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30 May |
Article: Konquering the Web |
Here is a great article about Konqueror written by Dennis E. Powell.
A snippet from the article:
"A friend, having looked at Konqueror's Web page, recently dropped me a note:
"What won't it do?" The answer is, not much--it performs all the tasks you could
imagine and some that you haven't dared imagine."
To read the entire article hop on over to
LinuxPlanet.
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28 May |
Keystone 0.1 added to kdenetwork |
In Richard Moores own words:
"I've just added Keystone, a VNC client for KDE to kdenetwork in the CVS.
You can find more information about it at
http://apps.cx/keystone"
Here is the current feature set:
- Non-blocking socket handling
- Authentication and logon
- KDE 2 user interface
- Raw and CopyRect encodings
- Full screen mode
- Grab keyboard mode
- Taking screenshots of the remote desktop
- Event dispatching
- Konqueror helper application support (you can run Keystone by
entering a vnc: URL anywhere in KDE).
- Options, login, password and about dialogs
- 8 and 32 bit depths supported
Rich
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22 May |
KWord gets sponsorship |
From Kaiwal Software:
Today, Kaiwal Software (Shane) Co., Ltd. and theKompany.com signed a
sponsorship agreement to support the development of KWord. Two programmers
will be available for dedicated KWord development for a period of two
years. TheKompany.com is sponsoring the salaries while Kaiwal is providing
the equipment and the workspace in Phuket/Thailand.
Enhancements planned include, but are not limited to, filter development,
keeping KWord up to date with the ongoing KDE developments, integrating
scripting facilities and internationalization. All contributed code will be
published under either the GPL or the LGPL.
We recognize the importance of a full blown Office suite for KDE and Linux
to give users strong incentives to migrate from MS Office and Windows.
KWord as a key application of KOffice will play an important role in this.
To achieve that goal we'll help to make KWord as stable, slick and feature
rich as possible.
Contacts:
Kaiwal Software (Shane) Co., Ltd.
48 Villa 1
Phuket 83000
Thailand
http://www.kaiwal.com
Rüdiger Koch (rkoch@kaiwal.com)
theKompany.com
5 Coluso
Rancho Santa Margarita, CA 92688
United States of America
http://www.theKompany.com
Shawn Gordon (shawn@thekompany.com)
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18 May |
A nice KOffice review |
Denis E. Powell
presents, with very nice words and screenshots, KOffice, the highly expected first Open Source complete office suite. Many thanks
to LinuxPlanet and to Denis for this
nice review.
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15 May |
Article: Leading and Bleeding with XFree86 4.0 and KDE 2 Beta |
This article from LinuxPlanet gives users a first impression on the just
released KDE 1.90. Scott Courtney writes about installing XFree86 and
KDE 1.90 on his Caldera Linux system.
Scott comments, "I've only been running
it for about eight hours as I write this, but so far there have
been zero crashes of KDE as a whole. "
To read the article follow this
link.
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12 May |
Joy on us all, Konfucius is born |
In an explosion of announcements, in a flurry of activity from testers,
packagers and compilation experts, the latest public version of KDE,
the first from a series of beta releases bound to lead us to the great
KDE-2.0, the so dubbed 1.90 and affectionately called
Konfucius was brought into the world today.
If you read the official
announcement, you'll have the occasion to learn, among others,
that KDE-1.90 is
targetted at developers and at brave interested users willing to test,
get acquainted with and learn first hand about the latest technologies
created by the absolutely amazing KDE developer community.
All praises to the heavy working, never tired creators, testers,
documentation writers, translators, packagers and all those who decided
to put time, effort and knowledge in this absolutely miraculous project.
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11 May |
Matthias Kalle Dalheimer says it all |
The nice people at BeOpen.com realized,
through the person of Sam Williams, an excellent interview with
well known KDE developer and evangelist Matthias Kalle Dalheimer. Matthias opens his heart
and says all about his involvment in KDE, his views on Open Source as a
community and as a development model, and, most interesting :-), about
his private life and how all these interact.
This is an interesting reading. Thanks to all involved.
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11 May |
Answer to Amir Michail about usefulness of CodeWeb |
Through its code base size, through the diversity of its community,
through the technological choices it made, the KDE project sparkled much
interest from researchers interested not only in coding for KDE, but also
in better understanding underlying principles, functioning rules, useful
social mechanisms. For example, the writer of these lines is highly
interested in the amazing sociology manifestations of a gathering of
people of the kind and structure of KDE.
