Plone book
The Definitive Guide to Plone — PloneDocs
Originally from del.icio.us/tag/plone by
Plone book
The Definitive Guide to Plone — PloneDocs
Originally from del.icio.us/tag/plone by vdobriakov
Plone and Zope painless installation on Ubuntu 6.10 Edgy Eft — Plomino.
You want Plone running on Ubuntu 6.10, you don’t need ZEO, and you don’t want to remove Python 2.4.4…
Install newest Plone on Ubuntu
Originally from del.icio.us/tag/plone by vdobriakov
… (tags: python s60 mobile Nokia symbian software development) Archetypes Developer Manual ‘ plone.org (tags: plone webdev archetypes manual tutorial) The tiny magnetite compass in the human nose | Anthropology.net (tags: anthropology magnetism human anatomy biology science) Coping with a Live Spinning Zope ‘ plone.org (tags: zope) Trampoline Enron Explorer » (tags: enron email v…
Feed History Plasser.net – Small World Blog
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Originally from Strategic Board on plone from 236,002 blogs and news feeds by Plasser.net – Small World Blog
Politique éditoriale — site cybertim
Originally from del.icio.us/tag/plone by GeorgesMariano
Stefan Holek’s presentation from Plone Conference 2006 – great, useful reading
Top Twenty Plone Pitfalls — plone.org
Originally from del.icio.us/tag/plone by wsfulmer
Stefan Holek gave a great presentation at the Plone Conference 2006 in Seattle about mistakes and things to avoid when programming with Zope & Plone.
As a developer you should take your time and step through the slides:
http://plone.org/events/conferences/seattle-2006/presentations/top-twenty-plone-pitfalls.pdf
I am sure that even advanced programmers will find violations of the 28 Lurker Laws in their code. This is a must-read.
Andreas Jung: The twenty-eight Lurker laws
Originally from Planet Plone by ajung <info@zopyx.com>
Finally! After weeks of waiting, one incorrect purchase and one purchase that got cancelled as the supplier mis-allocated the item, I have my MacBook – 2Gb RAM (the easy part) and 160Gb hard disk (the hard part).
The MacBook’s are extremely easy to upgrade (well, RAM and disk, at least). You remove the battery, and take out three tiny Phillips screws, pull out a metal flap and you can eject the RAM using two levers and pull the disk out with a plastic tab.
To replace the disk, you will need a Torx T8 screwdriver (a kind of strange pentagon shaped screw, I have no idea why they can’t just use regular ones). I got one from Amazon. This is used for the small metal caddy that holds the disk.
You need to make sure you buy the right disk – mine is the Seagate Momentus 2.5″ SATA 5400.3 160Gb, which cost me about £120. The SATA bit is important; my first mis-purchase was an Ultra-ATA disk (which I actually knew would be wrong, but I thought I’d bought a SATA one), which won’t fit.
I also bought a USB 2.0 2.5″ SATA drive enclosure on eBay for £10 or so. I put the new disk in that first, and used SuperDuper to mirror my existing 60Gb drive (which I’ve set up over the last few weeks) to the new drive, after using Mac OS X’s Disk Utility to format (”Erase”) the new disk. This took just under two hours, for 35Gb of data. SuperDuper also took care of making the disk bootable.
So, with the new disk set up, I simply swapped the drives, and I now have the exact same system as before, but with 111Gb of free space, soon to be occupied by my music collection, photos and documents. And of course, I have a slim 60Gb USB 2 drive as well.
Ah, I love a Mac ![]()
Martin Aspeli: The computer, complete
Originally from Planet Plone by optilude
I like GNU’s autoconf; but why can’t it be more insane?
Sean Kelly: A Plea for Insanity
Originally from Planet Plone by kelly
Originally from del.icio.us/tag/plone by rlundstrom