Alle giovedì 26 febbraio 2009, Dominik Schulz ha scritto:
> Am Donnerstag 26 Februar 2009 01:07:35 schrieb Bernard Gray:
> > On Thu, Feb 26, 2009 at 11:01 AM, Valerio Passini
> >
> > <valerio.pass...@unicam.it> wrote:
> > > Alle mercoledì 25 febbraio 2009, Bernard Gray ha scritto:
> > >> Does anyone have this working? Can you point me in the right direction
> > >> for a resolution?
> > >
> > > It's a well known problem and there is already a bugreport that you can
> > > read here:
> > > http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=502851
> > > Hope this helps you to understand why strigi can't work at least for
> > > now. Valerio
> >
> > That's the answer I was after  - thanks a lot :)
>
> I got it working by compiling kdesupport myself. Not a very clean solution,
> but it seems to be working so far. See [1] or [2] for more information.
>
> [1] - http://blog.gauner.org/2009/02/26/kde42-and-nepomuk-on-debian/
> [2] -
> http://www.simplylinux.ch/strigi-nepomuk-sporano-in-kubuntu-810-desktop-
> suche
> --
> Mit freundlichen Grüßen / Best Regards
> Dominik

I appreciate your how-to, but I would really discourage this behaviour since 
you get a mixed 
environment that it's difficult to track if you are not an experienced user and 
 will potentially 
get you more problems than it solves.
There are at least two good options for you before trying this one:
1) wait that someone skilled enough packages sesame2 for Debian
2) wait that redland is improved. From the comments I've read so far redland 
should be better than 
sesame because it's written in C++ instead of requiring a JVM to run on your 
system. It has bad 
algorithms inside at the moment, that's why it is so slow in indexing and have 
been disabled as 
default in Debian.

On the long term, redland will be better than sesame2, so if you don't need 
these features NOW, be 
patient. Otherwise use a distribution that requires to be compiled and you can 
manage totally by 
yourself.

Valerio
 


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