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XTech 2006 – day 0/1

The flight was bad, as always with LOT Airlines. I landed around 23:00, found Termie and Nadia, they got me to their place (which is awesome!), I took a shower, and went for a beer with Andy. Few beers, few hours and we were back home got some sleep. Day 0 is ready. (shots from Amsterdam: [1], [2], [3], [4])
Day 1 started at 08:30 am, shower, cornflakes, short web lurking, and went to XTech.

The first talk was awesome. Simon was presenting the JS framework that seems to be great. After few minutes of lurking, I see that their library is not that great (Animation module seems to be very poor),
but it’s still worth contributing and I’m considering using this as a JS lib for Bugzilla. (shots: [1], [2], [3])
They also made a poor job on browser detection, and I hope it’ll get better now.

Next talk was led by Termie on behalf of Alex Russel from Dojo. Termie’s speedtalk was without of slides which was good, because if people would be forced to try to understand termie at his speed talking, and scan the screen, they’d be doomed. Termie/Alex was talking about Web 2.0/Ajax culture, reasons behind it (it’s evolution, not revolution, it’s the logical next step, not a buzzword).

Short break, and we got to OpenLaszlo talk. OpenLaszlo seems to be very, very powerfull platform, with possible drawback on code cleannes. It allows you to create rich web applications and then select the result technology (actually – flash or dhtml/ajax). It could be extended to work with XUL, XAML etc.

Next talk was about Hijaxing. I’m happy that someone did a talk about the way I believe Ajax should be developed. It was basicly against-ajax-lock-in talk about creating pure HTML code first and the putting fancy Ajax on top of it to simplify the world for ajax-capable browsers. Actually, in my work on Bugzilla UI, I’m doing even one step earlier: I model the UI first, do usability, review, then code pure, accessible HTML, and then put Ajax on top of it. I’m using this approach since my first Ajax-y work, and this made me not understand W3C freaks screaming that Ajax is “not accessible” – Ajax has nothing to do with accessibilty or it’s lack. If you want to create accessible page, you can. Also, “Web 2.0” is also about standards, usability and accessibility, so it’s obvious that more web 2.0 means more fun for people with disabilities.

Then we went for a lunch with Pike, Termie, Andy and Gijs. Lunch took us a bit too much time, so we missed Developing Enterprise Applications with Ajax and XUL.

I didn’t like the Adobe’s talk, which came next. Possibly, I’m just too much anti-flash and sad-that-adobe-focused-on-flash-instead-of-svg, but the talk was pure marketing and I never enjoy marketing talks.

Then, after next small brak, the talks went crazy, not following Schedule at all, which makes it impossible for me to report what happened. The lightning demos didn’t show anything new to me, but it’s nice to see people focusing on usability and user workflow quality more these days.

After the talks we got for a free wine/juice/water+small junks of food sponsored by Mozilla, and then we went for a dinner with Michael from Opera, Tristan, Ian, Termie, Gerv, Gijs and Hish. Dinner was great, food was good, and beer was … well, beer 🙂 We got some pictures of toast made by Opera, Flock and Mozilla all together! :] (shot: [1])
From dinner place we did move to drinking place, and then to another, another, and we ended around 2 am with Ryan from Technorati, Ian and Andy walking amsterdam streets and steping in every possible pub on our way 😉 It was great.

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X-tech 2006

Today, on 8:00 pm I’ll leave Warsaw Airport on my way to Amsterdam where I’ll join the Flock Amsterdam Team (Termie, Ian) in the X-tech quest.

The bad news is that I just got email from Alex Russel that he won’t be there. 🙁

My personal schedule:

Tuesday:

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday & Sunday: Barcamp Amsterdam II

Groovy!

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po polsku

Suse Linux 10.1 PL by AviaryPL

We’re glad to announce that AviaryPL team (new website is in production) prepared the Polish localization on SuSe Linux 10.1 for Novell Poland. Four people from AviaryPL – Wojciech Kapusta, Marek Stępień, Stanisław Małolepszy and Wadim Dziedzic was working on this since December 2005.

Our team prepared global, deep review of SuSe Linux 10.0 localization and then  full localization of 10.1. We’re sure that it’s the most localized and the best localized release of SuSe Linux in Polish. If you followed the progress, you probably noticed that there were some delays and many RC versions. Well, it was a lot of work for those four guys and I’d like to thank them for this. Nikdo started dedicated thread on SuSe forum.
This experience was extremly usefull and it will for sure bring us to our ultimate goal – to rise the quality of using software in Poland. It’s also probably one of the last archivements of the team under my lead. More news on those two topics very soon.

AviaryPL team hope you’ll like shiny new SuSe 10.1 in Polish 🙂

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Konferencja Web 2.0

14 czerwca, w Warszawie, odbędzie się pierwsza w Polsce konferencja w całości poświęcona Web 2.0 (przy pełnej akceptacji niejednoznaczności tego buzz-worda).

