Contributor
Affiliated with Unspecified
I've provided bug-fixes and enhancements, including a "large HUD radar" and a sight-along-weapon targetting patch. Where the weapon might end up, a targetting line is drawn.
There are no commits available to display.
Analyzed
about 2 months
ago.
based on code collected
3 months
ago.
Contributor
Affiliated with Unspecified
I've contributed numerous honest bug-reports and also assisted, very indirectly, with the development of debian-installer (I helped out on hands-free debian).
There are no commits available to display.
Analyzed
27 days
ago.
based on code collected
over 7 years
ago.
Contributor
Affiliated with Unspecified
I worked on the Xanadux codebase - Intel PXA 25x and 27x HTC (High Tech Corporation) smartphones - the Himalaya, Wallaby, Universal, the iPAQ hw6915
... [More] and a couple of others.
I maintained the reverse-engineering pages and info that helped subsequent developers to contribute to the project.
I provided several device-drivers and also helped with joint debugging efforts. It was great fun.
[Less]
There are no commits available to display.
Analyzed
about 2 months
ago.
based on code collected
over 8 years
ago.
Contributor
I've provided bug-fixes and contributions to the Linux 2.6 Kernel, mostly in the form of ARM-embedded / handheld drivers and ports. Devices include
... [More] the SkyMinder, the HTC phones Himalaya, Blueangel, Universal, Sable and the HP/iPAQ hw6915.
The primary motivation was to get an entirely-community-owned smartphone platform, a goal which hasn't entirely been obseleted by the (current) Neo Freerunner, yet, because it is only a 2G (GSM/GPRS) platform.
Also, I've helped out with SE/Linux. [Less]
There are no commits available to display.
Analyzed
about 2 months
ago.
based on code collected
3 months
ago.
Researcher
I did three sets of reverse-engineering, which provided the basis and paved the way for openchange to exist. The first was in 2000, which used
... [More] FreeDCE and broke the initial MAPI layer. The last significant effort was in February 2005:
http://oser.cvs.sourceforge.net/viewvc/oser/exchange5.5/exploration/
This work provided the OpenChange team with the break that they needed. [Less]
There are no commits available to display.
Analyzed
about 2 months
ago.
based on code collected
3 months
ago.
Contributor
I've provided bug-reports and contributions to the development of Python, including a base class division for SocketServer and a base class for
... [More] TelnetLib (which also provides an "expect" library, similar to the unix expect command).
[Less]
There are no commits available to display.
Analyzed
about 2 months
ago.
based on code collected
4 months
ago.
Contributor
Affiliated with Unspecified
I provided several enhancements to Superkaramba, including the means to read the KDE Menu, so that people no longer have to write daft text user-menu
... [More] files, you can get the complete user-desktop menu tree, and so users can edit that with KMenuEdit.
I also created a patch to read the URL hierarchy, so that SK themes can browse the filesystem, system:/, media:/ etc. etc. the patch is pending as it was believed at the time that Plasma would be hunky-dory, and replace superkaramba.
[Less]
There are no commits available to display.
Analyzed
about 2 months
ago.
based on code collected
3 months
ago.
Developer
I've provided the Glib / GObject bindings to Webkit's DOM model, which opens up Webkit in highly strategic and far-reaching ways. With the DOM model
... [More] bindings, programming languages other than Javascript can now be used to manipulate and control on-screen content. Effectively, Webkit becomes an extremely powerful widget set canvas. Python bindings are what is presently provided (through pywebkitgtk).
[Less]
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