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Konfabulator Coming to Windows

islandroots writes "Arlo Rose, developer of the popular Konfabulator widget, is moving his application from Mac OS X to Windows. Back when Apple unveiled their next OS, Mac OS X Tiger with Dashboard, Arlo Rose accused Apple of copying his application. 'We're all diehard Macintosh developers here, but we recognize that Windows is the dominant platform,' Rose said in a statement. 'When you have a great idea, you want more than 2 percent of the global market to have access to it.'"

307 comments

  1. Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Ph33r+th3+g(O)at · · Score: 5, Funny

    We'll have to fix them. Dude! I know! We'll port the product to Windows! Yeah, Microsoft would never copy an idea and include it in their next operating system! Excellent!

    --
    I too have felt the cold finger of injustice.
    1. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by AC-x · · Score: 5, Funny

      At the rate Longhorn's going they won't have anything to worry about for a _long_ time

    2. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by metlin · · Score: 5, Informative

      From the article --

      "Even moving to Windows may not ensure Konfabulator free reign. Microsoft plans for the next version of Windows to have a slightly different twist on the same idea. The company has demonstrated a feature called Sidebar that allows access to similar sorts of information in one part of the Windows screen."

      That answers your question :-)

    3. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by lowe0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'd rather have 18 months of revenues from 95% of the market than 6 months of revenues from 2%.

      The smart thing to do would be to build up some cash, start working on the next killer idea, and release it cross-platform next time. That WILL teach Apple a lesson, though a small one.

    4. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by WebMasterJoe · · Score: 5, Funny
      Microsoft plans for the next version of Windows to have a slightly different twist on the same idea.
      So, version one in 2-3 more years, version 2 which deletes all the original widgets in 7 years, and version 8, which is completely incompatible with previous versions and now integrates with MSN and WMP 11, will debut in 13 years. Seriously, if they make the sidebar anything like the toolbars that sometimes adhere to the always-on-top and auto-hide settings, Konfabulator has nothing to worry about.
      --
      I really hate signatures, but go to my website.
    5. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by 13Echo · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought there was already a "Dashboard" for Gnome that has very similar functionality (thought development is slow).

      http://www.nat.org/dashboard/

      Ultimately, aren't they all just rip-offs of GDesklets and Karamba anyway?

    6. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Graff · · Score: 5, Informative
      We'll have to fix them. Dude! I know! We'll port the product to Windows!

      Konfabulator coming to Windows is old. old news. In fact, that announcement on December 16, 2003 predates the Apple Dashboard announcement on June 28, 2004 by over 6 months. Konfabulator for Windows was even already in beta form at the time of its announcement, so the idea of porting it is definitely older than 6 months before any word from Apple.

      It comes down to this: Arlo Rose was porting Konfabulator over to Windows way before Apple even announced Dashboard. The port has very little to do about Apple coming out with a product similar to Konfabulator, it's more about Arlo Rose wanting to tap into the large Windows market.

      That's not to say that Arlo Rose is not bitter about the whole thing - he has made a lot of snide comments on the matter - but the fact is that "little desktop applications" have been a part of Mac OS ever since it first came out. Apple has always had Desktop Applications, small applications that take up minimal RAM and do one small thing well, such as a note pad, a calculator, a clock, etc. If anything it is likely that Rose was inspired by Apple, not the other way around.
    7. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by mccoma · · Score: 5, Insightful
      next killer idea

      also, try to pick a concept that wasn't implemented in the classic Mac OS that Apple is likely to bring forward into OS X.

    8. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Yea, I'm an early Konfabulator puchaser, actually have three licences, but I think Rose is off his rocker by getting so bent out of shape over Dashboard.

    9. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by jimhill · · Score: 3, Informative

      Minor nit but I never miss a chance to provide educational opportunity. The phrase is "free rein", meaning that you let your horse go wherever his will takes him, rather than guiding him yourself. The implication is that you can reassert control if and when you choose.

      --
      Learn to spell: nickel, missile, lose, solely, amendment, speech, kernel, probably, ridiculous, deity, hierarchy, versus
    10. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by mbbac · · Score: 5, Informative

      They're ultimately all ripoffs of Apple's Desk Accessories {more info}.

      --

      mbbac

    11. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Coldfusion97 · · Score: 2, Informative

      While Nat's project shares the name of Apple's new technology that will be included in Tiger, it's a completely different concept. Instead of having customizable UI widgets Nat's stuff displays "relevant" information as you use your computer.

      For example, if a friend IMs you and says "I can't wait for our camping trip this weekend!" the dashboard will show things like your recent emails about the camping trip, your camping bookmarks, and any files or notes you've got on your hard drive about camping (example stolen from Nat's site verbatim).

      If you're going to compare Dashboard to any OS X technology, it's probably closer to a tweaked Spotlight.

      --
      Are you saying coconuts migrate?
    12. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by chrish · · Score: 1

      IIRC, fvwm had something like this (GoodStuff?) in the mid-90's (certainly in 1995, probably released earlier).

      I don't really think that GNOME and KDE have invented any new UI features, which isn't necessarily a bad thing.

      --
      - chrish
    13. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by mbbac · · Score: 1

      Actually, the linked Dashboard is nothing like Konfabulator. It seems pretty cool and is more related to Apple's Spotlight than Apple's Dashboard.

      --

      mbbac

    14. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by LilMikey · · Score: 1, Troll

      They're ultimately all ripoffs of Apple's Desk Accessories

      Which was ripped off the Xerox Star.

      --
      LilMikey.com... I'll stop doing it when you sto
    15. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by lowe0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How's that saying go about "everything old is new again..."

      Did Apple's original idea involve easily developed add-ons for Desk Accessories (that's what the original was called, right)?

    16. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by mbbac · · Score: 4, Informative

      Apple actually licensed Xerox's GUI tech which implemented some of Jef Raskin's (Apple) pre-existing concepts.

      --

      mbbac

    17. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny
      Darn! Making a joke about Longhorn being delayed sure is funny.

      But, you should have given them the old one/two by making a Duke Nukem comparison as well!

    18. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Coocha · · Score: 1

      That's what I'm thinking. The Konfabulator site is down for the count, but this smacks of Gdesklets-style eye candy to me.... I wonder which once can claim prior art...

      --
      May the threads progress competently.
    19. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Exitthree · · Score: 1

      They were about as easy to develop as anything else back then.

    20. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by tonywong · · Score: 4, Informative

      erm, the guy is being serious. The parent post should not be modded funny. It should be modded insightful. The widgets concept is a derivative of Apple's original Desk Accessories from OS 9.

      Dashboard looks similar externally to Konfabulator because both are OS X looking applications, with a glossy theme. Internally, they are different, although some of their feature sets overlap by allowing use of HTML common scripting languages.

      Sorry if I'm vague and foggy, but I just woke up. Please feel free to flame and roast this post.

    21. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by FinalCut · · Score: 2, Informative

      a company actually already does this so you dont have to wait for longhorn:

      http://www.desktopsidebar.com/

      I tried it out and it is OK. nothing special but kinda handy.

      i'm still looking for something with a smaller footprint.

    22. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by somethinghollow · · Score: 1

      Of course, he was mad. Lots of people buying your $20 application means lots of money. Apple making something almost just like it means you lose some potential money (from people like me who feel that paying for a javascript/PHP/applescript engine that everyone else builds wigets for isn't quite right). But it is only $20 bucks (about 4 hours of work at minimum wage).

      Unless there is a free version out there that I missed. Maybe I'll break down and buy it one day...

    23. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Moofie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think anybody who writes anything is going to have to get used to the idea that creativity does not entitle them to a revenue stream.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    24. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps the author of the software might want to do a little research first? Kapsules appears to do everything his software does, and more, for free. Plus there's the increased copying in the win32 world, and PC users in general are much less likely to pay for every little script and tweak.
      I suspect Konfabulator will disappear very quickly.

    25. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by nacturation · · Score: 1

      I'd rather have 18 months of revenues from 95% of the market than 6 months of revenues from 2%.

      Well of course. Anyone would rather have 18 months of revenue @ 2% over 6 months of revenue @ 2% even. Or did you mean 6 years of revenue at 2% vs. 18 months at 95%?

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    26. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by nacturation · · Score: 1

      It comes down to this: Arlo Rose was porting Konfabulator over to Windows way before Apple even announced Dashboard.

      Arlo knew about Dashboard (as an OS X tester) before Apple formally announced it. Likely he announced the Windows port shortly after learning it would be cloned in Tiger.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    27. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Damek · · Score: 3, Funny

      Jef Raskin & Xerox actually built off of even earlier concepts.

    28. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by NSObject · · Score: 4, Interesting

      A couple of weeks ago, the following clause was added to Apple's developer program agreement:

      11. Apple Independent Development. You understand and agree that Apple may acquire, license, develop for itself or have others develop for it, and market and/or distribute similar hardware or software to that which you may develop. In the absence of a separate written agreement to the contrary, Apple will be free to use any information you provide to Apple for any purpose, subject to any applicable patents or copyrights.

      You can view the full agreement by going to connect.apple.com and clicking Join ADC.

    29. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that was dishonest of him to imply that the move to Windows is because of Apple. They had planned to bring it to Windows long, long before Apple introduced Dashboard.

      I have respect for Arlo for his skill and sense of style, but he should just shut up and improve his product. Make the JavaScript engine more robust. Make the footprints of the widgets smaller.

    30. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Graff · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Arlo knew about Dashboard (as an OS X tester) before Apple formally announced it. Likely he announced the Windows port shortly after learning it would be cloned in Tiger.

      At that point in time no one had been seeded developer previews of Tiger and Apple kept very quiet about the features. It is certainly possible that Arlo found out early about Dashboard somehow, but it's not probable that he did.

      Anyway, it's his right to complain about it but there is nothing he can gain from doing so except making himself look like a whiner. He has just got to move on, port over to Windows and/or make a better product than Apple's stuff.
    31. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you - and please, keep up the pressure on the morons who say "could care less" too. Seriously, it's needed.

    32. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2, Funny
      Mac OS-X? Longhorn? I don't get it. Isn't Konfabulator a KDE app for Linux?

      What? It's not? Well, then, isn't that name some sort of trademark infringement?

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    33. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by aarku · · Score: 4, Informative

      It should be noted that Desk Accessories are a lot older than Mac OS 9. In fact, they are from the original System 1.0 of the year 1984.

    34. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by DroppedPacket · · Score: 1

      Interesting. I'd never though about where it came from. Thanks for the info. :-)

      --
      I am not a resource! I am a free man!
    35. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by tonsofpcs · · Score: 1

      I actually have a copy of an old application that does many things like this (for Windows - 3.x and earlier), called HP Dashboard [by none other than Hewlett-Packard]. From what I've read, Borland was planning to purchase it at one point.

      Some other Info:
      [URL:http://www.wohl.com/g0040.htm]

      --
      My Amiga GUI doesn't even need a dashboard.

    36. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And as we all know, Jef Raskin is responsible for everything we see and touch every day.

    37. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      two wrongs make a right?

      what i see here is that apple and MS are both evil.

    38. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Anonymous+Writer · · Score: 1

      The company has demonstrated a feature called Sidebar

      I wonder if Microsoft's Sidebar "tiles" will work more like the "pods" in Macromedia Central rather than applets in Konfabrulator or Dashboard. The pods are supposed to be part of running applications, so you can see information about them while working in another. Konfabrulator and Dashboard are more like independent small applications. I also wonder if Macromedia came up with the idea first and Microsoft copied it, or if Microsoft came up with the idea on their own.

    39. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by lowe0 · · Score: 1

      6 years? Longhorn's gonna be late, but not THAT late.

    40. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by UserGoogol · · Score: 1

      I don't think you can trademark the letter K unless it's Special.

      --
      "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity." -- Hanlon's Razor
    41. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by jcr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      One major difference to point out is that Konfabulator widgets have to be JavaScript, but Dashboard widgets can include Objective-C extensions.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    42. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1
      I'd rather have 18 months of revenues from 95% of the market than 6 months of revenues from 2%

      Except that most Mac users actually PAY for their shareware.

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    43. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yeah, and you should sue Midway for stealing the most successful KDE app ever: Mortal Kombat...

    44. Re:Dude--Apple stole our idea! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      isn't that what the software patten scam is about?

      You would think people would learn by now. Software shoudl be copywriten not pattened. If you mke somehtign you have to make it well or someone else will. Unless of course they can give it away when selling you an os thaT is forced upon you when you buy the computer.

  2. Konfabulator going to Windows? by richie2000 · · Score: 5, Funny

    One might think this particular project was a natural for a KDE port.

    --
    Money for nothing, pix for free
    1. Re:Konfabulator going to Windows? by Uteck · · Score: 1

      It's called SuperKararamba, http://netdragon.sourceforge.net/

      --
      no .sig found Please restart your browser.
    2. Re:Konfabulator going to Windows? by imr · · Score: 1

      SuperKaramba, I wonder when it's going to be used for anything more usefull or original than system informations display and news feeder.

    3. Re:Konfabulator going to Windows? by Perl-Pusher · · Score: 1

      It's used to make a Doc clone, control XMMS, Weather Applets etc. It does everything that Konfabulator does. If you have any original ideas by a python book and start coding.

    4. Re:Konfabulator going to Windows? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean like being a SNMP monitoring station? Or show the number of alerts over a few periods of time that get logged by Snort? Or maybe even something as simple as a calender? You mean stuff like that? Learn python.

