Collabora joins GMAE Initiative

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Chris Measures writes “Collabora accelerates mobile Linux adoption through new industry programme
Joins GNOME Mobile and Embedded Initiative (GMAE) as founding participant

Cambridge, UK and Embedded Linux Conference, Santa Clara, USA, 20 April 2007: Open source development experts Collabora (www.collabora.co.uk) today announced that it has joined the newly formed GNOME Mobile and Embedded Initiative (GMAE) as a founding participant. GMAE aims to apply the technology, philosophy and experience of the open source desktop GNOME project to the world of mobile, handheld and embedded devices.

Collabora’s Telepathy (http://telepathy.freedesktop.org/) real time communication project is included in the GMAE Platform which includes proven, best of breed components ready for shipping on production devices. Already used in the Nokia N800 Internet Tablet OS 2007 Edition, Telepathy provides a unified framework for all forms of real time conversations, including instant messaging, IRC, voice calls and video calls. It incorporates Farsight, Collabora’s media streaming library.

“The embedded and mobile markets are adopting open source in general and GNOME in particular at an ever-increasing rate,” commented Philippe Kalaf, director, Collabora. “By joining forces through the GMAE initiative, knowledge and applications can be easily pooled to benefit the entire community. We predict this will drive forward the open source movement in these areas at even faster pace.”

Used by millions around the world GNOME is a free-software project whose goal is to develop a complete and easy to use desktop for Linux and UNIX-based operating systems. It also includes a complete development environment to create new applications.

Launched at the CELF Embedded Linux Conference 2007 in Santa Clara (http://www.celinux.org/elc2007/), GMAE aims to pool the growing knowledge and experience of those using the GNOME platform in the mobile and embedded sector to drive market adoption. Other organisations to sign up alongside Collabora as founder members include Nokia, Wolfson Microelectronics, Intel, ACCESS (formerly PalmSource) and OLPC.

“Collabora is part of a thriving ecosystem of expert consultancies supporting the GNOME Mobile and Embedded Initiative,“ commented Jeff Waugh, founder of GMAE and director of the GNOME Foundation. “The Telepathy framework delivers vital functionality for real time communications, backed up by the knowledge and understanding Collabora has developed by working with industry leaders such as Nokia.”

As part of its ongoing commitment to GMAE and the GNOME platform, Collabora has participated in development of Telepathy support for the Gossip GNOME IM client. The recent 0.23 release included this work and is able to use Telepathy to connect to different protocols, and development is ongoing to make use of Telepathy’s voice and video call features. Robert McQueen of Collabora will be giving a presentation at CELF on Telepathy and GMAE.

Telepathy works by putting in place a framework that cuts development and integration efforts by separating protocol code backends from the user interfaces that link to them. By moving away from the monolithic client it removes duplication issues and creates a framework that allows multiple clients to share the same connections to carry out different tasks. It creates a standard set of D-Bus interfaces, abstracting common messaging, presence and multimedia services so developers don’t need to continually re-invent the wheel.

“Telepathy extends the range and reach of Gossip to deliver desktop integration, multiple protocol support and voice and video calling in a simple, easy to use way,” commented Martyn Russell, lead developer, Gossip. ”Working together will enable us to bring new functionality to Gossip that benefits the whole GNOME community.”

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About Collabora
Collabora Ltd. is a Cambridge, UK based company specialising in open source development. With expertise in both real-time communications and open-source technologies including XMPP, SIP, RTP, D-Bus, GStreamer and Gtk+, it specialises in bringing companies and the open source software community together. Collabora provides clients, including Nokia and OLPC, with the knowledge, experience and infrastructure to meet their targets whilst allowing them to be an integral part of the open source community. Collabora has created a network of open source engineers from Europe and North America, and continues to expand this web further to include talented developers from around the world. More information is available at www.collabora.co.uk.

About GNOME
GNOME is a free-software project whose goal is to develop a complete, and easy to use desktop for Linux and UNIX-based operating systems. GNOME also includes a complete development environment to create new applications. It is released two times a year on a regular schedule.

The GNOME desktop is used by millions of people around the world. GNOME is a standard part of all leading Linux and Unix distributions worldwide, including popular community distributions like Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora Core, and SUSE. It is also the default desktop on major enterprise Linux distributions like Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Novell’s SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop, and Sun Java Desktop System.

GNOME is also the desktop of choice for some of the world’s biggest Linux desktop deployments, including large government deployments in Extremadura, Spain, and Sao Paulo, Brazil. GNOME’s technology is used by major Linux ISVs such as Firefox, the Eclipse Project, Real Networks, and VMWare. Additionally, GNOME is increasingly being used by mobile device companies such as Nokia and Palm.
More than 500 software developers from every continent, including more than 100 paid developers, contribute their time and effort to the project. Sponsors include industry leaders like Fluendo, HP, IBM, Novell, Red Hat, and Sun. GNOME is supported on a variety of platforms, including GNU/Linux (more commonly referred to as Linux), Solaris Operating Environment, HP-UX, Unix, BSD and Apple’s Darwin. More information on GNOME can be found at www.gnome.org.”