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Open, Collaborative Effort to Improve US Patents

make things better

Late last year, I wrote about the EFF’s project to leverage the Patent Office’s new Preissuance Submissions procedure to promote open 3D printing technology. Here we are, several months later, and the fight for open 3D printing continues. Now, the EFF has partnered with Ask Patents to facilitate crowdsourcing of prior art searches for various 3D printing-related patent applications.

 

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Read more at OpenSource.com

Tiling Support For AMD’s RadeonSI Gallium3D Driver

As a potential performance-boosting addition, the “RadeonSI” Linux driver for open-source support of the AMD Radeon HD 7000/8000 series graphics cards now has patches for supporting tiling…

Read more at Phoronix

Gallium3D’s “Heads-Up Display” Gets Some Early Love

The Gallium3D HUD that makes it very easy to show various driver/hardware related real-time performance metrics on a heads-up display drawn over OpenGL applications, has already received a few improvements…

Read more at Phoronix

KDE 4.10.2 Fixes Annoying and Dangerous Bugs

KDEKDE announced the latest release of their popular desktop environment today, KDE Software Compilation 4.10.2. This is an update/stabilization release that brought over 100 fixes. Some bugs were annoying, but one particular nasty bugger was also fixed.

KMail/PIM

One of the areas in KDE’s software compilation that really needs some bug fixing, it’s Kmail slash Akonadi. While looking through the list of bug fixes, one can see they got quite a few. A couple dealt with Kmail not making Trash, Drafts, and other directories when first-time opened – these are fixed now. Another fixed a bug where deleted items weren’t deleted in the database and reappeared at next opening…

 

Read more at Ostatic

LLVM Pushing Out Daily Compilers For Ubuntu

The LLVM project will be releasing daily Debian/Ubuntu package snapshots of its compiler for those interested in testing out the very latest code…

Read more at Phoronix

$99 SBC Runs Linux on 1GHz Dual-Core ARM SOC

Embest is accepting pre-orders for a $99 single-board computer (SBC) based on a 1GHz dual-core Freescale i.MX6 ARM Cortex-A9 system-on-chip (SOC). The compact “MarS Board” provides interfaces for Gig-Ethernet, SATA, HDMI, camera, and more, and it’s supported with ready-to-use embedded Linux and Android OS images. The MarS Board’s small size (100 x 65 mm) precludes […]

Read more at LinuxGizmos

HTML5 and Qt, Two Popular Tools for Embedded Linux Application Development

Along with the proliferation of mobile and touchscreen devices, embedded Linux developers have shifted away from building their own operating systems from scratch. Instead they’ve been moving over the past few years toward frameworks such as the Yocto Project, Tizen or Android.

“We build upon existing frameworks and just extend with our hardware abstraction and with an application for user interaction,” said Jan-Simon Moeller, a Linux Foundation trainer in embedded Linux.  

Standardization has now also moved up to the application layer as developers adopt tools that simplify and speed UI creation. Instead of building from scratch with Java, Objective C or C++, developers build on top of a stack of pre-defined software that limits the need to rewrite the application’s common functionality.

The holy grail is an application framework that works across all devices and platforms, Moeller said.

“Traditional embedded development typically didn’t have such nice UIs,” Moeller said. “Now every device needs a display and needs a nice UI so (standardization) is a hot topic.” 

HTML5As a result, application development environments such as GNOME Mobile, Clutter, Java, HTML5 and Qt have become standard tools among embedded developers. So much so that in order to stay up-to-date with how embedded Linux developers prefer to work, the Yocto Project has added support for all of these environments, says David Stewart, embedded Linux engineering manager at Intel. 

Among these options, HTML5 and Qt have seen increasing popularity of late, Stewart said.

HTML5

It’s difficult to create applications for embedded devices because there’s no single framework to use across platforms, Intel’s Stewart said.  Apple and Android each has its own ecosystem and developers must build separate applications to suit each – a costly and time-consuming process. This is why Intel is making investments upstream to support HTML5, he said.

Because HTML5 is a standard supported by most web browsers, developers who are experienced with web development can create applications for iOS and Android devices without tying them to those platforms.

The markup language is most popular as the basis for applications on connected devices. But HTML5 applications can be run offline, as well, from the device’s local storage with a web runtime, Stewart said.

“(HTML5) holds the promise of really helping developers have the power to deliver the kinds of applications they need to with a very strong portability story,” Stewart said.

Despite the promise of HTML5, it’s still in its early days with embedded applications. Security and standardization across all devices are still the biggest issues facing its adoption by embedded developers, Moeller said.

Qt logoFor example, “once you have to allow access to the systems hardware – how do you ensure integrity of this sandbox?” he said.

Other difficulties include implementing rich UI’s with good performance; mixing with native technologies; alfa-level user interface libraries; and finding developers with knowledge of HTML5 & CSS3 in resource-limited environments, said Tuukka Turunen, director of R&D at Digia, Qt.

Qt

With more than ten years as an application development framework, Qt has risen in popularity again with the trend toward touchscreen UIs. It uses a C++ engine “for creating all the application logic,” Turunen said, in combination with QML, an HTML-like markup language that runs on top of Qt, instead of in a browser.

“QML is analogous to HTML5, but at the GUI toolkit level, which can be really interesting,” said Behan Webster, a Linux Foundation trainer and an embedded Linux consultant. “It’s not web-based like HTML5.”

Qt is often used for mobile development as well as for traditional embedded devices, from small handhelds all the way up to heavy machinery. And it actually offers the option to use HTML5 in Qt-based applications, if needed.

“With Qt you can easily develop hybrid applications leveraging the best of native and Web depending on the use case,” Qt’s Turunen said.

Qt has a strong cross-platform play, with Windows and Linux versions, said Stewart. And because its interface is based on C++, which a lot of schools are teaching to computer science majors, “it’s pretty popular,” he said.

Neither HTML5 nor Qt has achieved the coveted ability to build applications that work universally across all devices. Developers view HTML5 as the closest to the grail, The Linux Foundation’s Moeller said. But both tools can help developers achieve the high-quality graphical UI embedded customers have come to expect in an increasingly mobile space.

Manufacturers Slashing Prices of Windows RT Tablets

Microsoft is still keeping its Surface RT priced at $499, however.

Intel is Well Placed to Make the Leap to Mobile

It’s far too early to rule Intel out of the mobile game. The company’s success with 14-nanometer architecture could give it the power it needs to elbow aside the likes of ARM and Nvidia.

Does a Diverse IT Infrastructure Save Money?

A recent survey executed by MeriTalk, sponsored by Brocade, promotes the notion that adding more suppliers can reduce IT infrastructure capital costs and only minimally increasing operational costs in Federal data centers. Does this survey provide useful information or is it yet another self-serving, badly executed study?