…and it’s still OK. Please note that this blog post is very old, and not an accurate reflection of the current state of versioning in GTK. Today is the second day at the GTK hackfest, and we are discussing portals, interactions between applications, and security. That’s not really what this post is about. Yesterday’s post got quite a lot of feedback. I had a number of discussions with various stak
For some time I’ve been working on HiDPI support for Gnome, in order to support all the new laptops with very high resolution displays. This work is now at a stage where I can start showing it off and adventurous users might even want to test it out. The support happens on many layers, like: Wayland: I’ve added support in the protocol for scaled windows and outputs, and implemented this in Weston
I’ve spent the last two weekends with the GTK+ Wayland backend, trying to make some progress towards day-to-day usability. While there are still some big gaps, things are looking pretty ok now. This screenshot shows client-side decorations on a GTK+ window. You can see rounded corners and invisible borders – shadows are still missing. We use the proper resize cursors, depending on which directions
I suppose I can’t just leave my last post standing there as-is. I’ll start by listing a bunch of things I consider facts about the GNOME project. I don’t want to talk about solutions here, I just want to list them, because I don’t think they are common knowledge. People certainly don’t seem to talk about them a lot. core developers are leaving GNOME development. The most recent examples are Emmanu
So, for the first time ever (to my knowledge), the full multi-touch stack working on Linux: This video features: Linux 2.6.31 with the N-Trig driver (Plus some modifications of mine to have multitouch enabled with my touchscreen firmware) Xorg 7.5 xf86-input-evdev-multitouch (By the ENAC people, plus some patch of mine to cope with devices that don’t provide tracking IDs for each tracking point) G
Dear KDE people, I made sure you can watch your own videos now: You absolutely had to upload them to the only video portal Swfdec didn’t support yet, eh? Anyway, Google video works ok in git now. So it’s your turn to write code so you can watch them on KDE. 6 comments ↓ #1 felipe on 01.22.08 at 10:55 Perhaps you may want to address Google next time, since they decide what to do with their own foot
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
処理を実行中です
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く