Almost astoundingly, my flat mate and I started writing one of these yesturday. At the moment we have got no further than a simple vCal parser, but we hope to make a fully open source (GPL) calender server which will (eventually) be a complete exchange server replacement. Its called "The Scene" with the vCal part being called schedule-.
Its going to take us ages but its coming. It should be on sourceforge in the next couple of weeks.
Many people are using ogg for streaming already. IC Radio, Raw and several other UK Student Radio Stations are using it. The BBC were also using it for a while, but I think it vanished:(
Mozilla, just like IE, has been a hack/botch fix of older versions to support new standards. What I'd love to see is a lightweight browser, that _only_ does webbrowsing. It doesn't have its own mailer, or nntp client, or even its own GUI library.
More than that, it should be written from the ground up bearing the standards in mind. It should have seperate parser, dom and renderer modules to make io plugins easy etc...
Cheetah (cheetah.sourceforge.net) started well, but the mailing list looks dead now, and they may well have given up. Does anyone else agree, and if so know where we might find one?
The BBC has the story too
Almost astoundingly, my flat mate and I started writing one of these yesturday. At the moment we have got no further than a simple vCal parser, but we hope to make a fully open source (GPL) calender server which will (eventually) be a complete exchange server replacement. Its called "The Scene" with the vCal part being called schedule-.
Its going to take us ages but its coming. It should be on sourceforge in the next couple of weeks.
Many people are using ogg for streaming already. IC Radio, Raw and several other UK Student Radio Stations are using it. The BBC were also using it for a while, but I think it vanished :(
Mozilla, just like IE, has been a hack/botch fix of older versions to support new standards. What I'd love to see is a lightweight browser, that _only_ does webbrowsing. It doesn't have its own mailer, or nntp client, or even its own GUI library.
More than that, it should be written from the ground up bearing the standards in mind. It should have seperate parser, dom and renderer modules to make io plugins easy etc...
Cheetah (cheetah.sourceforge.net) started well, but the mailing list looks dead now, and they may well have given up. Does anyone else agree, and if so know where we might find one?
I share a birthday with the linux kernel! I'm proud. :)