Monthly Archive for March, 2009

Personas for Firefox

After a trial run for the past few months Mozilla has finally gone public with their latest addition to Firefox, Personas.  Personas aims to help users customize the look of their browser by enabling them to select a skin to change the status bar and top of their browser window. You may be asking what exactly the difference is between Personas and Firefox themes, well themes change the entire look of the browser by altering the appearance of the buttons, icons, and browser window.  Personas is more concerned with adding lightweight customisation options to the browser than changing the entire appearance.  According to Mozilla:

Personas allow you to “skin” the top and bottom areas of Firefox only (the header and footer of the browser chrome) without any change to the look of the navigation buttons or menus. With Personas, you can easily switch between many different lightweight skins with no further installation required.

Like Personas, a Firefox theme is a type of Firefox add-on that extends the functionality of your browser and allows you to “skin” it in a variety of ways. However, unlike Personas, a theme changes the appearance of navigation buttons, toolbars and menus.

I’ve got to say its certainly a great way to allow user customisation while still allowing users to feel comfortable in their browser window by not altering the menus and buttons.  If you want to check out Personas then download Firefox and install the addon.  Enjoy!

PS If you want to see the difference when using Personas, then here are two screenshots (click the images for the full versions):

Firefox without Personas

Firefox without Personas

Firefox with the Greenpeace Persona

Firefox with the Greenpeace Persona

Love at first bite…

subway_logoI think I may have fallen in love… with a sandwich.  Yes you heard right dear readers, I have fallen in love with the most scrumptious and delicious sandwich that has ever been created on this planet of ours.  We met at the Subway here in Somerset mall today at lunch time.  I had a crisp R50 note and she had a filling of Italian ham, cheese, tomato, onion and gherkins all doused lightly in a sweet chilli sauce.  I can honestly say that I’ve never tasted such an amazingly delicious sandwich in my life before and it’s unfortunate that I’ll only be able to pop in there once a week as they seem to have no branches here in my area.  I love the fact that it’s healthy and cheap and you are asked exactly what you want on the sandwich so it tastes precisely like you’d want it.  Top it off with a refreshing orange juice and you have all the makings of a wonderfully healthy and delicious meal.  Now please get a move on Subway and open up here near me!

50 Cent: Blood on the Sand review

50_cent_blood_on_the_sandMy next review is up at Xboxgaming for 50 Cent: Blood on the Sand.  The best way to describe it would be if Steven Seagal and Jean-Claude Van Damme had a lovechild it would turn into 50 Cent: Blood in the Sand.  So if you’re a fan of cheesy action films then you’ll have a ball playing this.  Bad dialogue, non-existent story and plentiful swearing make this game a guilty pleasure for any and all action movie fans so if that describes you then check it out and let me know what you think, as usual comments are more than welcome.

PJ Harvey rocks!

Wow.  I’m amazed at the recent batch of PJ Harvey tracks I’ve gotten hold of this past week.  She is one of the most talented female musicians that I’ve had the great pleasure of listening to and is right up there with Tori Amos in my opinion.  I find their style of music far more listenable to the ear than more typical female pop acts that seem to be blighting the music scene these days (I’m starting to sound almost like some sort of mother grundy here!) and I’m glad top see that they are still managing to find an audience out there.  So if I can recommend a few albums for anyone interested:

  • Is This desire?
  • Stories From the City, Stories From the Sea
  • To Bring You My Love
  • White Chalk

What has been…

CalendarWell its been a long week hence the absence of any sort of updates on this here blog of mine and unfortunately next week looks to be equally rough with month end approaching faster than I would have liked.  This week has seen some highlights for me though with the most notable being the swapout of my RROD Xbox console by MI Digital.  Unfortunately the one they gave me in exchange would seem to be lacking HDMi.  Oh well, I’m just glad enough to be able to have a working console again in time for resident Evil 5 which landed in my hands yesterday and should satiate my zombie killing lust for the time being till the new Left 4 Dead DLC hits in June.  This of course also means I have to get hard at work on my current batch of reviews for Xboxgaming.co.za with my review for Rise of the Argonauts being published this week and 50 Cent: Blood on the Sand being next up on my plate. (Hint:  Its surprisingly fun if you like B grade action movies.)  I’ve also come into possession of some PJ Harvey tracks (thanks Mark!) and so far I’m loving what I’m hearing especially the track This Mess We’re In which is a duet with Thom Yorke, one of my favourite vocalists.  Otherwise my weekend is looking mighty boring with only 50 Cent providing any sort of relief from the assignments I need to get done ASAP.  I’ve also been hit by the first cold of the year so I’m a bit doped up on medicine at the moment and will probably not remember much of my weekend come Monday morning.  Here’s hoping you all have a great weekend! :)

An open letter from David Hayter

I thought I’d post an open letter from David Hayter, voice of Solid Snake and screenwriter for Watchmen and X-Men amongst other films.

