- Bluefish is not a gopher service, an old boy’s network or a snobby bunch of party-crashers. Rather, we offer the highest level of personalized travel, transportation, and cutting-edge entertainment services to corporate executives, VIPs, celebrities, professional athletes and other discerning individuals interested in living life to its fullest.
- Watch uploaded videos from bluefishtv on FREE video sharing website GodTube.com! You can search and watch family safe Christian, music, inspirational, cute, funny, comedy, educational and Spanish videos on GodTube.com!
- Bluefish, (Pomatomus saltatrix), also called tailor or snapper, swift-moving marine food and game fish, the only member of the family Pomatomidae (order Perciformes). The bluefish ranges through warm and tropical regions of the Atlantic and Indian oceans, living in schools and preying with voracity on other, smaller animals, especially fishes.
Bluefish is one of the UK’s leading office product companies. An independently owned and managed business, established in 2000, we have an annual turnover approaching £20 million. Centrally located in Northampton, we carry over £1 million of stock, covering 4200 products for next day delivery, using our own Bluefish delivery fleet.
- 1Installing Bluefish on Debian GNU/Linux
- 1.2Installing the very latest release on Debian
- 1.3Installing the very latest on Ubuntu Linux
- 2Installing Bluefish on Fedora Linux
- 3Installing Bluefish on RHEL/CentOS 6.5
- 8Installing Bluefish on Windows XP or newer
- 8.1Installing with internet connection
Installing the release that is part of Debian / Ubuntu / Mint / etc.
Use
or any other frontend for the package manager such as synaptic or simply 'add / remove programs'.
Installing the very latest release on Debian
Installing the very latest release on Debian 8 (Jessie/Stable)
Recent packages for bluefish are available from the official Debian backports archive and can be installed by following the instructions given here. The entry would look like this:
or
And install the package via:
Report any bugs to the Debian bugtracker.
Installing the very latest release on Debian 7.0 (Wheezy/Oldstable)
Recent packages for bluefish are available from the official Debian backports archive and can be installed by following the instructions given here. The entry would look like this:
or
And install the package via:
Report any bugs to the Debian bugtracker.
Bluefish Restaurant
Installing the very latest release on Debian 6.0 (Squeeze/Oldoldstable)
Recent packages for bluefish are available from the official Debian backports archive and can be installed by following the instructions given here. The entry would look like this:
or
And install the package via:
This version is built with the GTK+ 2 libraries. Report any bugs to the Debian bugtracker.
Installing the very latest on Ubuntu Linux
You'll find recent packages of bluefish in the Bluefish PPA maintained by Klaus Vormweg. Follow the instructions given there to add this repository. Then bluefish can be updated to its latest release:
Please note, that the http://debian.wgdd.de repository has become obsolete. See below, how to clean your system.
Removing obsolete debian.wgdd.de entries from sources.list
The http://debian.wgdd.de/ repository no longer provides packages of bluefish. The above steps make the following entries to either /etc/apt/sources.list or /etc/apt/sources.list.d/debian.wgdd.de_*.list or any other file in /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ obsolete. You can safely remove any references to the http://debian.wgdd.de repository, that may look like these:
and update your system:
Also the wgdd-archive-keyring package then is obsolete together with the repository keyring. If you have the package installed, do:
... or if you only had the key:
Installing the version distributed by Fedora
Installing the very latest on Fedora with dnf
To enable a bluefish-release dnf repository download the bluefish-release.repo file.
Place this repo file in /etc/yum.repos.d
Then you can install normally with...
Packages are currently provided for Fedora 24 and 25. Packages are provided for both i386 and x86_64.
All packages are built using mock. All packages are signed. You will be prompted to download the GPG key.
Installing development versions on Fedora with dnf
While care is taken to keep development versions very stable and usable, development versions may crash, contain data eating bugs and incomplete features.
Please report any bugs you might find in Bluefish bugzilla
If you wish to test the bleeding edge versions of Bluefish currently under development download the bluefish-svn.repo file.
Place this repo file in /etc/yum.repos.d
Then you can install normally with...
Packages are currently provided for Fedora 24 and 25. Packages are provided for both i386 and x86_64.
All packages are built using mock. All packages are signed. You will be prompted to download the GPG key.
Installing the very latest on RHEL/CentOS 6.5
Bluefish packages for RHEL/CentOS 6.5 are available at the links below for i386 and x86_64.
These packages require version 6.5. Previous versions prior to 6.5 had GTK+ 2.18.x.
RHEL/CentOS 6.5 has GTK+ 2.20.x which is the minimum version required to build current versions of Bluefish.
All packages are built using mock. All packages are signed with this gpg key.
Required for RHEL/CentOS 6.5..
i386
x86_64
Optional debug info RHEL/CentOS 6.5..
i386
x86_64
Bluefish is available in the main repository. Launch YaST and search for 'bluefish' to find and select the appropriate package to install.
This process is also automated through 1-Click-Install on the openSUSE Build Service: https://software.opensuse.org/package/bluefish
Download the latest version installer from http://www.bennewitz.com/bluefish/stable/binaries/macosx/, open it and drag the bluefish icon onto Applications.
In Mavericks there is a system setting called Gatekeeper that only allows you to install packages from Apple-identified developers. Bluefish is not distributed through the Apple app store, so you will have to workaround that setting.
Use the contextual menu (e.g. secondary-click button), and you'll see a menu with 'Open' in it.This will present you with a dialogue box, asking you for permission to run the software.You will only be asked this the first time.
Alternatively, the Gatekeeper setting can be disabled. For information, see: https://kb.wisc.edu/helpdesk/page.php?id=25443 or http://support.apple.com/kb/ht5290
Installing with internet connection
Download the latest Bluefish installer from the main download server: http://www.bennewitz.com/bluefish/stable/binaries/win32/
The installer will require internet access to download GTK+ and any spell check dictionaries. Please note that the internet-enabled setup may fail if the installer is run from a network share. See below for instructions for internet-less installation.
Installing without Internet Access
Download the latest Bluefish installer from the main download server: http://www.bennewitz.com/bluefish/stable/binaries/win32/
Download the GTK+ 2.24.8 installer (from the gtk-win project): http://downloads.sourceforge.net/gtk-win/gtk2-runtime-2.24.8-2011-12-03-ash.exe?download
Download any language dictionaries you wish to be able to install: http://www.muleslow.net/files/aspell/lang/
Place the files in a new directory named 'redist' in the same directory as the Bluefish installer.e.x.
The installer will fall back on downloading the files if they are not found in the redist folder, or if the checksum of the local copy is invalid.