In this edition...

  1. Front Page
    • Tim Samoff resigns from Hildon Foundation
    • New Hildon Foundation Board of Directors appointees
  2. Development
    • Porting Harmattan apps to Sailfish and NemoMobile
    • Qt for iOS preview
  3. Devices
    • Petition to get Nokia to bug fix released for N9

Front Page

Tim Samoff resigns from Hildon Foundation

Via: @jaffa2

Editor: GeneralAntilles

The Hildon Foundation has had a rather bumpy start to its stewardship of maemo.org (which should become official this month with the final infrastructure migrations and the end of negotiations with Nokia): resignation of a string of board members, friction with the council and members of the community, and drawn-out negotiations with Nokia over the transfer of ownership of maemo.org.

Despite these issues, the primary short-term goal of ensuring that the lights remain on for maemo.org looks to be accomplished. Fundraising efforts have collected more than $4000 in donations, the new server hardware from Nokia has been installed at a colocation in IPHH (essentially for free!), volunteer sysadmins have been found, and the DNS change to point to the new infrastructure—which some very dedicated people have been hard at work for months getting set up. All of which involved a great deal of time and energy (particularly from the community council)—should be completed this week.

Unfortunately, the bumps continue. Citing a change in vision of the role of the Hildon Foundation and the Maemo Community, timsamoff announced his resignation from the Hildon Foundation last week: But all of these successes aside, I have come to a new, personal understanding of the viability of a Board of Directors acting in conjunction with a Community Council at this time. While I whole-heartedly feel like an organization like the Hildon Foundation would be a positive force in the open source world, I think that the relationship between the Board of Directors and the Community Council has been counter-productive. As a nonprofit entity that must operate according to bylaws and legal formalities (as well it should in order to comply with certain governing laws), the processes have been less than efficient. Likewise, as a former Community Council member myself (two terms as a member and one term as the Chair), I have realized that a Council more than adequately prepared to run an ecosystem such as the Maemo Community. Similarly, operation of the Hildon Foundation—again, for me personally—has been less than the rewarding experience that I was hoping it would be.

This leaves—the unelected—sd69 as the only member of the Hildon Foundation Board. Replacement appointments for both Tim and ivgalvez (who resigned from the board in February due to an international relocation and the related time commitments) have been found (see the next story), but, according to the by-laws, an election sholud be triggered if fewer than 3 board positions are occupied for more than 7 days (Ivan resigned on February 17th).

On a personal note, I'm sad to see Tim leaving the board (though I completely sympathize with his reasons). I've know Tim for most of the existence of the Maemo community and served a number of terms with him on the Maemo Community Council. He was always a pleasure to work with and his optimistic, forward-thinking approach and clear-headed competence is an asset the Hildon Foundation Board will be a lesser thing without.

New Hildon Foundation Board of Directors appointees

Via: @timsamoff

Editor: GeneralAntilles

With the resignation of timsamoff from the Hildon Foundation Board last week, and ivgalvez's resignation in February, there are two vacant spots to fill on the board. sd69 announced two appointments in Tim's resignation thread on Talk: As the sole remaining Board director (and as the loser in an apparent game of "not it"), it falls on me to continue on and appoint a replacement for Ivan if possible, and now for Tim if possible. I wish the time period to do so was longer so there could be more consideration and input. I appoint Craig Woodard and Jim Jagielski. Craig should be known to most here as a former maemo council member and a co-founder of Hildon Foundation. He has done invaluable work for maemo in the past and I believe will work diligently to do so in the future. Jim is a co-founder of the Apache Software Foundation and is also on the Board of the Open Source Initiative (OSI). He is new to maemo, but he should be able to provide valuable organizational insight and assistance as the Foundation struggles to get on its feet. Please join me in welcoming them both to our Board. Both have indicated a willingness to serve, but if either one should decline their appointment, then the other one will fill Ivan's seat and another appointment will be made for Tim's seat.

Having fewer than 3 board members for a period longer than 7 days should trigger a new election cycle (a normal board term being one year). The period between Ivan's resignation (February 17th) and woody14619's appointment—which is, as of yet, not official—exceeds 7 days. As the council will be having a new election for the next term in April coordinating a new board election to coincide with the upcoming council election seems wise. Especially, as joerg_rw points out, considering the bruises the board's reputation has taken during the infrastructure migration.


Development

Porting Harmattan apps to Sailfish and NemoMobile

Via: @jaffa2

Editor: GeneralAntilles

The Sailfish SDK was released a few weeks ago and developers have already been hard at work playing with it and getting their applications to run. thp has written up a guide about what's involved in porting Harmattan applications to Sailfish's Silica framework: As explained in the last blog post, gPodder is already running on Sailfish Silica Components. Of course, this has only been possible because Silica is quite similar in API design to Harmattan Qt Components [...]. But of course porting "from" Harmattan "to" Sailfish with no way back would be kind of annoying - either Harmattan gets dropped, or somebody has to maintain two codebases, something I'd rather avoid. So, just like in "good old" Maemo 4 and Maemo 5 times, the goal here is to convert a Harmattan-only codebase to Harmattan-and-Sailfish, so that both can be maintained in the same codebase and improvements to Harmattan benefit the Sailfish port and vice versa.

Qt for iOS preview

Via: @jaffa2

Editor: Jaffa

With the sale of Qt to Digia, the project is able to better embrace other mobile platforms. Qt 5 has seen the better provision of Qt for Android, and it's now time for a preview of the native, non-jailbroken, easy-to-use delivery of Qt for Apple's iOS. From the blog post: We are very excited to be able to bring Qt to a new platform. Qt for iOS is planned to be a supported part of Qt 5.2, scheduled for release late 2013. The scope of that release is not completely determined: available resources, platform/app store restrictions and Qt legacy set constraints on the project. This blog outlines the current plan.

A Mac, running XCode, is still required to build the project - something which is unnecessary with Xamarin's .NET support for iOS (which can instead contact a remote build server).


Devices

Petition to get Nokia to bug fix released for N9

Via: @jaffa2

Editor: GeneralAntilles

A petition was posted on change.org last week to request that Nokia continue to release bugfixes for Harmattan: Dear Nokia, we belong to a strange kind of people, the customers who bought a Nokia N9. This is a very unlucky smartphone: few updates, few apps and tiny support. But there is a great community beside it, people that decided to buy it anyway despite its destiny was already known because it IS a great and a simply innovative smartphone. Anyway, it has still a few issues: [...] Now, these are simple but annoying bugs and what we request is a bug fixing, which we think is due also because support was promised until 2015. Everyone here is aware of the decision to focus on Windows Phone but please Nokia, don't forget about us and above all don't forget that we are largely loyal customers that believed in you also in the darkest days of your history. Making us happy giving us finally a fully reliable product is not a big effort for you.

Given that very few people remain at Nokia working on Harmattan and Nokia's focus on Microsoft platforms it would be unwise to hold your breath in anticipation of new software updates, even if there are updates stalled in the release pipeline.