Podcasts about free pascal

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Best podcasts about free pascal

Latest podcast episodes about free pascal

Sustain Open Source Design
Episode 23: Heiko Tietze of the Document Foundation on Mentoring Designers

Sustain Open Source Design

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 34:49


Guest Heiko Tietze Panelists Richard Littauer | Eriol Fox | Django Skorupa Show Notes Hello and welcome to Sustain Open Source Design! The podcast where we talk about sustaining open source with design. Learn how we, as designers, interface with open source in a sustainable way, how we integrate into different communities, and how we as coders, work with other designers. We are very excited to have as our guest today, Heiko Tietze, who is a full-time UX Mentor at the Document Foundation. Today, Heiko fills us in on the Document Foundation, what his job involves as a UX Mentor, and the challenges in mentoring designers in open source. We also learn what building a team means to Heiko, how the teams integrate other user experience with people from different backgrounds, and how someone can contribute to open source besides translations. Go ahead and download this episode now to learn more! [00:02:57] Heiko tells us what the Document Foundation is and what he does there. [00:04:18] Since Heiko mentors UX people, he fills us in on much UX work there is to go around and how many UX people he mentors. [00:06:02] We learn about some unique challenges for designers and mentoring designers in open source. [00:09:51] Heiko talks about the backgrounds of the people that he mentors. [00:12:57] Eriol is curious to know what kind of expectations designers or people that contribute design to the projects have about the team and what does the team mean to him and the rest of the folks in the project. [00:17:05] Since LibreOffice has tons of contributors who contribute in other languages, Richard wonders how Heiko integrate different contributors from different languages. [00:19:02] We find out how you can contribute to the open source besides translations, if there's a way to improve UX besides internalization and localization, and how the teams integrate other user experience with people from different backgrounds coming. [00:22:56] We learn how conversations happen in the Document Foundation and the different tools that Heiko is working on. [00:29:46] Find out where you can follow Heiko on the internet and how to join the design team. Quotes [00:06:20] “Designer [as a term] is misunderstood as 'people who do the visual part.'” [00:23:30] “I'm not concerned with the one percent. The other percent is more important.” Spotlight [00:30:55] Django's spotlight is a project he's working on called The Vulnerability History Project. [00:31:52] Eriol's spotlights are Human Rights Centered Design and Open AAC Systems. [00:32:44] Richard's spotlight is David J. Peterson. [00:33:31] Heiko's spotlights are Free Pascal and Lazarus. Links Open Source Design Twitter (https://twitter.com/opensrcdesign) Open Source Design (https://opensourcedesign.net/) Sustain Design & UX working group (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/t/design-ux-working-group/348) SustainOSS Discourse (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/) Sustain Open Source Twitter (https://twitter.com/sustainoss?lang=en) Richard Littauer Twitter (https://twitter.com/richlitt?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Eriol Fox Twitter (https://twitter.com/EriolDoesDesign?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Django Skorupa Twitter (https://twitter.com/djangoskorupa) Heiko Tietze Twitter (https://twitter.com/heikotietze) Heiko Tietze LinkedIn (https://de.linkedin.com/in/heiko-tietze-4204aa30/en?trk=people-guest_people_search-card) LibreOffice Design Twitter (https://twitter.com/libodesign) Design and User Experience team (Document Foundation) (https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Design) Easyhack Archive (LibreOffice Design Team Blog) (https://design.blog.documentfoundation.org/category/easyhack/) Likert scale (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Likert_scale) Design Principles (Document Foundation) (https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Design/Principles) Human Rights Centered Design (https://hrcd.pubpub.org/) Open AAC Systems (https://www.openaac.org/aac.html) David J. Peterson (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_J._Peterson) Free Pascal (https://www.freepascal.org/) Lazarus (https://www.lazarus-ide.org/) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guest: Dr. Heiko Tietze.

All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows
2020-06-22 | Linux Headlines 169

All Jupiter Broadcasting Shows

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2020


Older Raspberry Pis receive a near-compatible Vulkan driver, Google's upcoming Nearby Sharing may include cross-platform functionality, Free Pascal adds more target architectures with its latest compiler release, and open source projects band together to lobby the US Congress.

google linux us congress vulkan jupiter broadcasting nearby sharing free pascal
Björeman // Melin
Avsnitt 106: Amiga as a service

Björeman // Melin

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2017 58:18


Som traditionen bjuder har pojkarna spelat in årets julavsnitt, det tredje i ordningen. Detta är ett actionpackat äventyr för hela familjen där lyssnarna bjuds på spänning, glädje och inspiration om hur deras liv kan bli ännu rikare, roligare och mer meningsfulla. Eller så handlar det om Star Wars, IP-telefoni, lite länktips, ytterligare funderingar runt Android, en “ny” jobbdator, BBS:er och Fidonet och något nytt som redaktionen är en aning skeptisk till: glöbbel. Tidigare julavsnitt 2016: Julafton på dödsstjärnan 2015: Saker min far lärt mig 01:48: Glöbbel - årets julfikatrend 04:40: App: the human story 08:25: The last jedi - spoilerfritt 11:29: Iphone och batteritid 14:07: Jocke har jobb-Mac igen 15:02: Lyssnarpost - bra Androidlurar? 20:29: Nätneutralitet - the BM story 25:28: Disney köper Fox 28:09: Fredriks bild 28:24: Filmtips: Baby driver 31:04: Poddtips: två avsnitt av Vector 34:11: Veckans URL:er 37:38: Jockes julafton har … eskalerat 39:44: BBS-nytt Länkar Länkar Webbplatsen Glöbbel Årets Blossa Frontdoor App: the human story Nätneutralitet Disney köper det mesta av Fox Baby driver - Fredriks filmtips The driver Vector - avsnitten om Marsedit och Drafts Marsedit Drafts wtfismyip.com Kodsnack om Swift Cenny fuckingblocksyntax.com 0fg.se Taylors & Jones TPCS Nikom Tosser Delta city SynergyClient - fjärrstyr en Amiga! Retrodatorer - håll utkik efter matnyttiga BBS-artiklar! Teletek Joaquim Homrighausen Binkp Binklyterm Binkd Turbo Pascal Free Pascal RTFM EMSI/IEMSI som det beskrevs i FSC-056 av Joaquim Homrighausen i maj 1991. Zmodem Hasselbacken Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-106-amiga-as-a-service.html.

