In this edition...

  1. Front Page
    • Maemo Community Council meeting outcomes
  2. Applications
    • First look at Wazapp - N9 community developed port of WhatsApp
  3. Development
    • Device seeding programme for maemo.org members
    • Unlocking the N9 using code possible?
  4. Community
    • Organising a 2012 Coding Competition?
    • everythingn9.com's Aries potentially running for Maemo Community Council
    • nieldk potentially running for Maemo Community Council
  5. In the Wild
    • Qt5 SDK now has "Official," "Unsupported," "WIP" iOS Support
  6. Announcements
    • Trojitá, a fast IMAP e-mail client - technical preview of QML & Harmattan version

Front Page

Maemo Community Council meeting outcomes

Via: @timoph

Editor: Andrew Flegg

On Tuesday, a Maemo Community Council meeting was held with the following agenda:

1.Welcome (back) to QGil/Update from Nokia(?)

2. Community OBS

3. Council Election voting

4. Left-over topics from last council meeting (if timely): A. Qt style license agreement for maemo; B. Co-maintainership for CSSU repo

Minutes have not been published, so here is our summary:

Attendees: Quim Gil (Nokia), RM Bauer (current council member); Craig Woodward (council candidate}; Niels Breet (Nemein); Joerg Reisenweber, Simon Pickering, Javier S. Pedro, martin brook, Ivaylo Dimitrov, RST38h, Andrew Flegg, itsnotabigtruck, Carsten Munk (Mer); David Greaves (Mer); Christian Ratzenhofer, Iván Gálvez Junquera (council candidate}.

The main points in the meeting were:

OBS: A proof-of-concept for Fremantle PR1.2 was "kind of working". There's a possibility for both technical and organisational collaboration with Mer. The motivation is to align, simplify and improve the maintainability of the infrastructure. A task force of volunteers has come forward to start documenting the proposed steps. Currently, COBS does not support external dependencies of projects, although this is a process restriction rather than technical (however, it is still a process which would need adapting). The proposal is "actually being driven by Mer proposal"; although your editor would note that there would need to be clarity between the aspects which were being paid for by Nokia (and what that covers) and those of the Mer project, and any entities involved. This is simplfied somewhat if Nokia are also contributing to the Mer project. The transition would be complicated. The benefits may only be realised if all of the current autobuilder can ultimately be switched off, freeing up resources.

Budget: Quim re-iterated that maemo.org's budgetting has not changed, it is funded until the end of 2012; after the summer, Nokia's budgets for the forthcoming period will be approved.

Apps For MeeGo: There may be greater alignment, including an onboard QA client, between maemo.org/packages, maemo.org Downloads and apps.formeego.org.

Licencing Nokia binaries: primarily the immediate problem is licensing them for the Community OBS; however, this could work in a similar way to the current autobuilder. The question of redistribution if Nokia were no longer willing or able to provide them was referred back to the budget question.

Co-maintainership of CSSU: It might be a good candidate for Fremantle on COBS, to avoid investment in maemo.org infrastructure which might be unused in future. The possibility of Nokia pushing an update to move people over to the CSSU was raised, but not fully dealt with.

Nemein: The current contract between Nokia and Nemein to "keep the servers up & secure". Quim will check with Nemein if the level of availability above and beyond that for project work.

Hopefully the next council will ensure the task of minuting meetings will be picked up ahead of time, as it's a key point in enabling transparency and getting more people involved.

Applications

First look at Wazapp - N9 community developed port of WhatsApp

Editor: Ryan Abel

A video preview of a WhatsApp (cross-platform XMPP-based IM service) client for Harmattan was released last week. The demo shows IM communications between an N9 and Android. Wazapp has not yet been released.

Development

Device seeding programme for maemo.org members

Via: @timsamoff, @Jaffa2

Editor: Ryan Abel

Last week Quim Gil sent an email to the maemo-community mailing list to plan a seeding program for maemo.org: Let's say we could have a nice amount of N9s for a maemo.org centered device seeding activity. I could get them as part of two lines of work where the maemo.org community might want to play a role: Encouraging developers bringing stable & interesting apps to the Nokia Store [...], Encouraging developers to port & develop apps to Qt 5, getting The specifics of the program are under discussion on the mailing list, and Quim puts the unconfirmed number at about 100 devices.

Unlocking the N9 using code possible?

Via: @Jaffa2

Editor: Andrew Flegg

Ben Martin has an idea of using an RFID/NFC tag to unlock his N9: This way the password can be nice and long for locking the device, but I don't have to interact with the virtual keyboard in order to use the phone. If the phone locks, I just tap the RFID tag to it, it unlocks, and I'm away. [...] Unlocking the phone is proving not so simple. I was hoping that MeeGo::QmLocks::setState would do the trick, but it is not to be so as the API docs explain. Anyone with any ideas should get in touch.

Community

Organising a 2012 Coding Competition?

Via: @Jaffa2

RM Bauer has kicked off discussion around organising a 2012 Coding Competition: It seems that Nokia has a supply of N9s and supports the explicit inclusion of Qt in this year's coding competition. So I'm throwing it open. Who is still around and what are your thoughts about repeating the competition. Specifically, is there anything we want to do differently this year (other than having voting ready to go)? The 2011 competition was marred by organisational problems around gathering the votes. Hopefully, the problems won't be repeated.

everythingn9.com's Arie Mark potentially running for Maemo Community Council

Via: @Jaffa2

Arie Mark ("arie") has posted to the maemo-community list that he'd like to run in the Community Council election (nominations open until 30 April): I am accepting my Nomination for the community council and would like to run. Unforunately, Arie's account does not currently have the requisite karma, so unless a recalculation raises it, he will not actually be able to stand.


Niel Nielsen potentially running for Maemo Community Council

Via: @Jaffa2

Niel Nielsen ("nieldk") has posted to the maemo-community list that he'd like to run in the Community Council election (nominations open until 30 April): I am accepting my Nomination for the community council and would like to run. Unforunately, Niel's account does not currently have the requisite karma, so unless a recalculation raises it, he will not actually be able to stand.


In the Wild

Qt5 SDK now has "Official," "Unsupported," "WIP" iOS Support

Via: @timsamoff

Editor: Andrew Olmsted

Although it sounds like a lot of qualifiers for official support status, an iOS build of Qt 5 can now be done from Qt Project repositories. All of the changes needed to *build* Qt5 for iOS are now in qt-project. So Qt5 now has "official", "unsupported", "WIP" iOS support Although the description makes it sound rather experimental, the same source (@Qt4iOS on twitter) claims it is "market ready." There are apparently Qt-based app already in the iTunes store, but "official" status may mean we will see many more in the coming months.

Announcements

Trojitá, a fast IMAP e-mail client - technical preview of QML & Harmattan version

Editor: Andrew Olmsted

meego.com user "jkt" has announced a port of the Trojitá e-mail client for Harmattan. This is a technical preview of the application, so some funcitonality (most notably actually reading messages or proper integration with Harmattan's network session management) is missing. It should however be absolutely safe to use; it won't really eat any of your mail. From the description it sounds like it is the GUI aspect that is in technical preview and not the backend. Converting a Qt4 widget-based application to QML is technically possible but often a difficult task - especially an application as complex as an e-mail client.