Adopt an orphan

FSM Columnist: Trusted

Write a full post in response to this!


In the Debian project they refer to packages that no longer have mantainers as orphaned. I think it’s a good definition, and I’d extend it to free software packages that are no longer developed.

There are a lot of orphaned packages around, some actually deserve it but unfortunately there are also some that are promising or very good, and now they are almost dead. But, since we are talking about free software, every good developer is encouraged to pick one and try to push it a bit further

Today I’ll talk about one of them; it’s Syndigator and it’s an RSS feed aggregator. It’s written in Perl using the Gtk2 library, that means that it fits perfectly in GNOME. Yes, that thing sitting on the desktop of your Ubuntu, I mean :-)

Syndigator
Syndigator

I tried a lot of aggregators, and since I am a happy GNOME user I tried hard to get one that was, in some way, “GNOME-compatible”: some looked good but were buggy or heavily unstable; some simply didn’t have the features I had liked them to have, one in particular.

When I use a news aggregator I want it to… well, aggregate news: I want be able to file my RSS bookmark in a hierarchical way (nothing more and nothing less that we use to do with our web browsers), and if I click on a folder I want the program to show me all the news that are in that folder. At the time, syndigator was the perfect fit: it was a real aggregator, it was quite integrated with GNOME and it was even written in my beloved Perl.

Unfortunately, its development was discontinued in 2004. I tried to survive with it, but eventually ATOM feeds became too popular to be ignored. That forced me to dismiss Syndigator and to get on the second KDE application in my installation: akregator (the other being k3b.

So, is there any smart Perl developer out there that wants to adopt an orphan and let syndigator reclaim its place on my desktop? :-)

Ciao!

--bronto

PS: feel free to comment this entry, adding your own beloved orphans that you’d like to be adopted!

Write a full post in response to this!

Similar articles

0

Do you like this post?
Vote for it!

Copyright information

This entry is (C) Copyright by its author, 2004-2008. Unless a different license is specified in the entry's body, the following license applies: "Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved and appropriate attribution information (author, original site, original URL) is included".

Biography

Marco Marongiu: Born in 1971, Marongiu graduated in applied mathematics in 1997; he's now a full-time system administrator for a European ISP. He's also a Perl programmer and technical writer and lecturer by passion, and is interested in web and XML related technologies. Marongiu has been a Debian User since version 1.1.10 and he helped found the GULCh Linux Users Group (Gruppo Utenti Linux Cagliari), the first one in Sardinia. He recently became a father to his first son Andrea, and he's been trying to reorganise his life since, so that he can start writing technical articles again and holding seminars.

Anonymous visitor's picture

other aggregators

Submitted by Anonymous visitor on Mon, 2006-11-20 13:34.

Vote!
0

Hello,
Maybe you could try
http://www.rssowl.org/overview
http://liferea.sourceforge.net/

Good luck.
Andre Felipe Machado
http://www.techforce.com.br

Marco Marongiu's picture

Re: other aggregators

Submitted by Marco Marongiu on Thu, 2006-11-23 09:39.

Vote!
0

Liferea was one of the aggregators I tried, maybe it's one year ago, and that left me quite unsatisfied: too buggy, too unstable... just worked like a beta.

RSSOwl, I didn't know it. It looks interesting, even if it's Java :-) (just kidding). I'll give it a try.

Thanks for posting!

Ciao!
--bronto