The People Behind Quanta Plus 137
anonymous writes "In this fascinating interview, Eric Laffoon and Andras Mantia give us a glimpse into the world of the Quanta Plus project. Read on for everything from tantalising references to Kommander, billed by Eric to be part of the foundations for the next generation desktop and user experience, to details of future plans for Quanta VPL (Visual Page Layout)."
Next up: (Score:5, Funny)
Kondom - for KDE developer safesex
Kommode - for taking a KDE Krap
Re:Next up: (Score:2, Funny)
Not far from reality, see the about box of KTeaTime: [kde.org]
"KDE utility for making a fine cup of tea"
You forgot.. (Score:1)
Re:Next up: (Score:1)
Re:Next up: (Score:1)
Re:Next up: (Score:1)
Quanta? (Score:3, Informative)
There is only one Quanta [ultrasoul.com].
Re:Quanta? (Score:1)
Re:Quanta? (Score:2)
Ooooohhhhh!!!
I'm gonna make you eat them works punk!!!
Re:Quanta? (Score:2)
That should be "quantum" then.
Next generation in bad UI design maybe (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, good god, look [sourceforge.net] at the layout of the tabs in that dialog for Kommander. Most of the other shots don't get much better.
Is it too much to ask these guys to put down the source code for 5 minutes and skim a chapter or two in an HCI book?
Re:Next generation in bad UI design maybe (Score:2)
Go calculate [webcalc.net] something
no, no, it gets better (Score:5, Informative)
Re:no, no, it gets better (Score:2)
> Thats the beauty of Any Human Criation.
Except your spelling.
Re:Next generation in bad UI design maybe (Score:2)
Another reason why you shouldn't be allowed to do GUI with reading some good books on interfaces.
Man, tlka about amature.
Re:Next generation in bad UI design maybe (Score:1, Insightful)
I think a basic reading primer is needed for some before they review what they know absolutely nothing about and thus are not qualified to review.
Re:Next generation in bad UI design maybe (Score:3, Informative)
Misspelled name? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Misspelled name? (Score:1)
In the words of our friend Krusty the Klown: "Have a Merry Christmas...and a Krazy Kwanza"
My Views, (Score:5, Informative)
I use vim for all my work, be it writing c/java code, shell scripts, html/xml , emails . basically everything that requires using keyboard for extended amount of time.
Over the years i have tried various IDEs and WYSWYG editors and gave up on them after some time to fall back to my trusted VIM.
Most of them are too bloated and takes ages just to start up. Plus you need a special directory structure and so on so forth.
Quanta plus is very fast, the pre-view actually works , and very intutive piece of s/w.
Re:My Views, (Score:4, Informative)
Daniel
Re:My Views, (Score:2)
Eclipse may actually be better but I was overwhelmed and I run my resolution at 1024 x 768 which obstructs views. I was under the impression that version 2.1 came with autocompletion but I did not see it. Maybe I should upgrade my mon
Re:My Views, (Score:1)
Although most of my coding is in Java, I would be the last person to use a Java GUI tool. JFC/Swing are hopeless slow. AWT is not bad but slow yet compared to vim or even emacs.
Borland JB is a big mess of stuff that i don't need. I have coded in Java for more than 4 years now, and I don't need most of the features that JB offers.
All I need is
Re:My Views, (Score:1)
Plus vim doesn't have code completion/insight, doesn't compile shit as you type, etc. Rather than spending half my time alt-tabbing to compile, see a typo, go fix it, compile again, see another typo, go fix it, etc, it's really worth the spare cycles to just see the wrong shit underlined in red while you're typing.
And if you find
Re:My Views, (Score:1)
Swing is slow. 4 years ago. Swing today isn't bad at all, especially with JDK 1.4.1. I seriously wish the "java is slow" bigots would get over it and try a modern version with java with a modern application. JEdit perhaps?
And you're spot on about JBuilder. IT's fantastic for actually writing code. The only thing I don't like about it the fact that it wants to name everything for you (JMenuItem1, JPanel4). I'd like it much better if you could toggle settings to have it prompt you for the n
Re:My Views, (Score:2)
I prefer Vim myself. But I am not a java developer.
Eclipse is a complex tool and is the most advanced I have ever seen. Its the autocad of ide's. It has plugins for c++, UML and all sorts of
Re:My Views, (Score:2)
Re: Eclipse screenshots? (Score:2)
Re: Eclipse screenshots? (Score:2)
Daniel
Re:My Views, (Score:1, Flamebait)
WYSIWYG? (Score:1)
Quanta is not WYSIWYG my friend. I once wished it were, but then I discovered learning HTML is not that hard.
