Showing posts with label Palm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Palm. Show all posts

Friday, September 28, 2012

webOS Open està listo para teléfonos, tablets y PCs.


WorldWide Tech & Science. Francisco De Jesùs.





webOS Open està listo para teléfonos, tablets y PCs.

Hoy HP por intermedio de su compañía filial Gram  en su portal webosopenproject, anunciò la disponibilidad del sistema operativo webOS antes de Palm, como abierto y gratis para fabricantes de móviles, tales como teléfonos inteligentes , tablets y PCs.

Para tal efecto HP en un video hace una demostraciòn de como webOS Open puede ser portado fácilmente a una PC, en este caso una HP Touchsmart.


webOS sigue siendo único y de fácil desempeño. Es considerado el mejor frente a otros que  emulan especialmente su multitareas sin llegar a ser exactamente igual, asì como la simpleza y eficiencia de su UI.

Algunos de los diferentes programas que inicialmente acompañaron a webOS cuando fuè lanzado en el año 2009 y que no eran  de su propiedad, fueron reemplazados con programas propios y se añadieron nuevos como OpenEmbedded que permite una experiencia webOS completo se ejecuta dentro de un emulador de la OE. Han añadido las aplicaciones básicas - Correo electrónico y navegador - sin dejar de apoyar el entorno de escritorio de generación.

La versión 1.0 también ofrece soporte para Enyo2. Ahora puede disfrutar de aplicaciones construidas en uno de los mejores marcos de JavaScript multiplataforma y fácil de ejecutar estas mismas aplicaciones en webOS abiertas u otras plataformas.

En los últimos 9 meses, han entregado más de 75 componentes Open webOS. Esto suma más de 450.000 líneas de código. El código fuente de Open webOS se puede encontrar en los repositorios de webOS abiertas en GitHub. https://github.com/openwebos/

¿Qué significa 1,0
La combinación de los componentes de hoy con los de las versiones anteriores, webOS Abierto ahora puede ser portado a nuevos dispositivos.

Esperan tener más anuncios de webOS Open en el futuro y trabajar con la comunidad para entregar actualizaciones.

El futuro
Van a seguir innovando y desarrollando webOS en los próximos meses, incluyendo las mejoras previstas que son:

· QT5 / WebKit2
· Medios de código abierto y los componentes de audio
· Bluetooth stack BlueZ
· ConnMan de gestión de red
· Optimizado sysmgr arquitectura de representación

webOS Open 1.0 is Here and running on a HP Touchsmart PC. Video.


WorldWide Tech & Science. Francisco De Jesùs.




webOS  Open 1.0 is Here and running on a HP TouchSmart PC. Video.


webOS architect Steve Winston demos open webOS 1.0 running on a HP TouchSmart PC.

Finally the webOS Open roadmap is accomplished with the release of the  1.0 Edition today.

Some enhancements will follow: Qt5 / WebKit2, Open sourced media and audio components, BlueZ Bluetooth stack,ConnMan network management and  Optimized SysMgr rendering architecture.

What is saying the webOS Open project team, right here below:


Open webOS 1.0 Edition.

Today is a great day for Open webOS. We have completed our initial roadmap and are releasing Open webOS 1.0 on schedule, as promised.

Our combined efforts with the community and hard work have paid off, and we are now ready to move on to the next phase together. With this release we have affirmed our commitment to meet our goals and create a vibrant open source community.

What 1.0 contains
We now have an OpenEmbedded build that allows a full webOS experience running inside an OE emulator. We have added core applications — email & browser — while continuing to support the desktop build environment.

The 1.0 release also brings support for Enyo2. You can now take apps built on one of the best cross-platform JavaScript frameworks and easily run these same apps on Open webOS or other platforms.
In the past 9 months, we have delivered over 75 Open webOS components. This totals over 450,000 lines of code. (Can I get a hell yeah!). The source code for Open webOS can be found in Open webOS repositories on GitHub.

What 1.0 means
Combining today’s components with those from the previous releases, Open webOS can now be ported to new devices. 


We expect to have more Open webOS port announcements in the future and will work with the community to deliver updates here.

The future
We will continue to innovate and develop for Open webOS over the coming months, including the following planned enhancements:

·         Qt5 / WebKit2
·         Open sourced media and audio components
·         BlueZ Bluetooth stack
·         ConnMan network management
·         Optimized SysMgr rendering architecture

Come join in the chatter on our mailing list and forums; your collaboration is encouraged.

