Mi blog lah! Το ιστολόγιό μου

22Apr/102

Πάροχοι mobile internet (3G) στην Ελλάδα και GNOME/Linux

Ο Dan Williams είναι ο βασικός προγραμματιστής για τα NetworkManager και ModemManager.

Πρόσφατα ανακοίνωσε τις νέες δυνατότητες που έχει ο NetworkManager 0.8.

Για να είναι σε θέση να γνωρίζει η διανομής σας όλες τις ιδιαιτερότητες του πάροχού σας για το mobile internet, μπορείτε να καταχωρήσετε τα στοιχεία ρυθμίσεων.

Τα στοιχεία που υπάρχουν ήδη για Ελλάδα είναι

<!-- Greece -->
<country code="gr">
	<provider>
		<name>Cosmote</name>
		<gsm>
			<network-id mcc="202" mnc="01"/>
			<apn value="3g-internet">
				<dns>195.167.65.194</dns>
			</apn>
		</gsm>
	</provider>
	<provider>
		<name>Vodafone</name>
		<gsm>
			<network-id mcc="202" mnc="05"/>
			<apn value="internet">
				<name>Contract</name>
			</apn>
			<apn value="web.session">
				<name>Mobile Broadband On Demand</name>
				<dns>213.249.17.10</dns>
				<dns>213.249.17.11</dns>
			</apn>
		</gsm>
	</provider>
	<provider>
		<name>Wind</name>
		<gsm>
			<network-id mcc="202" mnc="09"/>
			<network-id mcc="202" mnc="10"/>
			<apn value="gint.b-online.gr">
				<username>web</username>
				<password>web</password>
			</apn>
		</gsm>
	</provider>
</country>

Πηγή: http://git.gnome.org/browse/mobile-broadband-provider-info/tree/serviceproviders.xml

Αν υπάρχουν άλλοι πάροχοι ή αν οι παραπάνω πληροφορίες θέλουν ανανέωση, είναι σημαντικό να γίνει τώρα. Τυχόν διορθώσεις που θα γίνουν σύντομα θα μπουν κατά πάσα πιθανότητα σε Ubuntu 10.04.1 (αλλιώς στο 10.10) και στη Fedora 13.

Ενημέρωση – Wind «;»: ρυθμίσεις WAP και Internet

Ενημέρωση – Q Telecom «Οικονομική καρτοκινητή»: ρυθμίσεις WAP και Internet

Ενημέρωση – Q Telecom «Συμβόλαιο»: ; (είναι ίδιο με παραπάνω;)

Ενημέρωση – Cosmote «»: ρυθμίσεις WAP+GPRS

Ενημέρωση – Cosmote «Internet On The Go»: ρυθμίσεις

27Jun/080

Firefox 3 statistics, and the Greek language

Firefox 3 was released on the 17th June, 2008 and up to now, an impressive 22 million copies have been downloaded.

kkovash had a peek at the stats and produced a nice post with diagram for the downloads of the localised versions of Firefox 3 (that is, excluding en-US).

Firefox 3 Downloads; part of EMEA region, focus on Greece

Downloads at [Release+3] days (20th June 2008)

Dark red signifies that there have been more than 100,000 downloads originating from the respective country. It is quite visible that most European countries managed to surpass the 100,000 threshold. Greece at that point was hovering to about 50,000 downloads. In the Balkan region, Turkey was the first country to grab the red badge.

It is interesting to see that Iran has been No 2 in the whole of Asia (No 1 has been Japan). Only now China managed to reach the second place, and pushed Iran in the third place. When taking into account the population gap and the political situation, Iran achieved a amazing feat.

In the first few days, a few countries only managed to jump fast over the 100K mark. It appears that these countries have strong social network communities, that urged friends to grab a copy of Firefox 3.

Firefox 3 downloads, showing Greece, with Red status

This is a recent screenshow (26th June 2008), at [Release+9] days. Greece has achieved Red status the other day. In the Balkan region, Turkey, Romania and Bulgaria had reached 100,000 first.

In the EU region, it is notable that Ireland, at 76,000 downloads, is lagging behind.

