Giving up Facebook for Lent. Also, no complaining.

So I’ve decided to give up complaining (more the bitching, whiny kind than the legitimate, productive kind) for Lent. Oh, and also, no Facebook.  I needed a step by step guide on how not to lose all of my friends in the process.

To help me out with the endless temptation, I found this Greasemonkey script for Firefox that blocks most of the social networking crack that we waste too much time with: Facebook, Digg, Myspace, Youtube, and others.

userscripts.org/scripts/show/43053

As per tradition, there are exceptions on Sundays. So feel free to catch me on Twitter the rest of the week. :-)

twitter.com/dariusz

Using Facebook in Polish

As of May 14, 2008 Facebook is available in a variety of languages, not the least of which is Polish. I really appreciate how community-supported the whole translation process was:

More than 450 Polish-speaking users on Facebook chose to be part of the effort to translate the site from English to Polish. Users who added the Facebook translation application were allowed to submit translations inline while browsing the site. The community then approved all translations through a voting system.

My first thoughts are that the results of this translation are very natural and usable, even for a non-native speaker like myself. Congratulations to the team! The selection of terms for words like “poke” and “wall” feel right, much like they do in English.

Unfortunately, a some of my Greasemonkey scripts that depend on Facebook content stopped working, including a cool script that highlights todays birthdays. Facebook developers, including those making apps and scripts, are going to have to deal with internationalising (i18n) and localising their applications.

If you’re curious what it looks like, scroll to the very bottom of your Profile page or Newsfeed page (if you’re an American or Canadian user), and you’ll see a little link that says “English” with an arrow beside it. Click the arrow, and behold the available options: Norsk, Deutsch, Francais, and more.
Facebook in Polish, selecting a langugage

Why not use English?

My cousin and I changed the language to Polish just for the novelty of it. So far, I have kept it the language setting simply because it’s a nice, daily way to interact with elements of my culture that I otherwise have little access to. Only after a few days use, Facebook in English feels a little less comfortable, and a little less interesting.

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