Linux and Open Source Blog

  • Home
  • WordPress Plugins
  • About
  • Contact

Installation Guide: Fedora 8 Desktop (a.k.a. The Perfect Desktop)

Posted on November 15, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in guides, how to, tips, tutorials .

Installation Guide: Fedora 8 Desktop (a.k.a. The Perfect Desktop)

This document describes how to set up a Fedora desktop – including
how to enable special mouse buttons, improve laptop support (depending
on your model), set up printers (especially HP) and the usage of Compiz
Fusion. The result is a fast, secure and extendable system that
provides all you need for daily work and entertainment.

Read more…

Leave a comment .

How To Upgrade Your Desktop From Fedora 7 To Fedora 8

Posted on November 15, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in guides, how to, tips, tutorials .

How To Upgrade Your Desktop From Fedora 7 To Fedora 8

This guide shows how you can upgrade your desktop from Fedora 7 to Fedora 8.

Read more…

Leave a comment .

Video Preview: Google Android Platform

Posted on November 14, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

If you remember all the recent ballyhoo about Google entering the wireless handset market with a possible gPhone, and their announcement last week that they weren’t going to release the product but instead they’ve created the Open Handset Alliance that ties numerous mobile device vendors to a common API (Applications Programming Interface). As expected Google released their Android Software Development Kit (SDK) yesterday. It provides all of the tools needed to start creating applications that run on the next generation mobile operating system.Android revolves around the Browser and Java, it even uses the same dev tools (in this case Eclipse is the out of the box supported IDE).

Sergey Brin and Steve Horowitz discuss the availability of the SDK, that it will be open source in the future, and demo applications on the Android platform.

Also check out 3 part overview series on the Android platform – Androidology:

“Android is a software stack for mobile devices including an operating system, middleware and key applications. It is being developed by the Open Handset Alliance, a group of more than 30 technology and mobile companies. Android was built from the ground-up to enable developers to create compelling mobile applications that take full advantage of all a handset has to offer. Developers can create applications for the platform using the Android SDK.”

The main repository for the Android API is located here :
http://code.google.com/android

The Android SDK can be downloaded here :
http://code.google.com/android/download.html

Leave a comment .

Howto: Configuring KMail with Gmail – IMAP and Disconnected IMAP

Posted on November 14, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in linux/unix/os distros, news .

As you all probably know by now, Gmail now supports IMAP access for all e-mail accounts for free. IMAP is great because it allows you to sync your emails between multiple computers, devices or e-mail clients.

There are two ways you can configure your KMail e-mail client for accessing Gmail account through IMAP – the IMAP as it is and Disconnected IMAP (dIMAP). The difference between the two mentioned IMAPs is that first one requires you to always have internet connection (be online), and a fast one when you have tonnes of e-mails, whenever you want to read/manage your account, as it fetches/syncs e-mails directly from the server (GMail server in this case). The second option, dIMAP, is used to achieve the same result that Thunderbird does, known as “cache IMAP” – having all your e-mails stored locally on your computer, allowing you access to offline reading and management, which on your next check mail command will sync it with your GMail account.

You can create both type of accounts and use them simultaneously for a time being and later decide which better suits your need. I personally prefer dIMAP.

Before we start, here is what you need to have for IMAP/dIMAP to work:

I. Enaabling IMAP in Gmail:

1. Login to your G-Mail account. In the upper right hand corner, click Settings.

settings-gmail.png

2. Navigate to the Forwarding and POP/IMAP tab.

3. Mark the circle for Enable IMAP in the last section and then Save Changes.

II. Configuring KMail IMAP:

1. Head to Settings -> Configure KMail -> Accounts -> Add:

2. Mark IMAP in dialog that appears.

3. Now here are the fields that you must change under the General Tab:

  • Login: Type in your full e-mail address, including gmail.com
  • Host: Type in imap.gmail.com
  • Port: 993

4. Under the Security tab of the same window, mark Use SSL for secure mail download under Encryption and Clear Text as method:

Now, next time you retrieve mail, you should find your new GMail IMAP account under the mail tree. Keep in mind that it may be a bit slow to get everything downloaded if you have a lot of mail.

III. Configuring KMail with dIMAP:

1. Head to Settings -> Configure KMail -> Accounts -> Add:

2. Mark Disconnected IMAP in dialog that appears.

3. Now here are the fields that you must change under the General Tab:

  • Login: Type in your full e-mail address, including gmail.com
  • Host: Type in imap.gmail.com
  • Port: 993

4. Under the Security tab of the same window, mark Use SSL for secure mail download under Encryption and Clear Text as method:

Now, next time you retrieve mail, you should find your new GMail dIMAP account under the mail tree. Keep in mind that it may be a bit slow to get everything downloaded if you have a lot of mail, but as with the first option, where you are using only IMAP feature of KMail, once all downloaded, later it will be faster, as all your mail is cached on yor local hard drive (make sure to check Tips section at the bottom).