Another observation is that the countries from Africa are lagging significantly from the rest of the world. Low broadband Internet penetration and limited number of Internet users is likely to be the reason.

How many downloads have there been for the Greek localisation of Firefox 3;

kkovash reveals that there have been about 60,000 downloads for the Greek localisation of Firefox 3. This would approximately mean that more than 60% of the downloads in Greece have been for the localised version. Great news.

13May/080

thersa.org.uk, infected.

Probably through SQL injection, this page of thersa.org.uk links to a javascript file from some server in China

The screenshot shows the thersa.org.uk website has been infected, and users that visit it end up running in their browsers malicious JavaScript code. The code loads Javascript files from the .cn and the .la domains.

There is a reference in one of the files to a cookie named killav (Kill Antivirus?) that may disable some antivirus programs.

In addition, one of the JavaScript files checks which browser you have. If you have Internet Explorer 6 or 7, it loads some exploit which attempts to run binary code. If this succeeds, you are infected. If you have Firefox, it does not attempt to perform an infection, and it goes to the next phase.

The next phase is to open up pages to sites in China. It appears to me that the bussines plan in that case is to generate revenue from ad hits.

The worst thing however is if you get infected. Unpatched windows systems are at the mercy of these attackers.

One way to mitigate such risks is to use Mozilla Firefox, and have the NoScript add-on installed.

Update 5 June 2008:

The RSA updated their website by moving it away from Windows and ASP, to open source software. They are using Centos Linux, Apache, and an open-source CMS. Therefore, the above security risk does not apply any more.

29Feb/081

FOSDEM ’08, summary and comments

I attended FOSDEM ’08 which took place on the 23rd and 24th of February in Brussels.

Compared to other events, FOSDEM is a big event with over 4000 (?) participants and over 200 lectures (from lightning talks to keynotes). It occupied three buildings at a local university. Many sessions were taking place at the same time and you had to switch from one room to another. What follows is what I remember from the talks. Remember, people recollect <8% of the material they hear in a talk.

The first keynote was by Robin Rowe and Gabrielle Pantera, on using Linux in the motion picture industry. They showed a huge list of movies that were created using Linux farms. The first big item in the list was the movie Titanic (1997). The list stopped at around 2005 and the reason was that since then any significant movie that employs digital editing or 3D animation is created on Linux systems. They showed trailers from popular movies and explained how technology advanced to create realistic scenes. Part of being realistic, a generated scene may need to be blurred so that it does not look too crisp.

Next, Robert Watson gave a keynote on FreeBSD and the development community. He explained lots of things from the community that someone who is not using the distribution does not know about. FreeBSD apparently has a close-knit community, with people having specific roles. To become a developer, you go through a structured mentoring process which is great. I did not see such structured approach described in other open-source projects.

Pieter Hintjens, the former president of the FFII, talked about software patents. Software patents are bad because they describe ideas and not some concrete invention. This has been the view so that the target of the FFII effort fits on software patents. However, Pieter thinks that patents in general are bad, and it would be good to push this idea.

CMake is a build system, similar to what one gets with automake/autoconf/makefile. I have not seen this project before, and from what I saw, they look quite ambitious. Apparently it is very easy to get your compilation results on the web when you use CMake. In order to make their project more visible, they should make effort on migration of existing projects to using CMake. I did not see yet a major open-source package being developed with CMake, apart from CMake itself.

Richard Hughes talked about PackageKit, a layer that removes the complexity of packaging systems. You have GNOME and your distribution is either Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora or something else. PackageKit allows to have a common interface, and simplifies the workflow of managing the installation of packages and the updates.

In the Virtualisation tracks, two talks were really amazing. Xen and VirtualBox. Virtualisation is hot property and both companies were bought recently by Citrix and Sun Microsystems respectively. Xen is a Type 1 (native, bare metal) hypervisor while VirtualBox is a Type 2 (hosted) hypervisor. You would typically use Xen if you want to supply different services on a fast server. VirtualBox is amazingly good when you want to have a desktop running on your computer.