Community activity
Last month’s Beta release delivered collaboration tools for community members. Today’s 1.0 release includes new forums, and our project infrastructure now includes an integrated login across the website, forums, and the JIRA bug tracker.

The 1.0 launch includes contributions by expert community members made after the beta release.  These contain bug fixes, resolution of dependencies, and substantive commentary which guided our decisions on code structure and other issues.  Across the repos, the bug tracker and the mailing lists community members are helping each other.

The webOS-Ports team also continues to enhance the user experience on LunaCE with their latest release which includes shortcuts, bug fixes and several user-facing feature additions such as gesture-based app switching and improved card stack management. 

Thank you
Today is a day to celebrate our engineers. Martin Risau, our SVP, said that he was, “proud that we did what we said we would do in January. This achievement gives us the credibility to execute our future plans.”

Together, with the open source community, we have achieved great results over the last few months. Both internal and external engineers have put a lot of time and effort into getting us to where we are today, and they deserve a lot of credit.

Jim Zemlin, Executive Director of The Linux Foundation, echoed the importance of reaching this benchmark:
“By using the build framework for embedded Linux, the Yocto Project with OpenEmbedded-Core, Open webOS is poised to deliver an open source build environment that developers will thrive from. Open webOS continues to hit its milestones, and we expect the community around the project to continue to grow. All the right tools are in place.”

As we strive to make Open webOS an open platform of choice, we are excited to continue working with a great community whose members continue to amaze us with their innovation and creativity.

That’s all for now folks. See you on the Interweb and at community events.






Thursday, September 20, 2012

Latest news about webOS Open.


WorldWide Tech & Science. Francisco De Jesùs.



Latest news about webOS Open.

Today on a full interview made by PC World about Microsoft, HP and  post PC age, Todd Bradley answered questions about them and the final one was about webOS status and if there are some licensing deals at this time. How Todd answered to that question, just right here below:


PCW: Do you have a webOS status update? Any licensing deals?
Bradley: HP is executing its plan to deliver an open webOS under a new organization called Gram.  HP will make webOS source code available under the Apache License, Version 2.0, and we expect the full source code for open webOS to be available by September.
Of course if there are some licensing deals already, HP will let them know at right time.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Palm is now GRAM a new brand and company with HP webOS, Enyo and Cloud strengths.


WorldWide Tech & Science. Francisco De Jesùs.


Palm is now GRAM a new brand and company with HP webOS, Enyo and Cloud strengths.

Palm is now transforming in a new brand and company GRAM with the core strengths of webOS, Enyo and Cloud offerings.

“GRAM is a new company. We are in stealth mode on our product offering.”

 We are no longer a consumer hardware brand, we are a different company with focus on software, User Experience, Cloud, engineering and partnering. This change in identity will take some getting used to and that’s normal, says  HP's webOS Global Business Unit  Chief of Staff Martin Risau.

This news come ahead of the launch of HP webOS as an OpenSource OS next month. The sad  side , no more webOS hardware, maybe.




Hi everyone,
Thank you for all of your enthusiasm at yesterday’s new brand announcement: GRAM.  We hope you will fall in love with the brand just as lots of us have already.
Please note that our Mission, Values and Plan of Action are the same. We are continuing to march forward on our timelines as usual—nothing new there.
We have much work to do, and, again, I solicit your help.
Yes, this is a new brand—it is just the beginning, and there is so much more to do. And yet unveiling the new brand is also a Call to Action:
Try it on. We don’t expect you to love it overnight. We are no longer a consumer hardware brand, we are a different company with focus on software, User Experience, Cloud, engineering and partnering. This change in identity will take some getting used to and that’s normal.
Stealth mode. We are an incubation company, and we are trusting you to keep this company name and product under the radar to give it time to take root and grow. You can wear the logo, help build the momentum of the new identity, talk to your families and friends about it. If someone from the outside asks, you can say, “GRAM is a new company. We are in stealth mode on our product offering.”
Tap your network. Help us hire the best and the brightest, refer your friends and help us in our shared purpose as we continue our rise to the top. You can use the name to help us to recruit.
Be the culture. Spread our Values:  People Matter. Integrity and Trust. Deliberate Innovation. Act small, deliver big.
For those of you who could not attend yesterday’s unveiling – we really missed you.  Please be on the lookout for the gift bags with our new cool branded items, which we be mailing out to you this and next week.  All of you should get one, if not – let me know.
Best
Martin
Source: webOSNation