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After torrents? Try Deluge!

Historians may argue whether it was Louis XV or his mistress, Madame de Pompadour, who famously said, “Après moi, le Déluge” (”After me, the deluge”), but what cannot be argued is that, today, Deluge is the name of an efficient BitTorrent client that you would do well to try.

Unlike other BitTorrent clients that consume high levels of RAM and CPU usage, Deluge is lightweight and unobtrusive. To help cut down the bloat, most of its functionality is available as plugins, so you can streamline its runtime requirements. Deluge is free software licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL). Windows, Macintosh, and Linux versions are available, and you can run Deluge in KDE, Xfce, GNOME, and a number of other desktop environments.

Getting and installing Deluge

I found Deluge in the Packman openSUSE repository, and installed it with Smart with the command smart install deluge. I checked the downloaded version (0.5.7.1) against the one on the Deluge Web site, and it was up to date, so I didn’t have to do anything else. If you have to install it on your own, try the download site. If you’re running Debian, Gentoo, or Ubuntu, you’re in luck: you can get ready-to-install packages. As a last resort, you can get the source package or even try out the latest SVN version, but you should be aware that it’s written with PyGTK, so you’ll need several packages first, including Python and the GIMP Toolkit (GTK+).

If this is your first BitTorrent client installation, you’ll likely have to do some firewall configuration. Fortunately, several online sites offer such information. I couldn’t find a Deluge-specific one, but all BitTorrent clients follow the same protocol, so the setup is the same for all clients.

The first time you run Deluge, the First Launch Configuration wizard helps you choose:

  • which ports to use (the standard is 6881 to 6889, but if your ISP blocks those, you can pick other ones or even let Deluge pick a random one for you);
  • whether all downloads should go to a specific directory (and which one) or whether Deluge should ask each time where to save files;
  • the upload speed of your connection, which it uses to configure several other parameters, such as the maximum number of connections and the maximum upload speed.

You can set many more preferences by clicking on Edit -> Preferences. I recommend the following:

  • When you select Downloads -> Use Full Allocation, Deluge preallocates all the needed space whenever a torrent starts downloading, preventing disk fragmentation.
  • In the Network tab, enable Inbound and Outbound encryption, and check “Prefer to encrypt the entire stream” with “Full Stream” level. Several ISPs try to detect (and throttle) torrents, and encryption helps thwart them. (Changing the ports also helps.)
  • In the Other tab, check “Enable system tray icon” and “Start in Tray.” Checking “Minimize to tray on close” helps you avoid shutting Deluge down accidentally.
  • In the Other tab, check “Be alerted about new releases” to keep Deluge updated.

Using Deluge

To get the most out of Deluge, you’ll probably want to enable some plugins. (Be careful if you want to keep CPU and RAM requirements to a minimum; some of the plugins obviously have higher requirements.) Don’t bother looking for information on plugins on the Deluge plugins page; nothing is up yet. Instead, go to the application’s Plugins tab, where you can enable some of these interesting plugins:

  • Blocklist Importer: Lets you download and use PeerGuardian or SafePeer lists of potentially harmful IP addresses to avoid.
  • Move Torrent: Lets you move a finished torrent to another directory. I prefer to download everything to a temporary directory, then move the files to their final location after they’re done.
  • Network Activity Graph and Network Health Monitor: Let you see how your connections are doing. If you like knowing this kind of data, check out Torrent Peers, which shows you information about the peers associated with each torrent.
  • Scheduler and Speed Limiter: Scheduler lets you set daily per-hour upload and download limits. (I usually allow full-speed operations during the night, but I cut back to about 40% of the full bandwidth during the day, so my family can surf the Internet.) Speed Limiter lets you set per-torrent speed limits.
  • Web User Interface: Lets you control Deluge over the Net by opening http://yourOwnURL:8112. You can (and should) change the port number and security options by clicking on Preferences.

 Deluge is easy to use. For example, I wanted to try out Linux Mint 4.0 for Xfce, so I went to the site and clicked on the appropriate torrent link. Firefox opened it with Deluge — nothing more to it! After confirming the download, Deluge started getting my download with no fuss. You can also add a torrent directly by clicking on File -> Add Torrent From URL and entering its URL.

