Entries tagged as geekRelated tags openstack catalystcloud linux catalyst brooke adam family lca2007 photos baby lca2013 lca software kernel mythtv-status mythtv oss ipv6 dns perl adsl hardware olpc rpi stereo debian house audio admin fai fedora_coreos voip asterisk gnome evolution enum ben lca2009 lca2015 linux.conf.au lca2019 laptop recycle cacert lca2010 lede google lca2011 lca2014 social networking buildSunday, January 3. 2010LCA2010 - Many MeetingsA typical LCA2010 meeting The photo here's a typical LCA2010 organising meeting. The scones aren't typical - they were made by Andrew & Heather's son Max, who you can see through the door (they were certainly appreciated, thanks Max!). We've been using the training room at Catalyst as a handy location in town that easy for people to get to, and tucked out of the way. Also not visible in the photo are Susanne and our son Adam, and Heather who's taking the photo. Thursday, September 17. 2009
LCA2010 - Schedule Released and ... Posted by Andrew Ruthven
in catalyst, family at
10:28
Comment (1) Trackbacks (0) LCA2010 - Schedule Released and Recent Happenings
Wow, has it really been two months since the last blog post? No wonder, we've been flat out!
Tuesday, July 21. 2009
LCA2010 - Call for Papers - closing ... Posted by Andrew Ruthven
in catalyst, family at
21:21
Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) LCA2010 - Call for Papers - closing soon!
Wow, the linux.conf.au 2010 team have had a an awesome response to our Call for Miniconfs with over 32 amazing submissions. But the work isn't over yet!
Our Call for Papers is still open, but closes on Friday. That's right, Friday. If you'd like the opportunity to speak at one of the best FOSS conferences in the world, this is your chance, we want to hear from you! For more information about submitting a paper, have a look at the Papers Info page on our website. Tuesday, June 23. 2009
LCA2010 - First keynote announced! Posted by Andrew Ruthven
in catalyst, family at
20:56
Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) LCA2010 - First keynote announced!
The linux.conf.au 2010 organising team is proud to announce the first keynote speaker for LCA2010!
Our first speaker has a distinguished reputation in the free software world, with significant contributions to Debian, Ubuntu and OLPC across a variety of areas including development, policy, advocacy, activism, education and writing. He is an active board member with several non-profit organisations including The Free Software Foundation and Software Freedom International, and he is involved in the global discussion of copyright, software patents and free culture. We'd like to welcome Benjamin Mako Hill as our first confirmed keynote speaker for LCA2010! For information see the full announcement Thursday, April 16. 2009
Evolution 2.24 folder sorting Posted by Andrew Ruthven
in catalyst at
20:21
Comment (1) Trackbacks (0) Evolution 2.24 folder sorting
I run Debian Unstable on my workstations, which can lead to "interesting" experiences with new versions of software. The latest interesting experience was the upgrade to Evolution 2.24. In previous versions the default sort order for folders was the time and date the messages were received on my computer.
Due to some changes under the hood, the folders now appear to be displayed in a random order (at least, on my boxes that is the case). You can either go through every folder and change the order by right clicking on the column headers (like "Subject") and going Sort by -> Received. Don't use the "Date" header, because if people sending you email have the wrong date on their computers (which is so common) the messages appear in random places in your messages list (and with over a 1,000 messages in my INBOX that is an issue). The catch with this method is you have to change each folder. I have a lot of folders. A lot. But it turns out you can save the view setting once you've made it in one folder and then apply it to all of them. Make the change. Then go View -> Current View -> Save Current View. In the dialog window that appears, select the "Replace existing view" option, and then select "Messages" from the list of views. Now, because Messages is the default view applied to folders, everything just works. Thanks to mrcha in #evolution for pointing in the right direction of custom views. |
Calendar
ArchivesCategoriesSyndicate This BlogBlog AdministrationShow tagged entriesPowered by |