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Akademy

I don't even remember how I ended up on the Akademy site this morning .. but luckily I did.

Akademy takes place in Sint-Katelijne-Waver , ages a go my grandparents lived there to, that's Belgium if you didn't notice yet.

Now the weird thing is that there seems almost no fuzz about it in the Belgian Foss Community , nobody talks about it.
Also on Upcoming.org the event can't be found. :(

Honestly this worries me, why isn't there more talk about a rather big FOSS event in Belgium, don't we care anymore ? Or do we just not care about KDE. (apart from the people organizing the event ?)
There's lots of Drupal, MySQL and Gnome activity going on in our little country but somehow less KDE. Hopefully Akademy changes that.

Sadly I have already a fully booked schedule so I won't be able to actually make it to Mechelen for either days of the conference. Sad because unless we have a conference in Antwerpen some day soon it's probably going the to be the closest FOSS event to home.

MySQL: Planet MySQL

4.1 is out and i, too, am going to akademy.

4.1 Don't look back.


KDE 4.1 was released last week and there has been a lot of positive coverage in the press and the blogosphere about it. (Side note .. The promo team is busy collecting a list of these articles and putting them together for publication on kde.org.)

With the release of 4.1, KDE executed on our collective commitment to release in July. More importantly, that release fulfilled the milestone we set out for ourselves: a day-to-day usable desktop shell, more polish on the applications, lots of bugs fixed, more platform coverage and more application porting underway.

Make no mistake about it: 4.0 was absolutely required for the development team to successfuly unfold KDE4 over the coming years; but with 4.1 it is indeed time to look forward, not back.

So .. looking forward:

Every person can make a difference KDE is ours


The hiatus is over: I'm back. Well, I was never really gone, I was just unvisible ("un-" being more pink than "in-", and pink being the new black).

The KDE community has brought a number of important modifications to our community infrastructure to the table. Many of these are in "alpha", if you will, right now and will be making their way out into production over the next several months.

The variety of initiatives is impressive, ranging from a draft of a Code of Conduct that will hopefully get a general viewing during Akademy to comment moderation on the Dot, and lots of other things, big and small, in between.

This momentum has restored my personal faith in this community of contributors. I feel, once again, that we are able to take care of each other and not just sit idly by while Rome and its inhabitants burn. While it saddened me to step back, perhaps it was necessary to help get focus on issues that were being neglected by us all. It also gave me some space to catch my own breath.

To those who have put time, thought and energy into working on these topics: thank you!

Now let's get back to what we're all here for in the first place ...

I'm going to Akademy!


Akademy 2008 is upon us. At the end of this week a few hundred of us start gathering together in Belgium for what is shaping up to be one of the best Akademy events ever, which is saying a lot given the past installments.

KDE e.V. has sponsored more travel than ever (nearly twice as much as two years ago and over 20% more than last year) and the program looks fantastic. The Embedded & Mobile Day is going to be great (Plasma is already being used in product development in this category, so this topic is even more relevant to me now); the workshop led by Nokia engineers should be fun (playing with N810s! yay!); the Usability Day will be very fruitful (I'll be doing a presentation in that track; I hope to see work on the HIG reivigorated). And I can't wait to see what the BoFs will end up being like this year.

I also know of a couple of release announcements that will happen at Akademy, but I don't want to spoil the surprise for others so I'll (painfully) sit on these things until next week. Pay attention though, because some cool stuff is going to emerge!

As usual, the KDE e.V. AGM will be a roaring blast, or at least as roaring a blast as 7 hours of meeting mandated by and presided over by German law can be. ;) (Honestly, they are actually pretty good. =) Apparently I have to deliver the assembly opening, which I have yet to write. I promise to keep it short and sweet.

At the Plasma Frenzy at the end of Saturday, the Plasma team will be presenting a series of 5 minute lightening talks on various aspects and features of Plasma. We will cover such things as extenders, new applets (the UIServer and Notify ones, for example), scripting, API strategies, Plasma-on-screensaver and more.

I'll also be staking out a Plasma Tokamak area for the hack week where I'll be (mostly) planting myself to discuss and work on all things Plasma. If you are looking for me, (even if it isn't about Plasma =) that's where you will be able to find me .

Share the love KDE is ours


And just in time for Akademy 2008 ...

... KDE 4.2 development has begun. I think we are all proud of our achievements with 4.1, but we're not standing around patting each other on the back with drinks in our hands.

There is so much left to do and so much yet to explore in terms of what is possible with our new frameworks and applications. The goal has become to fully realize the potential imbued in the KDE4 foundations and pillars.

Thanks to the work to date and most notably the 4.1 release, we've gotten to the point where the code is really fun to work with and the results very enjoyable to use. We're back to the job of adding features, refining existing bits and fixing problems. In other words, we're doing evolutionary development and releases again.

With 4.2 having opened up for feature work in July, the Plasma team started off with not just a bang, but a Big Bang: two of our Summer of Code projects have already been merged into trunk with more on the way, and a number of features that had been lurking about in playground have also been folded in. There have also been numerous bug fixes and polishings done in July to both trunk (4.2) and the 4.1 branch.