So it has been five months since I saw my first rough cut of WATCHMEN, and eight days since the premiere of the film I’ve been working on since late in the year 2000.

The reviews are out — Some outstanding, others rankly dismissive, which can be frustrating for the people involved, (though I can only speak for myself,) because I firmly believe that WATCHMEN, the novel, must be read through more than once to even have the faintest grip on it. And I believe the film is the same.

I’ve seen it twice now, and despite having run the movie in my head thousands of times, my two viewings still don’t’ allow me to view the film with the proper distance or objectivity. Is it Apocalypse Now? Is it Blade Runner? Is it Kubrick, or Starship Troopers? I don’t know yet.

All I know is that I had a pretty amazing experience the two times I’ve seen it. And both viewings produced remarkably different experiences. The point is, I have listened for years, to complaints from true comic book fans, that “not enough movies take the source material seriously.” “Too many movies puss out,” or “They change great stories, just to be commercial.” Well, I f***ing dare you to say any one of those things about this movie.

This is a movie made by fans, for fans. Hundreds of people put in years of their lives to make this movie happen, and every one of them was insanely committed to retaining the integrity of this amazing, epic tale. This is a rare success story, bordering on the impossible, and every studio in town is watching to see if it will work. Hell, most of them own a piece of the movie.

So look, this is a note to the fanboys and fangirls. The true believers. Dedicated for life.

If the film made you think. Or argue with your friends. If it inspired a debate about the nature of man, or vigilante justice, or the horror of Nixon abolishing term limits. If you laughed at Bowie hanging with Adrian at Studio 54, or the Silhouette kissing that nurse.

Please go see the movie again next weekend.

You have to understand, everyone is watching to see how the film will do in its second week. If you care about movies that have a brain, or balls, (and this film’s got both, literally), or true adaptations — And if you’re thinking of seeing it again anyway, please go back this weekend, Friday or Saturday night. Demonstrate the power of the fans, because it’ll help let the people who pay for these movies know what we’d like to see. Because if it drops off the radar after the first weekend, they will never allow a film like this to be made again.

In the interests of full disclosure, let me also point out that I do not profit one cent from an increase in box office, although an increase in box office can add to the value of the writers’ eventual residual profits from dvd and tv sales.

But I’m not saying it for money. I’m saying it for people like me. I’m saying it for people who love smart, dark entertainment, on a grand, operatic scale. I’m talking to the Snake fans, the Rorschach fans, the people of the Dark Knight.

And hey, if you hated the film, if you think we committed atrocities, or literary mistakes of a massive, cephalopodic nature. If the movie made you a little sick to your stomach, or made you feel bad about your life. If you hated it for whatever reason, that’s cool too. I’m not suggesting you risk gastro-intestinal distress just for the sake of risky filmmaking.

But if you haven’t seen it yet? Well, I’ll just say this…

It may upset you. And it probably will upset you.

And all along, we really meant it to.

Because face it. All this time…You there, with the Smiley-face pin. Admit it.

All this time, you’ve been waiting for a director who was going to hit you in the face with this story. To just crack you in the jaw, and then bend you over the pool table with this story. With its utterly raw view of the darkest sides of human nature, expressed through its masks of action and beauty and twisted good intentions. Like a fry-basket full of hot grease in the face. Like the Comedian on the Grassy Knoll. I know, I know…

You say you don’t like it. You say you’ve got issues. I get it.

And yet… You’ll be thinking about this film, down the road. It’ll nag at you. How it was rough and beautiful. How it went where it wanted to go, and you just hung on. How it was thoughtful and hateful and bleak and hilarious. And for Jackie Earle Haley.

Trust me. You’ll come back, eventually. Just like Sally.

Might as well make it count for something.

David Hayter

I have to agree with him on most of his points.  Watchmen is the type of film that will need several viewings to appreciate many of the subtleties it presents.  So if you loved or hated the film, try and catch it again and let Hollywood know that these are the types of films we want to see more off.

Watchmen review

WatchmenI’ve just come back from seeing Watchmen and can say that I’m very impressed with Zack Snyder’s take on the graphic novel. Other than Ozymandias, the rest of the cast was a perfect fit and the story and dialogue both stuck closely to the graphic novel so any fans out there thinking the movie is nothing more than a casual cash in will be pleasantly surprised. The look of the novel has also been captured perfectly with the cold war era being prominent throughout the movie. The soundtrack certainly came as a massive surprise to me. At no point did I think that the use of music could impact so favourably upon the movie. There were definitely some awesome choices made in selecting the licensed tracks here. The only slight deviation from the graphic novel was the ending, but it manages to fit more appropriately into the context of the universe for the purposes of the big screen so its not that major of an issue (although it can be taken to change the meaning significantly depending on how you interpret it).