      SuperKaramba will do pretty much anything you want it to do.

    5. Re:Konfabulator going to Windows? by imr · · Score: 1

      I didnt write that to flame the project, in fact I have been genuinely interrested in it enough to follow it since the beginning through kde-apps.org.
      Yet, there are many of those weather applet and audio controllers also. I just dont put them into the original list. You can have them in kicker, in whatever bar or widget or even menus, the fact that they appear in karamba dont make them more accessible. In fact they are just less movable.
      And no, i don't have any better idea either, so i was asking out of hope.

    6. Re:Konfabulator going to Windows? by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Well, targeting another two percent - who are also not well known to pay for software - is not going to make Arlo any richer.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  3. Irony by metlin · · Score: 1, Funny

    Yeaaaaaaaaaaah right.

    The quote at the bottom of the page goes, "Cheer Up! Things are getting worse at a slower rate."

    Gee, thanks :-/

    1. Re:Irony by julesh · · Score: 1

      The quote at the bottom of the page goes, "Cheer Up! Things are getting worse at a slower rate."

      Well, something's going at a slower rate. Could be the web site that describes whatever the hell Konfabulator actually is.

      Someone want to enlighten us non-Apple users?

    2. Re:Irony by YouHaveSnail · · Score: 0, Troll

      The quote at the bottom of the page goes, "Cheer Up! Things are getting worse at a slower rate."

      Clearly, that quote was written before the 2004 election.

  4. slashdotted already by conteXXt · · Score: 1

    so can someone tell me what konfabulator does?

    I sure hope it isn't a bandwidth optimizer or any like thing :-)

    --
    The truth about Led Zep should never be told on /. (Karma suicide ensues)
    1. Re:slashdotted already by RandoX · · Score: 5, Informative

      (From the site) Konfabulator is a JavaScript runtime engine for Mac OS X that lets you run little files called Widgets that can do pretty much whatever you want them to. Widgets can be alarm clocks, calculators, can tell you your AirPort signal strength, will fetch the latest stock quotes for your preferred symbols, and even give your current local weather. What sets Konfabulator apart from other scripting applications is that it takes full advantage of Apple's Quartz rendering. This allows Widgets to blend fluidly into your desktop without the constraints of traditional window borders. Toss in some sliding and fading, and these little guys are right at home in Mac OS X. The format for these Widgets is completely open and easy to learn so creating your own Widgets is an extremely easy task. For the "skinning" crowd, Konfabulator is a dream come true. You can easily change the look, feel, layout, even functionality of a Widget so that it matches your lifestyle, your desktop, or the pants or skirt you have on that day.

    2. Re:slashdotted already by DJProtoss · · Score: 1

      Its a sysinfo-in-the-background app, like samurize or gkrellm.

      --
      "Success is based on knowing how far to go in going too far"
    3. Re:slashdotted already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It must be the secret to the Mac's fabulousness! Fer sure girlfriend!

    4. Re:slashdotted already by fatwreckfan · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's something like GDesklets for Gnome.

    5. Re:slashdotted already by DebianDog · · Score: 1

      Since the other site is /.'ed and they basicly do the same thing here ya go ;-)

    6. Re:slashdotted already by airjrdn · · Score: 3, Informative

      So....it's essentially DesktopX?

    7. Re:slashdotted already by gmuslera · · Score: 1

      Maybe more like Karamba, but probably with a more comfortable/easy way of doing/skinning "applets".

    8. Re:slashdotted already by tdemark · · Score: 5, Funny

      so can someone tell me what konfabulator does?

      It's pretty ingenious.

      Konfabulator takes a Dual G5/2.0 with 1.5G of RAM and makes it run like an Apple IIc.

      At least, that's what I found when I tried it.

      I didn't realized that is wasn't out for Windows yet, because XP had the same effect when I installed it on my PC.

      - Tony

    9. Re:slashdotted already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't realized that is wasn't

      Wow ... I need some caffeine. That should read:

      I hadn't realized that it wasn't ...

    10. Re:slashdotted already by Ford+Prefect · · Score: 4, Informative
      Konfabulator takes a Dual G5/2.0 with 1.5G of RAM and makes it run like an Apple IIc.

      When there was the Dashboard brouhaha a while back over ideas being 'stolen' from Konfabulator, I got linked to an interesting comparison between the two. It's quite illuminating reading, and should explain some of the performance, um, issues of Konfabulator:
      Konfabulator is not a lightweight or small-footprint environment -- every Konfabulator widget runs as a separate process, with its own runtime environment in memory. Most Konfabulator widgets use more memory than typical full-blown Mac OS X applications. Not just Konfabulator as a whole -- but each widget. Install it, fire up Process Viewer, and see for yourself.
      I really got the impression that one reason Apple passed over it for incorporation into MacOS X Tiger was because of the low-level architecture not being up to scratch. Instead of using the same, single instance of Safari's rendering and Javascript for all widgets, booting up some monolithic monstrosity for each sounds just... Horrid...

      Oh, and the Windows port was apparently announced in December last year. :-)
      --
      Tedious Bloggy Stuff - hooray?
    11. Re:slashdotted already by Pedrito · · Score: 3, Funny

      What sets Konfabulator apart from other scripting applications is that it takes full advantage of Apple's Quartz rendering.

      Now, porting that to Windows and keeping the above statement true: That'll be impressive!

    12. Re:slashdotted already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Instead of using the same, single instance of Safari's rendering and Javascript for all widgets, booting up some monolithic monstrosity for each sounds just... Horrid...
      Sure, absolutely. I mean, why provide widget writers with the benefit of multitasking and protected memory when you could lump them all together in the same process? It's like Desktop Accessories on the Mac 128 all over again!
    13. Re:slashdotted already by Ford+Prefect · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure, absolutely. I mean, why provide widget writers with the benefit of multitasking and protected memory when you could lump them all together in the same process?

      Dashboard widgets are written in interpreted Javascript, doing their display with HTML and CSS. If they can crash each other, you've got serious problems that need fixing elsewhere.

      --
      Tedious Bloggy Stuff - hooray?
    14. Re:slashdotted already by Frightened_Turtle · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Konfabulator basically returns to MacOS X the functionality of the old MacOS 9-and-under Desk Accessories.

      The graphics for their widgets are gorgeous! I really have to applaud the folks at Pixoria for paying attention to detail. I was pretty happy to try it out and return some of the whimsical little things back to my Mac that I used to have under the old OS.

      In their implementation, they used Java to run their stuff, so the result is that Konfabulator can be a bit CPU intensive to run. I didn't have quite the performance issues that another poster had, but running more than a couple of widgets did send my CPU usage soaring.

      I disagree with the assertion that Apple stole the idea. Returning Desk Accessory function to OS X had always been on the development path. It was simply low enough on the priority list that it didn't get approval to be included until the pending OS release, Tiger.

      I will concede that it does encourage one to raise an eyebrow at Apple for calling their DA's "widgets." But I can also point out that if anyone with half a brain was going to steal someone else's idea, they would at least give it a different name. And does anyone in the general public really know when Apple decided on that name for their DAs in OS X?

      Early on, there was a critique leveled against Pixoria that rather than just make desk accessories, they should have put their efforts into making an editor that regular people could use to make those desk accessories. Considering that Microsoft is planning on making their own similar desk accessory system, I think that would be a pretty good idea to come up with an editor like that.

      For an example: I ultimately decided that Konfabulator didn't have enough value for me to purchase it. But I did choose to buy a program for editing style sheets called, CSSEdit, even though I can easily slap together a style sheet by hand. The idea is the same, sure I could load someone else's work, but I like to see my own stuff.

      CSSEdit had value for me because it made it easier for me to manage my own work. Konfabulator is fun, but I can't do my own stuff with it.

      Finally, one important thing should be pointed out: just because Apple (and ultimately Microsoft) are going to be including their own DA code into their OSs, that doesn't mean there isn't room for competition! If the people at Pixoria could rewrite Konfabulator to lower-level code that isn't so resource intensive, I'm sure they could make a strongly competitive product. They certainly have set a pretty good standard by the look of Konfabulator's widgets.

      --


      Whew! This water sure is cold!
    15. Re:slashdotted already by drooling-dog · · Score: 1
      You can easily change the look, feel, layout, even functionality of a Widget so that it matches your lifestyle, your desktop, or the pants or skirt you have on that day.

      It's hard to fathom how we've managed for so long without it.

    16. Re:slashdotted already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow; honestly, I hadn't looked at how much of a memory footprint Konfabulator widgets had. 6-8 Meg looks to be typical for simple widgets like the picture frame and weather, which does make it as heavy as a mid-size application. That's a lot of memory for very little functionality!

      The good news is most widgets don't take anything in the way of CPU time, since they're typically only doing things like checking a website every half hour or so...

    17. Re:slashdotted already by Wetware · · Score: 1

      "I will concede that it does encourage one to raise an eyebrow at Apple for calling their DA's "widgets.""

      Apple uses the term "widgets" in reference to the close, minimize and maximize buttons at the top of open windows in OS X, so I would say that they have first call on that as well.

    18. Re:slashdotted already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You're thoroughly misinformed. Konfabulator is based on Mozilla's SpiderMonkey JavaScript Engine. A stock SM build runs about 424K. Go ahead and double the size if you include Konfabulators hooks into Quartz and other standard Apple API's (a more likely, it's another 100K). Design-wise, Konfabulator uses XML & JS to define layout and functionality of a widget; nothing terrible here as Apple made a similar design decision in Dashboard (their format is slightly different). I don't think several instances of 850K binaries is all that bad. Sure, it could be better but don't you have at least 512MB in your Apple box? I have 576MB in my G3 iBook 500Mhz. The XML for both platforms is relative similar to HTML so you come to a point where the largest difference comes down to widget designers. If a widget designer makes a poor decision in keeping large images around in memory, that's a designer's fault and not Konfabulator's. Also, Konfabulator is available for MacOSX 10.1.x and newer (newer versions only support 10.2.x or newer). Dashboard, well, we have to wait until Tiger goes gold for Dashboard to go gold.

      Again, memory bloat of is a function of design decisions, not Konfabulator's design.

    19. Re:slashdotted already by qw(name) · · Score: 2, Informative


      Pretty much except DesktopX is highly integrated into the OS and includes much more than just widgets and such. It has those but it's so much more.

      I'm wondering what the memory footprint will be with the Windows version of Konfabulator as compared to the original Mac version.

    20. Re:slashdotted already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Konfabulator is a JavaScript runtime engine for Mac OS X that lets you run little files called Widgets that can do pretty much whatever you want them to.

      So they're desktop components. When Microsoft did this, you hypocrites crucified them for it.

    21. Re:slashdotted already by shotfeel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Konfabulator basically returns to MacOS X the functionality of the old MacOS 9-and-under Desk Accessories.

      No, IMO Desk Accessories are gone. They're all small applications now. Dashboard isn't about another calculator/clock/stock ticker or anything like that. Its about providing a new way to write applications for the Mac. Its about making it easy for would-be developers to use tools they're already familiar with to write an application for the Mac (if you can do a web page, you can write a Mac program).

      Widgets and Desk Accessories are dead! Long live small, easy to write applications.

    22. Re:slashdotted already by someToast · · Score: 1
      In their implementation, they used Java to run their stuff, so the result is that Konfabulator can be a bit CPU intensive to run. I didn't have quite the performance issues that another poster had, but running more than a couple of widgets did send my CPU usage soaring.

      Konfabulator uses Javascript, not Java. CPU usage, like for any application, varies depending on what the application is doing. I can write an infinite loop that'll bring a system to its knees, but that doesn't mean that the system is flawed.

      I disagree with the assertion that Apple stole the idea. Returning Desk Accessory function to OS X had always been on the development path. It was simply low enough on the priority list that it didn't get approval to be included until the pending OS release, Tiger.

      Apple didn't just return Desk Accessories to the OS, they added a system that would let you run small "widgets" that are built using Javascript and a tagged page markup language designed so that mere mortals can create their own. Since Konfabulator was currently on the Mac OS doing the exact same thing with the exact same nomenclature, the appearance of Apple stealing the concept was inevitable (and IMO, justified).

      For some reason, people seem to gloss over the authoring aspect of Konfabulator, which is where its real power lies, and is what Apple attempts to replicate with Dashboard.

    23. Re:slashdotted already by cft_128 · · Score: 1
      Konfabulator uses Javascript, not Java. CPU usage, like for any application, varies depending on what the application is doing. I can write an infinite loop that'll bring a system to its knees, but that doesn't mean that the system is flawed.

      No, but having a whole separate engine for each widget adds plenty of extra overhead and makes the footprint larger than it needs to be.

      Apple didn't just return Desk Accessories to the OS, they added a system that would let you run small "widgets" that are built using Javascript and a tagged page markup language designed so that mere mortals can create their own. Since Konfabulator was currently on the Mac OS doing the exact same thing with the exact same nomenclature, the appearance of Apple stealing the concept was inevitable (and IMO, justified).

      When Windows 2k came out I could write little javascript pages and embed them in the background. They could check stock quotes, be calculators, I even added one that tracked sattelites. Did Konfabulator rip off Microsoft? Competition makes things better doesn't it? Isn't that what OpenOffice is all about? Should we all be using wordstar and visicalc now?

