Fighting Orkut Ghosts

Some people seem to have fun to add well-known but Orkut-hating people to the Orkut database. And some of my friends already have been taken in by it. So I started sending PGP-encrypted messages to these ghosts to see if they are real.

And to make it easy for others to make sure I am who I claim I am, I have signed my self-description (Orkut account required to view).

Removing Smiley Icons from iChat

If you have grown up with computers and computer networks in the early days, replacing smiley character combinations with graphical icons is evil at best. I am still upset that Apple can‘t provide a hacker compatible option to turn that stuff off. Instead, when I type something like chown(8) in a chat, the number gets replaced with these nasty little things.

Today I reached my limit and went for a hunting session. And I found the little bastards. They are hidden in a property list file in the InstantMessage system framework. You can change the mapping in the files (SmileyTable.plist) manually or – to make a long story short – you can just kill them by typing:

sudo rm /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/InstantMessage.framework/Versions/A/Resources/*.lproj/SmileyTable.plist

And the martyrdom is over.

Social Software and Dead People

Don Park has some interesting thoughts on social software and dead people where „social software“ means networks like Orkut or Blogs or Wikis:

It would also be interesting to turn my blog into a wiki-ish blog after I died so that my friends can post to my blog for one reason or another.  In a sense, ‘I‘ continue to live within the mind of my friends so ‘I‘ am still blogging from the grave.

He also touches upcoming deaths that are sure to happen:

What should happen when a member of Orkut or LinkedIn dies?  It‘s bound to happen or have happened already.  Should his node disappear?  That doesn‘t make sense.  Two people having a friend in common is relevant even if the friend happens to be dead.  But if the node is left within the network, what are the downsides other than having to add a gravestone icon to the profile?

Good question.

How to encourage women in Linux

The HOWTO Encourage Women in Linux document tries to list common problems bringing women into the open source community.

This document began with the verbatim recommendations of the women who attended the LinuxChix BOF, and was added to by many more women in the months following the original BOF. In other words, this HOWTO represents the feelings and opinions of real women involved in Linux. While we represent the women who „made it,“ we still have fairly important insights into why other women left or never entered the Linux community, as well as being keenly aware of the pressures which are currently pushing us out of the community.

[Posting on She-Nerds community forum in Orkut (subscription needed)].