If you enable Speed Limiter, you can set specific bandwidth limits to each torrent. You can also pause and restart torrents. If you don’t have a quick enough connection, Deluge will limit the number of active torrents by default, so you might find yourself downloading files only one at a time.

I checked Deluge’s use of memory by running cat /proc/meminfo before loading the program and after making it run, and it required about 25MB of RAM. Using top while it ran showed it used about 1% of the CPU time; it didn’t affect my work at all.

Conclusion

There are dozens of BitTorrent clients available, but if you’re looking for one that both is powerful and has a small footprint, consider Deluge.

Link:http://www.linux.com/feature/123253

Does Linux Still Fill a Need?

Joel Barker wrote an interesting book entitled, “Paradigms:The Business of Discovering the Future”. Originally written several years ago, I find it relevant today. In his book Barker has more of an interest in how we think about the future than making predictions.

Which brings us to the evolving relevancy of Linux. When I began using Linux it solved several problems I faced. Linux provided a way for me to learn UNIX without having to pay $20,000 for the so-called privilege of owning a Solaris OS. Linux also ran my PC at a remarkable speed. It gave me an Internet server unavailable even at a cost. It allowed me to connect to the Internet when Netware refused.

I say Linux is evolving because it still fills similar needs, but not necessarily in the mainstream of the PC world and at the growth rate in the US and other leading industrial nations where cost is not a factor. Many savvy PC users have switched to Apple’s Macintosh and of all things Vista. Recently, a company of stature asked me to apply for a level 3 advanced Linux administrator position managing a department. I turned them down. I have my reasons, but if you have read my articles in the past, you know I don’t apply for positions that require three people and the company wants only one.

I see Linux competitors catching up in many areas and it bothers me. It goes back to the formula our competitors use called adopt and extend. It also confuses potential users who depend on information about infrastructure from vendors. And Linux doesn’t have as many vendors as the other guy.

I expect to see comments from the community like I have in the past quoting statistics from places like Brazil, China and so forth. I have already taken those issues into consideration. I’m not writing in that context. I’m not ignoring adoption rates. I’m asking how can we think about the future of Linux outside of our belief systems and factoids.’

I began considering this subject when my wife looked up at me during breakfast and took a shot at music formats. Without using technical terms like digital convergence she ran through the history of her own money spent on music. She said that my old car has a cassette player and have I considered that cassettes are gone. Then she said the world switched to CDs. Now, she said that people are downloading hundreds of albums into a device the size of a fountain pen and smaller. She then said with the speed of change that something has the potential of replacing the pen size device. She didn’t know what would happen but many problems existed in each format from cassette to the pen. Wouldn’t something solve even more problems.

She wasn’t making a prediction per say, she was thoughtfully wondering about the future given the need to solve problems. As a medical professional she pointed out how headphones and ear pieces are know to damage ones hearing. To her, that’s a big problem. She was thinking about the future.

Perhaps you get the gist. Instead of making predictions, how can we think about how Linux evolved will do, what it has always done best, to meet future needs. Some might say that people have used Linux in devices and that’s the future. I would agree in the short term and in the current context. What about looking outside that context.

Right now, I’m angry. Someone plowed into the back of my truck and put me in the hospital. The wreck damaged my knee. I had an MRI and the doctor told me I had no real damage. The MRI didn’t reveal swelling in my knee, a sprain in my LCL and excruciating pain. The MRI didn’t show those things. The doctor insisted on exalting the infallibility of the MRI. Several years before, a doctor said something similar about the CT Scan to me. Both men had a vested interest in their paradigms. If something else came along where would they stand on the next technology?

Thinking about the future of Linux requires identifying needs not met in the IT world. What problems have we yet to solve? What technology is emerging and are we keeping up with the problems of the world’s emerging technology? Will it be Betamax or VCR?