      --

      Underloved Movies and Pub Quiz: donotquestionme.org

  5. This is old news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    ... for everyone keeping an eye on the developer's weblog.

    All in all it's just good news for us windows users. By the way, there are a plethora of other Konfabulator-alike utilities (Kapsules, Samurize, Ave Desk...)

  6. Doesn't seem like they died that hard... by theAtomicFireball · · Score: 3, Funny

    They seem to have a rather weak concept of what a "diehard" is.

    1. Re:Doesn't seem like they died that hard... by ChefInnocent · · Score: 1

      That's right! Those of us who were Amiga fans didn't give up our platform until it was well and truely in the grave. Amigas were so much better than everything else, that they even produced better diehard fans.

      The Amiga is dead, long live & die the Amiga!

  7. How about this? by isecore · · Score: 2, Informative

    I don't know about you guys, but there already is an excellent utility for system-monitoring on Windows, it's called Samurize.

    It's totally configurable and can be made to be a lot of eye-candy as well. Also it can be extended with scripts and plugins for everything from weather to television listings.

    --
    I enjoy large posteriors and I cannot prevaricate.
    1. Re:How about this? by DavidLeblond · · Score: 3, Informative

      Konfabulator is not a system-monitoring utility.

    2. Re:How about this? by afd8856 · · Score: 1

      And samurize uses python for its plugins. That means complete freedom and a language that is easier to program and a standard library that is a lot bigger. There, now you have it.

      --
      I'll do the stupid thing first and then you shy people follow...
    3. Re:How about this? by Fweeky · · Score: 1

      What is it? Samurize seems to do a lot of what I see Konfabulator being used for (which extends way beyond system monitoring). I'm guessing Konfabulator has more of a point-and-drool interface or something *shrug*.

    4. Re:How about this? by igrp · · Score: 2, Informative
      No, it indeed is not (it can be used as one though).

      Konfabulator is a pretty amazing and very versatile little utility. If you've never used it you should definitely check out this list of Konfabulator widgets over at Widgetgallery.com.

    5. Re:How about this? by iainl · · Score: 1

      The thing is, I looked through a bunch of them trying to figure out exactly what Konfabulator was (given that the story provided no info, and their 'information' page is a dead link).

      Everything looks remarkably like what Samurize does.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
  8. Who'd a thunk it? by erick99 · · Score: 1
    Rose said in a statement. "When you have a great idea, you want more than 2 percent of the global market to have access to it.'"

    Ya think?

    I don't care how much I love Mac's, I would play where ever I could get the most revenue and then go back and port/develop for other platforms as the business model allowed. If you are not in business to make money you may have a hard time staying in business.

    --
    http://www.busyweather.com/
    1. Re:Who'd a thunk it? by cowscows · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but it's not always as simple as looking at the potential market. While the total Mac market is much smaller than the windows market, the amount of competition is generally much less, making it easier for a small developer to get recognized and make a name for themselves.

      The Mac shareware market has stayed fairly active and seems to be reasonably successful, for a couple of other reasons I think. While not as bad anymore, macs cost a premium over a windows box, so they're often owned by people with a little more spending money, and who are more likely to cough up $15-20 to register a cool little app. I'm also going to make the bold claim that mac users are a little more appreciative of quality in their software, so a well designed application will be rewarded. Third, the smaller market share means a lot less support calls/emails, which could easily eat up all the time of one guy writing a nifty utility in his basement over the weekends.

      Not to mention that for all their similarities, there are still some substantial differences between OSX and Windows. Perhaps implementing something like konfabulator was a lot easier on a mac.

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    2. Re:Who'd a thunk it? by vicparedes · · Score: 1

      Except that the bigger the market the more competitors there are. And you have monolithic Microsoft to worry about. Browser war anyone?

    3. Re:Who'd a thunk it? by mitchus · · Score: 1

      Unless you don't actually need the money because you have no staff to pay and you're sort of doing it for fun.

    4. Re:Who'd a thunk it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That 2% still represents something like 25 million potential customers.

  9. Wonder what it is? ....slashdotted by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1

    Wonder what it is? The actual Konfabulator site is slashdotted, but does come up some time. The front page looks like part of "MYST". The article describes it as a desktop organization utility, but it is rather vague.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:Wonder what it is? ....slashdotted by erikharrison · · Score: 4, Informative

      Short answer: Konfabulator is a product for writing little eyecandyful tools in JavaScript, like Weather monitors, calculators, yaddida, yaddida, yaddida. They are _very_ similar to the widgets being offered in the next version of OS X.

      Long answer and editorial: Konfabulator is a resurrection of the old Apple Desk Accessories if you used those. This has been used to claim that really, Konfabulator isn't doing anything new, and that Apple isn't stealing Konfab. I find this argument to be malarky. Sure, Konfab is the spiritual decendent of Desk Accesories. And maybe even Tiger's widgets started as a coincidentally parrallel development within Apple. But writing them in JavaScript? The look and feel? The likely base package of Widgets? Come on. The most you can give Apple is that someone started working on a primitive version of a Desk Accesories successor, and someone came along and said "That's neat. Why don't you make it more like Konfabulator?"

    2. Re:Wonder what it is? ....slashdotted by Zemplar · · Score: 1

      Use google. Okay, so Google cache isn't worth much in this case, but a picture is worth.....

      http://images.google.com/images?q=konfabulator&hl= en&btnG=Google+Search

    3. Re:Wonder what it is? ....slashdotted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find your argument to be malarky.

      Anyone remember Internet Explorer 4? Remember Active Desktop? Why, goodness, it featured network-aware desktop "widgets" written using HTML, VBScript, and JavaScript. They did all sorts of neat things, like play music, show you the weather... see where this is going?

      Similarly, where the hell do you think Konfabulator got its "look and feel" from? It's no coincidence it fits in with the polished glass Aqua environment -- it's designed to look right at home Mac OS X! Amazingly, so is a product designed by Apple. Wow! Those damn Apple employees, ripping off their own look and feel.

    4. Re:Wonder what it is? ....slashdotted by FortissimoWily · · Score: 1

      "Long answer and editorial: Konfabulator is a resurrection of the old Apple Desk Accessories if you used those. This has been used to claim that really, Konfabulator isn't doing anything new, and that Apple isn't stealing Konfab. I find this argument to be malarky. Sure, Konfab is the spiritual decendent of Desk Accesories. And maybe even Tiger's widgets started as a coincidentally parrallel development within Apple. But writing them in JavaScript? The look and feel? The likely base package of Widgets? Come on. The most you can give Apple is that someone started working on a primitive version of a Desk Accesories successor, and someone came along and said "That's neat. Why don't you make it more like Konfabulator?""

      It's been linked to already, but you might find this to be worth a read. It goes to show how dissimilar the two actually are.

    5. Re:Wonder what it is? ....slashdotted by Colol · · Score: 1

      A nice effort, but I'll have to disagree with you on Apple ripping off Konfabulator's "look and feel." Remember, Konfabulator was designed to fit in with Mac OS X. Like so much else for OS X, it's glassy and shiny and colorful. It's only obvious that if Apple itself tackles desk accessories again, it's likely to be glassy and shiny and colorful.

      Moreover, though, Konfabulator blatantly ripped off Apple. Perhaps you haven't been using Mac OS X long enough to remember this bit: Way back in 10.0, Apple was using docklings for battery and AirPort status instead of menu extras. The battery dockling was a clear battery filled with a green, bubbly liquid. Konfabulator's battery widget is... a clear battery filled with green, bubbly liquid. The Konfab AirPort widget is similarly "inspired" as well.

      Somehow I don't think Apple was stealing Arlo Rose's ideas long before he unleashed them on the world two whole releases of Mac OS X later.

      As far as scripting, Konfabulator is nothing new either. Microsoft was doing it with Active Desktop back in the 90s when IE 4.0 came out and began IE's reign of terror. If you wanted to code up an Active Desktop "widget," you did so with HTML, VBScript, and JavaScript. Several of the Windows "widget engines" also use scripting languages (including JavaScript), some of which predate Konfabulator.

      Arlo and Perry are talented guys, but this whole Konfabulator stink is a bunch of BS. I get the impression you weren't hanging around the Konfabulator forums post-WWDC as Arlo started contradicting himself left and right, and then ultimately deleting posts by himself and others that weakened the notion of Konfab as the One True Widget Engine.

  10. Nothing uncommon here by inflex · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's a saying that I've heard all too often that goes ...

    "Many people think of the same thing at the same time across the world - it's a matter of who gets it done first".

    Time and time again I've seen this happen in the software world, where it's appearance is more noticable all thanks to the speed and expanse of the internet.

    So, while it sounds like I'm backing Apple in this one, what I'm really saying is it might not specifically have been plagarism, sometimes it's just a bad coincidence.

    PLD.

    1. Re:Nothing uncommon here by inflex · · Score: 2, Funny

      Damn, I was hoping someone would say the same thing in another post at about the same time. So much for -that- theory :-\

    2. Re:Nothing uncommon here by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      AFAIK, Konfabulator was out for the Mac a good OS point version ahead of Apple's. This isn't the first time Apple has cannibalized their shareware developers. I seem to remember the same thing happening with Watson, which I think was an add-on for "Sherlock." I'm a huge Mac fan, but I really wish Apple would give developers who created truly excellent software the opportunity to bundle their software with the OS, instead of just co-opting their ideas.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    3. Re:Nothing uncommon here by TheTimoo · · Score: 1

      But someone did!!!!!!!!111oneoneleven
      Now that this theory is tested, develop a proof and get a patent on it. These fine people will love to grant you one. Oh and do it fast. I mean now that we know that your theory works and all...

      --
      "Be careful or be roadkill" - Calvin
    4. Re:Nothing uncommon here by lisaparratt · · Score: 1

      Except that Konfabulator was simply an idea stolen from 1980s era Mac OS with a new paint job.

    5. Re:Nothing uncommon here by inflex · · Score: 1

      This could get outwardly recursive until we find that we're confronted with a parallel universe that another God thought of creating... omg, better stop thinking these thoughts before I vaporise.

    6. Re:Nothing uncommon here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I'm guessing you are talking about Hypercard.

      All in all, its not really even a new paintjob as much as it is just a different engine. I had hypercard apps that could do all the same look and feel with the right free externals (remember -- the original Myst was written in Hypercard -- it still looks as beautiful today as it did back then).

      This is what pisses me off about the whole Arlo Rose They Stole Mahhhh Idear bit...he was part of the team that was developing ideas like this at Apple. Its not like he didn't know this stuff was already available to the public. He changed the engine to one of his own (actually I heard it was a reappropriated BSD'd XMLHTTP engine -- which is cool if thats what happened as the BSD is intended to allow folks to do almost whatever they want with the code, unlike other licenses that force one to take specific actions based on others morality) and put it out there.

      And now he claims that ANYONE doing the same thing is a thief and a plagerizer because he had the idea to rip someone elses idea off first. He's not complaining about people ripping of his app...he's complaining about ripping off his idea of ripping off apps. Its the whole slashdot joke of I Patent The Idea of Pattenting Ideas that got old years ago...

      Fuck Arlo and Fuck All Ya'll...

    7. Re:Nothing uncommon here by hackstraw · · Score: 1


      A software program with a sliding puzzle, and a calculator, and a clock, and a little notepad. Tiny little applets -- little pieces of software that are something less than full applications themselves, but which run alongside real apps and are easily accessed at any time.?!

      That was my idea! If I had the patent, I'D BE RICH!

    8. Re:Nothing uncommon here by System.out.println() · · Score: 2, Informative

      The whole thing was actually Apple's idea.

      20 years ago.

      When they first made the desk accessories on the original Macintosh.

      Copied Arlo my ass. The only thing that makes people say it's copied is because the widgets look similar - but that makes sense. Arlo used to work at Apple, so why wouldn't he share some of its design tendencies?

      (props to Daring Fireball)

    9. Re:Nothing uncommon here by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "other licenses that force one to take specific actions based on others morality"

      Jesus, can we put this to rest? Nobody comes to your house with a gun to make you use GPL'd code. You agree to the terms of the GPL IFF you use their code. Don't like it? Don't use it.

      "Force" means something specific, and it has nothing to do with Yoda.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    10. Re:Nothing uncommon here by SmittyTheBold · · Score: 1

      If HyperCard's the first thing that comes to mind...you should probably have tried using the Desk Accessories in the classic Mac OS. (er...System Software)

      --
      ± 29 dB
    11. Re:Nothing uncommon here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah -- you could't program DAs yourself without a lot of computer knowledge.

      DAs were cool...but a completely different idea.

      So again,

      Fuck All Ya'll

    12. Re:Nothing uncommon here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are very right, no one puts a gun to your head to use it.

      But it is distributed in a fashion that forces you to take upon the morality of the guy that gave you the software and released it under that license.

      It is a moral issue.

      Its just like the guy that feeds the homeless, but forces them to bow down and pray to his god before the homeless eats. In my hometown, the only shelter available forces folks from ANY faith to profess to love Jebus H. F'N Christ before one can be fed and out of the cold...last year a few people were turned away because they openly broke with the rules, even though they weren't disruptive. They were told if you don't believe, find some other place to go.

      Thats what the GPL is. Nothing immoral about what you do with your own works as it is your time and money, but don't get all huffy about it not being a moral decision.

