Tag Archive for 'press-release'

Inkscape 0.45 Released and Strategy toward Inkscape 1.0 :)

Heya all, Inkscape 0.45 is out in the wild. Bryce and I sent out PR. The great thing about Bryce is that he is the master of planning. He helped to reshape Inkscape’s roadmap so we can get to 0.50 with SVG Mobile compliance and full Inkscape 1.0 with SVG 1.1 compliance. Need I say, the more contributors we get, the faster we will get there.

Would anyone out there like to help out with Inkscape by either funding development or with steps to getting involved in Inkscape? I can connect funding with developers and am eager to do so to accelerate Inkscape towards > 1.0 version numbers.

Check out the release notes and the press release:

Jon Phillips
Inkscape Announces 0.45 Release :: http://www.inkscape.org :: Draw Freely.
Draw Freely: Inkscape Announces 0.45 Release

February 5, 2007 - The Inkscape community today announced the newest
version of its cross-platform open source vector graphic drawing software,
Inkscape. Inkscape 0.45 features a new Gaussian Blur SVG filter.
Sponsored by Google’s Summer of Code program, Gaussian Blur allows you
to softly and naturally blur any Inkscape objects, including shapes,
text, and images. This enables a wide range of photorealistic effects:
arbitrarily shaped shades and lights, depth of field, drop shadows,
glows, etc. Also, blurred objects can be used as masks for other objects
to achieve the “feathered mask” effect.

Numerous other new features, enhancements to existing features, and bug
fixes have been included. A history dialog allows you to browse your
change history. Many new extension effects are added including Pattern
along Path and Color Effects. There are performance improvements to
rendering speed, on the order of 2-3% in general, and up to 5-10% for
drawings using heavy transparency and/or radial gradients. Compositing
quality is also improved through the removal of banding seen in gradients.

The Inkscape community invites anyone to contribute to the project. The
project is now working on the upcoming 0.46 release which will focus
on the initial stages of adding SVG animation support, increasing the
apps PDF functionality, and other refactoring tasks. On a global scale,
Inkscape is pushing for version 0.50 to have full compatibility with
SVG Mobile/Tiny. Then, the ultimate large goal is to get to Inkscape
1.0 which will be a fully W3C SVG 1.1 compliant application. The more
help the project receives, the faster the aforementioned goals will
be accomplished.

Download Linux, Windows, and Mac OS X packages:

http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=93438

For many more details, see the complete Release Notes for 0.45:

http://wiki.inkscape.org/wiki/index.php/Release_Notes045

Community submitted screenshots:

http://www.inkscape.org/screenshots/

About Inkscape

Inkscape is an open source drawing tool that uses the World Wide Web
Consortium’s ([[W3C]]) scalable vector graphics format (SVG). Some
supported SVG features include basic shapes, paths, text, markers, clones,
alpha blending, transforms, gradients, and grouping. In addition, Inkscape
supports Creative Commons’ metadata, node-editing, layers, complex path
operations, text-on-path, text-in-shape, and SVG XML editing. It can
also import EPS, PostScript, and most bitmap formats,
and exports PNG, PS, PDF and various vector formats.

Inkscape’s main motivation is to provide the Open Source community with
a fully [[W3C]] compliant XML, SVG, and CSS2 drawing tool. Additional
work includes conversion of the codebase from C/Gtk to
C++/Gtkmm, emphasizing a lightweight core with powerful
features added through an extension mechanism, and maintaining a friendly,
open, community-oriented development process.

Press Contact

Jon Phillips
jon@rejon.org
+1 510.499.0894

Looks like I will be attending the iCommons Summit (you should too!)

iCommons Summit, Rio de Janeiro, 23-25 June, 2006
www.icommons.org
“Towards a global digital commons”

The past few years has seen the burgeoning of a number of initiatives
aimed at opening the fields of creativity, science and knowledge in
communities around the world. Practitioners from these movements
currently identify themselves as falling within a particular community
– ‘free and open source software’, ‘open access’, ‘open content’ and
‘open science’, amongst others – but they share key processes and
values whose common elements are yet to be fully realized.

This year’s iCommons Summit aims to bring together, in a creative,
stimulating and cooperative environment, the pioneers from these
communities – to inspire and learn from one another and establish
closer working relationships around a set of incubator projects. With
participation by commons communities from Creative Commons, Wikipedia,
Science Commons, Ubuntu, A2K and others, this year’s Summit is set to
be one of the most exciting events for creative and knowledge commons
pioneers from around the world.

Creative Commons presents: CC Salon 2, San Francisco

From the main Creative Commons website:

Please join us for the second CC Salon, taking place in San Francisco on Wednesday, April 12 from 6-9 PM at Shine (1337 Mission Street between 8th and 9th Streets). CC Salon is a casual get-together focused on conversation and community-building with 2-3 brief presentations from individuals and groups developing projects with relationship to Creative Commons. Please invite your friends, colleagues, and anyone you know who might be interested in drinks and discussion. We look forward to seeing you there!

Following the first successful salon, this event focuses on “Net-based Music.” James Polanco is presenting about “Podcasting and the Fake Science Digital Music Store” and
Lucas Gonze is talking about “How the Net is Changing Music.” Lucas Gonze is the creator of Webjay and is a frequent Creative Commons supporter. Also, we have a special surprise guest.

