Jeremi

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jeudi, mai 31 2007

NoticiasTech | Google Launches Gears Open Source Project to Bring Offline Capabilities to Web Applications

Just avant de partir a OpenCoffee, une petite news interessante venant de google ce matin : Google Launches Gears Open Source Project to Bring Offline Capabilities to Web Applications a dit:

Google Gears marks an important step in the evolution of web applications because it addresses a major user concern: availability of data and applications when there’s no Internet connection available, or when a connection is slow or unreliable. As application developers and users alike want to do more on the web—whether it’s email or CRM or photo editing—enhancements that make the browser environment itself more powerful are increasingly important.

Google Gears est dispo a http://gears.google.com/.

mardi, décembre 12 2006

GWT 1.3 Release Candidate is 100% Open Source

this news was published on Google Web toolkit but remove a little bit after. I got it by my google reader :-)

Update: It's official now

Today is quite a milestone for Google Web Toolkit: with the GWT 1.3 Release Candidate, our team is very happy to announce that all of GWT is open source under the Apache 2.0 license. There's a lot to say, but let's start with our mission: it's "To radically improve the web experience for users by enabling developers to use existing Java tools to build no-compromise AJAX for any modern browser." (I'd really encourage you to drop the red verbiage - kw) Since our primary mission is to help users (as opposed to hoarding proprietary development tools), opening up GWT has always been a no-brainer -- we just had to decide when. Now that GWT has some serious adoption and a lively user community, open-sourcing became the obvious next step to help GWT evolve more quickly. And we're committed to doing this the Right Way. All of our development will be done in the open, and we're going to be working directly from the GWT project on Google Code. We've created a charter document ("Making GWT Better") that describes the philosophical foundations of GWT as well as the nuts and bolts of compiling GWT yourself, submitting patches, and participating in the new Google Web Toolkit Contributors group. We'll be discussing the GWT roadmap and all technical decisions publicly, we've republished the GWT web site documentation under a Creative Commons license, and, while we're at it, we'll be publishing our team meeting notes to the contributors group. So, what's new in this 1.3 RC? Well, nothing, actually. The only thing that has intentionally changed since GWT 1.2 is the open source thing. However, since we did have to tweak a lot of source code and the GWT build scripts to make it easy for anyone to compile, we want to be conservative and call this a Release Candidate anyway. Once we hear enough success stories with the 1.3 RC, we'll call it 1.3 Final then get back to full-speed-ahead coding as we drive toward a nice big GWT 1.4. Meanwhile, what's done is done: GWT is an open source project!

mardi, septembre 26 2006

Googleplex, j'arrive

Vite fait une version francaise de ma news en anglais. Comme je l'ai annonce dans le titre, je m'en vais une semaine aux US avec Ludo, le jour de mon anniversaire. Ce n'est pas pour des vacances, mais pour aller a une conference et participer a une discussion sur l'open source au GooglePlex.

Trop content le Jeremi :-)

I'm so Happy, googlePlex, i'm coming

You know what? Ok, it's on the title. I'm going to the GooglePlex for a conference about the Summer of Code. You can't imagine how excited I am to go there. I'm going there with Ludovic. I Hope to meet Patrick Chanezon, which is member of the Paris OSSGTP, and i meet him one time before he left to US.

We are also going to meet a client for a very exciting project. Ludovic has already talk a little about it, but I don't know if i can say more about it for the moment. You can easily find who is it if you look at the XWiki source code repository :-)