August 2008 Device Software Optimization Monthly

Wind River at LinuxWorld 2008

Learn how leading mobile stacks, industry consortia, and hardware platforms are using tools, integrated development environments, and SDKs with Wind River Linux to create compelling, differentiated mobile solutions. Stop by Wind River booth #500 at LinuxWorld to see our demos, meet with product experts, or attend one of our Wind River Developer Day breakout sessions on Wednesday, August 6. Read More »



Wind River Linux

Wind River Solutions for Mobile Handsets

Wind River Solutions for the Automotive Market


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Mobile Linux Conference at LinuxWorld
August 4–7, 2008
San Francisco, CA

Space and Missile Defense Conference
August 11–14, 2008
Huntsville, AL

Real-Time & Embedded Computing Conference (RTECC)
August 26, 2008: Montreal, QC
August 28, 2008: Ottawa, ON

Freescale Technology Forum 2008
September 10, 2008
Tokyo, Japan

October 7, 2008
Paris, France

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Modernizing Software Development for Embedded and Mission-Critical Systems
September 16, 2008
Bellevue, WA

Software Quality Assurance for Device Software
September 16, 2008
Petaluma, CA


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General Purpose Platform, VxWorks Edition 3.6 for New Users
August 12–15, 2008: Kista, Sweden
August 19–22, 2008: Ismaning, Germany
August 26–29, 2008: Torino, Italy
September 16–19, 2008: Dulles, VA
September 16–19, 2008: Maidenhead, UK
September 23–26, 2008: Sunnyvale, CA
September 23–26, 2008: Atlanta, GA
September 23–26, 2008: Les Ulis (Paris), France

Workbench 3.0 for VxWorks
September 4–5, 2008: Sunnyvale, CA

Workbench, On-Chip Debugging Edition 3.0
September 9–10, 2008: Maidenhead, UK
September 10–11, 2008: Dallas, TX

General Purpose Platform, Linux Edition 2.0
September 30–October 3, 2008: Sunnyvale, CA
September 30–October 3, 2008: Les Ulis (Paris), France
October 7–10, 2008: Chicago, IL


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Doug Schaefer, Engineering Manager




Who's Leading Anyway?
The LinuxHater linked off to Christopher Blizzard's (from OLPC fame and now at Mozilla) blog on the current state of affairs with the GNOME project. He gives some very eye-opening insight into what's happening there and the potential future directions for GNOME, GTK, and friends. It's not pretty, literally. Read More »