15 February 2010

  1. Front Page
  2. Applications
  3. Development
  4. Community
  5. Devices
  6. Maemo in the Wild
  7. Announcements
  8. Download issue

Other Issues

  1. 30 January 2012
  2. 23 January 2012
  3. 16 January 2012
  4. 9 January 2012
  5. 2 January 2012
  6. 19 December 2011
  7. 12 December 2011
  8. 5 December 2011
  9. 28 November 2011
  10. 21 November 2011
  11. 14 November 2011
  12. 7 November 2011
  13. 31 October 2011
  14. 24 October 2011
  15. 17 October 2011
  16. 10 October 2011
  17. 3 October 2011
  18. 26 September 2011
  19. 19 September 2011
  20. 12 September 2011
  21. 5 September 2011
  22. 29 August 2011
  23. 22 August 2011
  24. 15 August 2011
  25. 8 August 2011
  26. 1 August 2011
  27. 25 July 2011
  28. 18 July 2011
  29. 11 July 2011
  30. 4 July 2011
  31. 27 June 2011
  32. 20 June 2011
  33. 13 June 2011
  34. 6 June 2011
  35. 30 May 2011
  36. 23 May 2011
  37. 16 May 2011
  38. 9 May 2011
  39. 2 May 2011
  40. 25 April 2011
  41. 18 April 2011
  42. 11 April 2011
  43. 4 April 2011
  44. 28 March 2011
  45. 21 March 2011
  46. 14 March 2011
  47. 7 March 2011
  48. 28 February 2011
  49. 21 February 2011
  50. 14 February 2011
  51. 7 February 2011
  52. 31 January 2011
  53. 24 January 2011
  54. 17 January 2011
  55. 10 January 2011
  56. 3 January 2011
  57. 20 December 2010
  58. 13 December 2010
  59. 6 December 2010
  60. 29 November 2010
  61. 22 November 2010
  62. 15 November 2010
  63. 8 November 2010
  64. 1 November 2010
  65. 25 October 2010
  66. 18 October 2010
  67. 11 October 2010
  68. 4 October 2010
  69. 27 September 2010
  70. 20 September 2010
  71. 13 September 2010
  72. 6 September 2010
  73. 30 August 2010
  74. 23 August 2010
  75. 16 August 2010
  76. 9 August 2010
  77. 2 August 2010
  78. 26 July 2010
  79. 19 July 2010
  80. 12 July 2010
  81. 5 July 2010
  82. 28 June 2010
  83. 21 June 2010
  84. 14 June 2010
  85. 7 June 2010
  86. 31 May 2010
  87. 24 May 2010
  88. 17 May 2010
  89. 10 May 2010
  90. 3 May 2010
  91. 26 April 2010
  92. 19 April 2010
  93. 12 April 2010
  94. 5 April 2010
  95. 29 March 2010
  96. 22 March 2010
  97. 15 March 2010
  98. 8 March 2010
  99. 1 March 2010
  100. 22 February 2010
  101. 8 February 2010
  102. 1 February 2010

Development

Battery status graph for analysis using battery-eye

Developers can check if running their application for a long time will have an impact on battery life with Jussi Holm's new application, Battery Eye. Emanuele Cassioli has started a thread on talk.maemo.org showing particular use-case graphs: I've installed it and found that it continuously monitors the battery consumption, even when the phone is off. Due to the extreme impact battery life can have on user's perceptions of a device and a platform and the usual difficulty involved with determining the battery life impact of a particular program, this application should be a large boon to developers and users alike.

TI collaboration on getting 3D acceleration drivers for N8x0 progressing

Texas Instruments, the manufacturer of the OMAP chips which have powered all Maemo devices to date, are continuing to work with Nokia and Carsten Munk on getting functional and releasable drives for the N800 and N810's PowerVR 3D acceleration chip. Don't assume drivers that will work out of box and render happily to the screen - there's still work to be done on this as explained earlier in this thread, but this is the first step to make this possible. You will need to flash a new kernel (with extra DMA memory) and some other things as well. The drivers themselves will be in the form of a binary blob, but the kernel module which interfaces to that library will be GPL, allowing it to be ported to new kernel versions.

PySide (Python + Qt) tutorials

Python is, almost certainly, the language with the lowest barrier to entry on Maemo: it's a modern, garbage-collected language with a clean syntax and large development community. Qt is, as you'll know, the UI toolkit on which Nokia is betting the farm. Robin Burchell has recently been blogging on an introduction to developing Qt applications with Python: I recently met an acquaintance around Maemo (hi Khertan!) who was having problems coming to grips with how to use Qt in general. He's a python developer currently, with exposure to Gtk+, so I thought I'd write up some help for him to read over. Targetted at developers who are already familiar with Python, the examples each tackle a single concept and are very heavily commented, to make it clear exactly what each line does.

Open sourcing of Maemo components queue & workflow

Working from the openness report, Carsten Munk has proposed a process for prioritizing components for open sourcing. The idea of the open sourcing queue, is to have the ability to prioritise what components should be sent through the machinery that in the end decides if something is open sourced or not and in which order. [...] The important thing is to spend more time on the actual open sourcing process than in time consuming discussions. Hopefully this will help focus the community and Nokia to get the most important components opened faster.

Maemo 6 Platform Security: FOSDEM slides

Maemo 6's DRM and security provisions is one of the most talked about items in Harmattan. This is for two reasons: 1) even above the UI & Qt, more is known about it than any other component; and 2) the introduction of a security framework allowing the device owner - and that may be the network with a subsidised phone - to tightly control how and what the device does is contentious in a system which has been progressively getting more open. is tasked with explaining the technical aspects of this framework and did so at FOSDEM last week. The purpose of the Platform Security in the Maemo 6 platform is to protect the owner of a Maemo-powered device from getting her personal, private data and passwords from being stolen and used for malicious purposes, to prevent a malware from misusing a device and incurring costs on user, to prevent a user from accidentally breaking the device and to make the platform meet the requirements set by such third party software that requires a safe execution environment. The slides from her presentation are now online, and video of the presentation itself can be seen below.

Maemo 6 Platform Security: FOSDEM video

The video to Elena Reshetova's presentation at FOSDEM. In addition to being viewable through YouTube below, fosdem.org has downloadable versions in Xvid and Ogg Theora formats.

Maemo book for WRT/Qt/QML - request for content suggestions

Rajesh Lal is working on a new book about Maemo development, focusing on Nokia's strategic platforms of Web Runtime (WRT), Qt and Qt/QML. I wanted to ask you guys, what do you want in a professional book on Maemo Development. How it can best help us to develop applications on Maemo? If you have ideas on how the book should be structured, or the content and topics it should contain, drop Rajesh an email.

TpSession, simplified Maemo 5 SMS & messaging API

Kate Alhola has, on her Forum Nokia blog, introduced a new library for interfacing with Maemo 5's Telepathy-based IM and SMS API. Based on the Qt bindings for Telepathy, she says, There has been numerous questions and requests from developers about how to send and receive SMS with Maemo 5. There was even lot of rumours that the API is not public. I decided to do something for issue, find out non documented API's and write examples how to do SMS. After starting work, i soon noticed that there is nothing secret, everything needed was already documented and it was possible to do with documented API's but it was just a complicated and time consuming task that needs deep understanding how Telepathy Framework works. Writing just an example code expanded to project write simple to use API that allows SMS sending with just couple of lines code.