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GTK+ - About

GTK+ - About

GNOME: The Free Software Desktop Mockups Take a second. Let it sink in. The first impression might be disorienting. There are very few interface elements on the screen. Start exploring however, and you'll find out that Mockups is filled with powerful yet only-visible-when-you-need-them features. Getting your ideas out should be effortless. Our sweet spot: the ideation phase Mockups really shines during the early stages of designing a new interface. Mockups is zenware, meaning that it will help you get "in the zone", and stay there. Mockups offers the same speed and rough feel as sketching with pencil, with the advantage of the digital medium: drag & drop to resize and rearrange elements, make changes without starting over, and your work is clear enough that you'll make sense of them later. See what you can build with Mockups Download the samples above, or find more on Mockups To Go, our community-contributed stencils site. Designed for collaboration Your whole team can come together around the right design using Mockups. Two reasons:

Scintilla and SciTE foobar2000 Bonobo - Ubuntu GNOME KDE-Apps.org Applications for the KDE-Desktop GTK-Apps.org Applications using the GTK Toolkit GnomeFiles.org Applications for GNOME MeeGo-Central.org Applications for MeeGo CLI-Apps.org Command Line Applications Qt-Apps.org Free Qt Applications Qt-Prop.org Proprietary Qt Applications Maemo-Apps.org Applications for the Maemo Plattform Java-Apps.org Free Java Applications eyeOS-Apps.org Free eyeOS Applications Wine-Apps.org Wine Applications Server-Apps.org Server Applications apps.ownCloud.com ownCloud Applications KDE-Look.org Artwork for the KDE-Desktop GNOME-Look.org Artwork for the GNOME-Desktop Xfce-Look.org Artwork for the Xfce-Desktop Box-Look.org Artwork for your Windowmanager E17-Stuff.org Artwork for Enlightenment Beryl-Themes.org Artwork for the Beryl Windowmanager Compiz-Themes.org Artwork for the Compiz Windowmanager EDE-Look.org Themes for your EDE Desktop Debian-Art.org Stuff for Debian Gentoo-Art.org Artwork for Gentoo Linux SUSE-Art.org Artwork for openSUSE Ubuntu-Art.org Artwork for Ubuntu

Gammu Gammu is the name of the project as well as name of command line utility, which you can use to control your phone. It is written in C and built on top of libGammu. Gammu command line utility provides access to wide range of phone features, however support level differs from phone to phone and you might want to check Gammu Phone Database for user experiences with various phones. Call listing, initiating and handling SMS retrieval, backup and sending MMS retrieval Phonebook listing, export and import (also from standard formats such as vCard) Calendar and tasks listing, export and import (also from standard formats such as vCalendar or iCalendar) Retrieval of phone and network information Access to phone file system (note that some phones work also as USB storage devices and those are not accessible through Gammu) This project has originally forked from Gnokii and up to version 0.58 has been named MyGnokii2. Latest News Gammu 1.36.8 Gammu 1.36.8 has been just released. Gammu 1.36.7

jEdit …for the adult in you Trees January 18, 2011 – 8:10 pm I know what you’re thinking: you thought this blog was dead. Posting to the Metacity blog was taking more of my time than actually working on Metacity, so I will try to cut back on the posts. Some actual news: As well as the standard git tree at gnome.org, I have pushed Metacity to github and gitorious, so you can easily clone it if you need to. Photo © Federico, cc-by-nd. Moving to GSettings September 24, 2010 – 2:53 pm In the beginning, Metacity stored keybindings in GConf. In 2005 , GNOME bug 164831 raised the point that other platforms used several keybindings for some of the actions. This posed a further problem. Now, in GNOME bug 621204, there is a laudable move to switch Metacity to using the new GSettings API. Gentle reader, your thoughts on this are welcome, here or on the bug. Photo © Matthew Boyle, cc-by-nc Come calm content serene and sweet Most themes place the icon of the current application somewhere on the titlebar. Photo © Glamhag, cc-by-nc-sa.

30 Excellent Pixel Art Tutorials For Pixel Lovers If you’re born in 90s, I am sure that you have witnessed the glorious age of the pixel art. It exists on the old-school gaming platform, mobile phone and other digital devices. It’s one of the greatest technological inventions that dominate the digital world for several years, and now it rises again as a definitive art form within the artist community. Doing the pixel art could mean that you’re striving for perfection, as you even need to manually craft out the shading, dithering and even anti-aliasing. Today, with the aim to provide you a solid understanding of the pixel art and its essential techniques, we want to showcase to you 30 detailed and inspiring tutorials by talented pixel artists to help you carve out possibly one of the most detailed works in your life. Try on them and you’ll know, full list of tutorials after jump! Recommended Reading: 50 Beautiful and Creative Pixel Arts Shading Of A Rock Textures Tree Adding Pattern Ever wanted to explore the ways to create cute pixel art?

Vala Introduction Vala is a new programming language that aims to bring modern programming language features to GNOME developers without imposing any additional runtime requirements and without using a different ABI compared to applications and libraries written in C. News About Vala Using Vala Contributing There is a mailing list for developer and general discussions. Jürg Billeter <j at bitron dot ch> (blog) CategoryProject Evince Simply a document viewer Evince is a document viewer for multiple document formats. The goal of evince is to replace the multiple document viewers that exist on the GNOME Desktop with a single simple application. Evince is specifically designed to support the file following formats: PDF, Postscript, djvu, tiff, dvi, XPS, SyncTex support with gedit, comics books (cbr,cbz,cb7 and cbt). For a comprehensive list of formats supported, see Supported Document Formats. Getting Evince You should get Evince from your distribution, but if you can't find it or are looking for the latest release you might be able to get it here. The section Where to Download Evince has the most updated information on where and how to get Evince from packages to source. Looking for Help? Looking to get busy? Getting Started Testing Features and Ideas Design CategoryProject

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