On 26 May 2008, at 09:35, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Since desktop systems are decreasing in popularity, notebooks are at
their top attractivity and UMPCs/Handhelds at the horizon, I think we
have to put a little more public emphasis on smaller embedded devices.
I really can't agree with this
Hello,
In my previous GNUstep desktop, I used to edit every kind of text files with
TextEdit.app. Now I can see CodeEditor and TypeWriter, but neither of them
seems to handle bash scripts. Not inside Inspector tools, nor with open
document menu, even I add them in GWorkspace Preferences.
So
Yen-Ju Chen wrote:
When applications call NSWorkspace in GNUstep, GNUstep will pick up a
default one if there is none. The default one is GWorkspace.app.
In your xsession, there are several application calling NSWorkspace
simultaneously.
I guess that is the reason you have multiple
Since desktop systems are decreasing in popularity, notebooks are at
their top attractivity and UMPCs/Handhelds at the horizon, I think we
have to put a little more public emphasis on smaller embedded devices.
I think the main problem for the GNUstep developers is to have a
common handheld device
Hi all,
LinuxTag is coming close and will start on Wednesday. As I had already
written, there will be a booth mySTEP / embedded GNUstep within the
Mobile Embedded partner stand Hall 7.2b # 112. Amongst the partners
will be the projects GPE and Open Embedded.
I will present mySTEP / GNUstep
Truls Becken wrote:
Stefan Bidigaray wrote:
Just add:
#include AppKit/NSFontManager.h
to TerminalViewPrefs.h. I have to do that every time I compile
Terminal.app, too. It's a small nuance but Terminal hasn't been updated
for
years, so it's expected that it doesn't work out of the
Hello,
When I run Wmaker, I can manage notifications like Ubuntu update-notifier
within docker, a systray dockable icon.
A simple test is :
zenity --notification --text My message
What about notification within Azalea / AZDock :
- Docker does not work with AZDock : it seems loaded and
David Chisnall [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
David
[1] The low-memory behaviour with Linux is spectacularly broken, so
I'd be much more interested in something running OpenBSD - which also has
a much smaller kernel footprint.
yep, OpenBSD runs very well on small devices. e.g. Zaurus. I use