Amir Michail, a young researcher in computer science at the University of Washington,
finds that KDE, thanks to its consequent use of object-oriented programming
technologies, is highly interesting from his angle of view, i.e. from
the perspective of discovering code reuse patterns in the code base. What
is interesting with Amir's work, is that the results are strongly
beneficial to the community of KDE developers.
Amir accomplished lately a major stage of his research by bringing
his main project, CodeWeb, to a final status. In a letter to
the KDE mailing lists, he kindly asked the developers to fill up a
questionnaire with pure
scientific purposes, that would help him better tune his project in the
future. He writes:
"If you tried using the CodeWeb data before --- even if you did not
find it helpful or only looked at it briefly --- please fill out the
mostly multiple-choice questionnaire (anonymously if you wish).
If you do not wish to complete the entire questionnaire, please answer
some of the questions; partial responses are better than no
responses.
Your feedback is much appreciated and will have a major impact on the
development of CodeWeb and similar data mining tools (which will be
done in an open source manner in the future)."
Thank you, Amir, for your excellent and useful work.
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9 May |
KDE.com announced |
Hi,
KDE.com (http://www.kde.com) went
live earlier today. Although the name
has ".com" in it, it's not at all commercial -- in fact it offers a
number of free community services many of you might enjoy:
- fully searchable mailing lists -- that's right, search all mailing
lists at the same time! -- with phrase searching, date searching, match
highlighting, attachment viewing, and more (if someone has a complete
comp.windows.x.kde archive they would like to contribute, please let me
know -- currently it only goes back to March 4, 2000);
- fully searchable KDE core documentation, to be supplemented in the
near future with third-party developer documentation;
- full search capabilities for the KDE family of websites;
- KDE- and general desktop/development related headlines (customizable
feeds);
- a comprehensive KDE portal-type directory; and
in the KDE tradition and spirit, customizability and themeability
and a clean, sleek look.
And more goodies are in the works . . . .
Enjoy!
Andreas
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8 May |
KDE Development News: 9 Apr - 6 May 2000 |
2.0 Beta Release Schedule. Kurt Granroth, KDE core developer,
posted
an email
on the tentative beta release schedule for KDE 2.0. The first beta,
1.90, is due out Wednesday, May 10, with regular beta releases to
follow on one month intervals. If everything goes according to plan,
expect a 2.0-final release in September!
aRts C API Ready. Stefan Westerfeld
announced
that the aRts C API is now ready for public use. aRts is the sound
server that will be used for KDE2, which allows many applications
to use the audio device at the same time. This means modules can now
be developed for plain C applications to allow them to output through
aRts. Stefan also notes that he has already developed two: one for
Quake, and one for Mpg123.
Kicker Updated. Matthias Elter
wrote in
with the note that many new features have been merged into Kicker
in the main KDE2 CVS branch. New features include: no more splitter
between the buttons and applets, a simplified applet API, applets can
be moved and reorganized just like buttons, general code cleanup,
and more robust layout save/restore code.
KDE Developer Tutorial Updated. A new version of Anontio Larrosa's
KDE Developer Tutorial is now available at
http://www.arrakis.es/~rlarrosa/tutorial.html.
Recent additions include a new chapter on using KXMLGUI and
miscellaneous small fixes needed by the latest KDE2 snapshots.
KWord Developers Wanted. Reginald Stadlbauer is
requesting
for new developers to take over the development and maintenance of
KWord. Time is now limited for him, and he plans to focus on his first
pet project, KPresenter. Of course, he will answer any questions about
design and implementation issues. If you're interested, please
let him and the
kde-devel/koffice
lists know!
Multimedia Market 2000. Martin Konold brought word of the great
success the KDE team had at the Multimedia Market 2000 exhibition which
took place recently in Stuttgart, Germany. He also provided a link to
pictures of their booth and presentation at
ftp://ftp.us.kde.org/pub/kde/events/Multi_Media_Market_2000/.
Our friends at the gnome project, who were also there, have more pictures
of the event at
http://home-of-linux.org/germany/mmm-2000/.
KDE Developer Network. Dan Pilone
posted
the news that the upcoming KDE Developer Network is almost
ready to go live. The submission process is already open, however,
and articles can be submitted at
articles@shdn.org. As usual,
feeback and suggestions are also welcome.
