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Monday, June 26. 2006Switching to FeedBurner
Having successfully moved some other blogs of mine to FeedBurner, I've finally decided to do the same here on Solaris 10 blog.
Starting today, all the default Solaris 10 feeds in English will be forwarded automatically to the feedburner.com feed. All the category-specific feeds are going to be still hosted locally. Please let me know if something's not working for you, and I'll do my best to fix it. Thanks in advance! Sunday, June 25. 2006Just finished upgrading this blog to Serendipity 1.1
That's it, I'm finished with upgrading this blog, it's now running on the latest beta of the Serendipity 1.1 engine!
I've changed the main theme and also altered it a bit for better browsing experience - so if you have a comment to make, please do so! All the constructive suggestions are also welcome! Monday, June 19. 2006What I love Serendipity for
I've started working towards this blog upgrade to the latest version of Serendipity yesterday, and it was decided to go for the latest beta of Serendipity 1.1 rather than for the 1.0 release. This time around I'm doing the upgrade on my home server as it's getting to be more and more time consuming. I think it will take me two or three days more to complete the works and make the changes live here on the website.
So, with this in mind, I thought I'd mention here just a couple of truly unique features I simply love Serendipity for: Central repository for all the plugins and design templates Installing new plugins in s9y is simply the best and easiest I've seen in any blog engine to the moment. Before showing you the list of all the plugins, a new list of updated versions is downloaded from the repository. When you activate a new plugin or choose a new design template to be used, all the relevant files are automatically downloaded and installed into your blog directories. Incredibly easy option of moving sidepanel plugins from lelf side to the right What I mean is that practically every design template has the support for either side of the sidebar placement. You can simply specify where your plugins should appear - to the left or to the right. Other blog engines, like WordPress for instance, are not so elegant in doing this, you're generally required to fix some of your design template files by hand. Serendipity 1.1 branch is the one where developers have down something incredible - they've finally implemented the Drag & Drop plugin management! So you have a table of all the plugins, which mimics the current plugins placement on your blog pages, and you can use your mouse to change plugins order in a sidepanel or simply move selected plugins to the panel on the other side of a page. If you haven't seen this live yet, I urge you to download the latest Serendipity build and try it out! Friday, June 16. 2006Serendipity 1.0 released!
After a long wait, the development team of the s9y blog engine has finally released Serendipity 1.0!
This means that I'll be upgrading to this version in the next few days. I just can't wait to see all the cool stuff in this new release! I strongly advise you to read the Serendipity 1.0 release blog post from the author of s9y, Garvin himself. Thursday, June 15. 2006
OpenSolaris: first anniversary Posted by Gleb Reys
in Solaris at
02:20Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Defined tags for this entry: opensolaris
OpenSolaris: first anniversary
Yes, time flies! It seems almost impossible to believe that it's been a whole year since the official OpenSolaris Opening Day celebration!
Today is the first anniversary for it, so it was only logical for me to attend the 2nd Irish OpenSolaris user group meeting at Sun Microsystems. Tim Foster gave a wonderful OpenSolaris: Year In Review presentation, followed by some impressive ZFS mastery demonstrated by Mike Byrne. |





