Tag-Archive for » Linux «

Saturday, April 18th, 2009 | Author: pluc | Views:

Cydia/Icy

I’ve been rocking a jailbroken iPhone for a few months now, and I must say I absolutely love it. It feels just like when I switched to Linux: power to the community, freedom of choice and usage, open source spirit… and you’re pretty much on your own if shit hits the fan. I’ve blogged about the best Cydia applications I found in the past (Top 10 Cydia Apps and Top 10 Cydia Apps Redux), but I feel it’s time to update that list and share it with you all. “Why?” might you ask. Simple. My needs and interests change regularly. The software source being Cydia, applications can be harder to find than with the centralized Apple App Store. New apps are added to Cydia on a daily basis, and new repositories are created daily, so new stuff is easy to find – good stuff is harder. There are a few tools on the interwebs to help you by attempting to centralize the Cydia apps information (appRater, ModMyi, hackint0sh, iPhoneFreakz, BigBoss, iSpazio), but it’s still more challenging than your search-and-tap routine.

Here goes a revamped list of my current essential Cydia apps for your jailbroken iPhone in no particular order. I’m gonna leave out the obvious like Cydia and OpenSSH.

more…

Category: Mobile  | Tags: , , , , ,  | 29 Comments
Friday, April 03rd, 2009 | Author: pluc | Views:

I’ve upgraded to Ubuntu 9.04 (“Jaunty Jackalope”) from 8.10 (“Intrepid Ibex”) about a week ago and was surprised how smooth it went. Jaunty’s still in its alpha stage (Alpha 3 as of now) yet it’s surprisingly stable. One thing that Jaunty, once officially released, will add to the regular Ubuntu is ext4 support. Ext4 is an upgrade from (wait for it…. you’ll never guess!) ext3, which is starting to show its age in the filesystem world. Ext4 provides better performance than ext3, mostly due to its delayed allocation and more file support (like you’ll ever have files bigger than 2 or 16 Terabytes?). Anyway, I felt like risking an in-place conversion of my two ext3 partitions for the sake of performance… and it went relatively smooth. I’ll explain how I’ve done it so you can give it a whirl as well. One thing worth noting though is that once a filesystem is converted to ext4, there’s no going back. You can’t convert it in-place to ext3, you must format the whole thing and start over. So obviously, back your shit up.

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Category: Linux  | Tags: , , ,  | 11 Comments
Sunday, February 15th, 2009 | Author: pluc | Views:

About a month ago, I jailbroke my iPhone and made a list of my top 10 Cydia apps at the time. As everything else in life, that list has since evolved, and looking back at it today I felt like it needed to be revisited. The main reason why I need to write about that list is because some of the apps that I found cool at the time turned out to be inadequate in the long run. So I’ll give you my current top 10 Cydia apps, now with 100% more knowledge! more…

Category: Mobile  | Tags: , , , ,  | 3 Comments
Sunday, January 25th, 2009 | Author: pluc | Views:

I’ve had an iPhone for about 7 months. I’ve been a regular App Store user, buying all my stuff legitimately. This weekend, I decided to JailBreak it (how?). What convinced me to jailbreak it? I wanted control over my SMS alert. I just wanted a simple beep, no fancy 5 seconds long tone, just a goddamn beep. Apple didn’t judge it important to give its users control over that. I actually didn’t know much about the pros – but I knew everything I had to know about the cons. So, I figured I’d give it a try, for the sake of having more control over my device and just trying something different. I was pleasantly surprised! The whole “breaking” process was ridiculously easy – it just implied installing an application on my MBP, connecting my iPhone and running it. Everything went smoothly, and when my iPhone rebooted, it was jailbroken. That introduced me to a whole new world I wasn’t aware of, honestly. First off, I had the option of installing yellowsn0w, which is an application that would allow my iPhone 3G to be carrier independant. I didn’t need that, so I just didn’t install it. It might be something interesting for other users though, and the possibility is there and equally easy.

Basically, jailbreaking your iPhone will give you more customization power and, if you’re a Linux enthusiast, will allow you to SSH to your device and explore they filesystem. The great thing about it is that it doesn’t affect everything you did before jailbreaking – you can still sync it with iTunes. Here are my favorite applications, the ones that made jailbreaking worth it for me. more…

Category: Mobile  | Tags: , , , ,  | 4 Comments