Can Linux meet the challenges? I’m not going to predict if Linux can, but I want to think about it in terms of what it brings to the table: The vast number of people working together, in synergistic ways, that think about solving problems in the uncomfortable area of adoption as innovators. That’s something that belongs to Linux in spades. No one has mustered that kind of human intelligence before. That’s something I can see as relevant to the future. All I ask this late in the year is for you and I to just think about it eh.

http://www.linuxjournal.com/node/1005968

Antitrust Ue, Microsoft si accorda con il vendor open source Samba

Microsoft ha siglato un accordo con un gruppo di software open source, che consente a Samba di stare al passo con le recenti modifiche in Microsoft Windows e anche di aiutare altri progetti Free Software che hanno bisogno di interoperare con Windows. Il colosso di Redmond ha finalmente trovato un accordo con Samba sull’interoperabilità, grazie all’intermediazione di Protocol Freedom Information Foundation (PFIF).
In base all’accordo Samba paga 10mila euro e in cambio il PFIF renderà disponibile al team di Samba la documentazione per l’implementazione dei protocolli workgroup server.
Nel marzo 2004 la Commissione Europea comminò una serie di sanzioni a Microsoft per violazioni in materia antitrust, a causa della presenza di Windows Media Player nei sistemi operativi e dell’interoperabilità dei server.
Le sanzioni Ue, deliberate dall’allora commissario Mario Monti, prevedevano una maxi multa da 497 milioni di euro per abuso di posizione dominante
(a cui si era aggiunta una maxi multa addizionale, il bis del luglio 2006)
e la soluzione dell’interoperabilità dei server. La Ue ha dunque stabilito che Microsoft deve fornire informazioni per l’interconnessione che consentano ai workgroup server di operare senza problemi.
Dopo 15 mesi di giudizio, Microsoft poche settimane fa ha accettato le richieste Ue, a iniziare dall’apertura ai vendor open source.
Microsoft ha commentato l’accordo su Microsoft Port 25 blog.

fonte:http://www.vnunet.it

Linux Man Pages On-Line

Gli ultimi mesi di questo 2007 sono stati davvero caotici, il tempo per scrivere poco, e trascurando leggermente il “blog”, quelle poche ore libere al giorno disponibili, le ho dedicate di tanto in tanto alla realizzazione di uno “scriptino” in php il cui unico compito è quello di visualizzare le man pages linux in formato html, rendendone così più agevole la consultazione e la comprensione.

L’ispirazione è venuta utilizzando in locale man2html (ottimo), e un pò per svago, un pò per tenermi in allenamento, da un paio di settimane sono riuscito a concludere e a pubblicare, una prima versione “grezza” ma “funzionante” dello script :)
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                                 Per chi volesse dare un occhiata: Linux Man Pages

Continua »

Fonte: http://www.e-pillole.com/linux/

auguri!

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La redazione augura a tutti

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Rilasciati i nuovi driver 169.07 NVidia per Linux

Nvidia, società conosciuta in tutto il mondo per la produzione di schede grafiche per pc, ha appena rilasciato un nuovo set di driver grafici per Linux e qui di seguito potete vedere le novità più importanti: Versione 169.07

  • Added support for GeForce 8800 GT, GeForce 8800 GTS 512 and GeForce 8800M.
  • Added CUDA driver to .run file.
  • Improved modesetting support on Quadro/GeForce 8 series GPUs.
  • Fixed several X rendering issues.
  • Fixed problems scrolling ARGB X drawables in Qt.
  • Improved support for interlaced DVI, HDMI, and HDTV modesetting.
  • Fixed stability problems with some GeForce 8 series GPUs.
  • Fixed stability problems with some GeForce 6200/7200/7300 GPUs multi-core/SMP systems.
  • Improved hotkey switching support for some Lenovo notebooks.
  • Fixed a problem with Compiz after VT-switching.
  • Improved RENDER performance.
  • Improved interaction with Barco and Chi Mei 56″ DFPs, as well as with some Gateway 19″ DFPs.
  • Added an interface to monitor PowerMizer state information.
  • Fixed rendering corruption in Maya’s Graph Editor.
  • Improved interaction between SLI AFR and swap groups on certain Quadro FX GPUs.
  • Fixed a bug that caused corruption with redirected XV on GPUs without TurboCache support.
  • Improved display device detection on GeForce 8 series GPUs.
  • Improved usability of NVIDIA-settings at lower resolutions like 1024×768 and 800×600.
  • Improved GLX visual consolidation when using Xinerama with Quadro/GeForce 8 series and older GPUs.
  • Added experimental support for running the X server at Depth 30 (10 bits per component) on Quadro G8x and later GPUs.
  • Worked around a Linux kernel/toolchain bug that caused soft lockup errors when suspending on some Intel systems.Potete cliccare qui per fare il download dei driver.
  • Fonte: Linux Valley
  • PromoGest summit 2008 - Cagliari 12 e 13 gennaio 2008

    logo_glob.pngVisto il crescente interesse verso il PromoGest, visti l’aumento dei downloads, delle richieste di informazioni, degli utenti, e delle persone che collaborano attivamente al progetto, abbiamo pensato di organizzare il primo Promogest Summit, per contarci, confrontarci, e tracciare la rotta che ci porterà nel 2009.

