Ted Leung on the air
Ted Leung on the air: Open Source, Java, Python, and ...
Ted Leung on the air: Open Source, Java, Python, and ...
Sun, 10 Oct 2004
(More) Kudos to the Quicksilver guys
[23:58] |
[computers/operating_systems/macosx] |
# |
TB |
F |
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4 Comments |
Those of you already using Quicksilver probably already know this, but the latest version of Quicksilver is out, and it can auto upgrade itself without launching a browser. I wish that more app would do this. I know there was a rumor that Apple was going to open software update to third parties, but that it got quashed. It would be great if a bunch of folks got together and pooled their resources to do a software update service and supply an open source library that developers could include in their apps....
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If it's any consolation, LocalNames is free (public domain), implemented in Python, and works by XML-RPC.
I haven't put any nifty string matching algorithms inside the server yet, though.
Posted by Lion Kimbro at Mon Oct 11 07:57:35 2004
I haven't put any nifty string matching algorithms inside the server yet, though.
Posted by Lion Kimbro at Mon Oct 11 07:57:35 2004
I'm not sure that this is a solution for Software Update....
Posted by Ted Leung at Mon Oct 11 23:28:27 2004
Posted by Ted Leung at Mon Oct 11 23:28:27 2004
I like the approach that [Azureus http://azureus.sourceforge.net/] takes for updates: all updates are distributed using bit torrent (makes some amount of sense given that it is a BT client ;)
This would probably be very useful for open source / freeware apps, given that the users of said products problably wouldn't mind sharing their bandwidth.
Commecial/Shareware application users may, however, object to giving away bandwidth for a product they've already paid for. Thus, shareware authors would probably have to create their own Software Update Coop as you've suggested.
Posted by Tom Weir at Tue Oct 12 13:24:56 2004
This would probably be very useful for open source / freeware apps, given that the users of said products problably wouldn't mind sharing their bandwidth.
Commecial/Shareware application users may, however, object to giving away bandwidth for a product they've already paid for. Thus, shareware authors would probably have to create their own Software Update Coop as you've suggested.
Posted by Tom Weir at Tue Oct 12 13:24:56 2004
Oh, sorry. I didn't read carefully enough.
A friend told me that Quicksilver (and Launchbar) do similar things to Local Names. I've been working on making such functionality so that you can use it in blogs and stuff. I figured that's what you were talking about.
Rereading, I see that you were talking about auto-updates and auto-upgrades.
I totally agree. There are a lot of apps now working on being super-easy to install, and then self-upgrading (or super-easy to upgrade), once they are installed. Firefox security fixes and extensions are amazing.
Posted by Lion Kimbro at Tue Oct 12 21:05:08 2004
A friend told me that Quicksilver (and Launchbar) do similar things to Local Names. I've been working on making such functionality so that you can use it in blogs and stuff. I figured that's what you were talking about.
Rereading, I see that you were talking about auto-updates and auto-upgrades.
I totally agree. There are a lot of apps now working on being super-easy to install, and then self-upgrading (or super-easy to upgrade), once they are installed. Firefox security fixes and extensions are amazing.
Posted by Lion Kimbro at Tue Oct 12 21:05:08 2004
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