“Why I use Ubuntu”

Good read…

"Why I use Ubuntu" The question I have been asked many times before. Why use anything other than Windows? Why look for any alternative? Well if you're asking the questions, then you are at least aware of that there are alternatives to Windows! I will tell you the reasons. But first answer me this: You have two options. You could go every time to the shop, buy food, bring home and then eat, all by yourself or someone could do all that for you and also feed you with … Read More

via Mi Vida

GNU/Linux IDE : From Kate to Geany

I was using KATE ever since… but now I’m using Geany instead. Try nyo nalang kung bakit…

This is not a blog saying who’s the best editor in town… It might be EMACS… it might be VI… ok?

Geany is a small and lightweight Integrated Development Environment. It was developed to provide a small and fast IDE, which has only a few dependencies from other packages. Another goal was to be as independent as possible from a special Desktop Environment like KDE or GNOME – Geany only requires the GTK2 runtime libraries.
Some basic features of Geany:

  • Syntax highlighting
  • Code folding
  • Symbol name auto-completion
  • Construct completion/snippets
  • Auto-closing of XML and HTML tags
  • Call tips
  • Many supported filetypes including C, Java, PHP, HTML, Python, Perl, Pascal (full list)
  • Symbol lists
  • Code navigation
  • Build system to compile and execute your code
  • Simple project management
  • Plugin interface (see Plugins)

Geany is known to run under Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, MacOS X, AIX v5.3, Solaris Express and Windows. More generally, it should run on every platform, which is supported by the GTK libraries. Only the Windows port of Geany is missing some features.
The code is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public Licence.

Resources:

http://www.geany.org/

Asterisk 10 == Asterisk 1.^H^H10

Basta Libre at Open-Source pa ang Asterisk… kahit mag 1.99 pa sya 🙂

In case you missed it, the next version of Asterisk is now in beta, and at the same time, has undergone a minor version numbering scheme. As it is unlikely that Asterisk will ever have a 2.0 release since for years now, that has generally meant Asterisk would undergo a major underlying change in both how it was programmed and the user experience (and since it would be a major disruption to the Asterisk community), it was deemed unnecessary to uti … Read More

via Asterisk, and other worldly endeavours.