write cycles?
</rant>
Feb 07
After posting my ‘KDE4 is dying’ sob story on the Kubuntu mailing list, I was advised to rename my hidden .kde4 directory then try logging in with KDE4. But just after reading the above solution I saw that KDE 4.0.1 would be released soon.
Sure enough, KDE 4.0.1 was released yesterday (Wed, 6th Feb) and I installed the updates, renamed my .kde4 folder and gave it a whirl…

Whoopee!
Ok, so I’ve only been using it for a few hours but already it seems much faster and polished. There’s now a separate resize icon and the border for the plasma widgets is now pale rather than dark, although I personally preferred the darker faded box but, what the hell, I can live with it. I’m not sure if it’s just me having not seen it for about a week but the K button appears smaller (to me anyway). The little ‘add a widget icon thingy’ at the top right of the screen is more faded now and the menu items swing in diagonally. I’m sure it may be handy later on but said icon thingy seems pretty useless at the moment I can add widgets by right clicking on the desktop.
One thing I noticed right away that they’ve fixed is the widget border thing, apart from now being pale, it doesn’t linger after you’ve moved off the icon, like it used to.
And Dolphin seems a bit faster too but, again, that might be just me…
Anyway, welcome back old friend… I did kinda miss you…
Feb 03
*sob*
I’m have no luck at all this week end.
First was my KDE4 debacle and now an argument with Google Calendar!
I read a nice tutorial which was about getting Google Calendar working in Thunderbird.
‘That’d be handy’, says I.
Downloads the Lightning add-on for Thunderbird, which gives it a built in calendar, then downloaded the Provider add-on which allows Lightning to read and write to a Google calendar.
Installed Lightning first then Provider. Fine. Now to configure Provider. Gives it the Private XML URL and a calendar name and so on, click ‘Next’…
Nothing.
That’s odd.
*scratches head*
After a bit of detective work it seems that there’s a conflict between Lightning and Thunderbird due to Thunderbird having installed from the Gutsy repo’s and Lightning having come from the Mozilla site. Ah crap!
Time for Plan B: get Lightning from the Gutsy repo too!
Ah HA! See? I’m a smart cookie me…
Not so. The Lightning in the repo’s is v0.5. The Provider add-on needs v0.7 (the one on the Mozilla site).
Crap, crap and thrice CRAP.
I give up. No more Linux h4×0r1ng this weekend, screw it… 
Feb 02
There’s a definite lack of pizazz in my desktop this morning. Why? Because it’s KDE3.5.8
I decided to run Adept to see if there were any new updates to KDE4 (since there’s no funky little reminder thing in the taskbar) and there were a couple of bits so I did my bit and updated everything.
KDE4 reported a crash (I see my old wallpaper but no icons or taskbar) so I did a quick Ctrl+Alt+Backspace to log out and log in again. Next thing I know there’s about six crash report windows on the screen.
Uh oh. Not good.
Close all them and… I see the old KDE3.5 wallpaper (the blue one with what looks like a faded Atari logo on it at a 45 degree angle) and nothing else.
I wait.
Nothing.
Try again. Still nothing.
So, until there’s another KDE4 update released, I’m in KDE3.5 again.
Boooooo!! 
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