New gPodder for Maemo… Wow! :)
So it looks like Thomas liked my ideas about gPodder user experience. Sweet!

New gPodder main view
I guess I need to draw some of those icons now... =) Stay tuned!
(Here is a funny thought for today: Ihink the N900 and boring meetings are the key to revive my blogging
Wordpress editor works just great with the Firefox-3-based browser in the device..
)
Design for maemo.org website
Originally uploaded by TuomasKuosmanen
We're working on a decent frontpage for www.maemo.org, to put the new site framework into use. Feedback is welcome and very much appreciated.
New maemo development theme
Finally I have more or less finished my new theme for the Nokia N800.
I hope to replace the old purple maemo platform development theme with this one. The template is in svn, I hope I committed it on the correct place, as Michael was moving stuff around when they were refactoring the theme packaging a bit. In any case, it's there and if you feel like hacking on a new theme of your own, there's also an Inkscape svg file you might find useful, in the same svn tree.
Oh, it looks like this:
It's still not perfect, as you can easily see, but I'll try to tweak the remaining bits when I can. But I feel it's good enough at this point. And hopefully it makes N800 users happy, with new look? Let me know if you like it..
Edit: DOH. Forgot to tell the packages are here. Install cacher first, the theme depends on it. (It generates some gtkrc cache that speeds things up when starting applications..)
Links for today
I love del.icio.us. Seriously. Try searching google for "free fonts" and you get the same crap on every "10000000000000000000+1 free fonts!!!" -site. They all suck.
Accidental art?
Last week I was riding the bus to work.. and I looked at the back window.
I first thought there was an ad of some tribal art exhibition in a museum, as there clearly was an image of a horse or cow skull staring at me.
But another look revealed it was nothing like that. Yes, it was an advertisement sticker, but the image was in the back: the sticker had become partly loose, and soot and dirt had crept under it, creating this pretty incredible picture.. wow.
Maemo.org webdesign and free tools
We've been preparing a revamp of the maemo.org website conglomerate using Midgard CMS, the same system that's been considered for the upcoming Gnome.org revamp. In Maemo there's quite similar situation - we wish to replace several traditional web services (wiki, blogs, static content, project pages, software catalog etc) with one setup that hopefully works out nicely, having common admin interface and centralized user account management etc. In short, to end the madness of various pieces of php from different projects and trying to tie them together with duct tape. So far things are going great, and since I am familiar with Midgard already, it's fun to hack this. We're also doing this very much in the open, our feasibility study is in garage.maemo.org svn, for example, along with everything we've been doing so far for the templates and artwork. Which leads to the other part of this blog entry: designing websites with Inkscape.
I have noticed it's very nice tool for this kind of stuff, especially since the SVN "bleeding edge" version can do gaussian blur's on objects. Mmmm.. super-nice and easy drop shadows..
What I found even nicer, is that if you have a new layer, call it "slices" for example, and put simple, outlined rectangles there, and use the "object properties" dialog to name them like "corner-topleft" etc, if you select them, then hide the "slices" layer, and choose "export bitmap", inkscape automatically defaults to "export selection" with your chosen name, with a .png in the end. There is no automated way to "export all rectangles in "slices" layer as png's with the layer hidden" of course, but it's still pretty handy if you change the design, to just re-export them all without much typing. And with vector graphics its very easy to alter the design without having to re-do much from scratch, like you often need to do with pixel-based programs. This is quite similar to what Adobe web tools do with their "slices" concept. A bit hard to explain, but maybe it lights up a bulb in some inkscape users' heads..
reverse polish cumbersomeness?
Inkscape rocks. The more I use it, the more I like it.
But why the heck is the "origo" (0,0) in the bottom left corner of the canvas??
I can not understand the logic behind this, maybe it is something that is planned to be fixed to be "the rest of the world -compatible" later?







