Friday, September 4. 2009it?s all clear nowWe’re hapy to release the first beta of Amarok 2.2. It comes with many goodies like playlist sorting, UMS device support, the ability to customize the program layout to your liking and much more. For details please read the release announcement and this nice review. Enjoy rocking Oh and don’t forget to send feedback, bug reports and patches (and maybe some cookies and hugs?) so we can get it in perfect shape for release in about a month. Sunday, August 16. 2009
social media guide for free software ... Posted by Lydia Pintscher
in Nightrose at
00:17
Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) social media guide for free software projectsLately more and more people come to me with questions like “What does $randomsocialmediaterm mean?” or “How does $socialmediasite work?” or “How do I do this on $socialmediasite?“. It seems people start to understand that social media can be a huge thing for free software projects but don’t really know where to start or where to look for help. So I sat down for a few hours and wrote the Social Media Guide For Free Software Projects. Download it and find out how social media can help your project stay in touch with your users and make it rock even more. Learn about digg, Twitter, identi.ca, Linked.in and more. The guide includes basic intros to different sites as well as advanced tips for how to deal with social media in general. Enjoy and please leave feedback for the next version of the guide Saturday, August 15. 2009amarok_forum-improve()When the KDE forum team started they came to me asking what to do about the Amarok forum. It was fairly active and working ok. So we decided to keep it and just link to it from forum.kde.org so people looking there would find it. Lately the forum software was causing more and more problems though and we are low on moderators as well. Luckily since they started the KDE forum team has done an amazing job, making the KDE forum so much better than the Amarok one. I’m happy to announce that we moved the Amarok forum to the official KDE forum at forum.kde.org to enjoy a better forum, reduce maintainance and reduce the number of needed accounts for KDE websites. All content and account data have been migrated. Migration of attachments and avatars is still in progress. Some nicks conflicted. If you can’t log in with your nick try your email address. If you want nicks changed/merged in this case please get in touch with me or the KDE forum team in #kde-forum on freenode. Thanks to the KDE forum team for handling migration and Jeff for helping on the Amarok side. Now go and enjoy a much improved Amarok forum Tuesday, August 4. 2009Where is the buzz?The buzz is at buzz.kde.org of course ;-) Check it out and watch what people are saying about the KDE 4.3 release on Identi.ca, Twitter, Flickr, Picasaweb and YouTube. Don’t forget to upload your own screenshots and screencasts! (Thanks to the Ubuntu team for the code, toma for putting it into a KDE theme and Nuno for a new header image.) Wednesday, July 29. 2009meeting up to celebrateJust a quick reminder that we are having a KDE/FSFE get-together in Stuttgart on Saturday to celebrate KDE 4.3. More info in Frederik’s blog. Come and join us. Bring Konqui and Kate! Looking forward to see you all. (Don’t forget to leave a note if you are coming so we know how many people to expect.) Monday, July 20. 2009
we?re testing the water for everyone Posted by Lydia Pintscher
in Nightrose at
17:59
Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) we?re testing the water for everyoneAmarok finally switched to git today after many weeks of discussion and preparation. Our part of KDE SVN has been made read-only and commits should be made to the repository at http://gitorious.org/+kde-developers/amarok/amarok from now on. We can hopefully work out all the problems soon so the rest of KDE (except translations) can follow asap. Please report problems you encounter and help us get documentation up to date. Oh btw: Perfect birthday present, KDE :D One millionth commit and move to git on my birthday rocks! Monday, July 20. 2009
we?re testing testing the water for ... Posted by Lydia Pintscher
in Nightrose at
17:59
Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) we?re testing testing the water for everyoneAmarok finally switched to git today after many weeks of discussion and preparation. Our part of KDE SVN has been made read-only and commits should be made to the repository at http://gitorious.org/+kde-developers/amarok/amarok from now on. We can hopefully work out all the problems soon so the rest of KDE (except translations) can follow asap. Please report problems you encounter and help us get documentation up to date. Tuesday, July 14. 2009Pass!Jeff, Leo, Ian and I are happy to announce that all of KDE’s GSoC students passed the midterm evaluation. That is awesome news. Congratulations to them and their mentors. You rock! Keep up the great work for the rest of GSoC and beyond. Can I hear some YAY for them, please? Sunday, July 12. 2009
Communication ninjas all around? Posted by Lydia Pintscher
in Nightrose at
20:46
Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Communication ninjas all around?Have you ever noticed that some people check their IRC backlog and answer every ping while others couldn’t care less about who tried to contact them while they were away? Are there people around you who answer emails within a day (most of the time much less though) while you can wait a week for your uncle to answer that email asking for photos of your latest family reunion? The people around us communicate very differently on the web for various reasons. Let’s simplify it by separating them into 4 groups:
