An introduction

This is a semi-public place to dump text too flimsy to even become a blog post. I wouldn't recommend reading it unless you have a lot of time to waste. You'd be better off at my livejournal. I also have another blog, and write most of the French journal summaries at the Eurozine Review.

Why do I clutter up the internet with this stuff at all? Mainly because I'm trying to get into the habit of displaying as much as possible of what I'm doing in public. Also, Blogger is a decent interface for a notebook

Monday, June 21, 2010

on that keylogger thing....seeks the showkey utility will do everything I need, with considerably less faff and higher reliability. yay!

Sunday, June 20, 2010

notify-send

Yet another linux trick I keep on forgetting...
To display a notification on the desktop from the command-line:
# apt-get install libnotify-bin
$ notify-send "hello world"

obv. "from the command-line" really means "from a script", unless you're in some Evil Dead situation of independently-mobile hands

[reason for looking: trying to get xmonad+dmenu to notify me when I mistype a command, rather than just failing silently]

markdown + vim

Since I'm spectacularly dim, it never occured to me that I can run markdown from within vim. Select your text, run !markdown, and wham! bam! everything is replaced by its technicolor HTML twin.

keyloggers on linux

I've been trying to find (for entirely legit reasons*) a decent keylogger for linux. The pickings are surprisingly slim - as one upstart option puts it:




Novice users, however, are usually limited to a narrow set of the following tools: lkl from 2005, uberkey, which appears dead, THC-vlogger, made by a renowned group of hackers, and PyKeylogger. All these tools have their pros and cons. Lkl, for example, sometimes abnormally repeats keys and its keymap configuration is rather awkward for a range of users. Uberkey, which is just over a hundred lines of code, also often repeats keys and what is worse, it makes your mouse move abruptly, loosing any sense of control. PyKeylogger, on the other hand, while very feature rich, only works in X environment. Finally, there is vlogger, ...umm..., about which I cannot say anything specifically, only that it is receiving low score all around the web and it only logs shell sessions.




I'd add that lkl managed to crash my system within 5 minutes of using it, requireing a hard reboot to get things back up. So I'm currently deep in thinking surely it can't be *that* hard?




  • reason: I find it useful to have statistics on my activity. Counting keypresses is pretty useless as a direct way of measuring productive work -- but it's a pretty good early indicator of when I'm getting too sleepy or too hyper.


Monday, June 14, 2010

Habermas and Europe — Crooked Timber

Habermas and Europe — Crooked Timber:
A very considerable part of Habermas’ intellectual project over the last few years has been exactly to come up with a form of patriotism which is distinct from nationalism. Habermas dubs this “constitutional patriotism” – and while it is not intended to overcome existing forms of nationalism, it is intended to temper them, and to make them non-exclusive.


& back to Henry F as himself:

he moment when (if) an actual European polity will be created, will not be the moment when European publics, led by their elites, realize that they are actually Europeans. It will be the moment at which self-interested political parties, rather than arguing and picking petty squabbles about whether ‘we’ should all be Europeans or not, start arguing and picking petty squabbles about what kind of Europeans ‘we’ should be.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

WaPo:
Like Washington's go-go, Baltimore Club exists as a regional sound relatively unknown outside the mid-Atlantic. The music blends the repetitive boom of house or techno with hip-hop's aggressive posturing and full-frontal frankness (one of the most popular B-More singles is DJ Booman's "Watch Out for the Big Girl"). What B-More lacks in subtlety it overpowers with shouted hooks, uncleared samples and chest-rattling bass patterns that induce dance-floor euphoria. Baltimore Club allows hip-hop heads to get their rave on.


Still can't figure out if I like bmore at all, or if it's just Donna Summer. Suspect the latter
Reddit longform seems bizarrely invisible to search engines. Search 'reddit longform' anywhere and you won't reach it; wonder what happened?

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Often I hate the hoops we jump through in order to provide the illusion of security:


Amazon CloudFront HTTPS delivery can be used to transfer inherently sensitive objects to your users, to avoid security warnings that some browsers present when viewing a mix of HTTP and HTTPS content, or for anything else that needs to be encrypted when transferred. [email from Amazon today, announcing the new service]


Yes, I know that every step along the way here is reasonable. It just feels wrong, y'know?
A bit of Debian lore I always forget: finding which package is responsible for a certain file:

$ dpkg -S filename

e.g:
$ dpkg -S /usr/bin/lintian
lintian: /usr/bin/lintian
Diaspora politics is identity politics in its purest form. Struggling to maintain and demonstrate identity in a foreign land, migrants adopt symbols and political doctrines from their hoemland. These are exaggerated to fill the gaps left by other forms of identity, and lack the pragmatic restraints that could come from actually living in a place.

A long article in the New York Review of Books considers the growing division betwen Zionists and liberal Jews, both in Israel and the US. It touches on the diaspora politics overall, but also connects to the impact of personal experience, memory, and generational divisions:


When he probed the students’ views of Israel, he hit up against some firm beliefs. First, “they reserve the right to question the Israeli position.” These young Jews, Luntz explained, “resist anything they see as ‘group think.’” They want an “open and frank” discussion of Israel and its flaws. Second, “young Jews desperately want peace.” When Luntz showed them a series of ads, one of the most popular was entitled “Proof that Israel Wants Peace,” and listed offers by various Israeli governments to withdraw from conquered land. Third, “some empathize with the plight of the Palestinians.” When Luntz displayed ads depicting Palestinians as violent and hateful, several focus group participants criticized them as stereotypical and unfair, citing their own Muslim friends.