So with GUADEC 2001 finished everyone is home and back to hacking. All the reports I've heard have been that it was a very positive event with planning for GNOME 2.0 making a lot of progress. Probably one of the most outstanding features was the attendence of a number of the KDE developers which hopefully will lead to more developments in interoperability between the two environments. You can read about the general event at the GUADEC 2001 web-site.
A number of the attendees have released notes or material from their talks.
Minutes of the GNOME Advisory Board Meeting April 5 2001 by Daniel Veillard.
http://mail.gnome.org/archives/foundation-announce/2001-April/msg00000.html
Minutes of the GNOME Board meeting 8 April 2001 by Daniel Veillard.
http://mail.gnome.org/archives/foundation-announce/2001-April/msg00001.html
A non technical perspective on GNOME goals and future work by Daniel Veillard.
http://mail.gnome.org/archives/foundation-list/2001-April/msg00002.html
GNOME Developer Documentation Report by Dan Mueth.
http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gnome-hackers/2001-April/msg00028.html
GNOME Office report by Sam TH.
http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gnome-office-list/2001-April/msg00001.html
Making Gnome Accessibile by Bill Haneman.
http://developer.gnome.org/projects/gap/presentations/GUADEC/
GTK+ at GUADEC 2001 Summary by Owen Taylor.
http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-devel-list/2001-April/msg00180.html
Keynote speech by Rob Gingell - this is a temporary location.
http://foundation.gnome.org/gingell-guadec.pdf
Guadec 2001: 6-8th April 2001 by Telsa Gwynne.
http://www.linux.org.uk/~telsa/Trips/guadecii.html
GNOME/KDE Interoperability by Dave Mason.
http://people.redhat.com/dcm/guadec.html
Nat Friedman one of the founders of Ximian steps down from the position and moves to working on products.
http://www.ximian.com/newsitems/patrick_ceo.php3
He posted to Linuxtoday that he's looking forward to working "hundred hour weeks on the desktop instead of the CEO-ly duties that previously consumed my days for the last two years" - so we can look forward to welcoming him back to full hacker mode and high caffeine consumption shortly!
http://linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2001-04-17-010-20-NW-GN-0017
eWEEK Labs reporter Jason Brooks gives some short views on the KDE and GNOME experience. Overall he believes they both go a long way to making Linux a viable corporate desktop but that there are still improvements to be made in the interfaces of both.
http://www.zdnet.com/eweek/stories/general/0,11011,2709282,00.html
The Register reports on what both camps are doing to work more closely together and notes that "we typically hear naught but sweetness from the respective developers" but that over-indulgent advocates can sometimes cause problems. Lets hope we can continue in this happy vein.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/18323.html
Famous in GNOME circles for her bug reports and ability to break any application, Linux.com uncovers her thoughts on how GNOME should develop.
http://linux.com/newsitem.phtml?sid=1&aid=12112
Michael Hall provides a timely reminder that with while everyone would love binary packages for GNOME 1.4 there are more important things than having the latest and greatest - like whether, in his case, his plane was sound!
http://www.linuxplanet.com/linuxplanet/opinions/3260/1/
Tim Janik and Stefan Westerfeld provide an initial release of gnome-arts which provides a GTK frontend for common features of aRts the KDE sound-server. This is obviously an early implementation but lets hope it's just the start.
http://www.arts-project.org/doc/gnome-arts-0.1.1.html
The GTK+ developers continue their frequent releases of the unstable branch that will eventually become GTK+ 2.0. The API is mostly frozen according to the team so the adventurous application programmers can try it out alongside their existing GTK+ setup.
http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gtk-devel-list/2001-April/msg00254.html
Module Score-O-Matic:
(Top 20 most active modules for this month by number of CVS commits per module)
307 evolution
200 nautilus
157 galeon
103 gtranslator
98 ximian-setup-tools
90 gal
88 gimp
82 gnumeric
80 web-devel-2
74 gnome-core
67 eel
61 trilobite
57 gtk+
52 gnome-i18n
50 dia
47 gtkhtml
44 guile-repl
41 gtkhtml2
40 libbonobo
40 glib
User Score-O-Matic:
(Top 20 hackers for this month by number of CVS commits per user)
241 martin
142 ramiro
131 kabalak
98 jirka
91 clahey
80 kmaraas
75 cgabriel
73 danw
69 fejj
65 darin
60 menthos
59 arios
55 maubury
54 mitch
54 chrisime
53 michael
50 veillard
50 owen
47 rasta
46 jody
Thanks to Cgabriel for helping me with the Score-O-Matic.
Software altered this week.
PonG - A library and a GUI tool for creating configuration dialogs.
Gaim - An AIM client.
Etherape - A graphical network monitor.
B4Step - A Window Manager for Linux and Solaris.
Batalla Naval - A networked multiplayer battleship game.
Balsa - An email client for GNOME
Pygmy - A GNOME mail client written in Python.
Overflow - Visual programming environment.
Glade - A UI builder for GTK+ and GNOME.
SQmaiL - A GNOME mail client that uses SQL for mail storage.
GConf-- - C++ wrappers for GConf.
mpterm - New terminal application that enables multiple terminals in one window.
The GNU HaliFAX Viewer- Fax viewer from the GNU HaliFAX project.
Manyapad - A text editor.
pyFind - Find utility.
glame - A powerful, fast, stable and easily extensible sound editor.
vlc - A DVD and MPEG player.
Cronos II - Fast and light email client.
xNetTools - Multi-threaded Network tools.
B-Chat - A client for Yahoo! chat.
See the software map on www.gnome.org (or Freshmeat) for more information about any of these packages.
Best Wishes,
Steve