This weekend the Inkscape 0.42 release was branched and tagged, and packages posted. Congrats to everyone that participated in this release!
With CVS now tagged and branched, this means we are past the hard freeze. The codebase is now open for commits.
Regarding CVS access: If you need access, the rule is that you must have two patches accepted. I know a *lot* of people had patches accepted, so there's probably a fair number of you who qualify. If this describes you, please email your SourceForge ID to me or another admin. (Note that you can continue using the patch tracker if you prefer, the CVS access is given for your convenience.)
Our final step to complete the release is to get word out about the release. Rejon is creating and distributing release announcements, but I would also like to strongly encourage others to send out word.
Please help us get word out about Inkscape 0.42. Tell people about the nifty new features it has; show off examples of the cool things you're able to do with it; write articles about it in some of the online news sites; find new mailing lists or websites to send our announcement; demo it at LUG's or other OSS gatherings; help friends or family members install it.
Looking further forward, I think there is a general concensus that we want to get 0.43 out more quickly than 0.42. This is mainly to give the SoC students a chance to participate in an open source project's full release cycle. We're hoping that 0.43 can be done on the order of a month or two.
Bryce
Hi
Please help us get word out about Inkscape 0.42. Tell people about the nifty new features it has; show off examples of the cool things you're able to do with it; write articles about it in some of the online news sites; find new mailing lists or websites to send our announcement; demo it at LUG's or other OSS gatherings; help friends or family members install it.
Someone has already posted a news on http://linuxfr.org
http://linuxfr.org/2005/07/25/19356.html
Regards,
Matiphas
This looks like a cool and powerful tool for type. It is open source. It works with Linux, Mac and Win. Is it relevant to Inkscape?
http://www.mikeindustries.com/sifr/
Erik
On Wed, Jul 27, 2005 at 11:34:11PM +1000, Erik wrote:
This looks like a cool and powerful tool for type. It is open source. It works with Linux, Mac and Win. Is it relevant to Inkscape?
http://www.mikeindustries.com/sifr/
Erik
Hi Erik,
Thanks for the link. This looks to be a Flash interface for improving typography of HTML by using the Flash engine. Cool idea, but fairly orthogonal to what we're doing. However, someone might find it interesting to study, it looks like kind of a fresh idea...
One idea this gives is some sort of tool to do SVG layout based on an HTML page... Be a cool idea, but probably be pretty challenging, esp. if CSS is involved...
Bryce
Bryce Harrington wrote:
On Wed, Jul 27, 2005 at 11:34:11PM +1000, Erik wrote:
This looks like a cool and powerful tool for type. It is open source. It works with Linux, Mac and Win. Is it relevant to Inkscape?
http://www.mikeindustries.com/sifr/
Erik
Hi Erik,
Thanks for the link. This looks to be a Flash interface for improving typography of HTML by using the Flash engine. Cool idea, but fairly orthogonal to what we're doing. However, someone might find it interesting to study, it looks like kind of a fresh idea...
One idea this gives is some sort of tool to do SVG layout based on an HTML page... Be a cool idea, but probably be pretty challenging, esp. if CSS is involved...
For my Master's thesis, way back in 1991 (eek!), I put together a 3D-text object package. First, I took Bitstream outline data and extruded it into polyhedra. These worked in the 3D environment built by the Brown University Graphics Group. I had read the five volumes of Knuth's Computers & Typesetting, so I knew that I didn't want to build my own text layout engine too. Instead, I hacked dvips to generate output in the format that I needed, generated appropriate font metric data, and wrote some LaTeX macros. Voila, high-quality typography with a fraction of the effort.
Probably not the right way to go now, though.
participants (4)
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unknown@example.com
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Bryce Harrington
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Erik
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George V. Reilly