To give you an idea of our current progress on 4.2, here is the current change log of notable improvements since 4.1 was branched off for release:

libplasma
---------
* Features
* Symbol Versioning: limit loading of plugins to those that match the libplasma version
* New: ToolTipManager for Plasma style tooltips
* Applet
* sizeHintChanged() signal. A containment (such as a panel) can adjust its size based on changed sizehints of an applet
* NEW: Plasma::Extender and Plasma::ExtenderItem, allowing visual, relocatable extensions to Applet
* NEW: PopupApplet, which switches between an icon with a popup in a Horizontal/Vertical containment (such as a panel) and the widget directly on the canvas in a Planer containment (such as a desktop)
* Corona
* addOffscreenWidget/removeOffscreenWidget: manage canvas items that should not appear in a primary view (e.g. Extenders)
* Package system:
* PackageStructure supports arbitrary URIs (in addition to auto-discovery for package) structure description files.
* Plasma::Theme
* Support compressed SVGs (*.svgz)
* Widgets
* NEW: Plasma::Slider based on QSlider
* NEW: Plasma::TabWidget
* NEW: Plasma::Frame used to visually group widgets
* Plasma::PushButton is svg-themed
* Panel SVG
* setting the margins via in-SVG hints
* paintPanel API additions to make it more like QPainter and Plasma::Svg

* Significant Fixes
* WebContent painting update synchronization (fixes, among other things, scrolling)
* Prevent crash when Containment that AppletBrowser is associated with is deleted
* Applet handles work with all icon sizes (user system settings)
* Fix View so that when a new activity is added, don't move more than necessary;
fixes dragging lock

Developer Documentation
-----------------------
* Design documentation
* NEW: tooltips
* NEW: wallpaper
* NEW: widgets

* Tutorials

Desktop Theme
-------------
* NEW: widgets/button for theming pushbuttons
* NEW: widgets/frame for theming Plasma::Frame used also in other widgets

Plasma Desktop Shell
--------------------
* Features
* Panel
* resizes itself when an applet changes its sizehint according to its maximum and minimum sizes

* Significant Fixes
* Reposition toolbox when zooming out/in to avoid panel overlap
* MS Windows compile fixes

Plugins/Addons
--------------
* Features
* Plasmoids
* NEW: Calendar
* NEW: Character selector
* Now Playing media player controls
* Notes
* Custom colors
* Digital clock
* Custom colors
* Folder view
* Filtering improvements: mimetype and exclusion based.

* DataEngines
* nowplaying Plasma::Service for controlling media players
* nowplaying supports MPRIS

* Significant Fixes
* Various clocks ported to AppletClock for calendar and timezone consistency
* Kickoff menu size restoration
* MS Windows compile fixes
* Taskbar shows thumbnails of windows on hover (4.1 regression)

KRunner
-------
* Features
* Plasma Screensaver: Plasma widget overlay for screensavers

* Significant Fixes
* Screensaver activation fixed to compensate for system clock changes


Note that this is not our feature plan (we have one of those, too, of course =). Rather, this is what we've already done and will be part of the KDE 4.2 release in January 2009.

We still have a nearly 6 months of development ahead of us with a large number of features, fixes and streamlining activities in the pipeline. More goodies will follow, and if you wish you can follow the change log as it evolves here.

If Plasma is any indicator of the overall level of activity in the rest of KDE, 4.2 is going to be an insane release, especially since we'll be joined by apps like Amarok2 by that point.

To put it all into perspective: KDE3 had 6 years of development on it after 3.0, KDE4 has so far had 6 months. Think about it. =)

One step at a time


Wade Olson's inspirational KDE themed Picasa albums, from which many of the above graphics were borrowed.

KDE: aseigo - trials of a KDE hacker

aKademy, finally

i haven't had a chance to blog at all this year at akademy. contrast with my first akademy when i could blog several times a day. since then many things in life have changed including my time availability for silly enjoyable things like blogging.

it's been an amazing week, however. the things that struck me the most was the growing visibility of teams within kde. i think we have successfully traversed the conversion from a project to a full meta-project. while in previous years we were obviously a meta project made up of many smaller efforts, this year it is very apparent where there are teams and who they are.

the developer sprints, the increase in project specific branding and merchandising and just the general maturation of each of the teams is all resulting in good things.

i've received comments from some of the people visiting who aren't from the kde community about how friendly and open the event has been; and i have to agree. it's been a hugely successful event with very useful and important discussions touching just about every part of kde happening.

there's also been a lot of hacking with things like the infamous krunner bug finally getting fixed (lubos is a god; and even then it took god most of the day to figure out the problem which was in the netwm code in kdelibs), lots of plasma engines and other work, amarok hackery, edu apps greatness ... the announcement of webkit in 4.4 eclipses my excitement for widgets-on-graphicscene even, and seeing zack's opengl widgets on plasma is amazing =)

it's all too big to keep track of and visualize at one time, and it's moving yet faster. we haven't hit a scalability wall yet. i think that is in part due to the amazing people we have involved and in part due to us actually thinking about these things in past years.

