I have now changed the default panel configuration in F12 to include gnote instead of tomboy, and changed comps to make gnote default and tomboy optional.
This won't replace tomboy in existing installations, but new installations will get gnote instead of tomboy.
This also means that gnote should show up on the live cd (where we excluded tomboy previously, due to no space for mono).
Some things are still needed for a 100% smooth experience: - pick up existing tomboy notes (less urgent now, since we do not replace tomboy...) - don't show the 'start here' note initially
Matthias
On 06/02/2009 07:55 PM, Matthias Clasen wrote:
I have now changed the default panel configuration in F12 to include gnote instead of tomboy, and changed comps to make gnote default and tomboy optional.
This won't replace tomboy in existing installations, but new installations will get gnote instead of tomboy.
This also means that gnote should show up on the live cd (where we excluded tomboy previously, due to no space for mono).
Thanks. I have added some notes to
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_12_Alpha_release_notes#GNOME_2.28
I am curious. Would F-spot still installed by default for Fedora 12 DVD image?
Rahul
I am curious. Would F-spot still installed by default for Fedora 12 DVD image?
Would we be interested in something like this in future: http://santanu-sinha.blogspot.com/2009/06/solang.html Still a long way to go, though.
Cheers, Debarshi
On Wed, Jun 3, 2009 at 7:46 AM, Debarshi Ray debarshi.ray@gmail.com wrote:
I am curious. Would F-spot still installed by default for Fedora 12 DVD image?
Would we be interested in something like this in future: http://santanu-sinha.blogspot.com/2009/06/solang.html Still a long way to go, though.
Would be good to have a page listing out the current and upcoming (by release) features.
On 06/03/2009 08:13 AM, sankarshan wrote:
On Wed, Jun 3, 2009 at 7:46 AM, Debarshi Raydebarshi.ray@gmail.com wrote:
I am curious. Would F-spot still installed by default for Fedora 12 DVD image?
Would we be interested in something like this in future: http://santanu-sinha.blogspot.com/2009/06/solang.html Still a long way to go, though.
Would be good to have a page listing out the current and upcoming (by release) features.
It would be good to have a rpm to see what's about and how it compares with the other applications (I am a heavily into photography and using mostly Nautilus, with gThumb from time to time).
It would be good to have a rpm to see what's about and how it compares with the other applications (I am a heavily into photography and using mostly Nautilus, with gThumb from time to time).
You would need Fedora 10. If you can manage that I will get you an rpm.
The reason for this is that Exiv2 and libgda broke API from F10 to F11. I could not install the F11 preview on my Macbook, and my co-developer is stuck with Debian Sid and its oldish packages. We plan to upgrade the dependencies in the next release.
Cheers, Debarshi
On 06/03/2009 09:16 AM, Debarshi Ray wrote:
It would be good to have a rpm to see what's about and how it compares with the other applications (I am a heavily into photography and using mostly Nautilus, with gThumb from time to time).
You would need Fedora 10. If you can manage that I will get you an rpm.
Sorry, I have F11 all around. Please ping when you have it working.
The reason for this is that Exiv2 and libgda broke API from F10 to F11. I could not install the F11 preview on my Macbook, and my co-developer is stuck with Debian Sid and its oldish packages. We plan to upgrade the dependencies in the next release.
Debarshi Ray, Wed, 03 Jun 2009 07:46:48 +0530:
Would we be interested in something like this in future: http://santanu-sinha.blogspot.com/2009/06/solang.html Still a long way to go, though.
Why not cooperate with others ... there are so many half-baked photo collection managers with lack of resources ??? E.g., I maintain a package of jbrout (no, it is not Java, but Python), which looks really similar to what you are doing and needs more maintainers (well, another maintainer). Is it just NIH or wish to make your very own scratch on the face of Universe not matter how insignificant it is?
Matěj
E.g., I maintain a package of jbrout (no, it is not Java, but Python), which looks really similar to what you are doing and needs more maintainers (well, another maintainer).
How does it compare with programs like F-Spot and Eye of GNOME with respect to resource consumption?
Cheerio, Debarshi
Debarshi Ray, Wed, 03 Jun 2009 14:06:29 +0530:
E.g., I maintain a package of jbrout (no, it is not Java, but Python), which looks really similar to what you are doing and needs more maintainers (well, another maintainer).
How does it compare with programs like F-Spot and Eye of GNOME with respect to resource consumption?
Comparing to f-spot very favorably ... it doesn't drag whole VM machinery, and feels pretty fast (I don't have any *sharp* packages installed though, so it is some time last time I had personal experience with f-spot). Truth to be told its functionality is limited to f-spot (it can call Gimp on selected image, but doesn't do almost any image manipulation itself), but that's debatable whether image collection manager should duplicate functionality of Gimp. And of course, patches welcome :).
Comparing to eog is unfair to eog ... viewing of images doesn't cover the main functionality of jbrout, which is management of the collection of images -- tagging (all tags stored in IPTC keywords, no database, just a cache), plugins, export to flickr/picassa/your own webpage/email/etc, fast search. Take a look at http://jbrout.free.fr/index.php
Anyway, initial caching of all metadata takes some time, but otherwise it feels reacting instantenous ... I have a developer's machine though, so I may not be right person to judge on this.
Try it for yourself!
Matěj
On Thu, Jun 4, 2009 at 12:28 PM, Matej Cepl mcepl@redhat.com wrote:
Comparing to f-spot very favorably ... it doesn't drag whole VM machinery, and feels pretty fast (I don't have any *sharp* packages installed though, so it is some time last time I had personal experience with f-spot). Truth to be told its functionality is limited to f-spot (it can call Gimp on selected image, but doesn't do almost any image manipulation itself), but that's debatable whether image collection manager should duplicate functionality of Gimp. And of course, patches welcome :).
A somewhat well formed usage of F-Spot is using it to upload pictures to various services like flickr, smugmug and Picassa even. So, while basic image manipulation (contrast, sharpness, brightness, hue, saturation) might be a requirement along with aspects like crop, the upload part is good to have as well. That was one of the reasons I am looking for a features (now and upcoming) list/page for solang.
That was one of the reasons I am looking for a features (now and upcoming) list/page for solang.
http://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/solang.git/tree/TODO
A proper web page will take some time. Savannah is limping back to life after the outage.
Cheers, Debarshi
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