Thursday, August 28. 2008SeeqPod and LibriVoxAmarok 2 has two scripted services that are really cool. For one SeeqPod, that lets you search for any kind of music on the web and listen to it in Amarok. And the other one is LibriVox, that integrates the LibriVox service. LibriVox offers free audiobooks of public domain books. Both services are great and definitely deserve to be in Amarok 2.0. The problem is that they were written a few weeks ago in Ruby. Now they need to be ported to QtScript as that is the only scripting language we allow for internal scripts to reduce the headache of script dependencies especially keeping the Windows and Mac releases in mind. Among all the stuff that needs to be done before the release of Amarok 2.0 those two scripts were kinda forgotten until now and really need some love. If you want to help us get those two scripts back please let me know. Free cookies and hugs included Friday, August 22. 2008Nerrivik releasedThe Amarok team is proud to announce the first beta of Amarok 2.0, codenamed Nerrivik. Wednesday, August 20. 2008FrOSCon!If you want to meet some KDE folks, want to see KDE 4.1 in action or if you have questions about KDE FrOSCon in St. Augustin is the place to be this weekend. Come and say hello at the KDE/Amarok booth and in our dev-room. Saturday: 11:15 KDE Edu (Frederik Gladhorn) 16:30 KDE Community - How to get involved (Alexandra Leisse and Lydia Pintscher) Sunday: 11:15 Amarok 2 (Sven Krohlas and Lydia Pintscher) 15:15 Kubuntu 16:30 KDE Grill - Ask questions about KDE you always wanted us to answer (KDE dream team And on Saturday 15:15 Sebastian Kügler will talk about KDE 4.1 in his talk “Don’t look back” in the main track. Oh btw: Last year’s social event = best social event of 2007. Let’s see if they can beat Akademy this year Sunday, August 17. 2008
Akademy / Summer of Code survey Posted by Lydia Pintscher
in Nightrose at
20:31
Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Akademy / Summer of Code surveyFinally back at home. Less tired after sleeping in my own bed again. Missing everyone. Caught up on stuff. Laundry still piling up Akademy was great. Very big THANK YOU to Wendy, Bart and their team. You did an amazing job. Akademy was quite productive. Talked to lots of people about lots of stuff. Wait for some interesting things to happen in the next weeks and months. I took the time to talk to some of our Google Summer of Code students about their experience. I wanted to find out where we as a community are doing very well and what we can improve in their opinion. Of course it wouldn’t be of much use if only I knew this so let me share it with you:
Thanks everyone who had a chat with me about their GSoC. If I didn’t find the time to talk to you at Akademy or if you were not there feel free to ping me on IRC. I will make sure your feedback gets heard. I hope a lot of our students stay with KDE after GSoC. You have done an amazing job. Rock on! PS: Thanks to everyone who signed my Moleskine at the social event. I considered doing nasty stuff to Sebr when he took it away from me but I have to reconsider this now since it is the BEST THING EVAR *hug* Monday, August 4. 2008Rokers on speed?whatever happened to the rock and roll? Paul always does sweet little graphs to show interesting stuff. Since everyone in the Amarok team felt that development really sped up in the last weeks/months I wanted some proof of that mainly to show it off Impressive, right? So now that Paul did his part I should probably do my job and explain why this is happening There are several “sources of developers”:
So the next question is: Why are more people interested in Amarok 2 now than they were say 2 months ago. The reasons I can see are:
Last but not least: Developers are motivated by:
It is pretty interesting to see how most of this, if not all, can also be applied to KDE 4.1. Let’s see if we can get some nice stuff put together at Akademy to prove this Exiting times and more of them ahead of us! Now is the right time to join KDE development (and any other non-dev part of KDE of course). |
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