      The BSD license makes no such requirement or tries to get you to change your moral outlook. Its the difference between real Christianity showing your beliefs off through example as opposed to Evangelical Christianity as espoused by Bushie -- Not Only Am I A Christian, But By Gawd, You Better Be One Too Cause I Says So...And Faggots, Stop Getting Married Because Your Exercise Of Your Own Freedoms Is Making A Mockery Of My Own -- Strategery.

      So Fuck Off and

      Fuck All Ya'll

    13. Re:Nothing uncommon here by Moofie · · Score: 1

      No.
      No.
      No.

      The GPL exchanges rights to use the code for your compliance with a set of rules. It is a free agreement, entered into by free actors. There is no, repeat NO, compulsion or coercion.

      Don't like the GPL? Don't use it. Don't release your works under it. Nobody will make you.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    14. Re:Nothing uncommon here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes.

      Yes.

      Yes.

      Again, you are right.

      Again, no one is forced into it and it is entered into with full knowledge of the act.

      But one should recognize that the fact that giving someone something with the requirement that they must do something else with it is not a gift at all, but a responsibility.

      The BSD license is a gift. No questions asked. No one forces you to do anything with it. It doesn't match your drapes, return it to the store, and we won't mind. Even if its just to get your money back. Or to sell to your next door neighbor that loves it and you can sell it for 2x what the giver spent on it.

      Big difference. The difference is forcing ones morality on the others. And you don't seem to get this. The BSD is *ALSO* a free agreement by free actors. No compulsion, no coercion. But it treats the giftee with a little dignity hoping they will do right and not treating them as if you are a child at best and a greedy retard at worst.

      So again, thanks for playing Fuck All Ya'll.

    15. Re:Nothing uncommon here by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Uh huh, so I'm right, but you're still arguing.

      Log in if you want to continue this discussion. Otherwise, HAND.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    16. Re:Nothing uncommon here by clifyt · · Score: 0, Troll

      Nah...its much more fun spewing the truth anonymously and seeing it get rated +5.

      As for being right, you are right, but you are only seeing one side of the story...I personally think Christianity is right...I think people that push it onto others are idiots. I think giving software away for free is right, I think forcing others to give it away for free is wrong. Live a good life and put out software as an example and hope others do the same without shackling them...

      So,

      Fuck All Ya'll

    17. Re:Nothing uncommon here by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Who is forcing people to use the GPL? Who is forcing people to convert to Christianity?

      I think you have a persecution complex.

      "Live a good life and put out software as an example and hope others do the same without shackling them..."

      Sounds like you're trying to "force" me to abide by your morals...

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    18. Re:Nothing uncommon here by elbobo · · Score: 1

      Well to be fair, Dashboard's implementation is airily similar to Konfabulator's. They both are either XML or HTML based and use Javascript. But on the other hand, I'd be more inclined to say that's a sign of the times more than anything else.

    19. Re:Nothing uncommon here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No forcing you to abide by any morals what so ever.

      Suggestions to do so, but no force.

      That is the difference.

      Most would say that allowing folks the choice is a far greater giving act than to demand they act a specific way. My point is that the GPL is not as giving as folks would imply it is...

      The fact that you can take a BSD'd app and GPL it says something...it says that folks can even go against the wishes of the original giver and give it out themselves under more restrictive terms if thats what they want.

      The GPL is a huge restriction and I can understand why some would say its viral. I put shit out under GPL, but thats to keep others from using my apps against me :-)

      Again, I can judge you, but I can't force you to do anything. If I take a GPL'd app and modify it, I am forced to what I can and can't do with it. if I take the same app under a BSD license, I am free to do what I want -- and for the most part, folks have treated BSD'd apps with respect and submitted back -- the Windows network subsystem not withstanding (though I know a few microsofties that have contributed back in pseudoanonymous ways -- though they'd probably never admit this).

      Again, you might be right, but you are still blinded...

      Fuck All Ya'll

    20. Re:Nothing uncommon here by Moofie · · Score: 1

      I may be blind, but you can't even be bothered to hew to your own principles. That makes them worth much less than the paper your ideas here are printed on.

      Which says something, since your ideas are not printed, and there's no paper.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    21. Re:Nothing uncommon here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Never said they were my principles. You are reading too far in.

      I do put a lot out Public Domain or BSD -- that is where the *MORAL* person puts things out. Sometimes I just don't give a fuck and only care about the money...thats when the GPL comes into play. Not a very moral decision.

      Those without morals are sometimes more adept at seeing others failures than those blinded by the light...

      Fuck All Ya'll

    22. Re:Nothing uncommon here by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "Those without morals are sometimes more adept at seeing others failures than those blinded by the light..."

      They're also totally unqualified to comment. HAND.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  11. original? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Widgets are NOT a new idea, and everyone ignores that his implementation is a memory hog and prone to crashes. How is he getting credit for things invented in 1984 and shipped alongside the original Macintosh?

    1. Re:original? by erick99 · · Score: 1

      Oh! Can't quite reach those grapes? Ah, they must be sour. Yeah, that's it, sour grapes.

      --
      http://www.busyweather.com/
    2. Re:original? by DavidLeblond · · Score: 2, Informative

      He's just pissed because now no one will want his memory-hogging, buggy as hell software. :P :-D

    3. Re:original? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or maybe you're pissed ya lost one to the Windows folks? Hmmm, could be . . .

    4. Re:original? by DavidLeblond · · Score: 1

      Don't use Konfabulator so I don't really care.

      I'm a Windows dev myself professionally so "hmmm... don't think so!"

    5. Re:original? by Jakomcbean · · Score: 1

      I agree. I have tried this software numerous times only to find poorly written modules hogging the system for simple things like RSS feeds, clocks, and the like. I never thought enough of it to consider paying the shareware fee to register. It is a cool concept but I always ended up dumping it a few hours after trying the newest release - hoping some of the bugs had be ironed out. Somehow I feel Apple would have gladly paid him for it if it worked as well as an Apple branded program should.

  12. Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by Polaris · · Score: 5, Informative
    1. Re:Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by imr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's the problem of ideas. They can appear in many heads at the same time.

    2. Re:Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by inflex · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Aha! thanks, you proved my theory - see my own post saying the same thing just a bit further up.

    3. Re:Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by eschwinge · · Score: 1

      Not to appear trollish, but that article's logic totally exonerates Microsoft in the browser war that killed Netscape. In fact, any feature/functionality that a closed OS dev wants to add in is ok as long as a slightly different inplementation scheme is used. Hmmmmmm....

    4. Re:Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by imr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I didnt prove your theory.

      You're taking into account the moments we expressed the same idea, aka you before me, to establish that it is your theory and therefore that i barely proved it.

      No, I expressed the same idea as you, and it is neither your nor my theory.
      As a matter of fact, it is an idea as old as ideas themselves, the idea that ideas are alive and free and don't belong to none, whenever and however they are expressed.

      We are just medium through which ideas express themselves.

    5. Re:Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by Ford+Prefect · · Score: 1

      We are just medium through which ideas express themselves.

      And those ideas are mine! I'll sue you all, honest! Mwuhahahahaha!!!

      Ahem.

      I always reckoned the real innovation of Apple's Dashboard was the inverse-F11-Exposé-style manner of appearance. No messing around shuffling a tiny window to somewhere legible next to your application window, instead press a button, FVOM! widgets are there, press button again, FWOOSH! widgets are gone.

      Probably done before, somewhere, but I still reckon it's a nice idea...

      --
      Tedious Bloggy Stuff - hooray?
    6. Re:Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by thparker · · Score: 1

      I think the Daring Fireball link in the parent makes some good points. Apple provided Desktop Accessories on my Quadra 800 in 1992. (Still do, in fact.) Konfabulator just created an environment to build them more easily and to easily take advantage of some OSX features. (While using voluminous amounts of RAM.)

      It's just an environment and tool to develop stuff. To me, this is as silly as being angry at AppleScript.

    7. Re:Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by artifex2004 · · Score: 1

      You're taking into account the moments we expressed the same idea, aka you before me, to establish that it is your theory and therefore that i barely proved it.


      How coincidental is it that you guys are disagreeing over what essentially was an idea that occurred to each of you at about the same time (though is hardly original), when that's also the point of your idea?

      You cannot go against nature, for if you do
      go against nature, that's a part of nature too.
    8. Re:Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by schuster · · Score: 1

      I don't know that that was the biggest issue in the microsoft/netscape thing. I think it's more about microsoft's html engine which did not properly support all the standards and all the websites that were developed and tested for it at the expense of external browsers. It's much easier to justify running Konfabulator and Dashboard at the same time than it is to justify running netscape and IE at the same time, especially if Dashboard can't run Konfabultor widgets

      --
      --- Don't ever trust a woman until she's dead- B.B. King
    9. Re:Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by mbbac · · Score: 1

      You proved his hypothesis and he proved yours.

      --

      mbbac

    10. Re:Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by imr · · Score: 1

      Sure since they were the same, but he contradicted his statement by tring to grab property on the fact.
      I would have said dogma (or even axiom) instead of hypothesis though.

    11. Re:Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lighten up, Francis.

      Seriously. Are you constantly smacked in the head by those around you who are sick of how pompous you come off?

    12. Re:Apple copied Rose? Or Rose copied Apple? by sirshannon · · Score: 1
  13. Is this like Super/Karamba for KDE by roughshod_coder · · Score: 1

    Does anyone know if this is an application like Super/Karamba that runs on KDE. The description sounds similar. And if so, does anyone know which of these two apps came first? Basically, who stole whose idea first?

    1. Re:Is this like Super/Karamba for KDE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does it really matter who was first? I'm a KDE user, and as far as I can see here from the screenshots, they're basically equivilent. Karamba uses Python and Konfabulator uses JavaScript.

      Who knows, maybe nobody stole anyone's idea, maybe they both independently developed their solutions. Not that I think it's patented or anything, but the concept hardly strikes me as novel.

  14. Money by Morgahastu · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I think this guy is just trying to scare Apple. He could possibly have Konfabulator running on Windows before Mac OS X Tiger comes out and then it will be an old feature. I bet he wants Apple to buy his product to protect it from being released on Windows to make it a Mac OS exclusive feature.

    1. Re:Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably more likely Apple is laughing their ass off at him. Hope he has fun porting to Windows. It should be an interesting experience. Let's all wish him luck, he'll need it!

    2. Re:Money by TonyZahn · · Score: 1

      I doubt it. Konfabulator would only be common on windows if everyone bought it. There are a few different pieces of software out there that will mimic Expose on windows, but they're not exactly common either.

      --
      - sig? who is this sig of which you speak?
    3. Re:Money by Quarters · · Score: 2, Informative
      Right, becuase nothing like Konfabulator exists on Windows currently.

      Don't worry about this
      or this
      or even this
      or this
      hmm, or this

      There's nothing "Mac OS exclusive" about widgets. Apple didn't do them first, just like they didn't do alpha blended shadows, app skinning, a dock, etc... first. But, for some reason, Apple users like to attribute all sorts of misplaced creative distinction to the folks in Cupertino.

    4. Re:Money by ThousandStars · · Score: 1
      I think this guy is just trying to make money, which means that a rational person would develop software for the platform that comprises 90% of the desktop market.*

      Another way to make money and sell more product is through advertising. By conflating this whole non-issue of Konfabulator's author stealing Apple's idea who stole Xerox's idea and then crying becaues he said Apple stole his idea, he can get tons of free press for his product. Like, for example, this /. article that announces Konfab for Windows.

      *Note that this is coming from a PowerBook owner. I still understand the respective market sizes of OS X and Windows, though.

    5. Re:Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "But, for some reason, Apple users like to attribute all sorts of misplaced creative distinction to the folks in Cupertino."

      Widgets are a modern implementation of "desk accessories" which Apple did do first. Give credit to other folks for modernizing an existing Apple concept first (Gui based light weight apps), but give Apple credit coming up with the concept (desk accessories) and the best modern implementation, "dashboard".

    6. Re:Money by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "creative distinction" is irrelevant. "Good design" is not.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    7. Re:Money by geoffspear · · Score: 1
      So presumably whoever owns MacPlay is either irrational or doesn't want to make money?

      Or a company making parts to customize, say, Mustangs, should switch to the Ford Focus instead, because that would automatically make them more money?

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
  15. Sidebar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    "Even moving to Windows may not ensure Konfabulator free reign. Microsoft plans for the next version of Windows to have a slightly different twist on the same idea. The company has demonstrated a feature called Sidebar that allows access to similar sorts of information in one part of the Windows screen."

    Uuuhhhhh, isnt the same concept that Mozilla uses for easy access to bookmarks, history, seaches and what not?

    1. Re:Sidebar by SpiffyMarc · · Score: 1

      If by same concept you mean "a bar on the side." The Longhorn sidebar is a lot more ambitious.

  16. Sour Grapes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Arlo's still sore from when he couldn't release Mekong because it became Apple's property. And then, when Kaleidoscope couldn't make the jump to X. Good artist, but he's got some bitterness.

    1. Re:sour grapes by suman28 · · Score: 3, Funny

      a lot of noise, but none of it really worth it.
      This just means it will fit perfectly into the Windows world.

    2. Re:sour grapes by JudgeFurious · · Score: 1

      Creepy.... It's ALREADY a Windows app!

      It just didn't realize it at first.

      --
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
    3. Re:sour grapes by Spoing · · Score: 3, Funny
      1. Konfab was a sluggish, memory hungry app that got more in the way than it did good.

      AH! On that note, I predict great sucess on Windows!

