Daily Archives: 22.09.2014

Bold Machines: MakerBot Founder Bets Big on 3D Printing’s Next Wave

By Darren Orf

Bold Machines: MakerBot Founder Bets Big on 3D Printing's Next Wave

When Bre Pettis, the co-founder of MakerBot, began his company in 2009, the mission was clear: make 3D printing accessible. Five years later, the company has sold tens of thousands of printers and …

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Source:: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/aNWhVnApT9g/bold-machines-makerbot-founder-bets-big-on-3d-printing-1637776405

      

Hulu Is Producing a Stephen King/J.J. Abrams Miniseries About JFK

By Alissa Walker

Hulu Is Producing a Stephen King/J.J. Abrams Miniseries About JFK

Creators of creep Stephen King and J.J. Abrams were destined to pair up at some point, and now Hulu is going to be one to bring them together. The site scored a huge coup in booking the duo for a new miniseries about the John F. Kennedy assassination, Hulu’s first big original content win.

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Source:: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/VvsJlTz7n0c/hulu-is-producing-a-stephen-king-j-j-abrams-miniseries-1637755015

      

8 Videos of New iPhones Getting Dropped, Soaked, and Torture Tested

By Kelsey Campbell-Dollaghan

You knew it was coming. Videos of people torturing the newest rash of iPhones are starting to emerge online, including one by SquareTrade, which shows the new iPhones being tortured in every way imaginable. So how did Apple’s latest crop hold up? Surprisingly well, with a few caveats.

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Source:: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/qmPBZW4bteM/8-videos-of-new-iphones-getting-dropped-soaked-and-to-1637709670

      

Qt Fix and Polish Week

By Frederik Gladhorn

Cake with Qt logo and bug on the icing

Last week we took a fresh look at bugs, examples and tests. Now the “Qt Fix and Polish Week” is over and it’s time to summarize. Most of the people working on Qt inside Digia participated, but it was especially great to have many people join us on #qt-bugs and contribute. On Monday morning we had a quick sync round to split into teams. Each team had a defined goal and much work got done.

Bugs
In the bug triaging and fixing track we got our hands dirty to fix issues in all areas. For some of us inside Digia this also meant getting to know parts of Qt that we weren’t as familiar with and a great opportunity to exchange knowledge while working in a different setup. This is something we certainly will repeat – do an effort to work across teams to be even more efficient in bug triaging and fixing and getting an overview of the situation for Qt 5.4. We closed many bugs, and hopefully some of you out there saw your own reported bugs get fixed.

Examples
Qt comes with a lot of examples. We continued the polishing effort of them that we already had started on some time back, and focused on a few of them to have them shine on all platforms and make sure they give a good first impression, for example when running Qt Creator for the first time. There was a huge list of suggestions that got done, from improving the color scheme to making things work on Android and iOS devices. The task is overall so big that it is still ongoing, but last week was a great start getting people involved in the work.

Auto tests and QA
The original focus of the test fixing team was the reliability of the continuous integration (CI) system. While the system helps us deliver a well tested and stable Qt by make sure the huge amount of tests run without failure for every change that goes into Qt, a few of the tests sometimes result in that the CI doesn’t run as smoothly as we’d like it to. A lot of discussions took place on how we can improve our tests and the CI in general. We had many small initiatives to fix different parts, and to stabilize, fix and re-enable tests. The results are now becoming visible as the fixes make it through the CI.

Thanks
Feedback …read more

Source:: http://blog.qt.digia.com/blog/2014/09/22/qt-fix-and-polish-week/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=qt-fix-and-polish-week

      

Qt Fix and Polish Week

By Frederik Gladhorn

Cake with Qt logo and bug on the icing

Last week we took a fresh look at bugs, examples and tests. Now the “Qt Fix and Polish Week” is over and it’s time to summarize. Most of the people working on Qt inside Digia participated, but it was especially great to have many people join us on #qt-bugs and contribute. On Monday morning we had a quick sync round to split into teams. Each team had a defined goal and much work got done.

Bugs
In the bug triaging and fixing track we got our hands dirty to fix issues in all areas. For some of us inside Digia this also meant getting to know parts of Qt that we weren’t as familiar with and a great opportunity to exchange knowledge while working in a different setup. This is something we certainly will repeat – do an effort to work across teams to be even more efficient in bug triaging and fixing and getting an overview of the situation for Qt 5.4. We closed many bugs, and hopefully some of you out there saw your own reported bugs get fixed.

Examples
Qt comes with a lot of examples. We continued the polishing effort of them that we already had started on some time back, and focused on a few of them to have them shine on all platforms and make sure they give a good first impression, for example when running Qt Creator for the first time. There was a huge list of suggestions that got done, from improving the color scheme to making things work on Android and iOS devices. The task is overall so big that it is still ongoing, but last week was a great start getting people involved in the work.

Auto tests and QA
The original focus of the test fixing team was the reliability of the continuous integration (CI) system. While the system helps us deliver a well tested and stable Qt by make sure the huge amount of tests run without failure for every change that goes into Qt, a few of the tests sometimes result in that the CI doesn’t run as smoothly as we’d like it to. A lot of discussions took place on how we can improve our tests and the CI in general. We had many small initiatives to fix different parts, and to stabilize, fix and re-enable tests. The results are now becoming visible as the fixes make it through the CI.

Thanks
Feedback …read more

Source:: http://blog.qt.digia.com/blog/2014/09/22/qt-fix-and-polish-week/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=qt-fix-and-polish-week

      

Qt Fix and Polish Week

By Frederik Gladhorn

Cake with Qt logo and bug on the icing

Last week we took a fresh look at bugs, examples and tests. Now the “Qt Fix and Polish Week” is over and it’s time to summarize. Most of the people working on Qt inside Digia participated, but it was especially great to have many people join us on #qt-bugs and contribute. On Monday morning we had a quick sync round to split into teams. Each team had a defined goal and much work got done.

Bugs
In the bug triaging and fixing track we got our hands dirty to fix issues in all areas. For some of us inside Digia this also meant getting to know parts of Qt that we weren’t as familiar with and a great opportunity to exchange knowledge while working in a different setup. This is something we certainly will repeat – do an effort to work across teams to be even more efficient in bug triaging and fixing and getting an overview of the situation for Qt 5.4. We closed many bugs, and hopefully some of you out there saw your own reported bugs get fixed.

Examples
Qt comes with a lot of examples. We continued the polishing effort of them that we already had started on some time back, and focused on a few of them to have them shine on all platforms and make sure they give a good first impression, for example when running Qt Creator for the first time. There was a huge list of suggestions that got done, from improving the color scheme to making things work on Android and iOS devices. The task is overall so big that it is still ongoing, but last week was a great start getting people involved in the work.

Auto tests and QA
The original focus of the test fixing team was the reliability of the continuous integration (CI) system. While the system helps us deliver a well tested and stable Qt by make sure the huge amount of tests run without failure for every change that goes into Qt, a few of the tests sometimes result in that the CI doesn’t run as smoothly as we’d like it to. A lot of discussions took place on how we can improve our tests and the CI in general. We had many small initiatives to fix different parts, and to stabilize, fix and re-enable tests. The results are now becoming visible as the fixes make it through the CI.

Thanks
Feedback …read more

Source:: http://blog.qt.digia.com/blog/2014/09/22/qt-fix-and-polish-week/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=qt-fix-and-polish-week