Entrusting your content to a proprietary format is like keeping betamax tapes and waiting for the player to break. This time, it’s Apple.
Filed under: Apple, QuickTime | 3 Comments »
Entrusting your content to a proprietary format is like keeping betamax tapes and waiting for the player to break. This time, it’s Apple.
Filed under: Apple, QuickTime | 3 Comments »
If you are in Venezia, Italy between September 6 and 11, don’t miss this unique immersive experience.
Filed under: exhibitions, virtual reality | Tagged: Chiara Masiero Sgrinzatto, Luca Vascon, Toni Garbasso | 1 Comment »
The Hugin FreeBSD port has been updated to 0.8.0.
Filed under: FreeBSD, hugin | Tagged: Vasil Dimov | Leave a Comment »
Hugin passed the one million downloads.
Filed under: hugin | Tagged: Bruno Postle | 3 Comments »
Hugin-0.8.0 is trickling down the distribution channels. Gentoo is the first Linux distribution known to me that distributes 0.8.0 to all of its users.
Filed under: enblend, enfuse, gentoo linux, hugin | Tagged: Thomas Pani | Leave a Comment »
Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a lifetime. How does it apply to Open Source, and specifically to Hugin?
Filed under: Open Source, enblend, enfuse, hugin, libpano | Tagged: Harry van der Wolf, Daniel M. German, Thomas Modes, Christoph Spiel | 7 Comments »
Mark Probst just published a new version of MathMap. I am proud to have contributed the Windows installer.
Filed under: MathMap | Tagged: Mark Probst | Leave a Comment »
In June I was traveling the whole month and I had no choice but to live with Ubuntu. Back home in July I had the choice to use both Ubuntu and Windows. Which one did I choose?
Filed under: ubuntu, windows | 3 Comments »
The 0 dB computing experience.
Filed under: desktop | Leave a Comment »
Hugin 0.8.0 has been released two weeks ago. Like with 0.7.0 the release cycle has been too loaded. I’ve decided to re-engineer our release cycle. Expect the next release of Hugin, 2009.02, soon.
Filed under: Google Summer of Code, development, enblend, hugin | Tagged: Andrew Mihal, Gerry Patterson, Thomas Modes | 2 Comments »