Talking KEdit. A version of KEdit that can talk
has been uploaded
as KTalkEdit by Richard Moore, as part of his attempt to add
support for speech synthesis to KDE 2. Note you must have the Festival
speech synthesizer installed for KTalkEdit to function. Currently, it
supports reading the document text and reading the current text
selection. In addition, a first step towards a screen reader has been
made, but extra methods in Qt will be needed before it can progress further.
Modern Theme. Mosfet, the developer of the KDE 2.0 theming
system has designed a theming module for KWin, the new KDE window
manager. This code clones much of the "Aqua" style look and feel but is
much faster without the associated memory and speed penalty of pixmaps.
Check out his work at
http://www.mosfet.org/modern-0427.html.
Qt-2.1 Released. The official 2.1 version of Qt has been been
released by the trolls, prompting yet another update of qt-copy.
You can download the new Qt version at
ftp://ftp.trolltech.com/qt/source/qt-x11-2.1.0.tar.gz.
Quickies. Konqueror now supports Netscape plugins! Look
here
for some screenshots of a flash application running in Konqi. KDE's
CVS server has officially been transferred to SourceForge, as of
Friday, May 5. Kurt has posted a FAQ
here.
For those of you having trouble making Jade and SGML work properly
on your system, Frederik Fouvry has created a troubleshooting
document that you can find at
http://www.sfs.nphil.uni-tuebingen.de/~fouvry/kde/sgml-errors.html.
Suggestions, comments, and especially contributions to
soudan@kde.org. You can always
find the current edition of KDN at
http://developer.kde.org/news/weekly/,
as well as archives of past editions. KDN is published weekly,
written and edited by Bill Soudan
(soudan@kde.org) and Prasanth Kumar
(kumar1@home.com).
If you'd like to have each issue of KDN automatically emailed to you as
soon as it comes off the press, send an email with the subject
"subscribe kdn-announce" to
soudan@kde.org.
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5 May |
Konqueror - the fierceful secret keeper |
Kurt Granroth, prolific KDE developer, lets us know that he
succeeded in his work to make konqueror easily useable for secure
browsing. It was known for some time already that konqueror includes
support for the OpenSSL
library. Kurt made secure browsing easily configurable, hence KDE-2
will support this highly valued feature by default everywhere where OpenSSL
will be available. More details, soon to be available on the newly opened
konqueror.org. Thanks, Kurt.
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5 May |
Stefan Westerfeld about aRts |
Stefan Westerfeld, multimedia programming expert and member of
KDE's multimedia interest group, gave an interview to M-Station,
the Linuxmusic site. He
talks about
aRts, artsd - the new KDE multimedia server -, MCOP - multimedia
communication protocol that Stefan invented - and more. Stefan does an
excellent job on aRts and this article helps us understanding better his
complex realisations.
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5 May |
Resource: Developing KDE applications |
Interested in developing applications for KDE? The article,
Expert Recommends: KDE Development,
is a great source for starting your KDE development.
Note from the author:
"Please note that I wrote this way back when www.mosfet.org didn't
exist. So it's missing on the list of web sites. I alerted them
and maybe they'll add it.
Please note also that the link to my company SysEx is broken. The
top level domain "na" is missing.
"
Uwe
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4 May |
KDevelop 1.2 released |
From Sandy Meier:
"
Hi!
We are proud to announce the 1.2 version of KDevelop (http://www.kdevelop.org),
a full featured C/C++ IDE for Unix/Linux systems.
short summary of changes (between 1.1 and 1.2):
- support for GNOME application development ( incl. application framework and
automake/autoconf based project management) - the user interface was translated into
18 language and the manual into 9 languages. (special thanks to all translators!)
- much improved documentation browser and integrated debugger
- extended documentation (tutorial, kdebase/koffice/kdelibs)
- basic shared library support
- several bugfixes and small improvements
Please see http://www.kdevelop.org for further information (requirements and
download addresses).
Have fun!
Sandy Meier
On behalf of the KDevelop Team
"
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3 May |
Konqueror.org Launched! |
The KDE
Team is pleased
to announce the launch of Konqueror.org,
a website devoted to Konqueror, KDE's next-generation, full-featured,
powerful, flexible, modular and Internet-transparent
file manager,
web browser and
universal document
viewer.
"While the site offers rich content already - including a number of
mouth-watering screenshots - it is a work in progress and we will
certainly
continually improve it",
said Chris Lee,
webmaster and principal architect of the site. "We plan to add tutorials
and FAQs for users, include a plug-in and component directory and
supplement the developer's news and tutorials. This will be the
site to go to for official, as well as unofficial, Konqueror news and
information."
You can find the full press release
here.
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