peterlog

the web log of peter sabaini

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      19 Apr 2012

      Evernote?

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      I'm a great fan of taking notes. I've collected notes for years, mainly on technical topics. The main goal was to prevent the "I know how to do this, I've done it before -- but how did I do it?" phenomenon -- ie. to collect a log of solutions to technical problems I've solved on the job or in private so I could easily reproduce said solution without relying on my rather haphazard memory. Some of the notes are just crudely copy-pasted terminal screenbuffer with a title; with others I've been more elaborate, adding prose explanation, resource links, etc. This was accompanied by notes from meetings, presentations and the like.

      My notes system used to be a desktop wiki for some time, but quirks in the software (and the fact that I mostly relied on "grep" to find stuff, and didn't need interlinking that much anyway) led me to keep the notes in just a bunch of text files versioned first in subversion and then git, which I synchronised over ssh to a server of mine from various workstations.

      That has worked quite well for some time now, but there are some issues. For one, while on a workstation I can easily sync text files up, this becomes a little more cumbersome on a smartphone. I'd like a little more comfort there. Also, while on a notebook it's no issue to type eg. some text from a flipchart, I'm not quite fast enough to do this on a phone -- the more natural solution would be to just take a photo. Finally, I've come to realize that I don't use all that many git features for my notes, it's mainly a glorified backup and synchronization solution there. In short, I'm thinking of migrating somewhere else.

      I've had an Evernote account for some time, but only barely used it. I'm now contemplating adopting it for all my note-taking needs. There's a few niceties I discovered in the past days about Evernote:

      • There's an API available, so migrating to (or from, as the case may be) Evernote should not be too much of a problem
      • Besides the Android and Web client, there's also a quite nice free Linux client available (Nixnote/Nevernote)
      • For my bunch of text files I relied on the filesystem for categorization, which is a bit limiting. Tagging notes with keywords makes much more sense
      • Text recognition for photos and PDF (to make them searchable) and speech-to-text are two features which I won't use everyday but which can come in handy
      • Also, there seems to be an Emacs mode for Evernote

      So, I'm halfway sold. Still, I'm feel a bit uneasy relying on a proprietary external service, and I wonder if it's worth it. After all, my pile of text files served me well; they were reliable and I was fully in control. And another issue is whether it will put up an additional barrier to usage. Something I've come to consider as crucial for my note-taking is that it must be as easy and fast to use as possible; otherwise I will omit some of the most important notes (that service I finally managed to set up at 11pm after hours of head-scratching and swearing -- if taking a note about the process is the least bit of effort I won't do it). I hope that using Evernote won't impede that.

      Do you use Evernote? Any thoughts, pro/cons? Should I take the plunge?

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      7 Nov 2010

      Android: "Inadequate patching practices"

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      Yep, der exploit funktioniert.

      Enter Froyo.

      Nicht dass das die im Artikel grundsaetzlich angesprochenen “Patching practices” grundsaetzlich verbessern wuerde…

      (Btw. ich hatte beim Froyo installieren im ersten Anlauf ebenfalls den im Forum beschriebenen Bootcycle, und musste im OpenRecovery einen Factory Reset durchfuehren. Backups machen — vorher!)

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      6 Oct 2010

      Skype @Android

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      Hm, I’ve always been a bit sceptical with Skype. Too closed source, to closed protocol, endless possibilities of abuse in case the protocol got cracked, or some government-related service or other convinces Skype Inc that its in their best interests to backdoor all clients. And I since at my workstation I used only chat anyway most of the time (for which there are plenty other products out there), I kinda failed to see the point.

      Now there’s Skype for Android, that has changed a bit. Having cheap VOIP software on my phone is quite a value proposition. Despite the news blurb, it seems to run ok on Android 2.0.1 (on Motorola Milestone). Some things don’t seem to work (file transfers, eg.), and it uses an improbable amount of space (some 13Mb), but generally it seems to work. Well, there goes…

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    software, sysadmin, python, zope, erlang, linux, teh interwebs, cats, austria, switzerland

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