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Re: Call for contributors
From: |
Quentin Mathé |
Subject: |
Re: Call for contributors |
Date: |
Sun, 16 Jan 2005 19:55:33 +0100 |
Hi,
It is a very late reply, but is probably better than no reply… ;-)
Le 23 déc. 04, à 10:07, NA a écrit :
There is a new, award winning, open source, volume visualization
project which is currently in version 1.5 on PowerPC.
http://homepage.mac.com/rossetantoine/osirix/Index2.html
This is currently a Macintosh only application.
Looks nice.
There is extreme interest in porting this application to Linux. There
is no open source Windows or Linux application of any caliber,
anywhere near OsiriX. The speed and excellence of the development owes
to using the rapid application development tools that are at the core
of both Mac OS X and GnuStep. We believe that the GnuStep community is
well aware of this. We would like the rest of the world to know.
Interested developers are presenting with notable credentials from
institutions across the globe.
It quickly became apparent that GnuStep should allow a far simpler
Mac2Linux port, than any other environment. Does that seem to be the
concensus?
Probably true.
We are interested in discovering any interest on the part of GnuStep
users and developers in participating in this project.
I'm interested but I must said I have no more time to be involved in
other projects… but I will gladly help you if you need explanations on
GNUstep or you discover bugs in GNUstep.
… otherwise I think if you can remunerate the developers for this port,
there will be probably some GNUstep developers interested (me included
may be later in the year… :-).
It is currently anticipated that a Power5/PowerPC initial version will
be the simplest to port, as most of the system calls to Altivec, of
which there are many, should work transparently. Any insight here
would be helpful.
True, but you must take in account that we have no really working gdb
versions for GNUstep on PowerPC currently… (Apple gdb doesn't work, and
FSF gdb is broken, even if I have find a workaround for the most
annoying bug in the last one)…
Any information and assistance on any of these matters would be
greatly appreciated. Suggestions to ease the porting, such as the
applicability of Renaissance in this situation, would be of help. Any
source of information that anyone can suggest that would serve as a
road map in the process would be invaluable.
For porting information, you can read http://www.gnustep.org
documentation… but it is not what I would call exhaustive.
One of the advantage of Renaissance currently is you can have a single
file for the UI code on both Mac OS X and GNUstep, unlike with Gorm
which doesn't read or write Mac OS X nib… but this last point should
probably change this year, because it is planned to add to Gorm the
possibility to read and write Mac OS X nib.
I have several questions to pose to this list, but I would like to be
sure that this is the best forum to do so.
Are there other message boards; which anyone feels are as, or more,
appropriate?
Yes, you can post them here, I will reply to them if I'm knowledgeable
on the subject. (I will reply faster in the future, yes… ;-)
Quentin.
--
Quentin Mathé
qmathe@club-internet.fr