Sonntag, 10. Juli 2016Jeopardy!About two weeks ago, some visitors of the openSUSE Conference enjoyed playing openSUSE Jeopardy. You might guess that there are some free implementations of the Jeopardy game out there. This is true, but everything I found didn't match my requirements (with varying reasons for each implementation I found). Therefore I decided to improve Ryan McDevitt's JavaScript Jeopardy and added quite some features I wanted to have available for running the openSUSE Jeopardy. Some technical details:
I'm happy to announce that I just released my Jeopardy implementation on github under the MIT licence. (Yes, I usually prefer GPL, but since both jQuery and Ryan's original implementation are MIT-licensed, I decided to keep it that way.) If you want to run a Jeopardy show (with whatever topics) yourself, I hope you find my implementation useful! I'd also like to thank Hakon from the Linux User Group Landau for soldering a Jeopardy controller using the controller of an old USB keyboard. If you want to do something like that yourself: Dismantle an old keyboard. You'll find a small controller board which is attached to two foils that reach out to the keys. The buzzing is done using the 1..9 keys, so find out which contacts are used for those keys and solder cables on them. Oh, and make sure the cables are long enough to reach out to your players ;-) Montag, 4. Juli 2016openSUSE Conference 2016A week ago, the openSUSE Conference 2016 ended, so it's time to finally upload my AppArmor Crash Course slides ;-) I enjoyed lots of good talks. There were too many to mention a favorite one, but I'll try nevertheless:
I also had lots of interesting discussions on the hallway track and learned something about Nürnberg in the city tour and the cellar tour. After the official part of oSC16 ended, we had a promising disussion about the (technical) future of the openSUSE wiki. If everything works out as planned, we'll get some shiny new hardware hosted in Provo that is only used for openSUSE - and the most important thing is that we'll have SSH access to it and can do whatever is needed without having to wait for the Provo admins. PS: You might have noticed that I didn't mention the openSUSE Jeopardy in this post - I'll do that in a separate post next week ;-)
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