Correct, but the idea is that many people don’t feel like having the extra layers to manage to get GfW working for it in the first place.
.
I never said I was expecting Brian to be the one to do it, hell, its OS, and the protocols a breeze. I can’t personally provide any time to it myself, or I would as I have a fairly strong background in c++.
Btw, the sky *is* purple. If your head is far enough up your ass ;)
Let me recycle the main points of the thread, and you might get the reason for the snark:
User requests native Pidgin notification support
> I would prefer to use growl for windows - is there any update on
> supporting pidgin for notifications natively?
User notes already knowing about snarly.
> In my campaign to get windows users to use pidgin/irc though, it's
> hard to have people install pidgin, growl for windows (my preference),
> snarl, and then snarly.
Brian simply responds with :
Paraphrase: Technically it’s a Pidgin update/extension that needed, and he doesn’t personally feel he’s capable of doing so.
Question, answer, reiterate.
Toast was cute.
and just to add some levity, if you really really want to know when
your toast is done, here you go:
http://www.iamshadowlord.com/2009/08/she-thinks-my-toaster-is-hot.html
(sure, he has it sending to Twitter, but that is easy enough to swap
out for a Growl notification). i have one of those IO-Bridges as well
and set it up so that my dog can send me a Growl notification when he
wants to come back inside - here is the entire convoluted, glorious
system:
dog wants in >> modified doorbell switch inside a giant push
button;dog pushes button >> sends signal wirelessly to modified
doorbell base station >> base station has been hacked so that instead
of playing a melody, it triggers a circuit >> IO-bridge monitors
circuit for state change >> IO-bridge sends email alert on state
change >> custom app receives email and fires Growl notification
(i also set up a modified version that used an Arduino instead of the
IO-Bridge and serial I/O instead of the email solution. cuts out a few
pieces, but required that the base station/Arduino mechanism be
physically connected to my computer).
Andrew,
Honestly, that was a tad bit over the top and I do apologize for being a little snark-ready today as I’m experiencing an overload in PEBKAC and poor application design (commercial code I can’t fix). I’m man enough to admit I took the toast and hot water comments like a peeved 14 year old.
Daniel - i think you should keep working on your plugin for Pidgin.
James said he was currently writing a plugin targeted at KDE and would
maybe port it to GfW when he was done, but with no promises on ETA.
working on several projects like that myself, i know that sometimes
things take much longer than planned and life can get in the way. if
you are far along with a GfW-specific plugin, i know a ton of people
are anxious to try it out.
that said, if you moved your efforts to creating a foobar2000 plugin
instead, that is also great. cant wait to see what you come up with.
and James - thanks for all the great links - quite helpful.