Overall I really enjoyed the film and at no point did I feel bored during the almost 3 hour running time which for me is the mark of a well paced script. My only hassles with the film comes with Snyder’s obsession with slow-mo scenes in every fight. While this may have worked for a film such as 300 where style was more important than substance, it just doesn’t fit right in watchmen. Hopefully it won’t become too overused in his future films and overshadow some of the good work he’s done here in Watchmen. One caveat is that this film will be far more enjoyable to those of you that have read the graphic novel. Others may find that the film drags a little in the beginning and might not see the grander message the graphic novel and film are trying to convey. Is it a great superhero movie? No, Dark Knight manages to meld a story with action in a far more palatable way than Watchmen. Does that make Watchmen a bad film? No, Watchmen is not and should not be seen as a superhero film. Its more than that, its a depiction of humanity and all its foibles as we come to terms with our ability to destroy ourselves and that is merely the beginning of a wonderfully crafted and presented film. do yourself a favour and watch it and if you haven’t had a chance yet try to read the graphic novel.

Pidgin 2.5.5 released

PidginThe latest and greatest version of Pidgin has been released with a whole host of bug fixes and features being added into version 2.5.5.  Two bugs that I am personally overjoyed to see disappear are the ugly fonts used in MSN messages and the inability to send and receive avatars to and from WLM 9 clients. As per usual you can grab the download from the link on my sidebar to the right or from here.  The full change list is as follows:

  • libpurple
    • Fix a crash when removing an account with an unknown protocol id.
    • Beta support for SSL connections for AIM and ICQ accounts. To enable, check the “Use SSL” option from the Advanced tab when editing your AIM or ICQ account. (Paul Aurich)
    • Fix a memory leak in SILC. (Luke Petre)
    • Fix some string handling in the SIMPLE prpl, which fixes some buddy name handling and other issues. (Paul Aurich, Marcus Sundberg)
    • Implement support for resolving DNS via the SOCKS4 proxy (SOCKS4a).
  • ICQ
    • Fix retrieval of status messages from users of ICQ 6.x, Miranda, and other libpurple clients. (Daniel Ljungborg)
    • Change client ID to match ICQ Basic 14.34.3096. This fixes publishing of buddy icons and available messages.
    • Properly publish status messages for statuses other than Available. ICQ 6.x users can now see these status messages. (Daniel Ljungborg)
    • Fix receipt of messages from the mobile client Slick. (David Jedelsky)
  • MSN
    • Fix transfer of buddy icons, custom smileys, and files from the latest Windows Live Messenger 9 official client. (Thomas Gibson-Robinson)
    • Large (multi-part) messages are now correctly re-combined.
    • Federated/Yahoo! buddies should now stop creating sync issues at every signin. You may need to remove duplicates in the Address Book. See the FAQ for more information. Thanks to Jason Lingohr for lots of debugging and testing.
    • Messages from Yahoo! buddies are no longer silently dropped.
    • We now save and use the CacheKey for ABCH SOAP requests.
    • Don’t try to parse Personal Status Messages or Current Media if they don’t exist.
    • Convert from ISO-8859-1 encoding to UTF-8 when no charset is specified on incoming messages. This should fix some issues with messages from older clients.
    • Force sending the font “Segoe UI” if outgoing formatting doesn’t specify a font already.
    • Queue callbacks when token updates are in progress to prevent two token update attempts from trampling each other.
    • Fixed a crash on Windows when removing a buddy’s alias.
    • Update the Address Book when buddies’ friendly names change. This prevents seeing an outdated alias or not seeing an alias at all for buddies who are offline when you sign in.
    • Update tokens for FindMembership and ABFindAll SOAP requests.
    • We no longer try to send empty messages. This could happen when a message contained only formatting and that formatting was not supported on MSN.
    • Buddies on both the Allow and Block list are now automatically removed from the Allow list. Users with this problem will now no longer receive an ADL 241 error. The problematic buddy should now appear on the buddy list and can be removed or unblocked as desired.
  • XMPP
    • Resources using __HOSTNAME__ substitution will now grab only the short hostname instead of the FQDN on systems which put the FQDN in the hostname. (Matěj Cepl)
    • No longer send a ‘to’ attribute on an outgoing stanza when we haven’t received one. This fixes a registration bug as described in ticket #6635.
  • Pidgin
    • Tooltip windows now appear below the mouse cursor. (Kosta Arvanitis)
    • Tooltip windows now disappear on keypress events. (Kosta Arvanitis)
    • Tooltip windows no longer linger when scrolling the buddy list. (Kosta Arvanitis)
  • Finch
    • Allow rebinding keys to change the focused widget (details in the man-page, look for GntBox::binding)



Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 South Africa
This work by Terrance Brown is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 South Africa.