On Wednesday 30 September 2009 22:47:16 Manolete, ese artista... wrote: > In the meantime Virtuoso becomes ready, and in case any of the readers of > this list feel like trying Nepomuk I managed to make it function on Debian > following these instructions: > http://sidux.com/module-News-display-sid-532.html > > Unlike the author of the article, I couldnt make it function with the open > source Java, although I remember to have dome some weird things and > deleted some files I'm not sure I should have deleted, son I ancourage > y'all to try the open source Java I guest most of y'all have installed > already. If it doesn't work try installing Sun's Java, it's what I had to > do. I'm on an AMD64 machine can't say on I386. > > 1. Before continuing with all the process stop Strigi and Nepomuk in Systen > Settings. Also I didn't install strigi-applet, which is a KDE3 app, > contrary to what's prescribed on Sidux's instructions. 2. Then delete > ~/.kde/share/apps/nepomuk. I lost the previous tags I had tried; perhaps > is possible to backup them and when everything works restoring them, but > since I had just tried a couple of tags to test Nepomuk I obviously didn't > have too much to restore and didn't worry at all. 3. The last thing was to > follow these instructions in the 5th step here: > http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1071376 to tell Strigi not to use > Redland but Sesame2. Start Nepomuk and Strigi in Systen Settings. > > > That's all. It isn't a very canonic way to do, but it does the trick untill > a decent backend that doesn't need tons of Java is available. > > Sesame 2 isn't still too fast when indexing, it took almost 50 minutes for > indexing a folder with almost 6.400 files in 2,5 GB. Of course you only > have to do this big indexing precess the first time, after that it works > like Amarok's database, it updates without you notice it > > > Regards. > Nepomuk might be really great but all those kde4 daemons run-a-muk. Bog down the system.
Funny, recoll runs nice 19 and one does not know it is running, and it works just fine. Find me a skeleton to make a runner and I will make a recoll- runner. When these things can be configured to run niced, ioniced or priortized so one does not notice them, simply enjoys the results, I will love them. Akonadi is manageable with some stuff reniced but kde4 comes up slowly and without the renice, can bog down until all this stuff has "syncronized." -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected]