Ian Pratt (Xen) explained well the advantages of using a hypervisor, going into many details. For example, if you have a service that is single-threaded, then it makes sense to use Xen and install it on a dual-core system. Then, you can install some other services on the same system, increasing the utilisation of your investment.

Achim Hasenmueller gave an amazing talk. He started with a joke; I have recently been demoted. From CEO to head of virtualisation department (name?) at Sun Microsystems. He walked through the audience on the steps of his company. The first virtualisation product of his company was sold to Connectix, which then was sold to Microsoft as VirtualPC. Around 2005, he started a new company, Innotek and the product VirtualBox. The first customers were government agencies in Germany and only recently (2007) they started selling to end-users.

Virtualisation is quite complex, and it becomes more complex if your offering is cross platform. They manage the complexity by making VirtualBox modular.

VirtualBox comes in two versions; an open-source version and a binary edition. The difference is that with the binary edition you get USB support and you can use RDP to access the host. If you installed VirtualBox from the repository of your distribution, there is no USB support. He did not commit whether the USB/RDP support would make it to the open-source version, though it might happen since Sun Microsystems bought the company. I think that if enough people request it, then it might happen.

VirtualBox uses QT 3.3 as the cross platform toolkit, and there is a plan to migrate to QT 4.0. GTK+ was considered, though it was not chosen because it does not provide yet good support in Win32 (applications do not look very native on Windows). wxWidgets were considered as well, but also rejected. Apparently, moving from QT 3.3 to QT 4.0 is a lot of effort.

Zeeshan Ali demonstrated GUPnP, a library that allows applications to use the UPnP (Universal Plug n Play) protocol. This protocol is used when your computer tells your ADSL model to open a port so that an external computer can communicate directly with you (bypassing firewall/NAT). UPnP can also be used to access the content of your media station. The gupnp library comes with two interesting tools; gupnp-universal-cp and gupnp-network-light. The first is a browser of UPnP devices; it can show you what devices are available, what functionality they export, and you can control said devices. For example, you can use GUPnP to open a port on your router; when someone connects from the Internet to port 22 on your modem, he is redirected to your server, at port 22.

You can also use the same tool to figure out what port mapping took place already on your modem.

The demo with the network light is that you run the browser on one computer and the network light on another, both on the local LAN (this thing works only on the local LAN). Then, you can use the browser to switch on/off the light using the UPnP protocol.

Dimitris Glezos gave a talk on transifex, the translation management framework that is currently used in Fedora. Translating software is a tedious task, and currently translators spent time on management tasks that have little to do with translation. We see several people dropping from translations due to this. Transifex is an evolving platform to make the work of the translator easier.

Dimitris talked about a command-line version of transifex coming out soon. Apparently, you can use this tool to grab the Greek translation of package gedit, branch HEAD. Do the translation and upload back the file.

What I would like to see here is a tool that you can instruct it to grab all PO files from a collection of projects (such as GNOME 2.22, UI Translations), and then you translate with your scripts/tools/etc. Then, you can use transifex to upload all those files using your SVN account.

The workflow would be something like

$ tfx --project=gnome-2.22 --collection=gnome-desktop --action=get
Reading from http://svn.gnome.org/svn/damned-lies/trunk/releases.xml.in... done.
Getting alacarte... done.
Getting bug-buddy... done.
...
Completed in 4:11s.
$ _

Now we translate any of the files we downloaded, and we push back upstream (of course, only those files that were changed).

$ tfx --project=gnome-2.22 --collection=gnome-desktop --user=simos --action=send
 Reading local files...
Found 6 changed files.
Uploading alacarte... done.
...
Completed uploading translation files to gnome-2.22.
$ _

Berend Cornelius talked about creating OpenOffice.org Wizards. You get such wizards when you click on File/Wizards…, and you can use them to fill in entries in a template document (such as your name, address, etc in a letter), or use to install the spellchecker files. Actually, one of the most common uses is to get those spellchecker files installed.

A wizard is actually an OpenOffice.org extension; once you write it and install it (Tools/Extensions…), you can have it appear as a button on a toolbar or a menu item among other menus.

You write wizards in C++, and one would normally work on an existing wizard as base for new ones.