i'm off this afternoon for wolverhampton and lug radio live. before i leave, and finish the blog entry, i would like to share things i've learned about the city of glasgow:

  • the dialect+accent applied to english here is hard for even me to understand at times

  • it rains often

  • there are some very pretty streets and buildings here

  • scottish lochs are cold but very refreshing (i'm surprised there aren't pictures of the canadians splashing through the water on planetkde yet)

  • it rains often

  • the street lights follow some odd pattern i've yet to decipher

  • yes, pounds sterling is the currency here *blush*

  • it rains a lot



i'll miss the other kde guys and gals when i leave, but i hope to see them all again soon and before next year's akademy. our global community is amazing. i've yet to find anything quite like it anywhere else. *tears and sniffling*

KDE: aseigo - trials of a KDE hacker

packing and other prep work

i usually pack my bag the day i leave for akademy. this time, however, i'm packing the day before. i don't have a particularly good reason for doing so, but there it is: i'm ahead of my usual schedule by a day.

i discovered that, sadly, i'm going to have to bring a larger suitcase than usual with me. usually i have my little guy that fits in the overhead compartments. i can get nearly 10 days of clothes into it, including underwear and socks for each day, with my ninja packing skills. (i am so good at rolling clothes into little cylinders now that i'm thinking of turning out for the canadian olympic clothes rolling team... that is an olympic sport these days, right? the 50 item pack; the overnighter dash; etc..)

but this time i'm bringing some gifts with me (some of which kevin bought while he was here) and a bunch of stuff for the aKademy awards that was kindly donated by Kitware. that and it's forecast to rain for the entire time aKademy is on so i figure bringing a sweater and a jacket might not be the worst of ideas. combined with the fact that 10 days is really at the limit of my trusty companion-on-wheels, i've had to rethink my strategy and have had to bump up to the next biggest size. damn.

i could bring two smaller cases, but that would suck in other ways.

i'm still working on my presentations, though i'm ahead there too as i usually do those on the airplane or even on the ground. i'm really trying to be proactive this time around ;) i'm doing a presentation called "beautiful features" this year where i'll be looking at some techniques to make applications look decent and try and set some goals for what our kde4 application should strive for. some of the stuff will focus on fairly traditional interface elements like toolbars but there will also be discussion of the use of animations and some cute painting techniques. don't expect zack level kung-fu moves for the latter; for that you'll want to go to his talk on graphics =)

looking at my aKademy schedule it's already fairly daunting. between the stuff i want to hack on (all plasma related; i'm going to ignore my other hacking interests as much as possible this week) and the various BoFs and meetings .. i'm already feeling tired ;)

i have a bit of an e.V. board get together on the friday; then the dev conf; then the agm happens; there are GetHotNewStuff, application add-on data packaging (and sharing) and plasma BoFs all on wednesday. and i've got meetings planned with a handful of people already about various development issues.

i don't forsee much sleep over the next week. and then there's lug radio right after that. zoinks.

to preserve myself i've basically decided to limit my drinking and night adventures pretty radically this year. we'll see how well i do with that.

i'm meeting up with people in the airport on friday at around 17:00 or so at the cafe nero just outside the customs area. you can see it on this map as stall #9. if you arrive around that time, come invade the caffeine hut with us =)

KDE: aseigo - trials of a KDE hacker

Dinner

duncan.mac-vicar posted a photo:

Dinner

Antonio Larrosa, Will, Olivier, Pedro Jurado, Duncan, Michael Larouche, Tobias Hunger, Johan Lappyre

KDE: Images Tagged KDE

Cenando

duncan.mac-vicar posted a photo:

Cenando

Duncan, Ken, Richard Moore, Will, Kevin Ottens

KDE: Images Tagged KDE

aKademy 2006 Kopete team

duncan.mac-vicar posted a photo:

aKademy 2006 Kopete team

Olivier Goffart, Will Stephenson, DuncanMac-Vicar, Johann Lapeyre, Michael Larouche

KDE: Images Tagged KDE

aKademy 2006 Kopete team

duncan.mac-vicar posted a photo:

aKademy 2006 Kopete team

Olivier, Johann, Will, Michael, Duncan

KDE: Images Tagged KDE

openDOOR

Davigno posted a photo:

openDOOR

new distro thought to keep doors open :)

KDE: Images Tagged KDE

http://www.flickr.co

Davigno posted a photo:

Marcus (aka "floor sleeper") on the right

KDE: Images Tagged KDE

http://www.flickr.co

Davigno posted a photo:

Florian of the HCI

KDE: Images Tagged KDE

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Davigno posted a photo:

Ruphy, youngest kid at Akademy

KDE: Images Tagged KDE

http://www.flickr.co

Davigno posted a photo:

Tackat, Antonio, Marcus

KDE: Images Tagged KDE

"Estão tudo fudido e não sabem mermão"

Davigno posted a photo:

"Estão tudo fudido e não sabem mermão"

Leonardo, hardcore from south of Brazil

KDE: Images Tagged KDE

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Davigno posted a photo:

Carioca enjoying the scene in the background

KDE: Images Tagged KDE

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