A few weeks ago, we reported on IBM’s GNOME2 Accessibility Guide. Since then, Sun Microsystems have written a user guide for the GNOME 2.0 desktop.
Busy making things: @mc, notes, tinycast, github, links, photos.
-
Gnome2
Posted in Web Services -
Itty Bitty Transistors
Posted in Web ServicesCNet:
The length of the transistor’s gate–a tiny pathway for electricity–is only 6 nanometers, or 1,000 times smaller than the width of a human hair.
-
Gateway Tablet
Posted in Web ServicesCNet:
The Gateway tablet is powered by Intel’s 866MHz mobile Pentium III processor and comes with 256MB of memory and a 40GB hard drive. Priced at a hefty $2,799, it includes built-in 802.11b wireless networking, a portable keyboard, a docking station and external combo drive that can play DVD movies and burn CDs.
Ouch. That’s almost three grand.
-
Alpha Geek, GLUE, J#
Posted in Web ServicesGraham Glass on choosing to be Alpha Geek instead of CEO:
about a month ago i made the decision to bring in a seasoned CEO to run the mind electric. it’s always tempting as a founder to stay in the CEO role, but if you’re a technologist such as myself, there is absolutely no way to run a company and continue to play a lead technical role. in addition, i’m the first to admit that michael broderick’s CEO skills are way beyond my own! it is really great to be able to focus 100% on my lead architect role.
Graham also shipped GLUE 3.3 beta 1 on Friday and managed to get a Java app to compile with J# without any modification to the source. That’s definately better than J++ was. J++ makes me shudder. The Java JVM was about two times faster than J# for what it’s worth.
-
The Evolution of Programming Languages
Posted in Web ServicesVia E7L3 (who has some problem with his site being a weblog and therefore offers no permalinks), check out The Evolution of Programming Languages (PDF).
Keith is also thinking about writing a text editor. He has some interesting thoughts on how to go about implementing such a project. Good luck, Keith.
-
Truly Wicked
Posted in Web ServicesI’ve only ever written two SOAP applications. The first was Hello World, except it would give back a random quote from the fortune file instead of the boring Hello.
The second was truly diabolical. It was a tunneling proxy. It tunneled TCP/IP. Any TCP/IP whatsoever. Over SOAP.
-
FreeBSD 5.0-RC1
Posted in Web ServicesFreeBSD 5.0-RC1 was just released, download its ISO from an ftp server near you.
-
Extended Ramblings
Posted in Web ServicesAttacking the process, or the village idiot himself, is not constructive.
-
LCDEmu
Posted in Web ServicesLCDEmu is a sweet little GPL’d project that allows you to emulate an LCD device (the Matrix Orbital LCD) so that you can play around with LCDProc or develop for an LCD without having one. This is an extremely cool little program. Oh the things I could do with this if I had the time…
And Curveball only has an 18 day uptime because I needed to borrow a CD-ROM from it a few weeks ago. The VIA Eden keeps on trucking.
There’s a perl module that should make writing to the LCD easy. There are also lots of clients for LCDd/LCDProc out there.
-
Flash Remoting
Posted in Web ServicesHas anyone looked into Flash Remoting MX?
Macromedia Flash Remoting MX provides the connection between Macromedia Flash and your web application server, making it fast and easy to create Rich Internet Applications. With its powerful yet simple programming model, you can easily integrate rich Macromedia Flash content with applications built using Macromedia ColdFusion MX, Microsoft .NET, Java, and SOAP-based web services.
Let’s see:
Flash Remoting + Web Services + .NET + J2EE/J2SE/J2ME + desktop computers + mobility/wireless + weblogs + people == ???
-
Phoenix Tips and Tricks
Posted in Web ServicesThe Phoenix Tips and Tricks site is a must-visit if you’re running Phoenix. The page rendering speedup makes zippy Phoenix even zippier.
-
BLOSOMJ
Posted in Web ServicesErik Hatcher is rewriting blossom in Java.
You might remember Erik as half of the dynamic Java Development with Ant duo.
-
Jakarta Updates
Posted in Web ServicesTDK2.2, Turbine 2.2, and Torque 3.0 have been released.
-
require_once(‘coffee.php’);
Posted in Web ServicesGood morning, sports fans!
-
My Big Fat Greek Wedding
Posted in Web ServicesI saw My Big Fat Greek Wedding again tonight. I was reminded why it brought in close to $4 million last weekend, having been in theatres for 33 weeks (over 8 months).
-
Phoenix 0.5
Posted in Web ServicesOSNews notes that Phoenix 0.5 is out.
-
Enterprise Computing
Posted in Web ServicesPhil Windley has been playing with Axis and Eclipse and SOAP with EJBs. Yes. They rock.
-
Castor
Posted in Web ServicesDavid Johnson has come to the same conclusion that I have: Castor JDO needs to be renamed.
-
Postnuke 0.7.2.2
Posted in Web ServicesPostnuke 0.7.2.2 has been released. From the freshmeat page:
A new free banner positioning and a new banner sideblock were implemented. All modules and the core have been secured against cross site scripting and other attacks. A new visual editor with upload capabilities was enabled. A new members list was created. Hundreds of bugfixes were made. Adodb was upgraded to 2.50. Support was added for register_globals = off (for full compatibility with php 4.2x and above. Apache 2.0.x is now supported. The pnIntrusion detection system was enhanced. Admin settings were added for censor, pnAnticracker, and article display. New admin icons were added. wBloggar support was added.
-
SourceForge Gem of the Day
Posted in Web ServicesSeahorse is a Gnome front end for GnuPG. It is a tool for secure communications and data storage. Data encryption and digital signature creation can easily be performed through a GUI, and Key Management operations also can be performed. This release just contains minor updates to 0.3.7, but more importantly is the beginning of the move to seahorse-0.6.0. Please use and test and send us any bug reports. Planned features for seahorse-0.6.0 are a file manager, basic key editing, and support for key servers.