Disable OpenID in Mozilla Weave

I’ve been using Mozilla Weave for quite some time now, ever since I made the switch from Foxmarks. This is a Firefox extension that allows one to synchronize browser settings, including tabs, history, extensions, and passwords.  Another feature of this extension is OpenID integration using Mozilla’s OpenID provider. The problem is that the OpenID integration into Weave might be a nice little feature for people that are not used to it, but people running their own identity provider or using one of the many existing providers, like myself have to jump through hoops to use these instead of the Weave IDs. I’ve found a post that mentions an about:config setting called
extensions.weave.openId.enabled
One can set this setting to ‘False’ if you don’t want the Mozilla OpenID support.  As for the rest of Weave, if you haven’t tried it yet, do so. It works just great :-)
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Apple = Ikea ?

Apple is a hardware manufacturer much like Ikea. Both have some fantastic and stylish products. But I would never let Ikea tell me what chairs may or may not be used with my new table…
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Bootchart

Bootchart is a neat tool to analyze and optimize the boot process, all with a nice simple poster:

bootchart

As you can see my boot process is far from optimal, but now I have a pointer to where to go next :D
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ThePirateBay sells out?

090219piratebay Just read an alternative way of seeing the deal between Global Gaming Factory and ThePirateBay (the worldwide largest BitTorrent tracker). While everybody is criticizing the deal, J.J. King of TorrentFreak puts it into a more positive light:
Big != Good

Let’s face it: The Pirate Bay itself had become a huge focus of attention for those trying to preserve the old copy-restriction model of the culture industries. By some accounts TPB’s tracker has been responsible for 50% of all Internet traffic, and its founders have been looming larger and larger, waving their pirate flags more and more visibly, for quite a few years. They are international celebrities and, love them as we might, that made them and TPB targets. It’s not a secret that quite a few peers on the TPB trackers today are ’spies’, there to gather data on legitimate peers — a real danger to Bittorrent users. And as well being feted, Brokep, Anakata and Tiamo have been followed, spied on, raided, arrested, maligned, sentenced and, now live under a real threat of imprisonment.

The bigger we get, the more of a target we are. Mininova, isoHunt and TPB have all been under siege these last years. We need to stop thinking about ‘one stop shops’ for our media. Distribution and aggregation point the way: think ’separation of powers’. Clients like Miro can aggregate feeds from a variety of sources according to the needs of the user. TPB may have represented the needs of the community for half a decade or more, but we don’t need them. We are our own media infrastructure!

Also the other points he cites are certainly well founded. He managed to convince me that the TPB Community won’t die when the Site is sold: let’s face it, it’s nothing more than the domain name. No Client data, no user information will be in possession of GGF!

[via TorrentFreak]

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Windows Stickers!

designed-for-linux

Do you have a notebook? Then probably you’ll have one of those incredibly annoying Windows stickers on it, even if you never had Windows running on it.

Far from being useful they are pretty annoying, first they lose all their colors, which then stick to your screen, instead of the shiny surface they are supposed to. Then the sticker itself starts to move around under the daily use, exposing its sticky underside.

Finally when you got fed up with your wrist being glued to the notebook, and decide to remove the sticker completely, the glue sticks to the notebook, and heavily fights off any attempt of removal.

That’s what happened to me, and now I’m wondering how to remove. Dammit Windows, even without you, you annoy me…

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