      --
      A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.
    4. Re:Sour Grapes by Moofie · · Score: 1

      History question.

      Is Arlo Rose the guy who wrote Aaron, the precursor to Kaleidoscope that put a Copland-style UI skin on System 7?

      If so, he has zero room to talk about people stealing ideas and artwork.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  17. Being platform dependent by lxt518052 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    is sad for small software companies, isn't it?

    Unless you're targeting some niche market that no one else can do or want to do. You'll never know when your selling point is integrated into the next OS version.

    Going platform-independent probably isn't the ultimate answer. Can opensource help?

    --
    People who dislike China tend to mention Tiananmen Square a lot, but they always forget the Tank Man is also a Chinese.
    1. Re:Being platform dependent by Wudbaer · · Score: 1

      So what you are saying is: Being platform dependent doesn't work, being platform independent neither, well, so let's just give our product away, this will make us shitloads of money. Ummm, no.

    2. Re:Being platform dependent by lxt518052 · · Score: 1
      Being a small software company is always a risky business. I didn't say to opensource is a sure way to make money. But there are successful examples, like Bluefishhttp://bluefish.openoffice.nl/, among many others.

      You'd probably say Bluefish is platform dependent on Linux. It certainly is. But that suits the niche market it targets. And there are myriad small companies live on proprietary software products.

      Therefore, the key isn't about how many platforms it runs on, nor opensource or not. It is how it fits into a niche market.

      --
      People who dislike China tend to mention Tiananmen Square a lot, but they always forget the Tank Man is also a Chinese.
  18. don't be such a pansy by 5n3ak3rp1mp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Since when did a little competition in the marketplace cause the ones first to market to simply up and leave?

    The proper response is to figure out a way to differentiate yourself. Maybe Konfabulator could be better at XMLHTTP or some other technology.

    The fact that you can burn cd's natively in OS X doesn't seem to have hurt Toast that much, probably because Toast provides a slew of other options.

    1. Re:don't be such a pansy by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      * Since when did a little competition in the marketplace cause the ones first to market to simply up and leave?*

      since the competition came standard with the os.

      anyways.. little marketplace doesn't matter if you got 100% of it. this is no longer going to be the case so they're moving it to a larger market which has more competition(there's comepting products out there for windows).

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    2. Re:don't be such a pansy by pocomoonshiine · · Score: 3, Insightful

      and iPhoto isn't going to put a dent in Photoshop, etc. etc... Welcome to the market. You either have to have a better product, brilliant marketing, an army of lawyers, or a simple monopoly.

    3. Re:don't be such a pansy by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Since when did a little competition in the marketplace cause the ones first to market to simply up and leave?

      Since it was called "bundling", the power of which has been demonstrated time and time again. Please don't pretend having your product included with the OS is like normal 'competition'. It's not.

    4. Re:don't be such a pansy by jedrek · · Score: 1

      iPhoto and Photoshop have maybe a 2-3% feature coverage.

    5. Re:don't be such a pansy by NaugaHunter · · Score: 1

      Get off your high horse. Apple had Desk Accessories back in System 7 or even maybe System 6. Small programs that just had their code and were very small, like Calculator and Alarm Clock. They are just now getting them in OS X, and using Javascript instead of Pascal.

      They aren't ripping off Konfabulator; they're ripping off themselves.

      --
      R: That voice. Where have I heard that voice before? B: In about 365 other episodes. But I don't know who it is either.
    6. Re:don't be such a pansy by Lord_Breetai · · Score: 1

      Welcome to the market. You either have to have a better product, brilliant marketing, an army of lawyers, or a simple monopoly.

      Sounds like a new pokemon/rock-paper-scissors.

      --
      "You are only young once, but you can be immature forever." -www.animemusicvideos.org
    7. Re:don't be such a pansy by crawling_chaos · · Score: 1

      Correction: Apple had Desk Accessories in Finder 1 in 1984. They were essentially device drivers and wicked as hell to write. I also find Moto's complaints somewhat suspect.

      --
      You can only drink 30 or 40 glasses of beer a day, no matter how rich you are.
      -- Colonel Adolphus Busch
  19. DesktopX by phurley · · Score: 4, Informative

    DesktopX for Win32 is similar -- I have never used Konfabulator -- however DesktopX allows you to write simple vb (or any other installed scripting language including perl) scripts and attach them to interactive desktop objects.

    If interested, check it out www.desktopx.com

    --
    Home Automation & Linux -- now I know I'm a geek
    1. Re:DesktopX by phurley · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sorry my bad -- I assumed (incorrectly) that stardock owned that link (I rally thought they did in the past). It is just an "ad link" page now. My bad

      Here is the correct link DesktopX

      --
      Home Automation & Linux -- now I know I'm a geek
    2. Re:DesktopX by dema · · Score: 0, Redundant

      That link is some strange search portal.

      Try this one. (:

    3. Re:DesktopX by dema · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Oops, didn't notice your correction. Damn threshold :P

    4. Re:DesktopX by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      What a way to waste mod-points. Concentrate on moderating *up* good posts, people - no point moderating this down, that's what comment thresholds are for.

    5. Re:DesktopX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not only is DesktopX already "konfabulator for windows" but during development of Konfabulator, Arlo made reference to its features and how it worked, as a direction for Konfabulator. DesktopX predates Konfabulator by years

      Funny how later on when DesktopX was mentioned as a precursor to Konfab at the time the original konfab/dashboard arguments broke out, Arlo claimed no knowledge of its existence.

  20. Already been done on Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Kapsules is similar to Konfabulator, so this isn't a new idea on Windows either. I never used it, but back when Windows had "active desktop" features those were quite similar to what Kapsules and Konfabulator offer.

    I've tried both Kapsules and Konfabulator and once you get past the "nifty keen" factor, neither are really all that useful in my opinion.

    1. Re:Already been done on Windows by julesh · · Score: 1

      back when Windows had "active desktop" features

      Windows still has active desktop. It hasn't been abandoned, its just not quite so obvious these days, but you can right click on your desktop and choose "Show web content on my desktop" and go ahead and stick whatever scripted weird things you want into an HTML document for it.

    2. Re:Already been done on Windows by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      however, the OS comming with such a feature for free makes it useful.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    3. Re:Already been done on Windows by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Uh huh. Still there. Still sucks.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  21. Konfabulator Sucked Anyways by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Konfabulator sucked anyways, each little widget is a java applet so they're slow as balls. I understand why Rose is so pissed, but Apple didn't steal his idea, they took it and made it 10x better. I don't think Apple, or the Apple community is going to care that Rose is jumping ship.

  22. Apple doesn't buy its own inventions back! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Arlo Rose is an ex-Apple employee that build Konfabulator based on his experiment at Apple. Steve Jobs would have been stupid to buy his own ideas back from Rose. And same goes with Watson: Sherlock was clearly first on the market.

    On the other hand. Apple has bought some cool technology to next Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger). Pixelshox Technology is one great example. It's been renamed Quartz Composer in Tiger and is basis of CoreVideo.

    So Apple will buy great inventions to their OS, but they're not that stupid to buy their own inventions back.

    (Sorry about typos, English is not my native lang.)

    1. Re:Apple doesn't buy its own inventions back! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple has bought some cool technology to next Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger). Pixelshox Technology is one great example. It's been renamed Quartz Composer in Tiger and is basis of CoreVideo.

      What is this CoreVideo by PixelShox? I understand it's a language/runtime for creating eyecandy effects. Is it similar to Nvidia's Cg or the OpenGL GLSlang -- a higher level language for utilizing OpenGL 2.0 pixel shaders? (Which are hardware supported I guess in all new PowerMacs and PowerBooks/iBooks, what with the Nvidia/ATI graphics.)

  23. A summary of most posts here ... by adzoox · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you would like to see a summary of most of the posts here and a general discussion of what Konfabulator does and Arlo Rose's history and general discussion ... see a recent story I did on this on my jackwhispers website:

    HERE IT IS

    Titled: What A Kon!

    --
    Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
  24. Dashboard is a quite different kind of thing by tequesta · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Except for the "lickability" of the widgets, Dashboard is a quite different animal. It's like a second desktop that can be populated with widget-like productivity tools and faded in/out on keypress.

    That sounds very appealing to me since the productivity stuff never gets in the way or wastes screen real estate when you don't need it, the way the Konfabulator widgets do.

    So even if Konfabulator had been the first to use widgets (which it wasn't), Dashboard would still not be a rip-off but a good idea done right.

    1. Re:Dashboard is a quite different kind of thing by mbaciarello · · Score: 0

      Konfabulator does have its own "desktop," and it matches your description of Dashboard perfectly.

      It's called Konsposé. You bind it to a key or mouse button, and when activated it brings about (with a fade-in!) an overlay where you have all your active widgets.

      You can set widgets to only be visible in Konsposé, so as to save up on desktop real estate.

      Or, you can place them in the very top layer on the desktop, so that you can click what's below them. In this latter case, you'll handle the widget by mouse while holding the command button, or in Konsposé.

  25. Samurize by neodude88 · · Score: 1

    That would be direct competition to Samurize...

  26. Apples version look more purrty by DebianDog · · Score: 1
  27. Brilliant Idea!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    That is a brilliant idea! Pay for porting the app yourself so Windows can steal it also!

  28. sour grapes by dJOEK · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Apple out-did this guy and now he runs like a scared little girl

    Konfab was a sluggish, memory hungry app that got more in the way than it did good.

    a lot of noise, but none of it really worth it.

    Face it buddy, you couldn't handle the heat!

    --
    Exercise caution when modding this message up: the author acts like a jerk when his karma is excellent.
  29. Dear Konfabulator team by tod_miller · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I once wrote a spreadsheet program in pascal when I was 13, and now look, people are using Excel, and stuff, and they obviusly copied off me.

    If I write something, NOONE should be allowed to write anything similar, I am sure you all agree.

    Stop whining!

    Instead think of all the things OTHER PEOPLE did, that you copied, to make your (good/bad/ugly - delete as applicable) application.

    Share the love, not the hate. h8rz

    --
    #hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
  30. Object Desktop anyone? by Gannoc · · Score: 2, Informative

    www.stardock.com

    Been around for years.

    1. Re:Object Desktop anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and also been bloated, sluggish, and memory-hungry for years.

  31. XUL is better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks for the info on what the Konfabulator does. I think I will stick with XUL which does the SAME THING, is free, and only requires Mozilla or Firefox for Mac, Windows, Linux, or UNIX.

  32. Innovation? by dema · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "We're all diehard Macintosh developers here, but we recognize that Windows is the dominant platform," Rose said in a statement. "When you have a great idea, you want more than 2 percent of the global market to have access to it."

    I wonder how much time he spent thinking of ways to improve Konfabulator to give people an incentive to use it instead of Dashboard. It would seem from this statement and the article that he just sort of rolled over.

    Also, I didn't see anything in the article about it and the Konfabulator website is loading slooooow as hell, but do they intend to coninue developing Konfabulator for OS X? When this originally hit the news there was a pretty large backlash and a lot of people came out in support of Konfabulator. I really hope they don't intend to just ditch them all.

    1. Re:Innovation? by adzoox · · Score: 1

      "a lot of people came out in support of Konfabulator"

      Which websites were you reading?

      I saw mostly hard facts that Rose was being a baby by claiming Apple copied him.

      For a while - the Konfabulator website had a lot of groupie posts

      (mainly people that were scared of the very scenario you suggested - having just finished paying for Konfabulator - then being unsupported within a few months)

      Then a few posts started popping up that showed how Apple used this same concept of widgets for monitoring and small apps way back in system 6 - just a little before Rose started working at Apple.

      --
      Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
  33. not due until the end of 2006?? vapor what? by ayeco · · Score: 3, Insightful

    not due until the end of 2006!?

    This is what vaporware dreams are made of. I doubt we'll ever see an official release of konfabulator. With that kind of target date for release there will be dozens of other copycats ready to get their versions embeded with spyware out to the masses.

  34. DesktopX vs. Konfabulator and Mac people by zealot · · Score: 1

    Just an FYI on some of the who did what first arguments here.

    --
    He said, "You'll be able to tell your grandchildren that you helped assemble the first NT supercomputer," and I cringed.
  35. Screenshots by Xeo+024 · · Score: 3, Informative
  36. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's like I read about this two days ago in the news and in the blogosphere...come on Slashdot try to keep up.

  37. Re:not due until the end of 2006?? vapor what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "not due until the end of 2006!?"

    Yeah, that's why it's called Longhorn.

  38. Let me get this right... by DoctorDyna · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, the guy is mad because the OS manufacturer took some peice of the "little guy code" and integrated it into the OS and buried the little guy? And he's making the move to windows because he thinks this happens less often there?

    --
    Windows has more viruses because linux has more virus coders.
    1. Re:Let me get this right... by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      actualy, it is like this:

      little guy working at apple pitches idea for Dashboard/konfabulator.

      project is shelved for the time being as ther eare more important things that need to be added to teh OS First

      Littel guy gets pissed taht his idea was sheleved and goes off on his own to make his vision come true

      little guy makes a crap implimentation that does not take advantage of any of QE and is a huge memory hog while Appel begins to develop the detailed idea internaly for the future Version of OS X that has just started development (tiger).

      Little guy releases product sooner than it was ready to beat apple to market.

      apple anounces 6 months later about their new feature in OS X.

