Microsoft Wireless Mouse 5000: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.

Posted on 28 May 2013 in Articles • Tagged with Microsoft, mouse, Linux, life • 4 min read

I have finally replaced my old Defender mouse with a brand-new, wireless blue laser-powered Microsoft Wireless Mouse 5000. Some of the reasons for picking this particular mouse are: symmetric, wireless, laser and GNU/Linux support :). A month of usage has passed and there is enough time to write a review with all tips'n'tricks which can help handling this mouse properly.


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PyRegs: The Python Regex Debugger

Posted on 22 May 2013 in Articles • Tagged with programming, Python • 1 min read

Long ago, I learned the regular expressions in order to write a simple syntax highlighting engine. Regular expressions are not hard to master, but take time to practice. Kodos was the regex debugger of my choice, as it was written in Python. All these years Kodos was a "must have" tool on my development machines. Suddenly with the new version of Debian operating system, Kodos was not in the repositories anymore! Why? Kodos is based on QT3 widgets toolkit, which is a bit outdated nowadays (QT5 has been released recently) and was removed from Debian 7.0 ("Wheezy"). That is how I decided to write a small Python regex debugger in Python 3 and its de-facto standard Tkinter bindings to the Tk GUI toolkit.


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Thoughts about XML structure: elements vs. attributes

Posted on 18 May 2013 in Articles • Tagged with programming, XML • 3 min read

Exploring XML elements versus attributes.


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Kaylee

Posted on 28 August 2012 in Articles • Tagged with programming, projects, Python, CoffeeScript, Kaylee • 1 min read

I just returned from my summer vacation and can finally state: another summer is over. But wonderful summer it was! I finally graduated and got a Master's degree in computer science. I cycled a lot and upgraded my MTB skills. I read lot of fiction. And somewhere between work, sports reading and sleeping was Kaylee, a distributed and volunteer in-browser computing framework.


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I have graduated

Posted on 08 July 2012 in Articles • Tagged with projects, life, science • 1 min read

I have graduated!


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C's heritage: bitwise and equality operators

Posted on 29 December 2011 in Articles • Tagged with programming, C, JavaScript • 2 min read

The design of C made by Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie has influenced the whole software and hardware industry. Sometimes you can feel the heritage of C even in modern high-level dynamic languages like Javascript.


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Python: comparing to None

Posted on 01 August 2011 in Articles • Tagged with programming, Python • 1 min read

Python's documentation states that one has to use the is operator to compare a variable to None. What happens when you avoid that advice?


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Inside Python: understanding os.listdir()

Posted on 08 May 2011 in Articles • Tagged with programming, Linux, Python, C • 2 min read

If you've been using python for a long time, then you surely know that os.listdir() function returns an unsorted list of file names. I didn't care much until facing a situation, in which the sorted-sequential processing of files was crucial, and I could not remember whether the previous file processing were done in sorted order. Well, luckily they were. But hey, this is a little bit annoying, isn't it? Why os.listdir() returns an unsorted list of files? Would you like to find out?


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Assembler for beginners

Posted on 08 August 2010 in Articles • Tagged with programming, Assembler • 1 min read

About introductory book to programming using assembly language.


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Linux, it's time to wake up!

Posted on 22 May 2010 in Articles • Tagged with Linux, ACPI • 3 min read

Back in my "Windows" times, I was a fan of Foobar2000 music player. One of my favourite plug-ins was "Alarm", which could turn user's computer on during "suspend" state. So, I could switch my laptop to "sleep" mode, and be awaken in the morning by music from Foobar's playlist :) Is it possible to reproduce a similar trick in Linux? It depends on your hardware. Let's give it a try!


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