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    Personal stories not related to KDE.
    jaroslaw staniek's picture

    Q-Fridges - we're hiring!

    2012
    24
    Jan

    There are job offers floating sporadically on planetkde so I guess this one would fit too especially that there are many related technologies involved.

    You may remember my story about some crazy Qt device. Now there is apparent expansion both vertically and to other types of high-end devices, so:

    This offer is for permanent jobs in Warsaw office, rather for Polish speakers. More on my Polish blog.

    spstarr's picture

    Out of the loop, but not out of sight, hello PlayBook and Qt!

    2011
    3
    Nov

    Please note: This blog is personal and opinions are of my own and do not represent RIM

    I've been quiet for a while now. Lots of things going on in my life. I have not forgotten KDE, but I'm still unable to work on anything at this time (more on that in future post).

    But I'm glad to say that having Qt as part of PlayBook is awesome!
    I look forward to seeing what people will do.

    We've ported a number of projects to QNX for the PlayBook and can be found here: BlackBerry GitHub

    jaroslaw staniek's picture

    2k11

    2011
    1
    Jan

    Besides all possible conventional wishes there is something I wish you for 2011:

    "Let any good code you commit come back to you redoubled"

    A twisted variant of the karm^w boomerang theory ;)

    simon edwards's picture

    New Job: Baby Wrangler

    2010
    28
    Nov

    This news is perhaps a little bit late, but I can assure you I've been very busy in the meantime. The first day of November Debbie and I were able to welcome our first child to the world, Toby Edwards. We are all very happy. It was a pretty tough labour and result was a health boy who has since been busy growing and stacking on weight. The parenting learning curve is quite steep at the start but I think we're finally getting the hang of managing the baby and sleeping enough.

    Thanks to all who suggested first and seconds names starting with Ks and Ds. Maybe next time eh.

    heliocastro's picture

    A Tale of Chile

    2010
    27
    Oct

    I've been last week in Concépcion, south of Chile to attend another nice open source conference, been the second brazilian around ( Sulamita Garcia beat me first :-). But for me was special since last year we have finally some latin american KDE communities giving life signs, and i would expect that take more time to have they start to appear strongly, even more most of latin america been a strong Gnome supporter for years.

    Well, here's Camilo Astete to prove me wrong:

    coolo's picture

    It's so easy to fall in love

    2010
    20
    Jul

    It's been a while since I had baby photos to show, Felix grew just too quickly. But we two have a lot in common, and the latest addition to the list is the love to his sister:

    Julia was born late night of the 12th of july in Fürth and now we're complete ;)

    jaroslaw staniek's picture

    Qt on ARM

    2010
    15
    Jul

    Qt on ARM is, literally, a sign of certification ;)                             

    Thanks to Trolls for the opportunity of getting certified at Akademy!

    bille's picture

    Unimpressed

    2010
    15
    Jul
    lubos lunak's picture

    Difficult, difficult...

    2010
    28
    Jun

    It is interesting to notice what is sometimes seen as difficult. "It's too hard for me, I can't do that." "I'll never be able to do that, that's nothing for me." Like if most things could be done instantly just by snapping one's fingers. They instead require all these tedious things like effort, trying, learning, practicing and so on. The funny thing is, figuring out things in the IT area is not really that demanding. Wanna write a Plasma applet? There's a step-by-step tutorial at Techbase, just follow it blindly and with a decent skill in reading and typing, tadda, there's a Plasma applet. Wanna a package in the build service? You can use another one as a template, find a tutorial on the wiki or just google for it, and if you'll be just a little lucky, a tool can even do the work for you.

    For getting a good comparison of what can difficult actually mean, let me show you something I consider to be pretty hard to learn. To have a better contrast, let's go in some completely different area that has absolutely nothing to do with computers. So if you think something is difficult, instead of doing this whatever something, try doing for example the Salchow jump. And since I expect many people here have no idea what that is, it looks like this, performed by yours truly:

    That's roughly it. I assume it looks quite unimpressive to anyone who's never tried it or anything close (and, possibly, in this specific case it probably looks quite unimpressive even to whose who have). Yet this thing was bloody hard to learn for me. I probably learnt coding with Qt quite decently with much less effort (although, that's one of Qt's selling points, isn't it). Writing .spec files and creating packages? Nah, eeeasy. Even getting into Xlib programming was probably less effort, and I read a good part of the Xlib manual as a part of that. I admit getting into compositing effects and adding them to KWin might have been harder than the Salchow though :). Still, for somebody whose reaction to the idea of writting an alternative KDE workspace shell was 'how hard can that be?', the Salchow proved to be an unexpectedly difficult matter.

    I was first shown and explained the Salchow about 9 months ago. I think I needed about 2 or 3 months just to perform it in the most lame way that'd technically qualify, about as much as x = 1 qualifies for a math equation. The video is from April, i.e. more than 3 months on top. Today I can perform it somewhat higher and at slightly faster speed, but it still hardly qualifies for anything better than 'decent'. And while I hope it'll one day get to something I'd consider good, I'll probably never ever get to those crazy things like multiple rotations or anything even remotely close to what you can see on the TV, no matter how much and how hard I'd try. Do you still think that e.g. creating and maintaining a package is hard, compared to this? And don't even get me started on the next jumps ... the Salchow is actually easy. Try to think of this next time when you'd want to do something but would consider it too difficult (besides, take this from me, trying difficult things is actually much more interesting than the easy ones).

    PS: Come to think of this, I've never thanked Danimo and Scott Wheeler, who happen to be ultimately reponsible for me starting with skating and having a lot of fun, as I'd probably never come across any such idea myself. So, well, thank you.

    lubos lunak's picture

    Salchow jump

    2010
    28
    Jun