Communication ninjas are those who you can always reach, no matter where. They read their emails regularly, check IRC backlogs, follow what is happening on Twitter/Identi.ca, know who broke up with whom on Facebook and have a huge contact list for different networks in their instant messenger of choise. Selective communicators are reachable on a few selected mediums. They might check emails regularly and Jabber. Or follow Identi.ca and IRC. They have chosen one or a few mediums and stick to it. You can rely on reaching them there but don’t bet on reaching them anywhere else. Part-time communicators are on top of things when they are “online” but nearly completely drop off the earth from time to time. They are probably the trickiest of them all because you can’t always rely on their communication pattern. Communication abstainers… Well, don’t rely on them getting any information. They don’t like communicating online or simply don’t have the time for it. You will have to spent some extra effort on them. So you might ask yourself why this is important for you. It is very important if you want to get a message to a person or a group of people. Unfortunately in the Free Software community we forget about it too often or are not aware of its implications while relying so heavily on communication every single day. Say you have a part-time communicator who does IRC and reads backlog. There is little sense in sending him a simple “ping”. He’ll read it 5 hours later due to time-zone difference between you two and “pong” you. This ping pong can go on for days without ever any of you two getting the message to the other. (Yes I’ve see it happen multiple times. Don’t ask.) “ping - I need you to do X” would have been so much more effective in this case. Other example: You have a communication abstainer and need to contact him quickly. You could send an email and wait days to get a reply. Or you could ask around in his network and get his cellphone number and call him quickly. Or ask his collegues at work to tell him you need him to do X or know about Y. Another example: You have a part-time communicator who can’t use IRC at work but you need something dealt with quickly. Contact him on Jabber which he uses at work. Things to take away:
Thursday, July 2. 2009Berlin, we?ll meet againAs others on PlanetKDE already wrote we had a really great time in Berlin last week. The KDE/Kubuntu/Amarok booth was well staffed with my favorite gearheads and new KDE people now to be added to the former group Thursday was probably the busiest day for me. Ingo interviewed me about Amarok for RadioTux. (Excellent job as always, Ingo! Kreuzberg surprised a small group of us on Saturday with CSD. Definitely not what I would have expected for that evening but it was awesome! And let me tell you: Marge’s outfit was great but it wasn’t the best one by far. That one goes to someone dressed as Hellboy shouting “KDE! Awesome!” after seeing Frederik’s KDE shirt. This was my second time in Kreuzberg and the second time there was a party on the streets. Rock! (Way less police than on May 1st though Thanks go to KDE e.V. and Amarok for funding and of course the Linuxtag team for another great event. Oh and btw: I of course signed the FLA as well. (I think I got number 10 - nice round number.) Everyone going to Gran Canaria: Have a nice time and lots of fun and make sure to blog/dent/tweet a lot for those left behind at home. I want to see lots of photos Wednesday, June 17. 2009OceaniaWhile the Amarok team has been working on a lot of cool new stuff for 2.2 we havn’t forgotten about 2.1. It’s time for 2.1.1, the first (and likely last) maintenance release of the 2.1 series. Enjoy! Blue Starfish, originally uploaded by Kanaka’s Paradise Life. Friday, June 12. 2009
It will eat your kittens! Posted by Lydia Pintscher
in Nightrose at
08:37
Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) It will eat your kittens!<public service announcement> Heya folks I will open Amarok trunk for 2.2 development in a few hours (not yet!). As people have a lot of awesome stuff to merge that they have been working on, trunk will be (semi-)broken for a few days and might eat your kittens. So if you compile from trunk you might want to wait a few days unless you want to help us stabilize things, which would of course be greatly appreciated. Let the breakage begin! </public service announcement>
Thursday, June 4. 2009Amarok 2.1 ReleasedJust 5 months since we released 2.0 and today we can present you Amarok 2.1 “Let There Be Light” with lots of improvements and new features. For videos of Amarok 2.1’s features check AmarokStudios. (Thanks to Abby for the videos.)
Tuesday, May 19. 2009
UserBase Competition - Round 3 Posted by Lydia Pintscher
in Nightrose at
15:51
Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) UserBase Competition - Round 3Two weeks have passed since I announced round 2 and I am very happy with the result. The Amarok page improved a lot and is ready for the release of Amarok 2.1. Many thanks go to Karthikp, the winner of round 2! Awesome work! You definitely get a beer when we meet. So who is next? Plasma! A few days ago the Plasma page on UserBase was a sorry little copy of the Plasma FAQ. Einar moved the FAQ already and was kind enough to start the new Plasma page. Now it needs more people to fill the missing spots. This is where you come in! Go to UserBase, get an account (non-OpenID login now possible as well thanks to danimo \o/) and start on either the main Plasma page or updating the FAQ where needed. This is a good way to get started with contributing to KDE and at the same time helping fellow users. As in previous rounds a beer (or similar drink of your choosing) is waiting for the winner at Akademy or another event. Thursday, May 14. 2009
Amarok 2.1 Beta 2 released Posted by Lydia Pintscher
in Nightrose at
21:46
Comments (0) Trackbacks (0) Amarok 2.1 Beta 2 releasedWeeeeeee! One more beta closer to Amarok 2.1! |
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