When people type in a word-processor, they typically abuse it (that’s my statement, not Berend’s) by omitting the use of styles and formatting. This makes documents difficult to maintain. Having a wizard teach a new user how to write a structured document would be a good idea.

Perry Ismangil talked about pjsip, the portable open-source SIP and media stack. This means that you can have Internet telephony on different devices. Considering that Internet Telephony is a commodity, this is very cool. He demonstrated pjsip running two small devices, a Nintendo DS and an iPhone. Apparently pjsip can go on your OpenWRT router as well, giving you many more exciting opportunities.

Clutter is a library to create fast animations and other effects on the GNOME desktop. It uses hardware acceleration to make up for the speed. You don’t need to learn OpenGL stuff; Clutter is there to provide the glue.

Gutsy has Clutter 0.4.0 in the repositories and the latest version is 0.6.0. To try out, you need at least the clutter tarball from the Clutter website. To start programming for your desktop, you need to try some of the bindings packages.

I had the chance to spend time with the DejaVu guys (Hi Denis, Ben!). Also met up with Alexios, Dimitris x2, Serafeim, Markos and others from the Greek mission.

Overall, FOSDEM is a cool event. In two days there is so much material and interesting talks. It’s a recommended technical event.

16Jul/070

GUADEC Day #2

(see http://www.guadec.org/schedule/warmup)

At the first presentation, Quim Gil talked about GNOME marketing, what have been done, what is the goal of marketing. He showed a focused mind on important marketing tasks; it is easy to get carried away and not be effective, a mistake that happens in several projects.

The next session was by Tomas Frydrych (Open Hand – I have their sticker on my laptop!) on memory use in GNOME applications. Many people complain that XYZ is bloated. However, this does not convey what exactly happens; pretty useless. In addition, the common tools that show memory use do not show the proper picture because of the memory management techniques. That is, due to shared libraries, the total memory occupied by an application appears very big. A tool examined is exmap. This tool uses a kernel module that shows memory use of applications by reading in /proc. It takes a snapshot of memory use; it’s not real-time info. It comes with a GTK+ front-end (gexmap) that requires a big screen (oops, PDAs). However, it is not suitable for internet tablets and other low-spec devices. Therefore, they came up with exmap-console which addresses the shortcommings. It has a console interface based on the readline library.

Here are the rest of my notes. Hope they make sense to you.

. exmap –interactive
. ?: help
. Head: quite useful (dynamic allocation)
. Mapped:
. Sole use: memory that app is using on its own (rss?)
. “sort vm”
. “print” or “p”
. “add nautilus”
. “clear”
. “detail file” (what executables/libs loaded and how much consume)
. “detail none”

Sole use
. valgrind, to analyse Sole Use memory?
. “detail ????”

Lots of small libraries: overhead

Looking ahead
. Pagemap: by Matt Macall
. http://projects.o-hand.com/exmap-console/

Python
. Sole use: ~18MB ;-(

Tomas was apparently running Ubuntu with the English UK locale. The English UK translation team is doing an amazing job at the translation stats. Actually, most messages are copied, however with a script one can pick up words such as organization and change to organisation. The problem here is that, for example, the GAIM mo file is 215KB (?), however for the British English translation the actual changes should be less than 2-3KB. Messages that are missing from a translation mean that the original US English messages will be used. I’ll have to find how to use msgfilter to make messages untranslated if msgid == msgstr. Where is Danilo?

After lunch time (did not go for lunch), I went to the Accerciser session. Pretty cool tool, something I have been look for. Accerciser uses the accessibility framework of GNOME in order to inspect the windows of running applications and see into the properties. A good use is to identify if elements such as text boxes come with description labels; they are important to be there for accessibility purposes (screen reader), as a person that depends on software to read (text to speech) the contents of windows.

The next session was GNOME accessibility for blind people. Jan Buchal gave an excellent presentation.