We’ve set up http://www.creativecommons.org/salon where you can find the latest information about CC Salon. It is also place where the community may contribute ideas, make suggestions, and submit proposals for future events.

You can track this event on upcoming.org along with every future monthly 2nd Wednesday CC Salon.

SFAI Design + Technology Salon: The Strange Destiny of Open Source in the Nation State

SFAI Design + Technology Salon:
The Strange Destiny of Open Source in the Nation State

Date: Thursday, April 6
Time: 7 - 9:30 PM
Location: SFAI Café, 800 Chestnut St., sf, ca 94133
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=800+chestnut+st,+sf,+ca
Free and Open to the Public
Free Snacks and Drinks

tags: open source, commons, raqs, salon, drinking, socializing,
eating, art, media arts, new media, remix, students, learning,
discussion, mixing

website: http://www.sfai.edu/design/salon
upcoming.org listing: http://upcoming.org/event/66617/

San Francisco Art Institute’s Center for Media Culture and Leonardo,
The International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology, will
co-sponsor the next SFAI Design + Technology Salon on April 6 from
7 - 9:30 PM at SFAI’s Cafe at 800 Chestnut St in San Francisco, CA
(http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=800+chestnut+st,+sf,+ca).
During the event the RAQs Collective will initiate a discussion on the
topic of “The Strange Destiny of Open Source in the Nation State”
accompanied by a presentation on intellectual property issues by San
Jose based writer and librarian Steve Cisler. The salon will consist
of short 20-minute presentations followed by an “open mic” and a
lively Q&A. An open wine bar and food will precede the presentations
and dessert will follow.
 
Monica Narula, Jeebesh Bagchi, and Shuddhabrata Sengupta of Raqs Media
Collective from New Delhi are the Spring 2006 Fellows of SFAI’s Center
for Media Culture. Raqs is a collective of artists who work in new
media and digital art practice, documentary filmmaking, photography,
media theory, research, criticism, and curating. Their work has been
exhibited at the Guangzhou Triennial, China; the Venice Biennale;
Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels; Walker Art Center; and Documenta 11,
Germany.

This Design + Technology Salon follows up on the first successful
event in November which featured Amy Franceschini of
Future Farmers, Ian McDonald, and Scott Snibbe all helping to define
what is design + technology in contemporary society. This event
expands upon this initial discussion by moving the focus from
contemporary practictioners to the topic of Open Source and Open
Content.

For More Information

RAQs Collective: http://www.raqsmediacollective.net
Sarai: http://www.sarai.net
Leonardo: http://www.leonardo.info 
Design+Technology Salon http://www.sfai.edu/design/salon

Join the Mailing List

design@sfai.edu

Press Contact

Jon Phillips
Visiting Lecturer
Design+Technology Department
San Francisco Art Institute
http://www.sfai.edu

510.499.0894
http://www.rejon.org

Gotmail 0.8.8 Released

The Gotmail project, a perl script which downloads mail from hotmail.com without user interaction, released version 0.8.8 today. This is a simple maintenance release with only a few basic bug fixes applied including better dealing with spaces in folder names and extra lines in config files.

While normally the project releases versions with more changes, the development community decided that releasing with some bug fixes is a priority. This is especially true now that the program, Gotmail, already accomplishes its primary goal of “downloading mail from hotmail.com.”

In the future, the Gotmail Project looks to add support for the new Hotmail beta which uses AJAX technology and a refined interface to provide a better user experience. The project seeks developers who might be interested in submitting code to become compatible with this new service.

Another feature that is desired by the development community is integration with other applications, such as Novell’s Evolution e-mail client (http://www.gnome.org/projects/evolution). Already included in this release is a simple script for transporting one’s hotmail into evolution. What would make for a strong feature is to develop a plugin which directly uses gotmail to check one’s hotmail account from within Evolution.

The Gotmail development community thrives off of users of the script, and ask for people to visit http://gotmail.sf.net/ to test out the latest version, file bug reports, and join the development process.

Itemized list of major changes:

  • Applied patch from jdanwhite to help with spaces in folder names.
  • Fixed bug in allowing empty lines in config files
  • Include “gotmail4evolution” script which transports one’s hotmail mail to a folder in evolution.

Packages ready for download:

http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/gotmail/gotmail-0.8.8-1.noarch.rpm?download
http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/gotmail/gotmail-0.8.8-1.src.rpm?download
http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/gotmail/gotmail-0.8.8.tar.gz?download
http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/gotmail/gotmail-0.8.8.zip?download

http://gotmail.sf.net/


1st Overlap.org Event Tonite

You all are invited to the first Overlap.org event tonite at the Hemlock in San Francisco. The website is about to go live for this project in synchronization with the first live event.

1st Overlap.org Event
February 18, 2006
9:30 pm - 2 am
Hemlock Tavern (map)

1131 Polk Street (between Post and Sutter)
San Francisco, CA

Live set by bLevin bLectum
DJ set by Safety Scissors
Solo set by Christopher Willits
Flossin (Christopher Willits, Zach Hill, Kid606)
Visuals by Nate Boyce

Also, see Lars’ post and Christopher’s post about the opening tonite. We have all been cranking on this for a couple of months now and its good to see the project’s public unveiling.