Using Jabber to query Swiss phone numbers

It’s now possible to query the Swiss phone book of search.ch with Jabber instant messenger. Add tel.search.ch@swissjabber.ch to your contact list and send him a message containing just the name and location of the person you’re looking for. I have now added this to my Adium client and it works fine. What’s missing is looking up the name for a phone number. And the output doesn’t format the phone number very nicely. (Via 2ni, search.ch CTO) ...

February 22, 2006 · Patrice Neff

namics Intranet Fachtagung

Nach der Banner Panne mache ich jetzt mal beim Experiment von Jürg Stuker mit. Er will rausfinden, ob Weblogs zu mehr Referern führen als Banner Werbung und verschenkt dafür 10 Tageskarten an die SBAW (Swiss Blog Awards). Klickt also folgenden Banner an, falls ihr denkt ihr habt an einer Intranet Fachtagung Interesse. Ein Intranet der namics wurde in die jährliche Intranet Top 10 der Nielsen Norman gewählt, also sollte namics doch etwas zum Thema zu sagen haben. Disclaimer: Ich habe einige Jahre für namics gearbeitet. ...

February 22, 2006 · Patrice Neff

Crime in Japan

That a report like the following makes it into the newspaper says quite a lot about crime rate in Japan: Popular novelist Mariko Hayashi had her handbag stolen by a street snatcher in central Tokyo, police said. Hayashi, 51, was on her way home in Shibuya-ku, on Sunday, when a man snatched her handbag and fled. The handbag contained her purse holding 90,000 yen. The handbag was found on that night in Tokyo's Suginami-ku, but the cash was missing from it, police said. Seems that in Japan there are no crimes more serious than handbags stolem from novelists. Good for the Japanese. And indeed I always felt very safe in Japan, quite the contrary to Peru.

February 21, 2006 · Patrice Neff

Skolelinux 2.0 is getting ready

The next Skolelinux release will soon be released. This will finally be based on Debian Sarge. For me one of the major advancements is the language support. The installation and most of the system can be used in Spanish. This was not the case with Skolelinux 1. In the past weeks we have translated the default Apache homepage (for the server installation) and the LDAP user admin in Webmin. Also parts of the installation suddenly were in English again, but with help of the mailing list we fixed that as well. So it seems to me that we have a nice Spanish Skolelinux system. A few parts are not translated yet, such as the Netgroup administration. I hope to address that in future Skolelinux upgrades. And here at the Diego Thomson we already use the Sarge-based system. We installed it from the release candidates and it works just fine. ...

February 21, 2006 · Patrice Neff

Swissinfo offline

Unless I am very much mistaken, Swissinfo is currently offline because of DNS problems. Or so it seems. I noticed a few minutes ago that NetNewsWire reported some error for the swissinfo.org domain. Tried to surf the site with Firefox and indeed, I got a “Server not found” (or rather “Servidor no encontrado”) message. So I used dig to verify that no DNS record is returned. Some more debugging showed, that the domain is still active and points to the two DNS servers NS1.IP-PLUS.NET and NS2.IP-PLUS.NET. But those domain servers don’t return anything for swissinfo.org queries. It seems, that IP-Plus has somehow misconfigured their DNS servers. Or maybe Swissinfo didn’t pay… I will notify the technical contact for the domain by e-mail, just in case he doesn’t know about the problem, yet (very unlikely though). Update: Definitely some IP-Plus problem. Checked swissinfo.ch, which lists the two name servers leo.srg-ssr.ch and ns1.ip-plus.net. The srg-ssr.ch one returns the names correctly (194.6.181.128 for swissinfo.org and a CNAME to www.swissinfo.org.edgesuite.net. for www.swissinfo.org). The IP-Plus one doesn’t return any data for any of those domains. Update: As Matthias noted in the comments, Swissinfo was online again a few hours after my post. ...

February 20, 2006 · Patrice Neff

DEVONthink: Making the switch

I reported a few days ago, that I was trying out DEVONthink. I have also had a look at Tinderbox. But after looking at the price ($192 per year) I was not very motivated to have a deep look. A quick look I took and it didn’t seem to provide what I’m looking for. Meanwhile I imported most of the articles from my personal Wiki into DEVONthink and I also had a look at the export function. While it’s not a world-class export function, it’s reasonable. It can spit out a file hierarchy with all the RTF, PDF, etc. files in it (but the links are not preserved). It’s also capable of exporting as a Web site where all the links will be preserved and the RTF pages are converted to (ugly) HTML. All in all I am very impressed. It’s indexing capabilities are great and it also integrates very nicely with the Web. I especially like the features of clipping text directly from Web sites. If you open a Web site in DEVONthink (or DEVONagent) you can add the whole page or a selection to the database as a rich text document. I currently use that mainly to add clippings from Wikipedia or The Economist. I guess I’ll report some of my tips for using DEVONthink in the future. Meanwhile I’m waiting until it presents me with a “buy now!!!” message and will most probably purchase it then. Correction: Tinderbox costs $192 to buy for the first time and comes with one year of free updates (that’s where my $192/year came from). But the update “only” costs $90. Update: As you can see in the following picture, there is already quite a lot of stuff in my database. ...

February 20, 2006 · Patrice Neff

namics.blogs

As probably most of my readers know, I used to work for namics for a few years (including a 4-year apprenticeship). Today I started a new experiment, the namics.blogs. On that planet a few weblogs and Flickr pages by current and former namics employees are collected. The software used is the same one as for Planet Switzerland and was kindly provided by Chregu. Thanks! If you work at namics or used to work at namics, you can contact me by mail to get listed. Or, if you’re also Swiss (or live in Switzerland) just add your blog to the Swiss blog list and add the tag “namics_alumni”. And now I’ll end with the legal disclaimer: this site is not officially endorsed by namics but is a private project. ...

February 20, 2006 · Patrice Neff

State of the Swiss Blogosphere 2005

This is the English translation of the original German article Status der Schweizer Blogosphäre 2005. Introduction In this post I'm presenting you the state of the Swiss Blogosphere in the year 2005. In order to come up with this numbers and statistics I analyzed the blog.ch database. This report is part of a project I'm going to present in a few days. This report is of course inspired by David Sifry's "State of the Blogosphere" reports. ...

February 18, 2006 · Patrice Neff

namics banner

For the first time in my life I stumbled over a namics banner. They are now capitalitzing on the fact that one of their Intranets (for ALTANA Pharma AG) was selected among the world’s top 10 by the Nielsen Norman Group. See the namics press release (German). On March 22 they are organizing an Intranet congress, which is what the banner was about. Too bad though, that clicking the banner leads to this page. ...

February 18, 2006 · Patrice Neff

Kent Beck in German-speaking Europe

In case you have 543 € you somehow need to spend, you might want to hear Kent Beck speaking about testing and extreme programming. He is coming to Zurich, Vienna and Frankfurt at the end of March this year. If you sign up until March 10, you pay 543 €. After that it will cost you 725 €. The talk is organized by iX (part of the Heise publishing house). See the official Web site for information. (Via Heise) ...

February 18, 2006 · Patrice Neff