My notes,

. is from Chech republic, is blind himself. has been using computers for 20+ years

. from user perspective
. users, regular and irregular ;-)
. software
. firefox 3.0beta – ok for accessibility other versions no
. gaim messenger ok
. openoffice.org ok but did not try
. orca screenreader ^^^ works ok.
. generally ready for prime time
. ubuntu guy for accessibility was there
. made joke about not having/needing display slides ;-]
. synthesizer: festival, espeak, etc – can choose
. availability of voices
. javascript: not good for accessibility
. links/w3m: just fine!
. firefox3 makes accessibility now possible.
. web designer education, things like title=”", alt=”" for images.
. OOo, not installed but should work, ooo-gnome
. “braillcom” company name
. “speech dispatcher”
. logical events
. have short sound event instead of “button”, “input form”
. another special sound for emacs prompt, etc.
. uses emacs
. have all events spoken, such as application crashing.
. problems of accessibility
. not money main factor, but still exists.
. standard developers do not use accessibility functions
. “accessor” talk, can help
. small developer group on accessiblity, may not cooperate well
. non-regular users (such as blind musician)
. musicians
. project “singing computer”
. gtk, did not have good infrastructure
. used lilypond (music typesetter, good but not simple to use)
. singing mode in festival
. use emacs with special mode to write music scores (?)
. write music score and have the computer sing it (this is not “caruso”)
. gnome interface for lilypond would be interesting
. chemistry for blind
. gtk+
. considering it
. must also work, unfortunately, on windows
. gtk+ for windows, not so good for accessibility
. conclusion: free accessibility
. need users so that applications can be improved
. have festival synthesizer, not perfect but usable
. many languages, hindi, finnish, afrikaans
. endinburgh project, to reimplement festival better
. proprietary software is a disadvantage
. q: how do you learn to use new software?
. a: has been a computer user for 20+ years, is not good candidate to say
. a: if you are dedicated, you can bypass hardles, old lady emacs/festival/lilypond
. brrlcom, not for end-users(?)
. developer problem?
. generally there is lack of documentation; easy to teach what a developer needs to know
. so that the application is accessible
. HIG Human Interface Guidelines, accessible to the developers
. “speakup” project
. Willy, from Sun microsystems, working on accessibility for +20 years, Lead of Orca.
. developers: feel accessibility is a hindrance to development
. in practice the gap is not huge
. get tools (glade) and gtk+ to come with accessibility on by default
. accessibility
. is not only for people with disabilities
. can do amazing things like 3d interfaces something

These summaries are an important example of the rule that during presentation, participants tend to remember only about 8% of the material. In some examples, even less is being recollected.

16Jul/070

GUADEC Day #1

I am writing this in the morning of the second day (posted at the end of the second day). Just had breakfast and there is a bit of time before making it to the conference venue.

Yesterday Sunday, was the first of the two days of warm-up for the GUADEC conference. At 11am the registration started. I was in front of the queue and got my badge quickly, then picked up the bag with the goodies; three cool t-shirts, a copy of Ubuntu 7.04, Fedora 7 Live, Linux stickers, two Linux pens, a mini Google Code notebook (no, that’s an actual notebook (not that type of notebook, it was just the paper-based thing)).

During registration I met up with Dimitrios Glezos (of Greek Fedora fame) and a bit later with Dimitrios Typaldos. It was the first time I met both of them in person.

Between a choice of two sessions I went to the one on X.org developments (XDamage, xrender, etc extensions and how to use them). Ryan Lortie gave the presentation.

Next was lunch time, and Dimitrios T. recommended a pub for traditional English food and drink. Sayamindu came along.

The next session I went to was the Hildon desktop, which is what we used to call Maemo; GNOME for internet tables such as the Nokia 770 and Nokia 800. There are special technical issues to solve. Lucas Rocha mentioned refactoring issues with the source code. In addition, as far as I understood, there is an issue with the internationalisation support for the platform.

Next, Don Scorgie talked about the GNOME documentation project. Several things can be improved and one of them is the introduction of a simplified XML schema for the needs of GNOME documentation. When compared to DocBook XML, the new GNOME documentation schema has only 6 elements (or do they call them tags?). In addition to this, there is a documentation editor with a special rich-edit widget for this schema. Mallard is a type of duck(?).

