Leveraging synergy in this championship year
Michael Davies
Local
News
Software
Utility
Powered by PyBlosxom
Copyright © 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Michael Davies, |
LinuxSA November 2007 - Multi-Pointer X Server (MPX)
Hi all,
Time for the November meeting announcement (it's over a month
away!)...
The usual details:
When: 7:00pm-9:30pm (doors open 6:45pm) on
Tuesday, 20th November, 2007
Where: Senior Secondary Assessment Board
of South Australia (SSABSA)
Boardroom (1st floor)
60 Greenhill Road
Wayville SA
Cost: FREE
Who: Anyone and everyone.
No pre-registration necessary.
Presentation:
Peter Hutterer will be talking about his research with the
Multi-Pointer X Server (MPX). MPX is a modification of the X server
to support multiple mice and keyboards in X. It provides users with
one cursor per device and one keyboard focus per keyboard. Each
cursor can operate independently. MPX is the first multicursor
windowing system and allows two-handed interaction with legacy
applications, but also the creation of innovative applications and
user interfaces.
Peter is a PhD student at the Wearable Computer Lab at the
University of South Australia.
Finding the Venue and Parking:
You can park either beneath or next to the SSABSA building. If you
are driving west along Greenhill road, you can turn left into the
driveway if you are going slow enough to notice the sign and turn in
time :-), or you can turn left at the next road, and left again to
go along the street behind the building to access the carpark that
way.
If you try to enter the building from street level but the doors are
locked, walk down the stairs and use the lift in the below-ground
carpark.
Pizza:
After the meeting, please join us for pizza at San Giorgios (cnr.
Frome Street and Rundle Street in the city).
For more information:
Email: organisers@linuxsa.org.au
Web Page: http://www.linuxsa.org.au/
Mailing List: linuxsa@linuxsa.org.au
IRC: #linuxsa on irc.freenode.net
The Future of Software DevelopmentNice summary article on The Future of Software Development. Worth a read. In summary, the article suggests that the future holds:
Of course the thing that the article doesn't mention is open-source. That really adds to the libraries point well, but at a higher abstraction level. Building systems where dependable open-source components can be used for your infrastructure - allowing you to concentrate on your value-add - is a huge win for our industry. Commoditisation is allowing open-source systems to leap-frog proprietary offerings, and is better from an integration perpspective - tailor or fix to meet your requirements. My new day job is far more about this than it has been previously - using open-source where it makes sense and building upon it. It's more than fresh air - it's a personal revolution! |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
This web page is optimised
for standards. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||