by
Peter on
3 Jan 2009 in
Apps

Welcome back to Part 2 of this series - pitting GNOME’s Evolution Personal Information Manager (PIM) suite against KDE’s Kontact.
If you haven’t read Part 1, please take the time to do so, as I’ll be making quite a few comparisons between Evolution, covered there, and Kontact.
Now, we continue with KDE’s Kontact.
Kontact

Read the rest of Evolution vs Kontact - Part 2 - Kontact & Conclusion
by
Peter on
2 Jan 2009 in
Apps

A Personal Information Management (PIM) suite is supposedly a single application that gives you your email, contacts, calendar and other important information. Bringing Mail, Contacts, Calendar and more into one application is something that many find useful.
On the Linux and Unix platforms there are two main competitors in this space - Evolution 2.24.2, for the GNOME desktop and KDE’s Kontact 4.1.3. I’m going to take a look at both programs, side-by-side and compare them.
Regardless of which desktop environment these applications are designed for (Evolution for GNOME and Kontact for KDE), which application is, for lack of a better word, ‘better’?
In this two part series, I’m going to look at each app and focus on the interface, email (particularly searching and organising), calendaring (with a focus on sharing), and integration (both within the suites themselves and with the desktop outside of them).
First, to GNOME’s Evolution.
Read the rest of Evolution vs Kontact - Part 1 - Evolution
by
Peter on
10 Dec 2008 in
Apps

Apologies for the FOSSwire radio silence recently. I’ve been really really busy with university stuff. My Christmas break starts next week, so with any luck FOSSwire should get some more content over the festive period. Thanks for bearing with us!
The Amarok team have officially unveiled the 2.0 release of the popular open source music and media player application.
The world of digital music management has changed a great deal since the birth of Amarok four and a half years ago. Amarok 1 established a reputation for innovation, but maintaining development with the old framework became more difficult as Amarok grew, often in directions we never imagined.
Some of the things this new release brings to the table include:
- New user interface
- Integration with many online music services (Last.fm, Magnatune and others)
- New scripting API
Crucially, Amarok 2.0 is built against KDE 4, rather than KDE 3, making it an ideal music player for KDE 4-based desktops as it now runs natively.
There are also Beta versions of this 2.0 release available for other platforms as well - with Windows and Mac OS X versions available. The use of the Qt library underneath KDE means that the versions for these other systems integrate well (for example, Amarok 2.0 uses global menu bar when run under Mac OS X - so it ‘feels like’ any other Mac app).
I haven’t yet had a chance to play with the new release, but you can read further release notes and download the 2.0 version from the Amarok site.