Domain: koumbit.net
Stories and comments across the archive that link to koumbit.net.
Comments · 7
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gcstar did the job for me
I did the inventory of my 500+ book collection here and while it took a few days, the upkeep is minimal, and gcstar allows me to also keep track of people I lend the book to. The interface is awful, but it does connect to Amazon and so on to get book details, including cover pictures, if you have an ISBN. If you don't, then it's likely that Amazon doesn't carry it and you'll have to enter the details by hand anyways, but that's still fairly easy.
I do not label the books with stickers, RFID or bar codes of any kind. I simply rely on the book name for reference, and since I have very few duplicate books, this usually works. Duplicates can usually be told apart by printing dates or something similar. The library itself is physically arranged by loosely defined categories - I did *not* bother with Dewey.
I have written a complete article about this that may be useful to you. You may also want to contribute to that wiki page which compares different software offering.
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SFLvault
I have been keeping an eye on this project for a while. To quote their description: "SFLvault is a Networked credentials store and authentication manager. It has a client/vault (server) architecture allowing to cryptographically store and organise loads of passwords for different machines and services."
The design seems sound, and it is a server/client model which seem to fit well your "multi-user" requirement, which isn't fulfilled by any other password manager that I know of. It can also automagically log you into different services like SSH, MySQL or sudo and can do multi-hop.
The only issue I have found so far is that installing the server component is a bit of a pain (ie. no Debian package, as opposed to the client side)... but i guess this really depends on the "Linux" environment you are using...
I have been maintaining a list of FLOSS password managers in our public wiki for a while, any suggestions not mentionned there are welcome.
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Some reviews and suggestions: calibre or gcstar
I happened to have scanned my modest book library here (~500 items) with GCstar, which works pretty well. It can download covers and details from Amazon and so on, based on the ISBN (although the latest version in Debian fails to do that properly for some reason). Before deciding on GCstar, I had evaluated multiple solutions, including Koha and custom-based solutions, none of which being simple enough for my uses, which made me settle on GCstar... The full details of the evaluation are in the Koumbit wiki.
Since then I have started looking into e-book readers, and family have pointed me to Calibre, a e-book management software. Now it's not necessarily very good with real libraries, but since I am likely to get such a device in the near future (and therefore accumulate digital books), this looks like a very good choice, especially since it seems to have a more complete interface (especially for batch entering ISBN numbers) and a more robust engine to talk with Amazon and friends. It also seems to be better maintained and have a stronger community.
I am not sure that is so helpful in your case, but I thought I could chime in since, well, I have a small library and most of the work is automated.
:) Just need to punch in the ISBN number and choose who to lease the book to (something I will do in a custom field in Calibre). A "standard" barcode reader (that behaves like a keyboard, basically) and judicious use of keyboard shortcuts should do the trick if you are really concerned about speed. -
i am + STEED
... and while i won't go as far as signing this comment (i admire the dedication folks, but really...), i try to use it as much as possible. I have done PGP trainings for the masses (see this and this, in french) and I'm doing my best to strenghten the web of trust.
I am also very curious to see where the STEED project leads us, it looks like a nice way to popularize PGP.
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i am + STEED
... and while i won't go as far as signing this comment (i admire the dedication folks, but really...), i try to use it as much as possible. I have done PGP trainings for the masses (see this and this, in french) and I'm doing my best to strenghten the web of trust.
I am also very curious to see where the STEED project leads us, it looks like a nice way to popularize PGP.
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Re:Isn't there anything like sourceforge for androI'm not aware of a repository but there are three lists of Android free software apps that I know of.
Le Wiki Koumbit: https://wiki.koumbit.net/AndroidFreeSoftware
The Replicant for Android list: http://trac.osuosl.org/trac/replicant/wiki/ListOfKnownFreeSoftwareApps
The Wikiperdia list: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Open_Source_Android_Applications
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Re:Actually, summary is wrong.
> until we can find some actual data.
Whilst nowehre near complete - this is a start..