Archive for May 6th, 2008

Liferea

I get a lot of my news via rss feeds. For that purpose, I really like Liferea. Liferea is a consistently good feed reader and aggregator for Linux. I have used it since the 1.0 series and have always been pleased.

There is a stable version out that has been available for about a month, 1.4.15. Usually I can find a deb for new versions within a week or so from places like GetDeb, but this time around I can’t find one. The Hardy repos have 1.4.14, but it has a problem that causes the program to run away with my cpu, causing weird usage spikes and slowing down my system until I kill it. The Debian Sid repos have the new version, but it requires other dependency updates, and I’ve had my fill of mixing repos (I used to do that a lot in the Hoary Hedgehog - Ubuntu 5.04 days, mixing in Debian repos for the occasional program).

There is a bug report on Launchpad for the runaway CPU behavior. Anyone have any ideas on what we might be able to do to fix this, other than the obvious “download it myself and compile it,” which I may do anyway.

8 comments May 6th, 2008

SMF forum modifications

I like to create and administer websites. I’m forever starting new projects, giving projects away, and finding something to tinker with. My most recent (not quite ready for the public) is a Simple Machines Forum installation. While I prefer vBulletin, SMF has some wonderful qualities and is a good piece of software and I am enjoying working with it.

The first thing I did after installing the software was look at themes. I don’t like the default theme of any forum software that I have seen. Maybe the elegant beauty of the Ubuntu Forums has spoiled me. I went on a search. There are a lot of decent and free themes available for SMF, but none was exactly what I was looking for. I did find one I liked pretty well, though, so I downloaded and installed it and began customizing the theme to suit my needs.

After the theme was set up and working, I realized there are several functions that SMF does not have out of the gate, functions that I wanted. I began to search for MODS, bits of code to add in to give me the functions I wanted. I added mods for pretty urls, creating a sitemap for Google, customizing the permissions beyond what is allowed in the standard setup, adding custom fields to member profile pages, and allowing members to choose or upload an avatar at registration.

I also found some nice mods that required some hacking to fix…for example, there is a mod to add drop down boxes for font and font size to the text entry area for posts, but the boxes were mislabeled. Most of the fixes are easy if you are able to dig through and read the PHP or html, but it takes time.

What I would like to find is a mod for spam control (the Akismet mod for SMF does not work with my custom theme, even after hours of hacking at it and also appears to be unsupported/unmaintained).

Anyway, this is kind of a followup to the “why does the Ubuntu Forums website use vBulletin instead of a free forum software?” questions we receive from time to time. vBulletin is easier, has more features by default, more complete control over how it operates, better customization options that add in and operate correctly with less work, and is well worth what little is paid for the annual license. We get complete access to the source code and can (and do) modify it at will when we want to, but almost never do we find ourselves forced to do so to make something work.

4 comments May 6th, 2008


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