After a bunch of searching, I’ve found that the easiest way of converting video to WebM on OSX for FREE is….drum roll…
It’s easy. It’s open source. It’s awesome.
It blows the other “free”, sketchy alternatives out of the water.
After a bunch of searching, I’ve found that the easiest way of converting video to WebM on OSX for FREE is….drum roll…
It’s easy. It’s open source. It’s awesome.
It blows the other “free”, sketchy alternatives out of the water.
Holy smokes, what a pair of months. Remember when I told you that I was hauling ass on getting an EDS contact integration add-on up and running for Ubuntu Oneiric? It didn’t stop – I’ve been continuing to haul ass ever since.
And now I’ve got something to show for my efforts!
Here’s a demonstration of my add-on in action:
If you’re using Thunderbird on Oneiric, I’d love for you to try the add-on. All feedback welcome in this Google Groups thread!
Over the next few days, I’m going to write a few posts on what I did, how I did it, and what kind of difficulties I ran into along the way.
Until then, stay tuned!
If you enjoyed our Lady Gaga video, you might enjoy this too – here’s my band covering When The Night Feels My Song by Bedouin Soundclash:
It’s been a really long time since I posted any updates about what I’ve been doing with Thunderbird.
There’s a good reason – I’ve been hauling ass. My Unity Launcher and Messaging Menu extensions have gone through several iterations, and are shaping up well. The plan is to bundle those extensions with the latest Thunderbird 5.0 beta to get some more user feedback.
The majority of my work lately has been on a project called EDS Contacts Integration. Do you remember when I talked about Ubuntu One contacts sync, and how I wanted to integrate that with Thunderbird’s address book? Well, I went to UDS a few weeks back, and I learned that a bigger / better goal would be to integrate with EDS (Evolution Data Server), which acts like the global address book, task list, calendar, etc for Ubuntu. If I integrate here, then *all* Evolution address books (including the Ubuntu One address book and Google Contacts address books) should be available in Thunderbird. So it’s a pretty big win.
So, like the Unity Launcher and Messaging Menu integration, this integration is currently being implemented as a Thunderbird add-on.
Currently, this add-on has basic read-only. I can view EDS address books, contacts and mailing lists. EDS contacts appear in the auto-complete when I start typing an e-mail address. They’re searchable. I can view the photos of EDS contacts. There are some edge cases that I haven’t addressed yet (reading address books that require authentication, for example). That’ll be coming soon.
I’ve also started work on write capabilities. I can now add and remove addresses on a mailing list, and set whether or not I want e-mail addresses to be hidden when I send mail to the list.
So, in short, I’m making pretty decent progress. Not bad for a month’s work.
But I can’t just fork over the add-on for you to play with, because this work has several other moving parts. The first moving part is the core address book de-RDF’ing work I started a few months back. The patch for this is landing in Thunderbird’s trunk shortly, which I’ve very excited about. And the second moving part: a patch in trunk where I’ve made a few slight modifications to the address book infrastructure. This makes it easier for add-ons (like my EDS integration add-on) to extend the behaviour of the address book. This will also, hopefully, be landing shortly once I’ve polished it up, and gotten it through review.
Once those patches land, my add-on should work properly on trunk. And not long after that, the patches will land in an Early Bird release for you all to try!
More blogging soon. And more screenshots. And maybe a video. Stay tuned.
In an effort to increase and focus our efforts on messaging and web communications, Mozilla Messaging is being absorbed by Mozilla Labs!
Check out these explanatory blog posts by David Ascher and Mitchell Baker.
P.S. Yes, I’ve been sitting on that title for weeks.