Posts Tagged ‘free’

Introducing WebDev Control Panel

Friday, April 13th, 2007

Once upon a time there was a little project called the XAMPP Control Panel. An associate of mine had a hankering for a similar application to control specific services used for web development on his local machine, so I looked to adapt Jono’s project to his needs. However, as is often the case in these scenarios, I ended up scrapping the vast majority of his code and starting from near-scratch.

In a very short space of time a working result was achieved, but said associate no longer had a requirement for due to a change of platform. Rather than let it languish, I started adapting it to be more generic and removed some additional (and not fully implemented) functionality to create the WebDev Control Panel.

A project which promptly vanished into the depths of my hard disk and was mostly forgotten about. I fetched it out from time-to-time and tweaked a bit here, changed a bit there, but overall it sat collecting dust. I fully intended it to be released as Free software, but was loath to release in its current form.

Jumping forward to a couple of weeks ago, I needed to re-acquaint myself with Python, so I dusted off the project and started polishing it. I made the code more object-oriented; I converted it from a fixed list of services to a dynamic one (controlled by a config file); and finally I made it ready for translation.

Finally the time had come, and I could find no decent reason for putting it off any longer. I had to release it.

So, after that long introduction, here is the WebDev Control Panel. Enjoy.

WebDev Control Panel

And if you do ask…

Tuesday, October 3rd, 2006

…you just might!

The school received my comments but have no idea what I’m talking about. They would like me to go it and discuss it with their IT coordinator.

Another result!

If you don’t ask…

Monday, September 11th, 2006

…you don’t get.

My childrens school sent out a questionnaire, which we returned this morning. It was the usual stuff – Are you happy with the amount of homework? What improvements would you make to the school facilities? etc.

It was the final question that caught my eye though: Any other comments? A fairly innocuous question you may think, but I saw a perfect platform for me:

I would like to see more use of Free and Open Source software used in education.

I also added a note that I was happy to discuss this with them. Nothing may come of it, but on the other hand…