      Little guy gets pissed that his idea that he pitched to Apple back when he was working there has now been used so he goes on a rant about some how Apple stole his idea, even though he came up with it at Apple, making it apple property.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    2. Re:Let me get this right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's moveing to get more money..
      If he has say 2percent of the mac users using his product and their only 2 percent of the pc market, if he gets 2 percent of the other 98 then he suddenly a whole lot richer...

  39. Re:not due until the end of 2006?? vapor what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Learn to read. The "not due until the end of 2006" was referring to Longhorn. They were suggesting that there would be 2 more years without competition from the OS vendor, where if they stay with the Mac the next version (Tiger) will have Konfabulator-ish functionality built into the OS this coming spring.

  40. Quartz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The graphics system Quartz was probably planned to have this feature at the beginning of developement.

    That this feature is only released now does not mean that apple had the idea earlier.

    I mean this kind of app is just logical on such a platform with such a graphics layer.

    Why should apple trough away all that R&D ?

    Those guys can be as pissed off as they want.
    But they are probably unlucky.

    ( plus konfabulator is a burden to run ).

  41. Let Windows have it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Windows doesn't have enough memory-hungry, CPU-hogging applications already, so I for one welcome the new resource plundering overlords to the dark platform!

    Good riddance impractical, useless eye-candy!

  42. DIME A DOZEN! by enigmals1 · · Score: 1, Informative

    It may have been some gee-wiz-bang swell tool for the MAC guys...but that kinda stuff is a dime a dozen for us Windows peeps since even Windows 3.1. And with the newer Windows GUI there are tons of free apps that do the same thing.

    "Welcome to the group Mr Rose...here's your number."

    And you know it kind of reminds me of the "star quarterback" from a high school thinking he's the stuff...then he joins a college or pro team. You're with the big boys now and you're just another player.

    1. Re:DIME A DOZEN! by dick+johnson · · Score: 1

      What application are you referring to? I've been using PCs since Dos and Macs since about 1985 and I have no idea what you are talking about.

      Have you ever used Konfabulator? My guess is no. So how would you know that there are dozens of similar windows applications.

      I'm not a platform fanatic. I use Macs for some things, Windows for others. But this claim just seems like hyperbole to me.

      I've used Konfabulator for some time now. It's a useful little application which has some neat features. I've seen NOTHING like it for Windows.

      Before poo pooing this, I'd suggest you give it a try. You may like it. I, for one, will run in on my Windows boxes, when it is available.

      --
      - dj
    2. Re:DIME A DOZEN! by enigmals1 · · Score: 1

      Yes, I know exactly what Rose's product is and does. If you read other peoples posts they even list some things. There are tons of tool bar addins and little 3rd party apps that do what his does. Some do it better than others but especially since WinXP and it's new GUI interface they have been comping out of the woodworks. Some of the best ones are XML based by the way.

  43. Kind of like Netscape before IE? by iceperson · · Score: 1

    I wonder how many people here at /. would be using the same arguments if it was M$ "bundling" other people's work into Windows.

    1. Re:Kind of like Netscape before IE? by Jord · · Score: 1
      I know this is /. and all but a little research can go a long way. Konfabulator was hardly first. Apple as well as many people on the Linux and Windows side had this long before Konfabulator ever hit the streets.

      This guy is just crying and making noise. He should be ignored.

  44. This is new? by tbase · · Score: 1

    I've been out of the Mac realm for a while now, but when I left, I would estimate at least 70% of the MacOS features were available as third-party shareware or freeware apps before they were part of the OS. I remember using "Launcher" before there were such things as "Aliases". Another good example is the Extensions Manager control panel. I wonder how many of those were purchased by Apple and how many Apple just made their own versions.

    --

    666-607: 6th floor apartment of the beast
  45. Who's Idea? by Goo.cc · · Score: 1

    "When you have a great idea, you want more than 2 percent of the global market to have access to it."

    If that is the case, why did you not develope it for Windows in the first place? Also, I challenge the notion that this was "your idea".

    DaringFireball has an excellent article on why this is bullshit. Google for it if you want to know more.

  46. Why not make it Enterprise Capable by alexhmit01 · · Score: 1

    I wanted to use Konfabulator for my Intranet stuff. Basically, instead of manually consolidating information from all my servers, I was going to add REAL simple reporting scripts that could be accesseed via Konfabulator, and let everyone on my network access them.

    HOWEVER, the Konfabulator guys have made it a User based system (in OS X, settings are stored in "Library," and you have a ~/Library, /Library, /System/Library, and /Network/Library... Konfabulator will ONLY use the ~/Library, where it SHOULD go ~/Library (User based), /Library (Computer Based), /Network/Library (network based), and support there had no interest in that feature.

    If you had a cross platform (do the Windows port in Qt and you have a free Linux port), and you have a GREAT system for Enterprise customers that want something like Widgets to get information available to users without running a complicated Intranet. And for me, add Kerberos support to your fetching code and it works with my Single-sign on environment... Do that, and you are also selling site licenses, as well as your personal users.

    However, for that, you need to run cross platform, which is entirely possible. Hell, if you don;t want to search the libraries, than do what Apple does with Kerberos settings... they write them to a file /Library/Preferences/edu.mit.kerberos (instead of /etc/krb5.conf), but they are pulled out of the LDAP cn=config group and rewritten if changed and the local machine had an unedited file...

    Give a reason for Enterprise groups to think that you can make their lives easier, and you get bigger sales.

    Alex

    1. Re:Why not make it Enterprise Capable by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      dude, that is awsome. that would make widgets a real web service!!! screw makign a browser based javescrypt form for peopel to use, just make the javescrypt and it is a widget!!! maybe you should write this gy and he can actualy morph it into soemthing that is totaly over and above Dashboard tot he point of not lookng liek it any more.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    2. Re:Why not make it Enterprise Capable by alexhmit01 · · Score: 1

      I did...

      They seem to busy wallowing in self-pity to figure out how to hit a kick ass market.

      Every other web service system is slow and annoying... Konfabulator is FAST...

      But why hit a kickass market when you can complain that Apple copied you.

      I'm not going to buy a third-party version of a built in utility that will take advantage of Apple's system improvements... but I would by an Enterprise-ready cross-platform Web Services platform... but I NEED to be able to roll out Widgets from the server.

      Alex

  47. Samurize by Buzz_Litebeer · · Score: 1

    how is confabulator different from samurize which is what I think konfabulator was copied from.

    Why should someone switch from Samurize to confabulator?

    --
    If you don't vote, you don't matter, so don't waste your time telling me your opinion
  48. They *are* different! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, no need to differentiate: Konfab and Dashboard are very different under the hood (as Daring Fireball, linked to a few posts above this, makes clear).

    One is a runtime you buy. (Not an IDE you buy to develop for a free runtime, which would perhaps be smarter biz.)

    The other enables any hobbyist web designer to start producing widgets right away, using technologies shipping with OS X long since (HTML + CSS, JavaScript, Cocoa if needed).

    I agree with DF: this brouhaha is a storm in a teacup.

  49. Kapsules by palad1 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    http://kapsules.shellscape.org


    uses the .net Framework, most widgets are written in Perl/Ruby .net. Works great for me, still needs some polish though.

    1. Re:Kapsules by Wojski · · Score: 1

      I also use Kapsules, they still have a while to go, but from what I've seen they are headed in the right direction.

      Is kapsules a sourceforge projet?

    2. Re:Kapsules by palad1 · · Score: 1

      Nops, it is not open source, no trace of GPL in the package or the site.

  50. It should be "going" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not coming.

  51. A great little toolbar for Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's called Crowbar, and it is created by a bunch of Something Awful goons, and it's open source :)

    http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php? s= &threadid=1244382

    enjoy

  52. Not the first time by Sheepdot · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Apply actually has a long history of destroying those developers that would help promote their OS. Here's a few examples: (3rd part app listed first, Apple newly introduce "feature" second)

    Watson/Sherlock
    Konfabulator/Dashboard
    SoundJa m/iTunes (the one time they hired someone)
    LiteSwitch X/Command-Tab

    It would stand to reason that Apple is killing off their own developers by usurping the projects they undertake, why? Because they've actually been here before. Remember when the Mac was stagnant at system 6-7.5? Not much really changed. Then 8.0 came out and Apple got into a better habit of releasing real changes on a regular basis.

    I think though, there's a bit of a double-standard amongst what geeks perceive what MS and Apple are doing. MS buys out open source or 3rd party developers, and /. cries foul. Apple essentially just steals the whole idea and integrates it into their OS package, and no one cries foul.

    Granted, I do understand there's more than just that in play, but it really kind of irks me when I see the editors gleefully talking about the latest Apple feature or product. It's like rooting for the underdog in the face of cats; you're still rooting for something other than what your target audience is concerned about.

    1. Re:Not the first time by mbbac · · Score: 5, Informative

      Watson/Sherlock
      They offered to hire the Watson developer, he turned them down because he wanted to be retro-actively paid for all of his Watson work even though Apple wasn't going to use his codebase for Sherlock.

      Konfabulator/Dashboard
      Both of these are inspired by Apple's Desk Accessories from 1984.

      SoundJam/iTunes
      Apple bought SoundJam and turned it into Itunes.

      LiteSwitch X/Command-Tab
      Please -- this has been in Windows for years. I've also heard it was in Next as well.

      --

      mbbac

    2. Re:Not the first time by ThatsNotFunny · · Score: 2, Informative

      Two problems with that list:

      Konfabulator is a rip-off of the old Desk Accessories that were more plentiful in the earlier days of the Mac OS. (Right up through 8, if I'm not mistaken).

      And LiteSwitch X was a "prettied-up" version of Alt-Tab in Windows.

      To say that Apple is stealing someone else's idea is only half the story. They're stealing someone else's stolen ideas, often times they're stealing back their own ideas.

      --
      "Was it a millionaire who said 'Imagine No Posessions?'" -- Elvis Costello
    3. Re:Not the first time by Jord · · Score: 4, Informative
      You just have to love people that pipe up with no clue.

      Sherlock came out before Watson. Watson cried a bit when Sherlock was updated but then went on to make a better product.

      Konfabulator was not first. Apple had desktop widgets quite some time ago. Not to mention Stardock, Karamba and lots of others.

      SoundJam was purchased to become iTunes.

      LiteSwitch was implementing a feature that used to exist in System 9 and disappeared in OS X. Apple merely added the feature back in. Even without LiteSwitch command-tab worked, the functionality was simply enhanced with the latest version of OS X.

      Konfabulator and LiteSwitch are simply a case of outside developers filling a hole that was obvious. OS X did not hit the shelves as a complete operating system. Every version that has been released has added features back in that were missing. Sometimes these features step on a developer's toes. It is sad, but it happens and it should be expected. These developers should be happy they got paid while the feature was missing and move on to the next big thing. It is unrealistic to think that a simple little toy program is going to be a permanent cash cow.

      If Longhorn came out without Active Desktop and then put it back in at a future date, would anyone cry foul? This is the exact same situation.

      These developers need to face the facts. Their implementation is a copy of an idea that has been around since the 80s. Their implementation is bloated and runs like crap. I know, I used to run their software until I realized it was slowing down both my cpu and my gpu, then I junked the entire mess.

      Let them move over to windows, they will be right at home.

    4. Re:Not the first time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you're saying is just not true. If Apple regards an application as really good, they will buy it, this is in fact the reason they bought SoundJam (which was renamed to iTunes) and hired the guy.

      Konfabulator is a resource hog and therefore Apple wouldn't be interested in buying them.

      Another example of a small application bought by Apple for the upcoming Tiger release is Curvus Pro X (http://www.appleinsider.com/article.php?id=652). I'm sure there are plenty more, if you search well enough on the web (or through Apple rumour sites)

    5. Re:Not the first time by Sheepdot · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree that Apple has improved on the ideas/features and reduced bloat. But I also wouldn't say that Microsoft didn't improve on and decreased bloat when it came to IE. Netscape was bulky and horrendous, load times were horrible, and they wanted to go their own direction with it.

      I guess what I'm trying to say is that Apple notices features/reasons why people are using these third party utilities and thus adopts them. I see it as a "good thing" (tm) and not bad at all, but I just happened to mention the double-standard when it came to /. editors talking about Apple like an angel, and MS like a demon.

      Konfabulator was not first. Apple had desktop widgets quite some time ago. Not to mention Stardock, Karamba and lots of others.

      I would argue that Konfabulator was the first one to do it *right*. They created a basis by which web developers could be widget developers. "Desktop Accessories" is hardly comparable from development and design aspects.

      SoundJam was purchased to become iTunes.

      And rightly so. So where are the hellions that cursed MS for buying up vendors in the mid-to-late nineties?

      LiteSwitch was implementing a feature that used to exist in System 9 and disappeared in OS X.

      I agree with your conclusion on this as well. This was one app or feature created by a third party that should never have had to be. I remember when Apple came to the local campus and was talking about OS X, the one question I asked was where Command-Tab was. They simply replied, "oh... hmm.. guess we forgot about that."

      I'm glad they threw it back in, but I'm astonished that some of the same whines we got about MS are lacking now that Apple has been tuning their OS. Do people just accept this as the norm now?

      Also, I take offense to your "people that pipe up with no clue" commment. I follow this, and while I don't consider myself an expert on OS X development, I *do* think there is a double-standard amongst the /. populace.

    6. Re:Not the first time by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "And rightly so. So where are the hellions that cursed MS for buying up vendors in the mid-to-late nineties?"

