Samsung Sponsors the Development of Enlightenment
An anonymous reader writes "The Enlightenment window manager project has shared on its website that it now has the backing of a major (top-five) electronics manufacturer that will be actively sponsoring the project and using Enlightenment on its devices. No manufacturer was named, but Phoronix has dug deeper and found out that Samsung is sponsoring Enlightenment. Phoronix provides independent confirmation along with citing a new Enlightenment program that Samsung sponsored and then released under the LGPL-3. They also have videos of some of the new work to this window manager that Samsung funded."
That's pretty ambitious. ;-)
So, a Buddhist walks up to a hot dog vendor, and says "make me one with everything". :-P
Cheers
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Samsung is awesome, so is enlightenment.
It's like Fluxbox in terms of resource use (and unfortunately on flashy little GUI indicators) but looks amazing!
Kudos on this! Let's get windows management handled! It's been so many years of updates on something that should have been handled by now!
Enlightment is BSD licensed. You can't just change it to LGPL-3.
Unfortunately it has a really weird name, but it seems to be a flash-like tool to make programming UI's with cool transitions and other effects quite easily. Getting a copy of the svn now to try it out, but the videos on youtube are showing the enlightenment libraries to be quite awesome.
Enlightenment already developed by Rousseau, Diderot, and Voltaire, among others.
This can only be considered a good thing - another well funded GUI to go against Gnome, KDE & XCFE. Myself I have been looking over OpenGEU for a while (even ran it for a week) and while I really like some of the features it's not ready for prime time. I partially blame the integration of GTK pieces into Enlightenment but I feel that is a necessity at this moment. If funding from Samsung can improve Enlightenment to where it has a stable, 100% native suite then only good things can happen.
I call it 'The Aristocrats'
I've been using it for months as my desktop at home and on my laptop. It is quite usable and I've had zero crashes for a while now. Rasterman has always had a focus on small-screen devices, so this development doesn't surprise me. But if you haven't checked it out in a while, you should.
Now maybe we'll see the final release of E17 before the 22nd century. Who knows, it may even come out before Duke Nukem Forever.
I used it back in the days of SuSE 6.3 and really liked it then. It had the most eye candy and "slickness" at the time (1999 or so), blowing other WMs and Win98 out the water, I mean who couldn't love the semi-transparent "eTerm" windows?
Other WMs have caught up now with the eye candy, but enlightenment is and was one of the few window managers that actually displayed innovation instead of simply tailing after windows and mac. It's nice to see it getting recognition.
The linked videos show that E17 has some nice rotations going on. Then they try to do some 3D effects and it's apparent that they're only doing affine transformations, so the perspective texture mapping is wrong on the 3D stuff. It feels so much like 1992. Didn't they learn anything from ID? There are even simpler ways to get the perspective right for large polys too.
X is an over-engineered monstrous relic from the mid-80's, and the window-managers on top of it are lipstick-on-a-pig kludges. Hopefully Google will present something to potentially replace it with when they announce their Chrome OS tomorrow.
"I bless every day that I continue to live, for every day is pure profit."
Enlightenment generally seems reckoned to be very nice technology. I've been repeatedly surprised to see Enlightenment popping up in commercial products here and there; Edje-based wallpapers can even be loaded in KDE now. Evidently it's a strong piece of work and it'll be really interesting to see where this sponsorship gets them. It certainly seems an enlightened approach.
I wish someone would do the same with Windowmaker and GNUstep, but I suspect the licensing has closed off that path.
Summary from TFA:
Samsung is sponsoring Enlightenment so that they can obviously deploy this lightweight and robust window manager on some of their mobile devices, but we do not yet have confirmation on what devices or when they may start surfacing... It sounds as though Samsung is still early on into their love affair with Enlightenment and that many more changes and work are still to come, which means that it may be some months before seeing any devices.
We also have been forwarded some YouTube videos of recent Enlightenment advancements (user-interface improvements) that have been made possible through this hardware company's sponsorship. The video demos are quite interesting and worth checking out.
Video here.
Why, for the love of God, Why ? What's in this for Samsung ? Are they going to run Enlightenment on their mobile phones ? Their TV's ? What ?
Chrome OS is based on technology with strong roots in the 70s, i.e. Unix and C. Moreover, the creators of Unix went on to create a new OS (Plan 9) to solve its problems and, recently, a new programming language (Go). Both Unix and C have been able to remain strong over time and add modern features whilst staying true to their roots and, broadly, retaining compatibility. This is particularly true for Unix, despite some questionable design decisions along the way.
The link you supplied is from the Unix-haters handbook, which basically argues that the entire Unix + X11 stack is a load of rubbish - I think that's a more consistent position than just wanting X replaced. To be honest I've never seen a strong explanation of why it's OK to keep developing Linux and BSD but that X should be ripped out and replaced, other than perhaps that X has languished due to lack of maintenance and management over a long period of time. But I think X.org has shown some reasonable signs of revival and more modern features.
Ironically, recent developments in X.org make replacement servers more viable than they have been before - lots of X.org infrastructure (kernel mode setting, GEM, plus others) have separated a load of the hardware support issues from the windowing system itself. Wayland seems to be the main example at the moment: https://groups.google.com/group/wayland-display-server/web/frequently-askeds-questions
It wants its anti-networked display server argument back..
