A few bugs to kill off before symbolic icons support is in GTK+. But we have some screenshot action for it!
Tuesday, 27 April 2010
Friday, 23 April 2010
Hardware enablement
Patches flying, and the results are nearly there.
Driver for the Apple Infra-red Receiver should soon be upstream (and a patch not to break LIRC setups), along with support for the Intuos 4 wireless tablet.
Ross merged patches in Gypsy which should allow for crappy serial GPSes to work, as well as the one on the Nokia N810 (and N900?), and the (even) crappy(er) ones that require a closed-source daemon and write to a FIFO.
Wednesday, 14 April 2010
GMyth dead?
Do you use MythTV? Do you use Totem?
GMyth, which Totem uses to access MythTV installations (watching recordings, and live TV) is dead upstream. Is anyone interested in taking over from upstream, and updating/maintaining Totem's plugin?
If I don't see any movement on this, I'll be forced to remove the MythTV plugin from Totem.
Thursday, 1 April 2010
Code for cash: Summer of Code ideas
As you might know, the time as come to put in your applications for Google's Summer of Code project ideas.
There's a good bunch of ideas available on the GNOME side of things, but if you fancy helping out GNOME without working on GNOME, you might also like the ideas from FFMpeg, GStreamer, or BlueZ (some of it directly related to gnome-bluetooth).
And if you're into web development, we have 2 good ideas in the GNOME Wiki (See the Front-end for common web services and Collaboration server/client ideas).
There's a good bunch of ideas available on the GNOME side of things, but if you fancy helping out GNOME without working on GNOME, you might also like the ideas from FFMpeg, GStreamer, or BlueZ (some of it directly related to gnome-bluetooth).
And if you're into web development, we have 2 good ideas in the GNOME Wiki (See the Front-end for common web services and Collaboration server/client ideas).
Labels:
bluez,
ffmpeg,
gnome,
gnome-bluetooth,
google,
gstreamer,
summer of code
Wednesday, 24 March 2010
iPhone and iPod touch support in Fedora
As Martin posted recently, libimobiledevice hit 1.0.0 earlier this week.
As a timeline of what's available in Fedora, here's a list of the features available in each Fedora release for iPhone and iPod Touch users:
- Fedora 11 contains libimobiledevice 1.0.0 and filesystem access through ifuse
- Fedora 12 was the first distribution to ship with out-of-the-box support for gvfs-afc, presenting you with your device on the desktop as soon as plugged in.
- Fedora 13 (and the upcoming Beta) will contain libgpod and Rhythmbox with music syncing support for those devices.
Loads of tweaks are happening now in Fedora 13 to make the experience smoother. Feedback in the bugzillas, as per usual.
Labels:
afc,
fedora,
gvfs,
iphone,
ipod touch,
libimobiledevice,
rhythmbox
Thursday, 18 March 2010
Guessing DVD titles
I just pushed discident-glib to GNOME git, a small library that uses discident.com's service to guess the title of DVDs. They have a database of some 250k DVDs, though the database itself isn't open, and the API doesn't seem to allow submission.
Still a few FIXMEs to go through and API docs to write, and it should be ready to be integrated in your favourite DVD ripper.
Drop me a line if you're interested in using it in your app.
Friday, 12 March 2010
Speaker testing
Based off the work Lennart did, let me introduce you to the speaker testing UI in gnome-volume-control.
Labels:
gnome,
gnome-media,
speaker,
speaker testing,
volume control
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