Dear Manager,
I thank you from the bottom of my heart for approvimg my request to move my work desktop to a RedHat system. FreeBSD4 sucks donkey balls (as Eric Cartman would say). Linux is so super-sweet (even if it is RHEL)
Now to move my home directory.
Your sincere slave
Raj Shekhar
some thoughts on portable device
Almost 2 months back, I got myself an ipod shuffle. After using it for some time, I am totally in love with it. I can now understand why the Macheads sell out their souls to Apple - the bargain is well worth it .
I was thinking about why portable devices like ipod and mobile phones are so close to their owners and I came up with this list.
- They are truly personal. You can customize them (think mobile wallpapers, ringtones, playlists) quite a lot.
- The are small and portable (duh!)
- They can serve multiple purposes. A mobile phone can also serve as a watch, address book, radio, m3 player, camera. A ipod can also be used as a memory stick, FM transmitter and it can also fit in your car's music system.
- These devices become useful as soon as you buy them. You can start using a mobile phone as soon as you insert your sim card into it and you can start using your ipod as soon as you transfer music into it. Instant karma!
- They have long battery life.
This list is just something to keep in mind when I am designing my Killer App (TM).
emacs registers
If you have not heard about
emacs
registers, you are missing a very powerful tool in your
arsenal. Think of registers as "clipboard" on steroids. I had been
using registers to store text -i.e. C-x r s a
to copy
region into register "a" and C-x r i a
to insert text
from register "a".
Today, while reading the gnu.emacs.help newsgroup, I came to know that you could save your current (emacs)frames layout to the register and then restore it back again.
`C-x r w R'
Save the state of the selected frame's windows in register R (`window-configuration-to-register').`C-x r j R'
restore a window or frame configuration stored in register R.
Here is the email where I saw this.
Re: how to keep/restore my view and mode?
- From: David Hansen
- Newsgroups: gnu.emacs.help
- Subject: Re: how to keep/restore my view and mode?
- Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2006 10:13:58 +0200
- References: <1158816234.643256.254090@e3g2000cwe.googlegroups.com>
- To: help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org
- Mail-Followup-To: help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org
- List-Id: Users list for the GNU Emacs text editor <help-gnu-emacs.gnu.org>
On 20 Sep 2006 22:23:54 -0700 Leo Hou wrote:> Dear all, > > I am not sure if I am using the right term of "view" and "mode". My > problem is as follows: > > I am using C-x 3 and "follow-mode" to view my source code. Every time I > compile, the other column becomes the result of make. I need to use a > lot of keys to switch it back to normal: C-x o; C-x k; C-x o; M-x > follow-mode > Is there a better way?
C-x r w <some letter or number> to store a window layout and C-x r j <the same number or letter> to restore it. And there is no need to kill the compilation buffer. It gets reused anyway.
David
test lj post
webcomics
I discover wonderful things through webcomics. Today, I was reading this comic, where I saw a mention of Miyamoto Musashi. I checked out his wikipedia entry, where a I found a link to his book The Book of Five Rings and that is what I am reading now.
Unnoticed bloggers
Hiren wrote this comment on my previous entry
I come across so many blogs which have good posts but the poor guys get unnoticed. They put in so much of effort and no comments. Two recent ones are:-
I think this is best answered by this sentence from Scoble
But, Steve Gillmor has it right: this isn't a game of traffic. It's about sharing what you love.
Most of my blog posts have 0 comments, but that still does not deters me from writing. Once, I too had despaired of the '0 comments' phenomenon, but I was motivated to start blogging again when I read through the Those Cute Kids archives of Aaron. Reading through that, I thought "Wow! I too would like to have something like that" (where that means a record of the days of my life ), and you know what - it is not that hard to write a blog post everyday or at least every weekend. These days, my motivation for writing blog is to keep a record of the highlights or the lowlights of a day or sometimes to record something new that I learnt that day (or in most cases, that week).
Coming back to Hiren's point of undiscovered bloggers, I guess those bloggers are driven by their own motivations. Or it might be the case that they are writing for their own family and close friends. If their idea is to be an A-list blogger (hehe), there are gazillion of pages dedicated to that too.
Three good tips
Three good tips that have made my life more productive
- Not to open my emails until I have completed at least one task in the morning. I read this tip on lifehacker.com
- No personal web surfing until at least noon. Found this tip on TheNowHabit mailing list
- Creative Observation . The advice sounds a bit corny, but I have been trying it out in small things and it works (somewhat).