IV. Setting up Outgoing Mail (SMTP):

This remains the same:

Outgoing Mail (SMTP) Server – requires TLS: smtp.gmail.com (use authentication)
Use Authentication: Yes
Use STARTTLS: Yes (some clients call this SSL)
Port: 465 or 587
Account Name: your Gmail username (including @gmail.com)
Email Address: your full Gmail email address (username@gmail.com)

There you go …. all set up and ready to go.

Tip to Notice with dIMAP: You can’t unsubscribe from the folders on the server. This implies that you have to subscribe to the ‘all mail’ folder. This really slows everything down if you use disconnected imap (which means that all messages are stored also locally). As in the web interface ‘all mail’ contains all your ever send or received mails (as long as you don’t delete them or report them as spam). This means that you have to download everything twice! Fortunately there is an option for some e-mail clients to differentiate between imap-folders subscripted server-side and imap-folders subscripted local. This makes it possible simply to ignore the ‘all mail’ folder in your e-mail client while it still exists on the server.

Here are settings that can be used with KMail 1.9.x (don’t use earlier versions if you want to unsubscribe ‘all mail’ locally!):

  1. Go to the settings for incoming accounts and check the option “show only locally subscribed folders”.
  2. Click with your right mouse button at your [GMail] or [Google Mail] folder and choose “local subscriptions…”. Uncheck here every folder you don’t want to see. Additionally to the ‘All Mail’ folder I have also unchecked the trash folder, since I use the local trash folder anyway. This makes sense as long as you don’t need your deleted mails on several locations.

Tips: If you really want to nuke the IMAP cache of all IMAP accounts then delete everything in ~/.kde/share/apps/kmail/imap/.

Tips: It is a good idea to use KWallet to store all your e-mail account(s) password(s) … and for the rest of the KDE apps as well.

3 Comments .

Enabling Compiz Fusion On An Ubuntu 7.10 Desktop (ATI Mobility Radeon 9200)

Posted on November 14, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in guides, how to, tips, tutorials .

Enabling Compiz Fusion On An Ubuntu 7.10 Desktop (ATI Mobility Radeon 9200)

This tutorial shows how you can enable Compiz Fusion
on an Ubuntu 7.10 (Gutsy Gibbon) desktop (the system must have a
3D-capable graphics card – I’m using an ATI Mobility Radeon 9200 here).
With Compiz Fusion you can use beautiful 3D effects like wobbly windows
or a desktop cube on your desktop.

Read more…

Leave a comment .

How To Install courier-imap, courier-authlib, And maildrop On Fedora, RedHat, CentOS

Posted on November 14, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in guides, how to, tips, tutorials .

How To Install courier-imap, courier-authlib, And maildrop On Fedora, RedHat, CentOS

For some reason there are no Courier packages (courier-imap, courier-authlib, maildrop)
available on RedHat-based distributions (RedHat, Fedora, CentOS), and
the only third-party repository that had such packages seems to have
closed (enlartenment.com). Therefore this
tutorial explains how you can create and install your own Courier rpm
packages from the sources, and I provide download links for my Courier
rpm packages that I compiled on Fedora 8 (i386) so that you can save
some time.

Read more…

Leave a comment .

Enabling Compiz Fusion On A Fedora 8 GNOME Desktop (ATI Mobility Radeon 9200)

Posted on November 14, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in guides, how to, tips, tutorials .

Enabling Compiz Fusion On A Fedora 8 GNOME Desktop (ATI Mobility Radeon 9200)

This tutorial shows how you can enable Compiz Fusion
on a Fedora 8 GNOME desktop (the system must have a 3D-capable graphics
card – I’m using an ATI Mobility Radeon 9200 here). With Compiz Fusion
you can use beautiful 3D effects like wobbly windows or a desktop cube
on your desktop.

Read more…

Leave a comment .

Developer crafts Linux support for Logitech Harmony remote controls

Posted on November 14, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in news .

Logitech’s Harmony series of programmable universal remote controls ship with Windows and Mac OS X configuration programs. That wasn’t enough for Phil Dibowitz, though — he set out to build his own Linux support.

Leave a comment .

Solving resource contention problems with fuser

Posted on November 14, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in news .

Have you ever tried to unmount your USB thumb drive only to get the message "device is busy"? Like me, you probably thought, "I know I closed that file manager window. What’s keeping it busy now?" fuser is a command that can answer that question for you, along with similar questions about what processes are using what files or sockets.

Leave a comment .

Makagiga: More tools than you can shake a stick at

Posted on November 14, 2007 by Linewbie.com Posted in news .