Mam nadzieję, że tematyka okaże się dla Was ciekawa, a ponieważ będę mówił tam o Web 2.0 z punktu widzenia epicentrum (jakby mówić o kinie popularnym z punktu widzenia Hollywood), chciałbym lepiej odnieść się do tego jak Polacy patrzą na to zagadnienie.

Bardzo by mi pomogło gdybyście podali w komentarzach swoje największe wątpliwości i pytania dotyczące Web 2.0.

P.S. Flamy będę jak zwykle kasował.

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Interview from FOSDEM

Tristan Nitot’s post reminded me that I also was interviewed by Source21 during FOSDEM 2006. I’m not 100% happy about this (I hate when people say this “iiiiii” between words, and that’s what I did here – shame on me 🙁 ), I was very tired, after many hours of work, but I hope that you’ll find it interesting enough to watch 🙂

Gandalf’s interview from FOSDEM 2006.

Update: The interview took place 3 months ago. Since then we improved our product management thanks to amazing work made by Mark and Bart and Geoffrey, and if you want to see what’ll be in the Cardinal – look at the Product Specification.

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What are the widgets for?

Since the first news about Opera 9, we all knew that there will be a widget system. Since the first preview build, users can touch them. But until now, Opera community and Opera company, failed to clear the signal about what the widgets are for at all.

I thought that it’s my personal problem, I just couldn’t understand the idea behind widgets. It’s nice, it’s great that it works, but what for? In my opinion, they could also add a small car racing game and/or guitar tuner. But few days ago I found (nota bene on Polish Opera Planet) Szymon Teżewski’s post where he confirms my doubts.
The only result is the praises like “Look, even with the widgets Opera is still the smallest and fastest browser!” – ok, that’s great, but it doesn’t answer the question about the usage of widgets. I can hardly imagine anyone using widgets on a daily routines (of course, there WILL be such people ;)), or that someone will use Opera because of the widgets. It makes no sense to me. Opera needs unique feature set for a longer term. To stay alive they need features that no other browser will want to have or be able to have. I don’t think that Opera will be able to attack IE’s market with them…

But the most crucial review was the C|Net one. I started watching it only because I was hoping that the man will explain the reasons for which he likes the widgets, the bright future of widgets and will show me how can I rise my internet experience with them.

Quote: “One of the exciting new features in Opera 9 beta 1 is widgets. And widgets stay with you, after you close out of your browser. And You can move them around the screen, or disable them completly. And there is a whole page of other widgets that you can download.”

Really, a musthave for any Joe Smith. I’m wondering how it’s possible that I used the web for so long without this great feature.

Update: I did not say that Widgets makes no sense to me. I love Mac OS X widgets, I use Karamba, I can’t wait for KDE 4 plasmoids. Do you follow? It’s a part of desktop, not a part of a software app. I feel strange when someone advertises a feature of some app that works because you can close this app and it still serves you. So why it’s a part of this app???

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Fx on google.com!

Oh yea… Each IE user from US visiting google.com will see a link to download Firefox 😀

Kudos to Paul Kim! It’s the first time ever a third party product has been featured on google’s main page!

P.S. By the way, www.ie7.com is NOT connected with any Mozilla Foundation part.

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flockblog

Flock pays for fixing Mozilla bugs!

Yes. It’s official now. See Will’s meeting notes. And now it begins.

Today, we started money rewarding our developers for every bug/patch upstreamed to bugzilla.mozilla.org!

It simply means that beside of supporting Mozilla in their mission (to preserve choice and innovation on the Internet), we also joined the list of companies that are supporting Mozilla development by their employees worktime!!!

We’re very proud to be a part of the Mozilla world, we believe that we can do much more than previously to help in bugfinding and bugfixing of Gecko, Editor and Firefox, but we want to give more.

We see shared goals between Flock 1.0 and Firefox 2.0/3.0 that are not yet implemented in Fx, one of which is a places mechanism that we want to reuse as a backend for Favorites and another is inline spellchecking, and yet another is search service. We’re very busy with Flock 0.7 (Cardinal) right now, but once we’re ready, we want to move to Firefox 2.0 as a base for next Flock release (Danphe) and a big part of the plan is to actually get involved into Firefox 2.0 development with above.

I hope that you can all see this clear signal: Mozilla, we *want* to help you! 🙂

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Friends

See, it’s sometimes that you just *think* that the world works in some way, while it appears that you’re wrong.

I had it today. I always thought of Microsoft, as the company, that morphed from the company that got computers to users, into a selfish giant that is too stupid to stop thinking only about money and domination. It seems that I underestimated them. Maybe they don’t speak too much about it, but under the hood, they sponsor many interesting, open source projects…. including Firefox. Nice :>

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Mozilla folks at XTech 2006

We’re regrouping before the XTech! Add your name if you’re going to be there 🙂