2009/7/13 Adam Williamson <awilliam@xxxxxxxxxx>: > On Sun, 2009-07-05 at 20:15 -0600, Nathanael Noblet wrote: > >> Apple's Calendar Server. It runs using python 2.5 or greater (I've >> installed it on a F11 machine and it work well). I've started looking >> at some of its dependancies. 90% of them are in fedora already, and of >> the ones in F11, only one if I remember correctly isn't at the version >> it requires). It seems like a great addition to Fedora if you ask me. >> So basically it would require two new packages, and an update to one >> other package (libevent) which is a minor version bump it seems if at >> all needed. > > The Infrastructure group has a rather ongoing project to try and find a > really good calendar server system (and then, obviously, package it) to > be used as the official Fedora calendaring system (then we could > schedule events and all that good stuff in an official Fedora server, > and people could access them via CalDAV or web, and all would be roses). > It's proved a bit tricky, though, to find a really perfect option. See > https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Infrastructure/Test/Calendering_Solution > for most of the details on this project. At present, we seem to be > looking at one called Calagator: http://calagator.org/ . > >> PS3MediaServer. A Java program to talk to a PS3 with DLNA. I'm >> guessing this one would have problems because it requires ffmpeg or >> mplayer/mencoder... Plus as a java program its probably a bit more >> complex to create a proper spec file for. I've made the other kind >> often enough, but java ones not so much... > > There's a sort of 'agreed-upon-right-way-of-doing-this' candidate for > this particular need, which is a nice modern GTK+ app and based on > gstreamer...but I can't quite pull the name out of long-term storage at > present. Someone will probably know what I mean, though. The one most > people use (as the one I'm talking about is still a bit alpha) is > mediatomb, which is also in Fedora already. Unless this provides > something significant the other options don't, it may not be the best > place to start, since it looks a bit complex. ps3mediaservers biggest improvement/enhancement is the ability to transcode video files on the fly. > -- > Adam Williamson > Fedora QA Community Monkey > IRC: adamw | Fedora Talk: adamwill AT fedoraproject DOT org > http://www.happyassassin.net > > -- > fedora-devel-list mailing list > fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list > -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list