Hack the Hack Week toolan invention by hennevogel This project is about advancing the tool you're currently browsing. It got started back in Hack Week 9 to retire all the weird tools we've used in the past to track ideas. As you can see it has gone far but is still far from done. There are lots of features missing and bugs to be fixed on github. Get going! |
openSUSE Landing Page Prototypea project by hennevogel www.opensuse.org is the single most accessed page in the SUSE/openSUSE universe. With 1.5 million visits per month it generates 2.5 million page views and has around 500 people on the page at any given time. Yet it's one of the oldest, crufty pages we have! It doesn't concentrate on what it should do: Tell people about the distro so they download it. It's design is 5 years old, it's not mobile, it's not accessible. There is absolutely no interactive, engaging content at all and the technology used goes as far as a shell script/cron to update dynamic content. |
Inqlude, the Qt software archivea project by cschum During Hack Week 7 I worked on an archive of Qt-based libraries. The goal was to easily make all available Qt libraries accessible to developers. Think CPAN for Qt. So I hacked on a web site and a command line client. There was a little bit of progress on the project since then, but with the upcoming KDE Frameworks 5 there will be quite a number of additional libraries available for Qt developers. This should be well represented in Inqlude as well. The coverage of Inqlude is also still not complete, and the tooling needs some improvement as well, especially regarding integration with distributions. |
pimp interactive political landscape '(and practice d3js with html5 aka svg, javascript, css)an idea by froh For the Bavaria 2013 elections I had created an interactive political landscape visualizing the party stances according to the Wahl-O-Mat with d3.js. I have tons of ideas to improve this: |
unlock html5 story teller options for openSUSE/SUSEan idea by froh html5 gives a new way of exchanging and expressing ideas and telling stories. simple, slide-like examples: |
Port the Spacewalk UI to modern web technologiesan invention by dmacvicar Spacewalk is an open source Linux systems management solution. It is the upstream community project from which SUSE Manager and the Red Hat Network Satellite product are derived. Spacewalk uses XHTML with a CSS stylesheet that has grown over the years. |
'Who's that guy?' - a floor based mini gamean invention by thutterer DocumentationWhat is it? |
Climbing Ticklistan invention by j_renner Ticklist is a web application enabling users to record their ascents of climbing routes as well as to maintain their personal list of currently projected routes. My implementation went from working alpha back to pre-alpha status (~ basic things not working) while migrating parts of the codebase (knockout.js -> angular.js). The goal of this hackweek project was therefore to finish this migration and fix the basic features in order to make the app useful at least for personal usage. The current technology stack is node, express, sequelize, jade (templating), angular and twitter bootstrap. Lots of future features come to my mind, like showing advanced statistics, integration with social networks, support bouldering ticklists as well, location based stuff, and so on. |
MirrorPinkya project by darix A web frontend for the mirrors in the mirrorbrain database to allow the mirror admins to manage their entries themself. You might know MirrorBrain already: our download redirector and Torrent/Metalink generator used u.a. on download.opensuse.org. It's really a great tool that plays a hidden key role inside the openSUSE infrastructure. |
Jabber server side historya project by -miska- Finish extension for server side history for jabberd2 server and create a simple webui to browse it using tntnet. Part of the project is to learn to use tntnet toolkit, other part is to have server side history. |
Get the new SUSE Floor ready to use!a project by rsalevsky The new SUSE Floor is nearly done. The core functionality is already implemented and only some basic features are left. |
community calendar widgeta project by eMBee a widget to list events from a JSON backend. the widget may be included by any website to share community events. |
QA Dashboard - provide a easy overview of the quality status of a product in developmenta project by xgonzo QA uses a dashboard (SUSE internal: http://qa.suse.de/dashboard/ ) to provide an overview of various data to assess the quality of a product. The project is about improving the available data points and the usability for users outside of QA department. |
Charon: A planet-like feed aggregatoran idea by hennevogel Charon (ˈʃærən) is intended for communities of people, institutions or companies who blog. It aggregates all the feeds of the community into a single feed which all the participants can read to stay informed. It's concept, a proven and popular communication method of the Free and Open Source Software community, and basic functionality is borrowed from the software planet. However, Charon adds a couple of nifty features like administration through your browser, user self-service, categories and personalized feeds. |
Group Refactoring of OSEMan invention by hennevogel Meet up NBG meeting room Paris with fellow Ruby on Rails hackers, throw an editor/shell onto the wall, grab a cup of coffee and refactor OSEM code together. That way we can share knowledge about setting up the development environment, editor tricks, RSpec patterns, gems or general rails code. Interested? Join us! |
PXEAT - A PXE management toola project by whdu PXEAT (stand for PXE Administration Tool) is a tool to easily deploy and manage PXE service. It's NOT a tool for automatic deployment. It can enable user to add their own PXE items by themselves, but of course, very limited for security reasons. The tool will be developed with the light-weight framework - flask, as well as a sqlite database. |
Convert the openATTIC project web site from Typo3 to Nikola (static content generator)a project by LenzGr Overview |
The Team Dashboard Web Applicationan idea by lslezak Why a Dashboard?In the YaST team we use quite a lot of external or internal services like GitHub, Travis, Jenkins, Open Build Service, Bugzilla, Trello,... It is too difficult and time consuming to track all those tools and get an overview what is OK, what failed and what actions should we take to resolve the problems. |
Admin UI for the Minion job queuean invention by kraih Minion, the job queue of the Mojolicious web framework, currently has to be administrated with command line tools. I want to build an Admin UI that will make the most common maintenance tasks, such as restarting a large number of failed jobs, a lot more comfortable. |
Refresh openbuildservice.organ invention by hennevogel openbuildservice.org is the landing page of the Open Build Service free software project. It could use a fresh design. |
Goodbye Disteran invention by cschum SUSE Studio was shut down earlier this year. It has been online for more than ten years and there are tons of links and references out there. To not make them lead into the wasteland of 404 we should have a landing page on https://susestudio.com which leads to what users can use instead of SUSE Studio. I did a mockup of a page which could be hosted there. See it at https://github.com/cornelius/goodbye-dister. |
LibertyDraft.deva record by hennevogel Discover Free Software projects that expose you to real-world tech problems so you can gain experience for the job market. Problem |
SUSana: debrand Grafanaan invention by pagarcia Following trademark and licensing issues with Grafana, explore the possibility of debranding Grafana and use that in SUSE Manager (and maybe others) Products are available from GitLab: https://gitlab.suse.de/susana |
Port Hack Week Tool to Terminal CSSan idea by hennevogel Terminal CSS perfectly transports the Hack Week vibe for me. Let's port this page! |
Uyuni as a Bootstrap themean idea by Etheryte Project DescriptionCurrently, Uyuni has three themes: Uyuni, SUMA light & SUMA dark. All of these are tailored around a common core using CSS preprocessor variables, mainly to switch out colors, fonts and the like. Core layout such as spacing, sizing and so forth is shared between all three and stems from the shared core. |