While it’s unclear what Maka stands for, the "giga" part of Makagiga most likely refers to the number of tools this application has on offer. It comes with a to-do manager, RSS reader, a basic photo viewer/editor, a text editor, miscellaneous widgets, and much more. Makagiga is written in Java, so it runs on any platform with Java Runtime Environment. Better yet, you can download a portable version of Makagiga that runs equally well on Linux and Windows, so it makes an ideal companion for use on the move.

Leave a comment .
« Previous Page
Next Page »

Recent Posts

  • Does an un-confirmed Bitcoin transaction expire?
  • Looting of the Fox: The Story of Sabotage at ShapeShift
  • Decentralization, Scalability, and Fault Tolerance of Bitcoin
  • Stripe will soon accept Bitcoin payments
  • Zynga announces Bitcoin acceptance in game
  • How to import very large sql dump via phpmyadmin
  • How to compare the content of two folders automatically
  • Top 5 reasons to start experimenting with Linux
  • The day our mind became open sourced
  • Mark Shuttleworth wants to turn canonical (ubuntu) into the next Apple Inc.

Categories

  • applications/software (26)
    • browsers (2)
    • development (1)
    • information management (1)
    • Mobility (1)
    • multimedia (5)
    • office suites (2)
    • security (6)
    • servers (6)
    • system (2)
  • audio/video/pics (3)
  • Bitcoin (3)
  • books & literature (1)
  • cms/portals (1)
  • desktop environments (7)
    • gnome (2)
    • kde (5)
  • events/shows (3)
    • interviews (1)
    • people (1)
    • surveys (1)
  • games & gaming (2)
  • general topics (4)
  • guides (112)
    • how to (105)
    • tips (87)
    • tutorials (86)
  • hardware (8)
    • desktop & laptop pc (5)
    • gadgets & mobiles (2)
  • howtoforge (47)
  • internet/web (4)
    • design & development (2)
  • linux and open source blog (49)
  • linux.com (76)
  • linux/unix/os distros (113)
    • debian/ubuntu based (10)
    • mac/osx (2)
    • other distros (3)
  • news (217)
  • open source (8)
    • business & foss (2)
  • other (26)
    • uncategorized (26)
  • Programming (3)
    • PHP (2)
  • quotes & thoughts (10)
  • random stuff (4)
    • cool stuff (3)
    • funny stuff (1)
  • review/preview/tests (7)
  • wordpress/blogging (3)

Archives

  • July 2016
  • April 2016
  • January 2015
  • April 2014
  • January 2014
  • November 2013
  • February 2013
  • November 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • August 2011
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2006

Recent Posts

  • Does an un-confirmed Bitcoin transaction expire?
  • Looting of the Fox: The Story of Sabotage at ShapeShift
  • Decentralization, Scalability, and Fault Tolerance of Bitcoin
  • Stripe will soon accept Bitcoin payments
  • Zynga announces Bitcoin acceptance in game
  • How to import very large sql dump via phpmyadmin
  • How to compare the content of two folders automatically
  • Top 5 reasons to start experimenting with Linux
  • The day our mind became open sourced
  • Mark Shuttleworth wants to turn canonical (ubuntu) into the next Apple Inc.

Categories

  • applications/software (26)
    • browsers (2)
    • development (1)
    • information management (1)
    • Mobility (1)
    • multimedia (5)
    • office suites (2)
    • security (6)
    • servers (6)
    • system (2)
  • audio/video/pics (3)
  • Bitcoin (3)
  • books & literature (1)
  • cms/portals (1)
  • desktop environments (7)
    • gnome (2)
    • kde (5)
  • events/shows (3)
    • interviews (1)
    • people (1)
    • surveys (1)
  • games & gaming (2)
  • general topics (4)
  • guides (112)
    • how to (105)
    • tips (87)
    • tutorials (86)
  • hardware (8)
    • desktop & laptop pc (5)
    • gadgets & mobiles (2)
  • howtoforge (47)
  • internet/web (4)
    • design & development (2)
  • linux and open source blog (49)
  • linux.com (76)
  • linux/unix/os distros (113)
    • debian/ubuntu based (10)
    • mac/osx (2)
    • other distros (3)
  • news (217)
  • open source (8)
    • business & foss (2)
  • other (26)
    • uncategorized (26)
  • Programming (3)
    • PHP (2)
  • quotes & thoughts (10)
  • random stuff (4)
    • cool stuff (3)
    • funny stuff (1)
  • review/preview/tests (7)
  • wordpress/blogging (3)

Archives

  • July 2016
  • April 2016
  • January 2015
  • April 2014
  • January 2014
  • November 2013
  • February 2013
  • November 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • August 2011
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2006
Privacy Policy

Est. 2002

linewbie.com serving the linux and open source community since April 09, 2002

CyberChimps WordPress Themes

© Linux and Open Source Blog