Re:My Views, (Score:1)
Its ok but.... (Score:2)
Re:Its ok but.... (Score:3, Funny)
Oh yes it is:
pvsavola@tienel:~$ ls -l `which quanta`
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 23 Oct 25 11:17
I think it makes it at least equal, neh?
Fascinating? Tantalising? (Score:2)
Re:Fascinating? Tantalising? (Score:3, Funny)
My thoughts exactly. "fascinating interview" , "tantalising references"
What suspense! What drama! Goodness gracious, I'm practically beside myself in anticipation of the goodies yet to come!
kde? (Score:2)
Re:kde? (Score:2)
Re:kde? (Score:1)
so, neutral in what sense then?
Re:kde? (Score:2)
Re:kde? (Score:2)
Re:kde? (Score:2)
At least the KDE core is usable for real work and development. The professional and modern looks are a bonus. I run KDE 3.1.1a on an ancient computer. You are really overblowing the large footprint, it works great!
Seconded. (Score:2)
Re:kde? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:kde? (Score:2)
Way to go! (Score:2)
The Quanta Plus page claims HTML validity and even sport a "Valid HTML" button, but the site doesn't actually validate [w3.org].
Their front page is generally pretty weak. I have no real idea what their software does. Is it a text editor? A web IDE? A WYSIWYG page-churner? All of the above? All I see is a verbose attempt at associating their project with PHP, Apache and Linux, and at saying their software is the best - but doesn't really say what it's best at or what it's better than. Even worse, looking at the link
Back to you! (Score:2)
Missing ALT tag? Oh, boohoo!
These are such nits you are picking. Minor bugs that can be fixed in a few seconds. Instead of sending a polite bug report, you decided to pull a tantrum on slashdot.
Good for you.
Re:Way to go! (Score:1)
Nice timing.. (Score:5, Informative)
End result? There's little doubt that it saved me time; probably 8 hours in total. Not bad. There were some annoyances as with all software of this type, and most of it can probably be chalked up to my inexperience with this software package; tags being auto-closed when I didn't want them to and vice-versa, strange text colouring, etc. Then there were some quirks like when some tags auto-closed they also moved the display up a couple of lines; so if I wanted to paste with my middle button right after having a tag auto-complete it would end up somewhere else. Stuff for me to R{more of}TFM and submit bug reports, but bottom-line is that I was quite pleased, it kept me organized and saved me some time. I'll certainly use this for future [applicable] projects and provide the community-feedback these guys deserve. Well done, check it if you haven't already!
Re:Nice timing.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Please do carefully think about the problems you had. Even if they were due to inexperience they may well provide you with an insight on how the interface could be imporved.
Self awareness and careful analysis will allow you to do useful research in the area of Human Computer Interaction without the need for any specialised knowledge or equipment (although reading up on the on Usability and HCI should help you distill the issues you are having and help you write clear and constructive criticism).
Good luck
Re:Kommander, the next generation user experience? (Score:2)
Good luck in taking on Dreamweaver. (Score:2)
Other than the usual BS about Gimp being a PS killer (utter nonsense) I think it's actually doable to eventually dethrone DW as king of webeditors. I see no way DW can go any further than now without getting hideously bloated. And if Macromedia doesn't manage to get into detailing DW and rid it of a
Only on Slashdot. . . (Score:5, Funny)
. .
-- "Naughty little whispers of Gideon." ."
-- "A playful spank of KwikDisk."
-- "A lingering yet mournful longing for the world that DCOP would bring, yet knowing it shall never be. .
---
Used to be Homesite, now Quanta... (Score:3, Interesting)
BTW, I also think KDE is a better Windows than Windows.
Re:Used to be Homesite, now Quanta... (Score:1)
Re:Used to be Homesite, now Quanta... (Score:2)
I too migrated from HomeSite to Quanta and have really liked the clean interface and the way it generally works. One of the things I like best is that it is pretty customizable, so I was able to set up some of the default keybindings to some of the ones I really used a lot in HomeSite and have become accustomed to. The customizability (is that a word?) of the application is a strong point.
After reading the article, I figured I'd try downloading the CVS version and see if I could compile it so I could giv
Re:Used to be Homesite, now Quanta... (Score:1)
Never mind. I killed the cache and it bombed out telling me that the KDE headers can't be located. Looks like something I'll work on tomorrow.
InterDev "Lite" (Score:1)
The only things blatantly missing from Quanta (from my perspective anyways) are the database tools that InterDev has. It's nice to be able to view table and field properties, edit data, test SQL state
The real killer app... (Score:5, Insightful)
There are tons of bloody component models, why can't one be agreed upon? Because they all seem to suck.