I also attended the last 10 minutes of the presentation on project Jackfield (sadly no special significance between Jackfield and what the project is about). Jackfield is apparently a way to run Javascript scripts on the desktop. OS/X is supposed to have it, and there are already scripts available. With Jackfield, you can run those scripts unmodified on Linux. The demos where really impressive.

The final session for the day was a presentation by Richard Rothwell on free software for the socially excluded. No, you do not have to go to Africa for this. His work relates to families in Nottingham, UK. It reminds me the situation and effort in Farkadona, Greece, that was described by Kostas Boukouvalas. I think it would have been helpful if Kostas Boukouvalas could have attended this. Richard is running a 3-year project that provides a number of PCs (in the hundreds?) with Linux to socially excluded families. Even in the UK, funding is hard to come by.

23May/0621

Ελληνικά σε VoipBuster, VoipStunt, VoipCheap κτλ.

Η εταιρία Betamax GmbH & Co KG είναι πίσω από τις υπηρεσίες Διαδικτυακής Τηλεφωνίας (Internet Telephony) VOIPBuster, VOIPStunt, VOIPCheap, InternetCalls κτλ (υπάρχουν άλλες;).
Κάθε μια από τις παραπάνω υπηρεσίες έχει δικό του πρόγραμμα (για Win μόνο) με το οποίο μπορείτε να κάνετε τηλέφωνα μέσω Διαδικτύου. Αν δείτε καλύτερα, θα παρατηρήσετε ότι κάθε μια από τις υπηρεσίες χρησιμοποιεί το ίδιο βασικό πρόγραμμα που έχει απλά παραμετροποιηθεί.

Από όλες τις υπηρεσίες μόνο στο VOIPBuster υπάρχει φόρουμ στο οποίο χρήστες μπορούν να στείλουν σχόλια και να επικοινωνήσουν μεταξύ τους.

Το λογισμικό στις παραπάνω υπηρεσίες μπορεί να μεταφραστεί σε άλλες γλώσσες. Παρατηρώντας την ενότητα Language Files του φόρουμ του VOIPBuster (απαιτεί λογαριασμό, χρειάζεται να εγκαταστήσετε την εφαρμογή που είναι μόνο σε Win για τη δημιουργία λογαριασμού), υπάρχουν 5 ανεξάρτητες (;) ελληνικές μεταφράσεις.

Θα ήταν καλό να μαζευτούν οι μεταφράσεις σε μια κοινή και γενική μετάφραση.

Ενημέρωση (Ιαν07): Νέα έκδοση της ελληνικής μετάφρασης.

11May/060

Ανακοινώθηκε το SUSE Linux 10.1

Αυτή τη στιγμή είναι διαθέσιμο από http://download.opensuse.org/
Το SUSE Linux 10.1 περιλαμβάνει βελτιώσεις στον εγκαταστάτη πακέτων με ενσωμάτωση του Red Carpet. Δεν είχα την ευκαιρία να το δοκιμάσω, ωστόσο πιστεύω ότι τώρα θα υπάρχει υπηρεσία συστήματος για την αναβάθμιση πακέτων. Δηλαδή, όταν ξεκινά κάποιος το Yast, θα είναι διαθέσιμα άμεσα τα εγκατεστημένα/προς εγκατάσταση πακέτα.
Όπως οι προηγούμενες εκδόσεις, το SUSE Linux 10.1 έρχεται με το Xen hypervisor.

Το AppArmor προσφέρει ειδικές υπηρεσίες ασφάλειας. Περιλαμβάνει ένα άρθρωμα πυρήνα και βοηθητικά πακέτα που ελέγχουν τις διεργασίες για ύποπτες λειτουργίες.

Μαζί με το OenSUSE Linux 10.1 έχετε και υποστήριξη γραφικών Xgl, αν η κάρτα γραφικών σας το υποστηρίζει.

Περισσότερες πληροφορίες

Ενημέρωση: SUSE Diary, XGL σε SUSE 10.1 (δηλαδή χρειάζεται επιπλέον βήματα), πως φαίνεται το SUSE 10.1.

2May/06Off

Explorer Destroyer for your WordPress blog (website, actually)

Explorer Destroyer is an interesting addition to your WordPress blog; when an Internet Explorer visitor arrives to your Website and they use Internet Explorer, they are advised to switch to Firefox.

