LinuxWorld Australia has an article on the present and future of open source databases.
My one sentace summary of the article: Open source databases are not 100% buzzword compliant yet, but they’re working on it. [via NewsForge]
LinuxWorld Australia has an article on the present and future of open source databases.
My one sentace summary of the article: Open source databases are not 100% buzzword compliant yet, but they’re working on it. [via NewsForge]
Cayenne “Holiday Release” 1.0a5:
A new release of Cayenne is out. It plugs a few gaps in the core functionality, fixes tons of bugs and provides a much improved documentation. Cayenne is an object-relational persistence framework written in Java. It provides tools and libraries to work with relational databases in an object-oriented way. Cayenne consists of class libraries and a GUI tool for O/R mapping and deployment.
This morning, Slashdot linked to a ball pc, something that I (and Slashdot Japan) mentioned over a week ago.
Old news for nerds, stuff that mattered last week.
Among things that were discussed yesterday in North Carolina: Blogger.el, post to your weblog from Emacs using the Blogger API.
Bloggers are to big media what Open Source and shareware coders are to Microsoft and Intel.
We’re disruptive.
I roadtripped to North Carolina today to do lunch with some of the RTP bloggers. Excellent food and great conversation. I also did some last minute (except for me it’s just getting started) xmas shopping this evening. Instead of any real content, here are a bunch of things that I need to read in detail:
XFree86 4.3.0 just around the corner:
The 4.2.99.3 snapshot, which should become the 4.3.0 release after bug testing and their appropriate fixes have been applied can now be found in our repository. It is tagged in our public CVS server as xf-4_2_99_3. Inquiries and issues should be directed to the Xpert mailing list (you need to subscribe before posting); bug fixes should be clearly marked that they are pertinent to this release and submitted to fixes@XFree86.org. Binaries will becomes available as they uploaded by our members; this should be completed by 24 December 2002. If bandwidth is a problem please use our mirrors.
[via PCLinuxOnline]
As I said about a week ago, I’m going to be daytripping down to the Research Triangle Park area for lunch with a bunch of RTP bloggers. The DC to RTP distance is just a little longer than the San Louis Obispo to San Jose trip that I made while I was in California over the summer.
I drove four hours each way from SLO to San Jose in order to visit the geek Mecca of Fry’s. Tomorrow I’ll be driving to North Carolina in order to have lunch with a bunch of bloggers.
I’m a geek. A hopeless geek.
Note to self: You’ll probably get better gas mileage if you take that monitor and Sparc crap out of your trunk.
The latest draft of the RSS 1.0 Creative Commons module is up. After a great deal of good thinking from Shelley Powers (who added Creative Commons licenses to here stuff today) and many others over the RSS-Dev list and other blogs, I’ve made some pertinent clarifications. Of course, if anything is unclear, or you disagree with something, I’d love to know.
LinuxDevices has put abstracts and papers from the 2002 Real-Time Linux Workshop online. Lots of embedded and real-time goodies to trawl through. [via NewsForge]
Sam Ruby allows us to validate our RSS with SOAP:
Well now you can. Simply POST your feed to the RSS Validator. Since this code is liberal in what it accepts, neither a SOAP Envelope nor a SOAP Body is required. Since it is conservative in what it does, you will always receive either a fully compliant SOAP response or a SOAP fault back.
[H]:
NVIDIA Corporation, the worldwide leader in visual processing solutions, today announced the availability of the NVIDIA Cg Compiler version 1.0. The NVIDIA® Cg Compiler is designed to generate real-time shaders from the high level shading language syntax developed by NVIDIA. The Cg Compiler version 1.0 is compatible with Microsoft DirectX® 9.0, released earlier today. NVIDIAs Cg Compiler generates code for both DirectX and OpenGL® platforms and is compatible with any graphics processing unit (GPU) that is OpenGL 1.4 (or higher) or DirectX 8.0 (or higher) compliant.
I’ve heard mixed things about Cg. Some people think that it might change the world, other poeple think that it’s not quite right. Time will tell.
Ingo “Mad Scientist” Rammer has pulled it off again. He’s blogging using Exchange Server 2000. The screenshot included in his post looks like an enterprise weblogging app. Truly wicked.
Via Erik, Java Outline Editor 1.8.10 has been released. It looks like a well-featured outliner, and also contains XML-RPC support.
This is an outliner editor and MDI implemented in Swing. The GUI is similar to the outliner found in Userland’s Frontier. Starting with version 1.8.10, Java 1.4 is required. Previous versions require Java 1.3.
I wasnt planning for the first public beta of NetNewsWire Pro to include RSD support. In fact, I wasnt sure I would do it for 1.0 at all.
But then the folks who make weblog publishing systems supported it so quickly and I realizedhey, RSD is here, time to do it. So this first beta does indeed include RSD support.
Josh Cooper seems to like Eclipse 2.0.2 with phpEclipse so far.
Flock 0.6 has been released. Changes from the freshmeat page:
This release of the Flock RSS Aggregator has mostly bugfixes, and minor feature enhancements. RSS 2.0 parsing has been improved, as well as handling of international characters and dates. A “Fold all” checkbox has been added.
Brent Simmons has set up a page for developers:
It points to things like a description of NetNewsWires AppleScript support, a description of the RSS clipboard formats used, a list of XML-RPC APIs and methods used, and so on.
Go, Brent!