By
Stephen Shankland
Wednesday, April 05 2006 09:45 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39348262,00.htm
BOSTON--Open Source Development Labs is previewing work that attempts to
make life easier for software companies by bridging GNOME and KDE, the two
competing graphical interfaces most widely used with Linux.
The effort, called Portland Project, began showing its first software tools on Tuesday in conjunction with this week's LinuxWorld Conference & Expo here. Using them, a software company can write a
single software package that works using either of the prevailing graphical
interfaces.
OSDL and a cooperating group called Freedesktop.org, which is already working on unifying interface issues, plan to release a beta version of the software in May and
version 1.0 in June. Ultimately, advocates hope that it will be part of a larger but separate effort called Linux Standard Base, which is
designed to make the operating system easier for software companies to use.
Portland Project began as a meeting among developers at OSDL in Portland, Ore., in December, organizers said. KDE and the GNOME Foundation both endorsed the project.
Unlike Windows and Mac OS X, Linux has two major sets of graphical
interfaces. This presents people with different items, such as control panels;
complicates cut-and-paste operations; and requires programmers to be aware of
what underpinnings they're using for elements such as dialogue boxes or
pull-down menus.
It's common for software packages with both interfaces to be installed on
Linux machines, enabling programs created for either to run smoothly, but that
circumstance isn't guaranteed.
Portland Project is working on two ways to gloss over the differences, a set
of command-line tools and an application programming interface called DAPI.
OSDL, a nonprofit consortium founded in 2000 by computing-industry heavyweights and employing
Linux leader Linus Torvalds, began working on desktop Linux issues in 2003.
"Portland is promising because the historical lack of uniformity across KDE
and GNOME has made it difficult for ISVs to build a single application that
integrates well in both environments," Linux Standard Base chairman Ian Murdock said
in an interview. But, he added, the Portland Project is just one step of many
that are needed.
The Linux Standard Base plans to add the software libraries of KDE and GNOME,
called Qt and Gtk, respectively, to version 3.1 of its standard. That version is
scheduled to debut in early May, while version 3.2 due in early 2007 will
incorporate the Portland Project's work, Murdock said.