3 November 20033 November 2003
Tuomas has been making some nice wallpapers lately. Here's one of my favorites. 
Federico's recent
file-chooser work is exciting. I guess the screenshots will be
more impressive when he puts the right icon next to the
"bookmark" quicklinks in the left-hand sidebar.
4 November 20034 November 2003
La la la. Hacking the planet. La la la.
. . .
Also, the Times of India wrote an article about us today.
6 November 20036 November 2003
In Utah again today. The first slopes opened yesterday, so I'm
considering whether or not it makes any sense for me to go back to
Boston this weekend.
. . .
I've been working on a fun little desktop hacking contest that we will
launch this weekend. Stay tuned.
. . .
We now have a wiki
for the Brooklyn GNOME Summit to take place later this week. If
you're planning on being there, add
yourself to the attendee list!
10 November 200310 November 2003
The always enthusiastic and charming Chema Celorio died yesterday
skydiving in Mexico.
For those of you not in Ximian who don't know, Chema started and ran
our Mexico City office, led the Ximian Setup Tools team a few years
ago, was in charge of the team that managed our contract with HP, led
the Ximian Desktop for a while, was one of the creators of GNOME Love,
and was recently our lead sales engineer for Europe.
Chema was one of the most loving, passionate people I have known.
Being around Chema always made you want to do more and try harder. He
was always questioning himself, trying to grow, taking on new
challenges and never backing down.
When I went to visit our office in Mexico I stayed at Chema's house
and gripped the door handle on his car till my nuckles turned white
when he drove us to work. Whenever he wasn't on sales trips or
skydiving he seemed to be in my office asking good hard questions and
always pushing for us to do more.
Chema was easy to love, and he will be easy to miss.
18 November 200318 November 2003
Gave a talk at Sloan this morning.
Currently there are 118 people registered for the Brooklyn
GNOME Summit. If you plan on coming, you should add
a note to the Wiki. If you're not planning on coming, you should
reconsider!
Our office has been overrun with adorable monkey antics lately.
There was a brief bout of dashboard-related
activity
today. Maybe it'll pick up again.
Also, I am very excited to see the evolution-sharp
module from Mike
Kestner in CVS now. Having good C# bindings for the Evolution
addressbook and calendar is going to make accessing that backend data
much easier. It would have been a big help this summer on the
dashboard work.
Overall I think there's a lot of exciting stuff coming in Evolution
2.0. Here's a very non-exhaustive list:
- Split of Evolution's backends into the evolution-data-server
module.
- Much simpler APIs for getting at the user's personal data, for the addressbook (C, C#) and calendar.
- Full HIG compliance.
- Split of the various components (mailer, addressbook, calendar)
such that they can eventually be run as separate apps, and not only in
an Outlook-like shell.
- S/MIME support
- Support for viewing calendars stored on the web.
And, hopefully, substantially more integration with the rest of the
desktop.
Stay tuned for more news on that later this week...
22 November 200322 November 2003
At the Brooklyn
GNOME Summit today. The slides from my opening session are here. There's a page of photos.
Also, today the GNOME Foundation launched the Desktop Integration Bounty
Hunt.
24 November 200324 November 2003
Though I've been dangerously exhausted, the summit has been a blast so
far. Lots of great people, lots of excitement and hacking.
One thing that didn't end up in the bounties but that I think
would be neat is an RSS backend for the calendar, so that you can see
blog entries on a timeline in your calendar.
. . .
Today we made an excursion to B&H for some new camera equipment to
better capture the intensity and energy of this conference.
Discussing libtool in the taxi.
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Toward the end, I think the stress was getting to us.
25 November 200325 November 2003
Holy crap, imgSeek looks awesome:
The algorithm they use is here. This
would be a great feature for F-Spot.
There was also some discussion today of a web backend
for F-Spot so you could use it to browse people's online albums.
26 November 200326 November 2003
Home for Thanksgiving. My parents had a party last night.
Papa pours the poire.
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28 November 200328 November 2003
"Implicit
query" from Microsoft. Ahem. I believe I was here first.
29 November 200329 November 2003
Too
many people.
A Charlottesville institution (great photo by Peach).
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Can your employer do this?
Virginia wine cellar.
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Off to India.
30 November 200330 November 2003
A sucker for the fisheye, I.
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I've moved over to using F-Spot fulltime. It is by far the best photo
management tool I've used on Linux, and it's only just begun. Once it
has an image publication feature, there won't be any going back.
. . .
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