Hanselminutes - Fresh Talk and Tech for Developers
Software Endurance with Ariya Hidayat

Hanselminutes - Fresh Talk and Tech for Developers

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2017 32:23


Scott has a wide-reaching conversation with Ariya Hidayat about how he - and software - endures. He started the popular PhantomJS project but also writes code in Free Pascal! Keeping positive, making small forward moves.

software endurance phantomjs free pascal
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Csound is back on the Mainframe after a 40 year absence

Podcast Bumper Music

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2012


Here's one that took a while to make. I was able to build Csound v5 under Linux on an IBM mainframe Integrated Facility for Linux (IFL), thanks to an IBM developer program. Csound is back on the mainframe after not seeing such an architecture for probably 40 years. It runs pretty fast, but that's not the reason to build it on the platform. I just wanted to understand the challenges of moving to the s390x architecture, since I sell mainframes for a living, and most of my customers have Linux today. Today's version of June Gloom was converted from my source code to Csound input on my PC under Free Pascal, shipped to the mainframe as drum12.csd, then processed by Csound on the mainframe to create a .wav file. I brought that back to my PC to create an MP3 file and posted here. Download or Play it here. Subscribe here:

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June Gloom #20 - processed by Linux

Podcast Bumper Music

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2012


Here's a version made on a Linux implementation on Amazon's Web Services. Now that my preprocessor has been ported to open source Free Pascal, it was a snap to compile it on an Ubuntu Linux instance. Csound only needed a simple install. It's my first try at Linux. Next stop: RedHat under z/VM on an IBM IFL at their developer sandbox. Unfortunately, there's no port of Free Pascal that supports the z architecture or instruction set, and I'll have to build Csound myself. I think the latter will be easier than the former. I can do the preprocessor work on my desktop and ship the Csound source to the cloud for processing. Download or Play it here. Subscribe here:

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Here is the last version of June Gloom I will post. Today's run through the algorithm is a milepost of sorts. I finally was able to generate the whole thing without having to run either the preprocessor or Csound in that dreadful XP box on my Windows 7 laptop. Today I finished the port of the preprocessor to Free Pascal from Turbo Pascal. Most of the problems along the way were due to failing to check for Nil pointers and out of bounds arrays. Apparently Turbo Pascal circa 1989 let me do some bad things. I fixed those and the program compiled. After earlier porting the Csound code to a version of Csound that runs in Windows 7, I'm now free of the XP box. Today's post is the result. Nothing is substantively different, except it's another round through the algorithm, so everything has changed. Download or Play it here. Subscribe here:

windows nil xp june gloom turbo pascal csound free pascal
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Here is one more version of the June Gloom piece I've been working on. For the past eight years I've used an older version of Csound (4.19 from 2005) that only runs on Windows XP. I moved to a new version of Windows, and the old version stopped running. So I obtained a current version, Csound version (5.17.11 from May 2012). To my delight it worked with all my old opcodes with only minor problems with the install. This version of the piece was made with the Windows 7 version of Csound 5.17.11. My preprocessor, written in Turbo Pascal (filedate 1989), is another story. Turbo Pascal won't work in the current version of Windows 7. I had to create a virtual machine running XP, and that is working, but poorly. All things considered, my $90 investment in Turbo Pascal was worth it, since I have been able to use it for 23 years. My next task is to try to port the Turbo Pascal to Free Pascal. My first attempts resulted in code that compiles with minor changes, but fails at run time reporting memory issues. That conversion will take much longer. Download or Play it here. Subscribe here: Source code Input to the Csound: drum12Second stage for volume control: drum12aThird stage for convolution: convolv

windows input xp windows xp june gloom turbo pascal csound free pascal
Swinburne CodeCasts - Programming tutorials
LP1: Getting started with SwinGame (Learn Programming with SwinGame)

Swinburne CodeCasts - Programming tutorials

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2010 8:01


The learn programming series uses Free Pascal and the SwinGame API. This podcast shows you how to install the tools you need to start learning to program games using SwinGame.

university learning getting started learn programming free pascal
The Retrobits Podcast
Show 003: Languages, Yesterday and Today

The Retrobits Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2005 26:20


Greetings, Retrocomputing Fans! Happy to have you here for show #3! This episode of the Retrobits Podcast focuses on a couple of popular languages from the 80s, and open-source languages in active development that carry on and extend the legacy of those languages.  Here are some of the URLs referenced in the show: The magazine New Scientist had a great article on vintage computing. Blake Patterson scribes the Byte Cellar Blog on retro computing.  Interesting stuff, and a very well-decorated retro room! The Vintage Computer Festival is an international event that celebrates the history of computing. It's a show for retrocomputing! I'm hoping to go to the 8.0 event in November 2005. The Computer History Museum is home to one of the largest collections of computing artifacts in the world. Borland maintains a Museum where old version of the Turbo languages can be downloaded. The Free Pascal project carries on Turbo Pascal and Delphi compatible legacy today. The xHarbour project provides an extended xBase compiler. Be sure to send us any comments, questions or feedback to retrobits@gmail.com Our Theme Song is "Sweet" from the "Re-Think" album by Galigan Thanks for listening! - Earl