Re: [ubuntu-uk] Torrent Client!

2006-10-14 Thread Adam Bagnall
Azureus is damn good, and runs on just about everything because it's a 
java app.

STONE COLD wrote:
 Hi,

 Any idea what the best torrent client in Ubuntu is? At the mo im using 
 Ktorrent..but its appalling..I did used to use Bitcomet in windoze...

 P.s is the there any way of moving downloaded files  from one torrent client 
 to another?

 Any suggesttions?

 Regards



   


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Project Proposal - ?Biobuntu?

2006-10-14 Thread Michael G. Wilkins



 Hello everyone on the list - a new 
member here, living in rural Pembrokeshire where I am 
happily retired with a younger wife, older malt whiskey, 5 
Border Collies, 2 cats and chickens 
in the orchard. Maybe a brief intro before some 
?Biobuntu? comments? 

 I am an old code pusher/scientist - 
scientific programming, physics, graphics, etc etc. [The 
horrors of Fortran77!]. I did do somebsd and 
Silicon Graphics (purple machine) unix back 
in the early '80s - '86 or so, but thats mostly all gone 
now, so basically I treat myself (and want 
to be regarded as) as a Linux noob. It is far 
friendlier than I remember all that stuffbeing back 
then ... vast improvements in useability and effectiveness 
have obviously occured. And I even 
still recognize some of the words! Nowadays my 
interests run more to Guild Wars and Oblivion, 
and modifying and fiddling with my PC, rather than code 
pushing. Why am I moving to Ubuntu? [Dual booting XP Pro 
and Ubuntu Dapper right now]. I HATE Windoze! And Vista promises to be 
a real monster. And one can buy a lot of single malts and dog food for 
its price!  A special 'Hello' to Tony Arnold, 
University of Manchester, simply because of his location. 
1959, old EE Building, U Manchester is where I was first 
seduced by computers - the old Ferranti 
Mercury machine. Two 8kb disk drives (Wow!), stone 
tablet input, illuminated manuscript output, 
racks of glowing 6SN7 double triodes ... . A real 
computer! I was an undergrad over in Physics, 
Schuster Building? Happy memories! [Got my 
degree in '61 and immediately left for the U.S.A. 
as part of the 'brain drain', had a 
semi-decenteducation and career over there for 40+ 
years]. I would have loved to have 
volunteered to help at Linux World somehow (we very occasionally 
visit London) but that time frame is out, and anyway I 
have some minor difficulties with travel (like 
wheelchair, oxygen ...). But if there is maybe a way 
I could help the ubuntu cause, at least please 
ask ... . [Especially if it involves killing 
Orcs, Trolls and Goblins!]

 ?Biobuntu? O.K., WHY another release 
based on another (admittedly good) distro? Most 
potential users of the Vigyaan live CD are, imho, not going to be opening 
it up and modifying 
codes. They want packages that work "out of the box" and with all the 
gory OS details hidden. 
Imho, anyway. And why should the originators of all the 
separate packages be in favour of and 
support yet another distro basis? Knoppix is not, imho, too friendly, 
but it is hidden from the user 
in Vigyaan, and does the job reasonably well.

 ?Question? on the side - anyone know a ref to a decent 
and fairly objective review and comparision of a number of the current live 
cd distros? Friendliness, useability, bugginess (is 
that a word? - you all know what I mean!), modifiability, blah blah 
blah? By the way, on the topic 
of distros, a friend turned up the other day with a copy of mepis. I 
was not too impressed with the 
package itself, except for the documentation! Which I think was 
first-rate! Ubuntu could maybe, 
imho, learn from the mepis style and content of docs??

 Back to ?Biobuntu? There 
are any number of fields where a collection of packages, comparable to Vigyaan 
but 
running on Ubuntu, might be useful/valuable. At random: 
  - Statistics (Stabuntu?), 
emphasis on ecological, zoological, biological - spatial patterns, 
   clustering, 
dynamics, classification ... .  
 - Or Pure Mathematics: topology (folding, knots, 
polyhedra,..); cellular automata; number  
  theory; tensor calculus (thats symbolic 
stuff); graph theory; some basic symbolic maths?, ... 
.  - Or an area I came across 
recently - systems and compartmental, state variable modelling, 
in
   biology and 
medicine. Korn  Korn's Desire; the NIH compartmental modelling codes 
(name 
   escapes me); 
s-plane transfer function modelling; etc etc  . Since a lot of the 
users might be 
   medical 
and clinical, you really need to insulate them from the OS details! 
Ubuntu may be ideal here.

 The key here, I think, is to get 1 or 2 captive experts 
in the area, who can reliably advise on packages  . 
Plus someone to handle all the (massive?) paperwork!

   Anyway, 
Hello People!

   Off to a 
Maddy Prior concert!

   
 Michael aka Nackles

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Project Proposal

2006-10-14 Thread gord
I would say that their are a few large problems to overcome for anyone
wanting to create such an alternative. Science in general is a rather
large field, everything from ringing bells at dogs to quantum physics,
fitting all the software that such a wide range of people would need
onto a single CD might be a struggle, especially if you wanted to
include things like OpenOffice. Second, people can already get access to
the scientific software that is in the repository's.

Right now the different ubuntu's exist because there is a real use case,
edubuntu for schools, xubuntu for people with less powerful computers
and ubuntu/kubuntu because you can't fit both KDE software and Gnome
software onto a single cd. To justify a science ubuntu you would really
need a good working case for it to exist, weather it to be used in
university's or at home.


On Fri, 2006-10-13 at 21:53 +0100, Mark Forster wrote:
 Ubuntu UKers 
 
 I wanted to float the idea of a possible Ubuntu project here. Given
 the rationale of edubuntu I wanted to suggest that a Ubuntu distro
 pre-built with a collection of valuable life science applications
 would be of value to academic and industrial researchers. 
 
 It could also be a set of packages (and docs) to be added to an
 existing Ubuntu release.
 Applications that I would suggest including are listed below
 
 Many of these apps exist on the Vigyaan live CD (www.vigyaancd.org),
 but what is needed  is the Ubuntu polish and 
 solid documantation on usage. 
 
 What about a name 
 maybe Life Science Ubuntu, LSbuntu ? 
 The one I like is Biobuntu. 
 
 Regards
 
 Mark
 
 --
 CCP1gui or Ghemical as a chemistry visualisation tool.
 MOPAC for semi-empirical quantum chemistry.
 MPQC for ab initio quantum chemistry.
 Gromacs for molecular dynamics. 
 
 JChempaint or BKchem for molecule drawing in 2D
 OpenBabel for interconversion of chemical molecular structure formats.
 Jmol / Pymol for 3D molecular visualisation.
 
 EMBOSS for bioinformatics - biological sequence analysis. 
 Tcoffee for aligning protein/DNA sequences.
 
 R for statistical analysis and visualisation.
 GNUplot / Octave for data visualisation and graphics.
 
 
 


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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Torrent Client!

2006-10-14 Thread Adam Challis
I've become partial to rTorrent.

Had to compile it from source for the latest version but I like the
following features.

* can control from anywhere as it's ncurses based so I can ssh in to my box
and control it
* You can set it up so that it monitors a folders for a new torrent file,
and automatically start it downloading. This combined with scp is pretty
useful :)
* running it within screen means that I can have it constantly running in
the background.

The only drawback is if you don't like working within a terminal window.

Adam. 



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