Export your Yojimbo database to a Tiddlywiki!
July 31st, 2008

The moment Yojimbo was released I grabbed a copy. I have used it daily ever since. Yojimbo is a very nice tool for quickly collecting bits of textual data in a searchable, taggable, and secure manner. But it has its limitations. Most notably—it only runs on Mac OS X. But it also suffers from a lack of export features
As I have move my life over to linux (and open source software in general) I have been in search of a suitable alternative. My favorite, thus far, has been the simple Tiddlywiki. Incollector is a close runner up, but it fails the cross-platform test (it only runs on Windows and Linux, not the Mac OS.)
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No! Wha…oooh…wow. Yes!
July 28th, 2008
That new-band feeling
Using linux feels a lot like listening to an undiscovered band; it’s the new band none of my friends have listened to. When they first experience it they want it. I have it. I feel special. You know the story…
Huh? You haven’t heard this band?! Well, let me show you…their friends of mine. No, they’re not in the iTunes store…they released their album as a torrent. Never heard of a torrent?! Well…
Perhaps it’s the grass-roots community effort of it all. There is a very evangelistic aspect of running linux when everyone else is entrenched in their Mac OS or Windows. Everyone asks “why?” And the answer is usually intriguing enough to start some compelling conversation.
I have been wondering how linux creates that mystique and what advantage there might be in it. Most of the people I show it to have heard of linux, but they have never experienced it. I think there’s something in the experience that gives the initial impression extra impact (beyond simply reading about linux in a blog post.)
More productive "Open With" method
July 15th, 2008
Problem Summary
In switching from Mac OS Leopard to Ubuntu Linux there was one Mac feature I seriously missed—the ability to drag-and-drop a file onto any application icon to open it. In Ubuntu I experienced a reduction in productivity as I tried to find a way to get this file to open with that application when that application was not the default for that file type.
Description
Coming from the Mac, drag-and-drop is often the easiest way to perform an “open with” action, coaxing an application into opening a file. Perhaps the best example of this is the OS X Dock. The ever-present icons accept dropped files from anywhere.
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The Linux vs Mac Scorecards…
July 11th, 2008
I posted a new page: a set of Ubuntu vs Mac OS scorecards. This page contains an ever-evolving set of graphs illustrating my impressions of Ubuntu Linux as a replacement to the Mac OS.
As I experiment with Linux I will be updating the linux vs mac scorecards to reflect my experiences.
As always I appreciate comments and suggestions of tools available for Linux that can better handle any of the listed tasks. So when you get a chance check out the The Linux vs Mac Scorecards…
Bible Software on Ubuntu Linux
July 10th, 2008
As a Christian I am keenly interested in software that can help when studying the Bible. Coming from the Mac OS where there are no good Bible software offerings anything would be a blessing. So, for all you fellow Ubuntu-using Christians here is what I found.
GnomeSword 2 — 4 Stars
GnomeSword 2 is the only Gnome-native app of the bunch (I am running Ubuntu 8.04 with the Gnome desktop.) It is based on Crosswire’s Sword project.
Ubuntu Photo Manager Experiment
July 7th, 2008
I have a passion for photography and have become heavily entrenched in the tools available on Mac OS X, such as Aperture and Photoshop. This experiment focuses mainly on Aperture and what tools, if any, exist for Ubuntu to replace my Aperture workflow with something cross-platform and open-source that I can use on Mac OS X and Ubuntu.
Hypothesis:
Aperture will reign supreme and continue to be my default photo manager and raw photo editor after trying the Ubuntu Linux photo management alternatives. Honestly, I do not see how free and open source solutions can compete with Aperture.
Experiment:
I am heavily invested in Apple’s Aperture photo editor manager. Given Apple’s attention to detail, and the Core technologies available from the Mac OS, I had sincere doubts anything could stack up in the Linux world. But, I have been surprised many a time, especially by Ubuntu itself; I was looking forward to seeing what the open source world had to offer.
