I had some free minutes today at Akademy, so I decided to build an ownCloud appliance. I did a few iterations in SUSE Studio and there you go: ownCloud in a box.
The screenshot shows the ownCloud web interface running in a testdrive on SUSE Studio. The appliances is available as live CD, USB image, virtual image for VMware, VirtualBox or KVM, or as disk image. This should make it really easy to run your own ownCloud server for just having a look or for quickly getting an instance up on some computer.
It's a first version, so don't be too surprised, if there are still some issues. Feedback is welcome as always.
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Friday, July 2, 2010
Akademy 2010
I'm on my way to Tampere for Akademy 2010. It's my seventh Akademy, not counting Kastle in 2003, the first KDE conference, which became the predecessor for all the Akademy events following afterwards. I'm especially looking forward to Akademy this year, because there are so many interesting topics to discuss, which could make a big difference for KDE in the future. So here are a couple of the things, which I'm particularly interested in this year:
Conference: The conference program is excellent as always. It's great that there is a strong mobile track. This is a still uderused potential for KDE, and I would love to see KDE expand much more in this area. Many years ago I wrote KOrganizer/Embedded which ran on a PDA, but I'm still waiting for the moment where I have a device running KDE software, which I actually want to have with me all the time.
BoFs: The BoF sessions are always a very important part of the Akademy experience. This is where actual work gets done, and where plans are forged. I'm involved in running three BoFs this year about KDE documentation, one about the supporting membership program, and a session about KDE e.V., which the board would like to use to answer questions about KDE e.V. and discuss what people expect from KDE e.V., and how we can improve and excel. They all will be interesting and I'm of course looking forward to attend some other BoFs as well.
Meeting old and new friends: KDE is an amazing community. Akademy and other meetings always feel like meeting friends, even if you haven't ever seen the other people before, and maybe just exchanged a couple of emails. So I'm looking forward to meet older gentlemen as well as the young and wild new members of the community.
Thinking future: Akademy always is a place to think about the future of KDE, of our community, our software. This year this is particularly interesting. There are a lot of interesting developments, be it on the hardware side, where devices which could run KDE software are becoming much more diverse, or be it on the software side, where web applications and the associated technologies, or new platforms like MeeGo or Android are having lots of momentum. So I hope we can have some serious and creative discussions about how and where KDE can find its place in this universe today, and in the coming years. Our potential is huge, bit we also have to make use of it.
Conference: The conference program is excellent as always. It's great that there is a strong mobile track. This is a still uderused potential for KDE, and I would love to see KDE expand much more in this area. Many years ago I wrote KOrganizer/Embedded which ran on a PDA, but I'm still waiting for the moment where I have a device running KDE software, which I actually want to have with me all the time.
BoFs: The BoF sessions are always a very important part of the Akademy experience. This is where actual work gets done, and where plans are forged. I'm involved in running three BoFs this year about KDE documentation, one about the supporting membership program, and a session about KDE e.V., which the board would like to use to answer questions about KDE e.V. and discuss what people expect from KDE e.V., and how we can improve and excel. They all will be interesting and I'm of course looking forward to attend some other BoFs as well.
Meeting old and new friends: KDE is an amazing community. Akademy and other meetings always feel like meeting friends, even if you haven't ever seen the other people before, and maybe just exchanged a couple of emails. So I'm looking forward to meet older gentlemen as well as the young and wild new members of the community.
Thinking future: Akademy always is a place to think about the future of KDE, of our community, our software. This year this is particularly interesting. There are a lot of interesting developments, be it on the hardware side, where devices which could run KDE software are becoming much more diverse, or be it on the software side, where web applications and the associated technologies, or new platforms like MeeGo or Android are having lots of momentum. So I hope we can have some serious and creative discussions about how and where KDE can find its place in this universe today, and in the coming years. Our potential is huge, bit we also have to make use of it.
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