      They're called the Department of Justice. Maybe you've heard of them.

      There is no /. Overmind, therefore there is no double standard. There is no consensus here. Nobody speaks for "us". You are not having a discussion with a monolithic entity.

      So, you're STILL piping up with no clue. Consider yourself clued.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  53. Not a clear case by alistair · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't think it does. Apple have produced Dashboard only for the Mac, Microsoft produced IE for Windows, Mac and Solaris (seeting up a UNIX team specifically for this purpose) and then made them available free specifically to hurt a competitor. As soon as Netscape died so did those ports (and perhaps they'll appear again if Firefox takes off).

    Microsoft also threatened PC manufacturers who didn't want to include the IE browser and took measures to prevent other shipping with Netscape. They produced other products like Outlook Express and IIS and gave them away free to specifically hurt Netscape's market share. The changed the licencing from NT 3.51 workstation to NT4 workstation simply to stop people using NT workstation to run Netscape and other competing internet server products.
    The list goes on. But if Microsoft had simply produced a Web Browser and added it to NEW versions of its OS do you think there would be a case for an anti monopoly trial?

    If Apple announces Dashboard for Windows and Linux and all old versions of Mac OS then you have a valid comparison. But extending their OS in this way as part of the core OS looks to be a logical extension.

  54. Bad Business model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These kinds of products that modify an existing product are often copied by the existing product's manufacturer. Stuff like konfabulator and outlook plugins that may be great ideas but not really that difficult to develop will be stolen and integrated into the main product. Its pretty common.

  55. How is this news? It was announced in December '03 by dzurn · · Score: 2, Informative
    So how is this news if it was written about in December 2003? Before Tiger or Dashboard was even annnounced.
    Mac applets coming soon to Windows

    Published: December 16, 2003, 5:08 PM PST

    By Paul Festa
    Staff Writer, CNET News.com

    A Web site that offers desktop applets for the Macintosh desktop is gearing up to provide similar gadgets for Windows.

    ...

    Now, Perry and Rose are at work on a version for Windows. That version goes to beta testers Tuesday night and is scheduled to be complete within four to six weeks.

    Oh, I get it. The four to six weeks was extended slightly to eleven months, and that counts as news.
  56. Re:Hmmmm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The pornographers are, and always have been, at the forefront of technology. They are also more exciting than a bunch of dweebs masterbating over a bunch of acronyms for things that could be done thirty years ago.

  57. The basic problem with Konfabulator... by mellon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ..is that if I write a widget with it and want to share it, everybody with whom I want to share it has to buy a Konfabulator license. The license isn't unreasonably expensive, but it's not free, and that's sufficient friction that it's just not worth bothering with as far as I'm concerned--I think very few people would ever cough up for the license, so I'd have wasted my time.

    So like it or not, Apple is actually doing something that works out really well for me. I'm sorry it doesn't work out well for the Konfabulator folks, but unfortunately I think their business model was unrealistic.

  58. Re:How is this news? It was announced in December by wandazulu · · Score: 2, Informative

    According to their website, the developers had ... issues ... with the sole Windows developer, including the belief that he would own the source code. They got rid of him and started over. Thus the delay.

    The reason why it's news now is because its release is Monday, instead of next year or the infamous "real soon now..."

    I, for one, welcome our new widget overlords. I love the Mac version and can't wait to use it on Windows too.

  59. Stardock by Kaa · · Score: 1

    Stardock already does this for Windows in a very nice way.

    Check it out here.

    --

    Kaa
    Kaa's Law: In any sufficiently large group of people most are idiots.
    1. Re:Stardock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah if your idea of "nice" is the same weather and calendar widgets endlessly recolored, then DesktopX must be for you. Try taking a look at the Konfabulator library, it's filled with very sleek and professonial looking widgets that serve different functions. Heck, even the current PC widget programs like Kapsules and AveDesk have good looking widgets despite not being large in numbers. Stardock's widget program looks like a bunch of wannabe kiddies in art class painting their own copies of famous paintings. Lots of recolorizations of the same widget, but a real lack of originality in coding.

  60. Good luck on sales by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, 2 percent of the world market may use Apple hadware. You'll be lucky to get that many sales for windows. I hope you have a well thought out piracy plan.

  61. Hack Konfabultor? by kidMike · · Score: 1

    Their server is hosed up, go to their web site and you get the Control Panel page... free access!

    --
    -- You can't drink all day. (Unless you start in the morning...)
    1. Re:Hack Konfabultor? by kidMike · · Score: 1

      Hmm, new passwords were just set... musta been too late.

      --
      -- You can't drink all day. (Unless you start in the morning...)
  62. Stardock and Konfabulator by rxed · · Score: 1

    Although Konfabulator sounds like a nice idea I think that Objectdock widget's (startools) do exactly same thing on Windows machines. You can get weather, transparency, Mac-like-skins etc.

    http://www.stardock.com/products/objectdock/

  63. Mosaic/Netscape etc by goldcd · · Score: 1

    Once something similar is bundled with an OS it can be buggy as you like, but it'll still decimate your market.

  64. Hope they're better at code than HTML. by Mr.Surly · · Score: 1

    Half the pages at konfabulator.com result in a 404, including the 'downloads' link.

    1. Re:Hope they're better at code than HTML. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know damn well it has nothing to do with the HTML.

  65. Similar to DesktopX by Mr.+Jax · · Score: 1

    This is very similar to desktopX. Which already has tons of free and paying widgest/objects/themes.

    From the weather report to translucent fishies swimming over your applications, it's all there. Quite fun for some time!

  66. MIRRORDot by danalien · · Score: 1
    --
    I don't claim I know more than I know, and if you know you know more than I know, then by all means, let me know.
  67. Konfabulator widget gallery??? by danalien · · Score: 1
    here's Konfabulator's http://www.widgetgallery.com/

    *main site got slashdotted prior someone might have noticed*

    --
    I don't claim I know more than I know, and if you know you know more than I know, then by all means, let me know.
  68. Desk Accesories by totoanihilation · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ever heard of Desk Accessories in MacOS systems 6 and earlier? Back when the OS could only run one program at a time, they created DAs that could run concurrently to another app. You could then have access to a calculator, note pad, etc.. without having to interrupt your work on the other program.

    Dashboard seems like a remake of that. Push a button and get all your accessories to pop up.

    Konfabulator on the other hand is a whole javascript runtime engine, and _that's_ what they're charging for. They're not charging for the concept of widgets (which could arguably be the same as DAs in the first place).

    So it's not so black and white about who took who's idea. Apple has the right to reanimate its DAs... They just happened to choose a way to handle the different gadgets that is vaguely similar to the way Konf does it (html/css/javascript).

    I still think there's room for both. Dashboard isn't always on. When it is, it dims the rest of your screen. Konf can run next to other apps.

  69. Actually, Arlo Rose ripped off Borland by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember Sidekick? That's exactly where Konfabulator's idea came from. Somehow it's okay for Rose to steal idea from Borland, but not from Rose. That's blatant hypocrisy.

  70. Re:not due until the end of 2006?? vapor what? by Aesiq · · Score: 1

    You have due dates confused. Konfabulator will be out shortly for Windows. Longhorn has the vapor date.

  71. Konfabulator's ugly older cousin, DesktopX by TrueSpeed · · Score: 1, Informative

    It would seem Arlo is a bit late in providing his great widget application to the other 98%. The windows desktop widget application DesktopX predates even the Macintosh version of Konfabulator. And he's accusing Apple of ripping off his "idea"? Arlo , do a Tom Cruise and Open Your Eyes.

  72. What exactly does it do? by mnemotronic · · Score: 1

    I tried to follow the story line "ten days in the wild" on the Konfabulator web site. It started off interesting, but after "day 4" I really wanted to get to the point. Then I saw the "whatever you want it to be" tag at the bottom. Oh, great. Another widget-wanker that promises everything but does nothing. Sorry folks, but having just survived a presidential election, I've had enough of that for a while. Hmmm. Maybe I'll click on that "Information" link ...

    --
    The Russians have won. They have made the world a cesspool of distrust, greed, fear and hate.
  73. Again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Again, Apple drives away the people on its side. They did it with Adobe, they did it with Macromedia, and now they're doing it with private developers. Having worked with Apple for 7 years, I have to say it doesn't surprise me. Eventually people will realise that the only difference between Microsoft and Apple is that Microsoft is a bit less incompetent - but both treat their partners and their customers like shit.

  74. INCORRECT, NOT INFORMATIVE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    They did not license Xerox tech. They allowed Xerox to buy a chunk of discount Apple stock in exchange for seeing a technology preview at Xerox PARC. This is well documented by Jef Raskin, Andy Hertzfeld, Larry Tesler, and scores of Apple history books.

  75. Re:Apple copied the program by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You really haven't been paying attention.

    http://www.folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Mac in tosh&story=Desk_Ornaments.txt

  76. Re: It was 1981. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Macin tosh&story=Desk_Ornaments.txt

    From Andy Hertzfeld:

    Bud Tribble was usually on an even keel, but one afternoon in the fall of 1981 he came into my office, unusually excited. "You know, I've been thinking about it. Even if we can only run one major application at a time, there's no reason that we can't also have some little miniature applications running in their own windows at the same time."

  77. Re: The History of Apple's Desk Accessories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Bud Tribble was usually on an even keel, but one afternoon in the fall of 1981 he came into my office, unusually excited. "You know, I've been thinking about it. Even if we can only run one major application at a time, there's no reason that we can't also have some little miniature applications running in their own windows at the same time."

    http://www.folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Mac in tosh&story=Desk_Ornaments.txt

  78. DesktopX already exists by FrogBoy! · · Score: 2, Informative

    It's nice that Konfabulator is coming out for Windows but Arlo knows that Konfabulator is old news on Windows. Programs like DesktopX not only do everything (and more) and cost less, but have existed far longer than Konfabulator. http://www.desktopx.net.

    And he also has to compete against freeware alternatives.

    Here's an article that compares ALL of them:
    http://frogboy.joeuser.com/index.asp?AID=27014

  79. Am I the only one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That keeps reading his name as Axl Rose?

  80. What is Konfabulator by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

    Ok, I read the story submission and read both of the pages that were linked to in the story submission, and I still have no idea what a "Konfabulator" is or what it does.

    A little help, please?

  81. Idle hands are the devil's workshop by eomnimedia · · Score: 1

    Kewl! Something else to keep the script kiddies busy!

  82. What's so special about custom windows? by Khashishi · · Score: 1

    Already there are many apps which do not show the standard window box. How is this different?

  83. Talk to Apple about competition by bogie · · Score: 1

    They are absolutely first in line when it comes to screaming bloody murder and attacking with lawyers when anyone puts out products that resemble anything they do.

    The thing is I agree with you. Pulling up and leaving isn't the right thing to do. I just think its odd that you would defend Apple in that way since they clearly have no tolerance when people put out products similar to theirs. If things were reversed we would have 500 posts from Apple users accusing the Konfab author of stealing Apple's "innovative ideas".

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
  84. Erm, what's this now? by ghjm · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It runs widgets that tell you a stock price or the power left in your battery, not in windows but integreated borderlessly into the desktop.

    So, basically, what we're saying is: Some company wrote Active Desktop for Mac(*), and now they're porting it to Windows.

    But, didn't all(**) the Windows users turn off Active Desktop back in 1998/99 or thereabouts? And if they wanted to turn it back on, wouldn't they just do that, rather than paying good money for some third-party program?

    I don't get this idea.

    -Graham

    (*) I am well aware that whatever-the-hell for Mac probably came out well before Active Desktop ever did. However, before you flame me on this point, please understand that I don't give a crap.

    (**) Everyone who works in tech support knows at least one (l)user who still has Active Desktop enabled. However, it's a mistake, and even that (l)user's co-workers all know it.

    1. Re:Erm, what's this now? by ruyon · · Score: 1

      Well, many s/w solutions overaps, but only a few prevail. For example, Apple tried something similar to Spotlight even before Mac OS X 10.0 (Sherlock 2). Mac OS X 10.3 Panther (if not 10.2) has indexed file content search, but it's slow and not reliable. Konfabulator, which I have never bothered to try and is said to have its own quirks, might have its own strengh. I think because it looks cool and dendy, at least to a clueless user like me. Bottom line: having same feature doesn't mean it's equvalant.

  85. IF IT AIN'T BROKE... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BUSH CHEENEEY IN 2008!!

    PS - You are a lame faggot.

  86. Like a IIc? by wernst · · Score: 1
    "...Konfabulator takes a Dual G5/2.0 with 1.5G of RAM and makes it run like an Apple IIc."

    COOOL!! My 20 year old Apple IIc has been getting a little tired lately. Now I can buy Apple's latest and greatest, install Konfabulator, and PRESTO! a green screen monitor, a nice keyboard, support for all my 5.25" disks, and all my AppleWorks files can live again!

    You'd think if this were the case, the Konfabulator would be advertising this to the Apple II community as a feature!

    (former Beagle Bros tech support)

  87. Sidebar? by psbrogna · · Score: 1
    Wow, this will be an enormous improvement over Bottombar, err.. I mean Quick Launch.


    Is reinnovation a word?