* KParts is not robust - its basically standard C++ linkage with a funner preprocessor. Also GPL bound. And I'm a GPL fan, but this is too restrictive.
* Bonobo is ridiculously overweight and doesn't seem even half sensible. The CORBA C binding? You have got to be kidding me. It is an absolute mess if you wanted to define a new interface and actually use it from a C program without wanting to gouge your eyes out with POAs and BOAs and excremental error checking. So you have to wrap it up in a GObject - ie you may as well forget defining an interface. And CORBA is fugly in any language.
* XPCOM - dunno, only used by mozilla atm... uses lots of ugly random numbers (UUIDs). Seems like a clone of MSCOM
* UNO - OpenOffices COM clone...
Either we pick one or really try to find an optimum. Hopefully ban the use of random numbers in source files (UUIDS), use domain strings instead.
Hopefully freedesktop.org or someone will try to standardise here - atm it is horrible.
You should be able to
* write a widget component and use it in a GTK, QT, Tk etc program.
* write a theme component and use it to control the look of any of these toolkits. - hopefully a better solution than duplicating or triplicating theme plugins.
* the whole ole shebang
* write non gui components and mix languages.
MS have had this working in a very ugly (on the source and implementation level) way for *ages*. Some of it is due to the level of control they exert, but we need to catch up.
This would be especially good because if we had a reasonable C mapping, people wouldn't be forced to use C to write infrastructure. Which isn't everybodys cup of tea.
None of this is new or clever, its just something that annoys me every now and then that no progress is being made.
Yeah yeah, I know, "show me the code" etc, etc.
Re:The real killer app... (Score:5, Interesting)
Then Microsoft published the
Look at http://www.go-mono.com/rationale.html for some of the early motivations for the project.
Today there are nice bridges for Perl and Python that allow them to consume objects from
Miguel.
Re:The real killer app... (Score:2)
Re:The real killer app... (Score:3, Insightful)
I've looked at mono and I use
Re:The real killer app... (Score:2)
While, unsurprisingly, many others of us simply see Dotnet as a rehash of Java.
The hard problems of interoperability are not addressed by either. For example, something as simple as pass-by-reference or pass-by-value should be dictated by configuration rather than hard-coded, yet practitioners seem to be under the impression that the solution lies in implementing 'value objects' rather than fixing the platform itself.
As long as te
Re:The real killer app... (Score:2)
Re:The real killer app... (Score:1, Informative)
looks like an interesting component model, and is based on C++ AND is BSD licensed. Llinux port is in progress and Mac port is coming - looks like the guy ordered a G4 just for this.
XParts too (Score:2)
One of my favorite apps. (Score:1)
Whoa... (Score:2)
I don't mean to be rude (or to sound like Simon Cowell!) but after the excellent web page designs we saw here [slashdot.org] and most especially here [homelesspixel.de], how could I take any tool seriously when created by people who clearly can't do good web design.
I personally would like to know what Radu used...;)
And for the record, I don't pretend to be a web designe
User Interface (Score:2)
First of all, let me say I think it's great that there are a lot of programmers out there (myself included) who take the time to write free software.
What bothers me is the user interface design. While I understand there have been plenty of UI design tools out on the market that have this same design, Visual Basic is of course the one that first comes to my mind. Look at the interface, it looks like a clone of VB.
When will the programmers of the world wake up and realize that Microsoft's user interfaces
Re:User Interface (Score:2)
HTML Editor for win32? (Score:2)
This may be a little off topic, but I thought it'd be a good time to ask: Can anyone recommend a good free/Free editor for HTML? I'm not looking for a WYSIWYG editor -- just something that allows me to hand-code more easily (with syntax highlighting and the like).
My current favorite [handcoding.com] is probably Crimson Editor [crimsoneditor.com]. Its big features include syntax highlighting (of course), a tabbed interface, and change detection (it notifies the user if someone else has changed the file on-disk).
Any others I should look into
Re:HTML Editor for win32? (Score:1)
I also use GVim when I want something quick and lightweight but I keep forgetting about the different key bindings when I use it so I tend to not use it for any extended editing as I usually end up stuffing things up by trying to copy or paste.
J
Re:HTML Editor for win32? (Score:1)
VPL? (Score:1)
If you want to support those guys, (Score:1)
Kitty Hooch is Eric's business. He pays Andras to work on Quanta. Thats not much dough a month (Andras lives in Romania of all places) but its all out of his own pocket.
And for what its worth, cats like his catnip a lot more than the store-bought one.
Re:What Quanta needs (Score:2)
Just find a web site that you like on the Internet and download its HTML.
You've got a billion choices.
--Richard
PS: Never used a template in my
life and I'm still alive. I also chew
my own food.