It can be easily added to your WordPress blog by following the instructions in the download file. There are three levels of encouragement for your IE visitors, ranging from a polite notification to disallowing all access. Of course, the REFERER User-Agent string can easily spoofed by using the User Agent extension (oh, wait, that’s for Firefox). Anyway, it should be possible with IE.
A certain IT news site jokingly mentioned that this action may constitute t3rr0r1sm in certain countries (covers my back) as it incites violence.
To sugar the deal, one can add their AdSense ID so that they get a tiny bit from their effort.

Installing Explorer Destroyer simply requires to locate and change the opening BODY element with this (English), this (Greek UTF-8) or this (Greek 8859-7) (they add the BODY element again along with some JavaScript).
If you use the code as it is above, you shamelessly support my ad account. Mmm, rather I shamelessly ask you to add my adsense, you selflessly support my account. That’s another view.

7Apr/062

.eu domain

Today is a special day for Internet domain specialists. Specifically, the .eu domain is on sale for all citizens and companies of the EU.

EURid is the focal point for the whole process. You can find a list of accredited registrars for the .eu domain, the current registration status of .eu domains, a guide on how to get an .eu domain.

Currently, Greece has completed 4324 registrations which is less than 1% of the total registrations.

There is a list of blocked names that cannot be registered (for example, geographical names). Here you can see that a good percentage of the names are from Greece. This is good. However, several of the Greek names are in the genitive case, such as lesvou instead of the more appropriate lesvos. If you are from Greece and you would like to activate a reserved name, you have to follow a special procedure.

Who is the cheapest accredited registrar for an .eu domain?

1Apr/065

Πρόταση συνεργασίας με Microsoft

Την περασμένα Τετάρτη έλαβα ένα τηλεφώνημα από την Roz Ho (Microsoft/EMEA) για να συζητήσουμε τυχόν δυνατότητα συνεργασίας πλήρους απασχόλησης.

Μου εξήγησε ότι υπάρχει γενικό πρόβλημα σε αρκετούς πελάτες στην Ελλάδα που έχουν web servers και βάσεις δεδομένων με ποικιλία κωδικοποιήσεων όπως ISO-8859-7, Windows-1253, UCS2 και UTF-8. Αυτό δημιουργεί πρόβλημα στο interoperability, μιας και τα δεδομένα πρέπει να επανακωδικοποιηθούν για να εμφανιστούν στο Internet. Έτσι, η Microsoft Services (consulting κλαδί της Microsoft) ψάχνει για άτομα για να καλύψει την Ελλάδα.

Η Roz με ρώτησε αν υπάρχουν άλλα άτομα με παρόμοια ενδιαφέροντα για τέτοιου είδους δουλειά σε μορφή contracting όμως, ανάλογα με το φόρτο εργασίας και τους πελάτες. Αν ενδιαφέρεστε, επικοινωνήστε μαζί μου (μπορείτε να βρείτε το e-mail address στο πάνω μέρος της σελίδας.
Τη Δευτέρα έχω ολοήμερη συνάντηση για interviews στο Λονδίνο. Ελπίζω να πάνε όλα καλά!

Ενημέρωση: Καλό μήνα σε όλους, ιδιαίτερα σε όλους όσους απάντησαν! ;-)

27Mar/060

Huge lemons in Cyprus?

According to this article by Reuters, there are some huge lemons at the size of a football in Cyprus.

In the article one can read that the lemon trees have been grafted with something else.

What could have happened?

There is a citrus tree called Pomelo that bears huge fruit, similar to the size of a football. It grows in SE Asia, though it is also cultivated commercially in Israel and California.

Most probably, the lemon tree was grafted with a pomelo tree.

It is important to experiment with pomelos to achieve fruits of big size; for example, the grapefruit is a hybrid between orange and pomelo. Pomelos may not be very common as their common taste is rather weak. There is experimentation with hybrids that would make them taste better.

No, they did not send me mini Ubuntu CDs. That’s a pomelo.

Limecat is not pleased.

The limecat, an interesting Internet meme, has a small pomelo as its helmet.

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