Is Gitmo closed? How's that warrantless wiretapping thing going? Is the NSA still eavesdropping on your 1-900 calls? How's the stimulus package working out for you? What's that? China is making all of the wind turbines for T Boone Pickens' wind farm project? Stimulus money went to nonexistent congressional districts? How about lobbyists being banned from the White House, and from the administration altogether? How's that working out for you?
In fact, the old Gnome/Enlightnement desktop paradigm is what originally convinced me to try Linux back in 2000 after hearing a bunch of "linux doesn't even have a desktop!" talk by coworkers. I tried it out and eventually learned that I could run with just Enlightenment and did that and never looked back. I've run AfterStep, Windowmaker, Black/Fluxbox, and a number of other WM's, but will always manage to come back to Enlightenment.
These days, when I bring up new linux installs, the number one task on my list is to get Enlightenment DR16 up and running if it wasn't installed by default.
Fifty watts per channel, baby cakes.
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Comment removed based on user account deletion
During my time on Fedora 11 I fell out of love with Gnome and switched over to KDE. During my transitional phase I played a bit with E. It was the window manager during the redhat 5.x days when I first started with Linux, and I was nostalgic to see how E had changed.
I liked E's speedy response. It's a lightweight WM without much bloat. Very quick and responsive load times.
On the other hand it needs updating. There's no support for compositing, and GL is software rendered. No acceleration. I'm a Blenderhead so this was not good. It doesn't have a good file manager. I found myself using MC whenever I was in E. No easy menu editing.
I very much would like to see E take it's place again as a viable desktop option. It has so much going for it, be clearly developer resources haven't been available like KDE and Gnome.
You have Window managers and desktops and whatnot. X-windows, gnome, enlightenment, etc. From my reading it seems x-windows and enlightenment do overlapping things. There seems to be a lot of confusion as to what to use, there is no consistency to this area.
Samsung is awesome, so is enlightenment.
It's like Fluxbox in terms of resource use (and unfortunately on flashy little GUI indicators) but looks amazing!
Kudos on this! Let's get windows management handled! It's been so many years of updates on something that should have been handled by now!
I've been using Compiz on my desktop the last few months, and the jury is still out. On the netbook, I went all the way back to FVWM just for the speed. The crystal theme is not bad and even the basic FVWM can be pimped out, within limits. I used Enlightenment for years, so this is great news. It is time to take a look at it again.
Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
Been awhile since I peered at E. Guess I'll have to take a peek to see what craziness I can manage with it, this time, lol.
--Wrex
http://wrexallen.blogspot.com/
I'm the GP. That's a lot of layers to suck CPU cycles. Has anyone tried to come up with a "built for speed" implementation for minimal CPU use? For the record I'm currently a Windows user (because that's where the audio production apps are - of course OSX too), but I eventually see a Linux audio solution maybe 6 years from now. We all run our rigs in classic mode, etc. Us audio guys, we like to mess with sounds, not OSes. And we are similar to gamers in the fact that we need every CPU cycle available. Anything that reduces non-audio CPU use is welcome in our book. That's why I was wondering about the Linux GUI stuff.
You're a terrible /. poster. Why don't you just die?
I shudder to think how much uglier they could make Enlightenment after their recent work on Android: http://gizmodo.com/5406912/samsung-behold-ii-non+review-oh-god-the-ugly
Samsung does have a line of netbooks (mostly same spec as everyone else, but oooh! colors!) and presumably regular laptops, but I can't believe no one's pointed out on this thread that enlightenment is meant for mobile devices, and since Samsung currently has a meagre Android lineup, apparently replacing their Instinct line with the Moment, this sponsorship could finally lead them to market dominance in one area, when they have spread themselves thin trying to be an everything company. This is their one foothold on making a unique and great interactive experience.
Being an Android and Enlightenment fan (and current Instinct S30 owner), I will be following this closely -- and trying OpenGEU, since someone mentioned it earlier.
Emacs: for people who just never know when to
Must they be coded to be compatible with a specific winsys/manager/DE, or are they portable across all of the Linux GUI elements?
People who don't care about getting things right, accuse others who do, of nitpicking. He was right. You weren't.
Cheers
"Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat:
Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it."
-- Matthew 7:13,14
Enlightenment as a window manager, is similar to the Amiga, in the sense that it is yet another example of the road less travelled, and yet more proof of the truth that the mainstream choice is nearly always, also the very worst.
Graphically it is beautiful, and always has been. In terms of resource use, it is far more efficient than it has any logical right to be, given its' degree of aesthetic beauty.
It is a shining example of the timeless, divinely sanctioned, and tragically (but unsurprisingly) rarely followed UNIX design philosophy, and as proof of such, also naturally uses the BSD license.
There are some people, who I wish it was possible for us to render exempt from physical death; such is the extent to which we as a species need them. UNIX's initial authors are such men, and Raster is another. However passionately I may experience negative emotions towards some things, I experience equal passion of a positive form towards others.
Could Samsung be eyeing Enlightment as the (or one of the) UI frameworks in their 'bada' mobile OS?