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![[Announcement]](../images/64x64/announce.gif) | Happy
new year to all! I think we can look forward to it, because there is a
lot of opportunity for it to be better than the last one. :-) | |
![[Announcement]](../images/64x64/announce.gif) | We
have a new Russian translator. Alexander ("azlk" on the forum) has
already done a lot of work on our Russian website, and is also working
on the translation of Syllable
itself. | |
![[Announcement]](../images/64x64/announce.gif) | The Dutch website of Software
Freedom Day
is now running on Syllable Server and the included Cheyenne web server.
This has given the site much more storage space for their multimedia
content, virtual hosting under their own domain names and the freedom
to use server technologies of choice. The site was already made with
the same content management system that Kaj is developing for the
Syllable sites. | |
![[Announcement]](../images/64x64/announce.gif) | Bas picked up the new Dutch
Linux Magazine this morning, that has hit the shops now. This
November issue, number 5 of this year, has a four-page article on
Syllable, including an interview Kristian did with them. | |
![[Announcement]](../images/64x64/announce.gif) | Bas has
announced that he will organise the first winter edition of
the Syllable Conference. We set up its
own page for it, where Bas will keep you posted as the event
evolves. | |
![[Announcement]](../images/64x64/announce.gif) | Dmitry ("Rohan" on the forum) has requested an
official Russian website, so we set it up. Dmitry will be translating
it over time. | |
![[Announcement]](../images/64x64/announce.gif) | Kaj
will be presenting the brand new Syllable Server 0.3 at the Software
Freedom Day event coming Saturday, September 20, in the city
of Utrecht
in the Netherlands. He will also be present at the Holland Open
Software Conference in Amsterdam the two days before.
Although there
won't be a Syllable presentation there, if you'd like to speak with Kaj
you can catch him while walking around, or enquire with Bas at the
Software Freedom Day booth at HOSC. | |
![[Announcement]](../images/64x64/announce.gif) | Thanks to the fact that Syllable Server is a
Linux, and after having gone through their waiting
list, Syllable is now listed
on DistroWatch,
the major monitoring site of Linux distributions and a few BSD and
Solaris systems. | |
![[Syllable]](../images/64x64/Syllable-emblem-63x64.gif) | The
third release of Syllable
Server has been published. This is an important release, because it is
the first one that focused on making the system actually usable as a
server. A number of popular servers were added and configured, and also
several innovative REBOL software stacks. Out of the imaginary box,
Syllable Server is now ready for such things as accepting remote SSH
log-ins over the network, running a web server on the Cheyenne REBOL
server, running an FTP server and several more. Special attention has
been paid to programmability, with support for developing
Model-View-Controller web applications in QuarterMaster
and networking
applications with the REBOL/Services
Service Oriented Architecture. The
Genode Nitpicker
windowing system is also included. Read the rest in the full changelog. An extensive
manual was also written, which is easy to follow. As usual,
both a BitTorrent
download
(preferred) and a regular
download are available (80 MB 7-Zip archive). Please use the
torrent if you
can.
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![[Announcement]](../images/64x64/announce.gif) | Apart
from organising Syllable events, Bas is very active in circles of open
source, open standards and open content in general. A truly open guy.
:-) He also organises Software Freedom Day in the Netherlands. His
free event will take place next weekend on September the 13th.