  88. stattoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I find Stattoo [www.panic.com] to do much of what konfabulator wants to do (the displaying information bit), but much more elegantly. The rest of the stuff that konfabulator tries to do is covered by dashboard (mini-apps). The two together are an amazing combination. I couldn't use Konfabulator for more than a day without getting annoyed at it getting in the way and slowing things down, but this combination works wonders for me.

  89. Active Desktop by democritus · · Score: 1

    Yeah, because Konfabulator is nothing like Win98's old Active Desktop... except for the whole being exactly the same thing.

  90. Re:dominant != good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Troll?!

    bah.
    #define dominant

    There is more than one way to do that. The most usedplatform? The platform with the most aplpications being ported to nowadays? You ever thought of being able to balance of these 'dominant' type of questions with simply porting your applications to other OSs than win*?
    write your applications on a portably way, since you as provider of some challangesolutions cannot decide which platform it should run on, can you?
    People swithcing_to/having_a_look_at Linux, will also soon discover the BSDs, and the other commercial Unix variants as well. The first thing of getting away from windows is imho Linux.
    And as you reach the point of meeting the limits of linux, during this long way you will get to know other possibilities. And yes, you will want some of your applications run also on the new platform with the wished features.

  91. Welcome to Windows! by xelph · · Score: 1

    Microsoft welcomes you to the dark side. Just watch out for the corn hole, buddy!

  92. Dashboard is based on webkit, not konfabulator by johnbeat · · Score: 2, Informative

    Dashboard is an inevitable result of Apple providing the webkit for easy use of HTML, Javascript, and other web technologies. I doubt very much that it is a response to Konfabulator. The three similarities usually cited are:

    1) it looks like a bunch of little apps
    2) they're programmed in Javascript
    3) they're called widgets

    The third one is just silly. They're called widgets because they *are* widgets. Konfabulator did not invent the name.

    The first one is something apple's been doing; they want developers to be able to create quick little things that enhance the user experience. For example, applescript studio, services, docklets, scriptmenu. Some of them disappear--I haven't seen a docklet for quite a while. But this is clearly a direction Apple has shown interest in from the beginning of Mac OS X.

    That Dashboard widgets are programmed in Javascript appears to be a slight misstatement. Konfabulator does use Javascript; as I understand it, it uses the open source javascript renderer from Mozilla. While Dashboard's widgets are for the most part going to be programmed in Javascript, simply because it's the programming language that's available, they are really programmed in WebKit.

    WebKit is the underlying web rendering engine that powers Safari; it is based on an open source rendering system and Apple makes its version available to all Mac OS X developers; so we've seen lots of webkit-enabled applications, such as HyperEdit (a text editor that automatically renders HTML as you type it) and web browsers (I believe OmniPage now uses WebKit). I haven't upgraded to Panther yet, but I understand that Apple's Mail program also uses webkit.

    Apple has been trying to make their scripting languages easier to use to create quick and dirty apps. They've made AppleScript Studio for Applescript; in Tiger they are also coming out with Automator, which appears to also be for AppleScript, making it even easier to use.

    Dashboard appears to be the same thing for WebKit: something that jumps it from being a way to enable other apps to display web pages; to something that lets web developers create apps.

    It may well be that Apple was influenced by Konfabulator; but I think that something like Dashboard from Apple was inevitable from the moment Apple came out with webkit.

    Jerry

  93. Konfabulator? His idea? Ha! by rb4havoc · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Konfabulator was not originally Rose's idea by any stretch of the imagination. This idea first came to light in the mid 1980s with the introduction of Desk Accessories. If anything, it's sorta like the idea that the MacOS was originally Apple's idea. Neither is an original idea, and each got the idea from another source.

    I did, however, Konfabulator for a while, and just found the way that it handles as bothersome as the original desk accessories that cluttered the desktop--not very intuitive at all, just maybe looked a bit more fancy. However, the dashboard coming out under Tiger looks like it resolves the "clutter" issue, and would definitely a more preferential choice for me anyways.

    --
    "There are 10 types of people in this world--Those that understand binary, and those that do not..."
  94. Let me get this straight by Trogre · · Score: 1

    So he goes from supporting Cthulhu to supporting Satan himself, because he's the more popular evil.

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
  95. Oh sure... by superdan2k · · Score: 1

    Like Windows needs another memory-hog kludgy piece of bloatware.

    I ran Konfabulator on my iBook (G3/500, 640MB RAM) for all of about two days -- the amount of time it took me to realize that it was more of a resource drain than Adobe Photoshop.

    --
    blog |
  96. Bye Arlo, don't let the door.... by theolein · · Score: 1

    hit you in the ass on the way out, and I wish you lots of success competing with the dozens of well established Windows GUi enhancement applications such as Stardock, Window Blinds etc etc etc, not to mention Active Desktop.

    You may be bitter that Apple is not kissing your ass and buying your memory hungry resource intensive application instead of using it's own small footprint application that works as well as Expose, but you definitely will be extra bitter when you discover that the competition in the Windows software world is much larger than it will be even under OSX Tiger.

    Bad attitudes never produced good sales, Arlo, only good software does that. Well, that and a tiny bit of innovation.

  97. Wonder if it will be as bloated as the Mac version by toph42 · · Score: 1

    I ran it for a few months, but Konfabulator ate so much of my system resources (it was an absolute hog) that I finally had to uninstall it. I'm looking forward to Apple's Dashboard, since it looks to have a much better engine design.

  98. Competing products predate Konfabulator. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These Konfabulator bells and whistles already existed as LiteStep wharfs and modules, as well as Geoshell plug-ins. I don't know why these gadgets are now catching on with the rest of the computing world. What next, Window skinning, a la StarDock?

    arkStep has had scriptable mini-applets already. Specifically inspired by Konfabulator, Geoshell's current main developer has created Kapsules as well. Konfabulator's author will be facing much more competitors on the Windows platform.

  99. Re:DesktopX - first on IBM OS/2 attn: bud tribble! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    {login failed ... this is zahadum}

    as anyone who is serious about history of UI widgets knows, STARDOCK originated the first commercially useful desktop manager more than a decade ago ... not on windoze, but on OS/2 Warp (RIP) ... ... but when OS/2 (and taligent) was sabotaged internally at IBM by a microsoft collaborator (named Thompson) - which resulted in the slow death of a beautiful creature - the guys at Stardock had no choice but to try and carve out a little niche by porting to it windoze, where it is called (i guess) desktopx.

    Stardock leveraged two things which made it a charm:

    * the wonderfully intuitive and powerful WorkPlaceShell (which was based on IBM's maginificent SOM - System Object Model, which itself was a _better_ knock-off of ObjectiveC)

    * OREXX, a _real_ object-oriented scripting language (created as a companion for OpenDoc) -- before Ruby or Python or Perl6 were even conceived! ... which could allow the user to create and manipulate the OO GUI (wps) which acted as a wrapper for the underlying legacy, procedural OS (just as ActiveX/COM was a clumbsy wrapper for win32).

    This achievement was more tna decade ago! And it was ported to windoze - but with little or no impact on the fundemental environment in which desktop 'applets' were scripted despite the inherent power of re-implementing the the OS/2 example! ... why? (instructive for konfabulator on the mac) .... because the desktop widgets existed in a vacuum, basically isolated to the desktop, not inherently networked applications ... of course, that 'craze', er, void, would soon be putatively filled by java/baens (NOT!) ... while there is no doubt that the virtues of modular design is ALWAYS to be gratefully received (classes, then components, frameworks and patterns; now aspect-oriented & generative programming), simply having incrementally better engineering methodologies/tools will not move big platforms let alone small ISV's - those wars have all been fought, and lost. What changes EVERYTHING is an environment which not just integrates the whole food-chain, nor just abstracts it nicely ... it is a deeper issue (for both Apple to fail at and konfabulator to succeed at ... more on that below ;-)

    True, what StarDock lacked then/now, of course, was the facilities of the mac that make Dashboard a true light-weight but intergrated system-level runtime environment for script-based widgets.

    Konfabulator has some but not all of these things; porting it to windoze will be nothing more than a band-aid for a bad UI ... so, yeah, there is a small market for that (ie windoze users who want a premium/quality UI) ... but it will not be earth-shattering (a ground-breaker, like p2p etc).

    what is a shame is that the suggestion of losing konfabulator as a mac shop, by over-looking the opportunity of one product life-cycle to jump-start a new innovative product for Tiger -- which would have been very easy if the originator had wanted to move onto to something REALLY important -- such as advanced user-friendly semantics/ontology tools for KIF & RDF, SCORM & LOM which is where the action is for the REALLY ADVANCED nexgen runtime environments for user-defined content models ! ... like:

    * <http://virtual.cvut.cz/kifb/en/>
    * <http://www.ontologyportal.org/>
    * <http://cvs.sourceforge.net/viewcvs.py/*checkout*/ sigmakee/sigma/suo-kif.pdf?rev=1.4>
    * <http://suo.ieee.org/>
    * <http://ontology.teknowledge.com/Phytila/Phytila-S UMO.html>

    * <http://www.lsal.cmu.edu/lsal/resources/links/>
    * <http://www.ecc.org.sg/cocoon/ecc/website/events/s corm.events>
    * <http://www.cetis.ac.uk/content2/20031119002908&

  100. Re:History Question by momus_radar · · Score: 1

    Close, but no. Aaron was written by Greg Landweber. Greg and Arlo worked together to make Kaliedoscope.

  101. Apple crowd happy to piss on Arlo/Konfab by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    From parading the old Apple Desk Accessories junk (a calculator? whoo-ee! case closed!) to concluding robotically that the Mother Ship must be right, the modded-up posters here can't spring to Apple's defense fast or furiously enough. Screw the dev; who does the little guy think he is, anyway?

    I would point out that the usual Apple myth of David v. Goliath is looking shabbier than ever, along with any notion of iconoclasm in all these earnest defenses of corporate arrogance; but I don't wish to interrupt the pleasant ass-buttering. Please carry on.

  102. Die-hard Mac ppl huh? by Chiisu · · Score: 1

    'We're all diehard Macintosh developers here, but we recognize that Windows is the dominant platform,' Rose said in a statement.

    What a fucking hypocrite

  103. Re:History Question by Moofie · · Score: 1

    That's right. I now remember the name. Thank you for setting me straight!

    Kaleidoscope kicked ass.

    --
    Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  104. This is stupid, Stardock did this years ago.. by TedSmith99 · · Score: 1
    Whats this Arlo Rose trying to prove? Stardock released DesktopX years ago, its better, it has more widgets, and its easier to work with and has more options. So this guy comes out and thinks this is something new and exciting? Give me a break. I find it even more funny its in JAVA.. LOL!

    Why the heck is this crap getting publicity? In the Windows market, its been done before, and done better. Who cares about this thing!

    Try Stardocks DesktopX for the real thing..

  105. Diehard? by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1

    To me, "diehard" doesn't mean running off because you're unhappy.

  106. He should sue Apple first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can't be bothered to read all the waffle, but Apple stole Konfabulator from this guy and just turned their back and laughed at him. It is a disgrace and is in line with Apple's current thinking all round and that the fact that Jobs has slashed all HU R&D to the point that Apple are no longer in a position in innovate new concepts in user interface design that they once were. All they do is grab a load of open source stuff and rename it as their own, or worse just outright steal someone else's concept. Again I'm sure this point has been brought up already in this (I'm too lazy too read it all) but what if Apple seek yet another design patent on Dashboard/Widgets ?

    Apple overstepped the mark this time so I think he should sue and yes indeed he should move his product to Windows too where it can enjoy more exposure.

  107. Seriously by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

    I just took a quick tour of the web site and I can't find out just what the fuck is konfabulator. Can someone tell me?

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  108. Yeah, defend Apple. What about TheHotFolder?! by MrMeCee · · Score: 1
    Since MacOS9, the Finder has had integrated disk burning. Put in a blank cd, burn files.

    The implementation has sucked for 5 years.

    18 months ago (EIGHTEEN) a shareware app was introduced that addressed the weaknesses of Apple's scheme (slooow process, tied up optical drive, wastes disk space) called TheHotFolder that introduced the concept of a monitored Finder "Smart" folder that was user assigned, to drop stuff into for burning later. Capacity was monitored dynamically, the user could "upgrade" their CD sized HotFolder to a DVDR capacity if the machine had one.

    Once the user was satisfied, the could burn their HotFolder, etc.

    Earlier this year, that app was updated to integrate even more into the Finder by the developer, and received a Mac Gems rating by MacWorld.

    Apple appears to be adding this feature to MacOS X 10.4.

    Finder burning worked *nothing* like this...not even close.

    Someone sits down, figures out what sucks about it, writes a solution, and Apple nicely implements it.

    APPLE RAWKS!

  109. Konfabulator would have been a LOT better if... by GrahamCox · · Score: 1

    ...it wasn't so damn buggy. For the two or three weeks I had it installed, it was mostly locked up or crashed. After a while I realised I simply didn't need a bunch of buggy clocks so I trashed it. Had it been more reliable (and, to be blunt., more useful) it might have stayed around and I might have cared a lot more about the Dashboard/Konfabulator bun fight.

  110. Hard to be a small innovative guy these days by HuguesT · · Score: 1

    Personnally I think Konfabulator is a bit of nickel-and-dime-ware that eats up your resources, but there is a place for eye candy in the world.

    The choices for small innovative independent developers are not great these days. You can either wait for your OS distributor to steal your idea if you are ever successful, or you can work on Free software and hope someone sponsors you. Anything in between looks a bit like survival economics.