Thunderbird 3 installation on Ubuntu 10.04

Hmm, my evening slowed down a bit when I downloaded Thunderbird 3, extracted it and didn’t really know what to do with the resulting files!

Turns out the answer is don’t be scared, just double click the file that says ‘thunderbird’ with no extension, and it starts up. Naturally, it starts asking you for a new account settings etc but I have all that info in the thunderbird profile I am now careful to store in my documents so that I can back my emails up periodically. Just quit out of this and perform a quick web search to remember the solution.

You have to cd to the programme folder (in my case, it’s still on the Desktop) and type ./thunderbird -profilemanager
These magic words open a little dialogue box. You want to create a new profile. Call it something obvious. I called mine ‘Dan’. Then click ‘Choose Folder’ and navigate to where you know your profile folder is (if you don’t, back up and look for this by consulting here). I was cautious and backed this folder up before I started. I recommend you do the same, although nothing went wrong with what I did, you can never backup enough.

That’s it really, clicking ok starts Thunderbird with this profile and next time, Thunderbird will open with this profile already selected.

On to mounting the windows partition at startup now before Soph comes back!

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List of programmes to re-install

  • Thunderbird – Email, Calendar (might migrate this to Evolution)
  • Skype – VOIP, IM
  • Viking – GPS visualisation with OpenStreetMaps
  • Pure Data – Sound & Programming
  • Unison – Cross-platform file synchronisation
  • VLC – Cross-platform multi-media player
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Updating Ubuntu (8.10 to 10.04)

Is it really two years since I started using the Linux OS? Coming up to I think, I was in Banff for the first time, so it must have been November 2008.

Any road, with the release of the latest Long Term Support version, Lucid Lynx (10.04), I thought I’d take the plunge tonight while Soph’s out and update from Intrepid Ibex (8.10) to this (don’t tell her).

I had to do an install of the new OS because I haven’t been updating to the intermediate versions, so I was a bit nervous about it, hence setting aside a quiet evening.

To my great happiness, it seems to have all gone smoothly. First, I slightly adjusted the partitions on my laptop’s hard drive with the new GParted CD (0.5.2) I just wanted to make sure that the new OS had a bit of elbow room.

I downloaded the .iso from the Ubuntu site and burnt it, then put it in the computer and rebooted.

In GParted I took the precaution of noting down what device names belonged to what, by me it was sda1 – Windows sda2 – Windows recovery, sda3 – linux root (system), sda4 – linux home (my files and data). This helped me to confidently check sda3 for re-formatting and the location for the root folder and to select sda4 to be my home folder as far as the new system was concerned – REMEMBER: Don’t format home! You’ll loose all your files.

After whirring and grinding away for a while, it was asking me to restart and now I’m typing away on the new operating system.

I’ve now got to work out what I need in terms of software, get them from the repositories again and do a bit of re-fiddling – get the windows partition to mount at startup (the dropbox folder symlink isn’t working because of this), etc.

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Great Perl Script for GPX files and OpenStreetMap

Two of my favourite things: free and open software that people work on and share with us all and the map that everyone can contribute to have been bought together by Thomas Fischer.

He has written and published a Perl script called gpx2png which grabs your GPX file, downloads the tiles from OpenStreetMap that it needs and produces a very nice png image of the track over the OpenStreetMap tiles.

Thomas being an exemplary coder and Perl being extremely readable (like Python), it was very easy to change the track colours, background colours, etc. until I was happy with the outcome.

It’s already come in handy for visualizing the GPS tracks that the students in Leipzig are re-creating of people’s journeys to the Monday Demonstrations in 1989, for our project there.

Below is my first trial, using the GPX track made when on the ‘Going Solo’ residency, of a walk from Hathersage to Bamford.

Thanks, Thomas

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Unpacking a walk

Walk Hathersage to Bamford

A walk form Hathersage to Bamford

Going on a six hour walk this Saturday with Heimo Lattner reminded me of a problem I was thinking about on the ‘Going Solo’ residency, how do you unpack a walk that you might have recorded aspects of?

In my case, for the Heimo walk, from S-Bahnhof Oberspree to the newly opened Tempelhof Airfield here in Berlin, I had set my small laptop periodically taking photographs with a web cam pointing straight upwards, attached to my rucksack. I thought I had also recorded the walk with my GPS but I discovered that it had run out of batteries about half way through!

In any case, the question that still preys on my mind is what to make of these walks? There is a big part of me that agrees with something Heimo said on the walk, that the walk is the thing itself. But there is another part that still has the urge to reflect on the walk by making work about it in a similar (but less traumatic) way that I dealt with a fire I saw by making a performance, ‘Unfallen‘ about it.

I’m slowly working on a walk from Hathersage to Bamford I did as part of the Going Solo residency and trying to bring together the GPS trail with the webcam images I took (in this case, of the ground, which I think is actually more successful that the sky).

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