    La nostra voglia di scrivere codice sempre migliore, di studiare funzionalità sempre più utili agli utenti, di rendere sempre meno traumatico il passaggio da un software proprietario qualsiasi al nostro software open source, ci indica chiaramente questi due giorni come l’occasione per mettere in un unico calderone tutte le nostre idee, al fine di convogliare le migliori nelle prossime releases del PromoGest, per accrescerne campo d’azione e possibilità di utilizzo.

    Il summit si svolgerà a Cagliari il 12 e il 13 gennaio 2008, per partecipare è necessario comunicarci preventivamente l’adesione a info@promotux.it e per la richiesta di informazioni, dettagli o più semplicemente per suggerire uno o più aspetti che vorreste fossero tenuti in considerazione nei prossimi sviluppi del programma, è a disposizione una discussione nel nostro forum.

    Francesco Meloni.

    Fonte : Promotux.it

    Abilitiare l’ipv6 su Linux

    zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzztux.jpgEcco una piccola guida su come far funzionare l’ipv6 sulle nostra macchine linux.
    L’IPv6 è la nuova versione (ossia la versione 6) del vecchio Internet Protocol IPv4 (versione 4). L’IPv6, rispetto al suo predecessore, introduce nuovi servizi e semplifica la configurazione e la gestione delle reti IP.
    Il punto forte dell’IPv6 (nonchè la causa della sua nascita) è lo spazio di indirizzamento più ampio rispetto all’IPv4: IPv6 gestisce fino a 280.000.000.000.000.000 indirizzi unici per ogni metro quadrato della superficie terrestre. Qui troverete un approfondimento sull’IPv6. Di seguito, invece, troverete le informazioni su come configurare il tutto sulle distribuzioni Debian/Ubuntu oppure su tutte le altre distribuzioni (fermo restando che se avete una distribuzione Debian-like potete comunque seguire la guida sull’ipv6 per una generica distribuzione). Ringrazio decra per il suo aiuto e i suoi consigli.
    Fonte : Linux Valley

    Winpooch, alternativa opensource software free & open source

    Winpooch è un’alternativa opensource per difendersi da trojan, malware, spyware e simili.zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzwin.jpgA differenza di altri sistemi antispyware, come ad esempio quello di Microsoft, che utilizzano un database delle possibili minacce, Winpooch monitora tutti i processi in funzione: potete ad esempio non permettere che un processo scriva della directory “Windows” o “system32″, aggiunga voci al registro, o si connetta ad internet.Gli autori ne consigliano l’utilizzo insieme a ClamWin, antivirus opensource gratuito.

    Tempi duri per Symantec, McAfee e tutti i produttori di software per la sicurezza: oltre a Microsoft col suo Safety Live Center cresce la presenza del mondo opensource nel campo della sicurezza.
    Fonte: http://www.diggita.it/story.php?title=Winpooch_alternativa_opensource_software_free__open_source

    File.io, uno spazio per condividere file temporaneamente

    Esistono diversi sistemi per condividere file tra due o più persone: quello offerto da File.io è molto pratico e veloce.Si tratta di un servizio che senza necessità di registrazione vi permetterà di creare uno spazio web dove caricare i vostri file: scelto il nome dello spazio e la password, che poi comunicherete ai vostri collaboratori, potrete subito iniziare a caricare file sul vostro spazio. I file dovranno avere un limite massimo di 100 MB, mentre il limite massimo di spazio utilizzabile per ogni account è di soli 150 MB.

    I file rimarranno a disposizione degli utenti per un periodo di un mese, scadenza non prorogabile: se caricherete una immagine, questa verrà visualizzata come miniatura della stessa per renderla riconoscibile (anch’essa sarà scaricabile). Caricando un file mp3 questo sarà riproducibile tramite un player integrato nella pagina.
    Sarà inoltre possibile modificare il nome del file e aggiungere una descrizione che possa facilitare i vostri contatti nella scelta del file che li interessa.

    Fonte: download|blog.it