Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Alternatives”
Goodbye Twitter - you were useful for (quite) a while.
After getting rid of my Facebook account a long time ago, finally, I have decided to pull the plug on Twitter as well.
I have become increasingly wary of the changes of the platform as it seeks for a way to monetise it’s user-base. The timeline has increasingly become infested with annoying ads and no way of getting rid of them. Since Twitter effectively killed the whole app ecosystem with their changes to API rules and banning anything that became useful to a substantial number of people.
Installing Ubuntu Phone (Touch) on Nexus 7 LTE
[](https://www.flickr.com/photos/leogaggl/16898140083 “ubuntu phone by Leo Gaggl, on Flickr”)
Add SDK repository
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-sdk-team/ppa<br></br>sudo apt-get update<br></br>sudo apt-get install ubuntu-device-flash
Enable USB Debugging on the device
- Make sure you have developer mode enabled (see http://developer.android.com/tools/device.html if you are unsure).
- Navigate to Settings > Developer options
- Enable USB Debugging. When a device is connected, you will be prompted in Android to authorize it.
Unlock Bootloader
adb reboot bootloader<br></br>fastboot oem unlock<br></br>fastboot reboot
Finding a private location check-in service
Foursquare decided that it was too hard for them to compete with location services like Yelp and split their app into two separate apps. Whilst that might make sense to the 4Square CEO and his VC masters, it makes no sense from a users perspective. Foursquare can be a bit of a battery hog already, and having 2 apps to open and “annoy” you with notifications is not an improvement by any means. And if I wanted Foursquare to be Yelp – I would have used Yelp in the first place. So no – I do not want to install another separate check-in App (called Swarm). One battery hogging location app was enough.
Turning the Toshiba Z830 into a Ubuntu Ultrabook
[](http://www.flickr.com/photos/leogaggl/6821823795/ “ultrabook by leogaggl, on Flickr”)
EDIT: Here are some tweaks if you install 12.04 (Precise Pangolin).
Since I will have to do a fair amount of traveling in the next year I was in need of upgrading my trusted workhorse of Toshiba Qosmio F60 to a more portable option that will be easier on the shoulders during long travels. After doing some research into which of the major manufacturers offer the best support for a Linux based Operating System it came down to a final two: the Intel i7 variants of Samsung Series 9 and the Toshiba Z830.
Alternatives to Google Adsense
Due to a recent absolute Customer Service failure with Google Adsense I have done some research on the alternative to Google Adsense as a content-sensitive mobile and web advertisements.
We are currently reviewing the following services:
- http://www.adbrite.com/
- http://chitika.com
- http://www.admob.com/
- https://pubcenter.microsoft.com/Login
- http://advertisingcentral.yahoo.com/publisher/index
- http://www.clicksor.com/
- http://www.infolinks.com/
- http://adhitz.com/en
- http://buysellads.com/
Once we have some results I will update this post. Please add your comments should you have any (good or bad) experiences with similar services.
GoogleApps (Gmail) as default Ubuntu mail client
Keeping mail on a local machine does not make sense when working across a large number of different (vitual) devices. As a GoogleApps user I have long preferred browser based mail client as my default.
Unfortunately this is not yet a very straight process on most Operating Systems and Ubuntu is no difference.
Edit: all the commands need to be run with root privileges. so either run “sudo su” or prefix all with “sudo ” (thanks to Paul for the comment below)
Ubuntu - the ‘old man’ experiment
Recently my father, who has so far not wanted to have anything to do with computers, decided to change all of this with age 67. While initially surprised (and remembering the comments I got when sitting in front of computers as a teenager instead of working on the family farm), I quite liked the idea. It’s a great to see him still wanting to explore and learn new things.
Unfortunately since there is approximately 17.000km between us, there was a limited amount I could do to help him get set up. So my eldest sister (as she always has to do) ended up having to help out instead. Finding hardware was the easy part and very cheap these days (and since it was bought online I could help with the technical aspects). However the machines in that particular shop came as white-boxes without an Operating System (which is a good thing in my book).