CD burning for Muine
I fixed up fer‘s muine-burn plugin recently. It now works with the latest muine, and recent libnautilus-burn. Surprisingly little was needed to get it into working condition again. AFAIK, the plugin wasn’t checked into version control anywhere, so I committed the changes into my baz archive. I also put up a tarball here.
Utah
I was in Utah last week for work. It was good to see people, put some faces with names, etc. Working from home has benefits, but it’s nice to do things in person sometimes. I was in the SuperLab, testing ZENworks (of course). It was pretty cool, and I’m quite sure I’ve never seen more computers in a single place before.
Haven’t done any hacking on Muine lately. Partially, because it won’t even run for me currently (some kind of lame gtk-sharp exception). One thing I was thinking of doing, is resurrecting fer’s CD burning plugin. I don’t usually take the iPod with me in the car on short trips, and I’ve wanted an easy way to burn stuff on a CD to use there.
Enjoyed reading GUADEC-goers blogs. Maybe one of these days I’ll be able to go. If there’s another Boston summit, I should definitely try to make it to that.
Nokia/Maemo
Like everyone else, I am totally stoked about the new Nokia 770. The hardware looks sweet, but the fact that it is coupled with a sane open development platform just makes it ridiculously attractive. Especially considering it’s based on a platform we all know relatively well :)
The screenshots look really great. One thing I wonder about, though, is how well the included apps deal with an unreliable network. I mean, if I stroll out of range from my wifi, will all kinds of errors and stuff show up, or will it deal gracefully? The development site mentions some things about getting events like “low battery” over dbus. Hopefully “network is down” is the same kind of thing, and apps can just go into offline mode or whatever.
It would be really fabulous to get mono running on this thing. I wonder if something like a “compact edition” of it would be needed.
more muine/iPod
Martin Palma has gone to the work of packaging muine-ipod and ipod-sharp for Ubuntu hoary. You can get them here.
Work progresses. I’ve still been getting used to bazaar, which I’m using for version control. Overall I really like it. I want to start learning some of the more advanced features, though.
The latest muine-ipod snapshot has support for optionally syncing only the current playlist to the iPod. I’ve been told this works pretty well for shuffle users. I still think we need some way to individually mark songs in the library for syncing (similar to what iTunes does I think?). iPod Mini users would especially benefit from this, since they probably can’t sync their entire library — and composing a playlist would just be a bit ridiculous (6gb of music in a playlist!).
Also, I sent a patch to muine-list this week that added a plugin for inotify support. It simply monitors the directories you’ve added to muine, and if something gets added/removed/changed it takes the appropriate action on the song library. I’ve wanted this kind of behavior in a music player for years, and now that inotify has come along it’s finally possible. I’ve been using rml’s inotify kernel for SuSE 9.3, and it’s working quite well. You can get the patch + plugin here.
iPod syncing for Muine
A while ago I started working on a plugin for Muine that syncs your library with an iPod. I worked on it a bit more lately and it seems to be coming along, so I’m trying to get people to test it. You need this and this, to start.
Right now there is no HAL integration, as I’m having an incredibly difficult time figuring out the correct way to integrate with that stuff. What it will do, however, is mount/umount your iPod assuming it is setup correctly in fstab (correct device, ‘user’ option, etc). It defaults to /media/ipod for the mount point, but that is configurable through a gconf key (/apps/muine/ipod/mount_path).
I’ve been using it for the last few days with no serious problems. I do suggest you backup your iTunesDB file before giving it a shot, though, as corrupting that is the worst thing that can happen. You can find it at /media/ipod/iPod_Control/iTunes/iTunesDB. If you encounter problems, feel free to email me.
Update: You will need muine 0.8.3 or greater to use this plugin, as previous versions lack the necessary interface.
Another Update: I’ve checked ipod-sharp and muine-ipod into arch at http://www.snorp.net/bazaar.
rcd for fedora core 3
A volunteer has packaged rcd/rug for fc3, and I have put the rpms here. Enjoy.
ipod-sharp
I just committed ipod-sharp to CVS, a library for manipulating iTunesDBs. It’s written entirely in C#. Currently you can use it to add/remove songs, and manipulate any existing playlists. There is also a cheesy little tool that lists the songs/playlists in a given iTunesDB.
I mostly wrote it to add iPod syncing to Muine. I have a patch which does this, but it needs a lot of work still. I haven’t yet totally worked out how the HAL integration will happen, for instance. For starters, I patched gnome-volume-manager to mount the appropriate partition when it sees an iPod and invoke ‘muine —ipod-sync
You can get the code from the ‘ipod-sharp’ module in gnome CVS, or here. Hopefully I’ll get the Muine patch in a useable state soon.
New Zealand, Part 4/4

From the beatiful sights of Milford Sound we went to the Circus Town, err Queenstown. It's packed with rollercoaster attractions like speedboats, bungee, tandem skydiving etc. But since I'm not much of an adrenalin person, we did the jetboat thing and continued north west, to the glaciers. We chose to climb the Fox glacier simply because it was cheaper, but visited Franz Josef the next day too.

From there we continued north to Punakaiki. I managed to get a few shots of a kiwi-like bird which turned out to be the weka. Even when the weather is playing games with you, New Zealand is really marvelous for giving you a number of fantastic scenic views. That place is simply heaven for nature photographers.

New Zealand, Part 3/4
The farm we stayed at was really close to the nice Purakaunui falls. Met some photographers there and they obviously didn't think much of my "why carry a tripod when I can just stick the cam on a railing, eh?". The method works really well for the lazy bastards like myself though. Especially when I saw a poor fella carry around a big camera bag on the Tongariro crossing track. Yuck.

We visited a few places on the way, like the McLeans falls which I found more appealing than Purakanui which were listed as the most photographed one on the south island. Them tourist guides. The wind almost blew us away at the fossil forest at Curior Bay. It's not much exciting on the photos though. We stayed overnight in Te Anau, preparing for what became one of the highlights of our trip - Milford Sound.

Everybody was telling us we should expect a rain, since it almost always rains at Milford Sound. Well I guess we were lucky, since we had a lovely day from the early morning. The trip there alone was miraculous and we had to make a stop every few minutes. You'll be driving the same road back so you can stop at places you missed ;).

The boat trip was quite nice, but I enjoyed the time on the land more. We regret we didn't go on the 3 day track, but it's a weather gamble.