It's well worth attending, with around twenty organisations setting up
booths and holding talks. In addition, Bas will be demonstrating
Syllable and the upcoming new Syllable Server release. | |
![[Announcement]](../images/64x64/announce.gif) | Bas will be representing Syllable at the T-DOSE conference in
the Netherlands,
the free Technical Dutch Open Source Event, "The place where experts
meet". In the weekend of October 25 and 26, in the city of Eindhoven,
at the Fontys University of Applied Science, there will be more than
twenty speakers and many open source projects will shed light on their
workings. Bas will present Syllable in a talk and man a booth. | |
![[Announcement]](../images/64x64/announce.gif) | Localised web sites are springing out of the
earth. Michael Utz and Matic Gradiser have offered to be the editors of
German and Slovenian versions of our web site, respectively, so we
created them. As with the other
translated sites, Michael and Matic will complete and maintain the
translations
over time. They would also like to
try their hand at creating and maintaining the German and Slovenian
translations of Syllable itself. | |
![[Announcement]](../images/64x64/announce.gif) | We moved our forum to a new hosting location. If you bookmarked it, please update the
link. All data is migrated, so you can simply log in as before. | |
![[Syllable]](../images/64x64/Syllable-emblem-63x64.gif) | Kristian
tracked down and fixed the bug that prevented Syllable from booting off
a USB device. We published a new development build that will boot from
a USB CD player. This means Syllable can now be installed on machines
that don't have an IDE CD player, such as the Asus Eee PC and other
small laptops. Also, with some extra settings in the boot
loader, it
should now be possible to install Syllable to a USB device, such as a
memory stick. On SylCon, we found out that the extra SD memory slot in
the Eee PC is connected via USB internally. It should now be possible
to install Syllable to an extra memory card, so you don't have to touch
the default operating system on the main drive. The new
development build also has the new Webster browser included. Update:
further bugs in our USB support turn out to cause lock-ups when trying
to install to a USB medium such as a memory stick. This problem will
need to be fixed before we can do so. | |
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![[Applications]](../images/64x64/applications.gif) | Jonas
Jarvoll released his new Image Viewer application. It's more capable
than the AView picture viewer that's included with Syllable. Image
Viewer is now listed in our applications downloads. | |
![[Applications]](../images/64x64/applications.gif) | More creative
destruction. Another long-time milestone has been reached.
It has always been our plan to factor out the web rendering engine of
ABrowse into a library with a native Syllable View widget on top, so it
can be embedded into more applications than just a web browser.
Kristian did just that: building on Arno's WebCore port, he updated
that and then stepped up the modularisation by creating the WebView
class. He rewrote the browser on top of that and named it Webster. The
first alpha version is available in our applications downloads. The
latest Syllable 0.6.6 development build is required to run it, as
several bugs in the system were fixed for the new browser. The source
code is available on our development site. | |
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Syllable
is a volunteer project that creates a family of easy to use, free
software operating systems. You can use them separately, or you can use
them together to form network platforms. Read our full introduction and go to the Syllable Desktop and
Syllable Server
sites for more information, news and software downloads. Syllable Desktop is
an original, modern operating system design, in the tradition of the
Amiga and BeOS, but built using many parts from the GNU
project and Linux. It is designed and optimised for your desktop PC,
making it exceptionally fast and responsive and easy to use. It is
under development, so it is interesting and even exciting
to try out, but you
have to decide for yourself whether it fits your needs already.
Syllable Desktop runs on industry-standard Personal Computers with a
minimum of a Pentium compatible processor and 32 MB of
memory. It can make a new computer extremely fast and an old computer
usable again. More
specificationsSyllable
Desktop site Syllable Server
is a small and efficient Linux operating system. It uses the Linux
kernel and is compatible with Linux software, but is otherwise built to
be as similar as possible to Syllable Desktop, using mostly the same
parts. It is optimised for server computers, yet inherits a
lot of efficiency and speed from the Syllable Desktop design. The
current version only has a text mode console interface suitable for
server use and elementary support for running some graphical programs
(it is shown here running on Syllable Desktop under emulation).
Nonetheless, the clean Syllable design and straightforward
documentation make it easy to use. The graphical user
interface from
Syllable Desktop will be added in later versions to enhance ease of use
further. Due to its Linux base, Syllable Server is a stable
and usable system. It runs
on industry-standard Personal Computers with a minimum of a 486
processor and 16 MB of memory. It can make a new
computer very fast and efficient and an old computer usable again. More specificationsSyllable Server site
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