WebMote and "Open" software

Wed Jan 25, 2012

This is going to be another three-part blog. Maybe 3.5, I'll see how it goes. You may want to leave after parts 1 or 2.

web-mote

I've been working on a tiny little utility to marginally improve my life in an almost insignificant way.

You've already heard the casual references to my "media PC", and you may have come to the conclusion that it's just a standard NAS setup, but no. It's actually just a regular computer hooked up to my TV through a VGA and audio wire. About a week ago, the wireless keyboard I was using started chugging and finally gave out. Well, being that I mostly listen to music and watch ridiculously low-res videos in mplayer, why not just get a remote working? As it happens, I also had an old iPod touch lying around literally collecting dust since I stopped carrying a mobile music device with me. So I put the two together and hacked up a little remote control server for the computer. It basically just starts mplayer with -slave -idle, runs Hunchentoot out front, then passes along commands when I click on the various video links. I'm using it to watch some downloaded videos from the science network as we speak. The only gap in the interface is that I can't control the actual TV the same way yet (so I still need to get up to change channels or up the output volume)

The code is up at my github, as usual. I just noticed that there's no license file, though.

Just a second.

Ok. Compiling and inserting that took almost as long as writing the actual code. There you have it, in any case. I don't seriously recommend you use this program until I've ironed out one or two things, but feel free to if you like. I definitely enjoy being able to control my media center from whatever HTML client I happen to have at hand.

Next step: figuring out how to control the TV through wifi1.

Fingerquotes Open

This was just sort of depressing.

I dunno, maybe it's not that big a deal to most people, but I'm depressed.

A good third to a half of my last weekend was spent researching ways of getting Open Genera) up and running, only to find out that "Open" doesn't quite mean what I thought it did in this context. Granted, the system was built back in the 80s, so I guess the word may not have had the same connotation, but I still got confused.

It's bizarre, because I honestly don't get the point of a closed-source Lisp system. The whole point is that the entire machine is there, open to pokes and prods at its various sources and definitions. Saying that it's not being released openly or freely is just ... I dunno, off. The message is so fundamentally incongruous with the medium that it seemed to come at me entirely out of left field2. I guess that'll teach me to read the license first next time.

I still have my ersatz lisp machine, I guess. And I could do a bit of poking and hacking on Movitz if I really wanted to. That'll have to hold me.

  1. Though early research is not encouraging.
  2. Enough to delete the relevant article from my archives (sorry, to the people who linked to it already) and never speak of it again. Except for right here, obviously.


Creative Commons License

all articles at langnostic are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License

Reprint, rehost and distribute freely (even for profit), but attribute the work and allow your readers the same freedoms. Here's a license widget you can use.

The menu background image is Jewel Wash, taken from Dan Zen's flickr stream and released under a CC-BY license