Apologies in advance if this is covered elsewhere, but I didn't find
what I need, hence this note.
I'm working on a research project for applying artificial intelligence
techniques toward creating adaptive applications. I've written a
system that does this on the Mac called Pennyworth:
http://pennyworth.aetherial.net/
It's a fairly straightforward Objective-C application that predicts
the user's context and disseminates it to listening applications.
I've been looking into options for porting it to Linux and Windows. I
recently caught a recent FLOSS Weekly that featured your project and I
was intrigued by it and the Chameleon theming software. Ideally, I'd
like to use those technologies create a native Windows (and Linux)
application that mirrors the Mac app's functionality.
Unfortunately, while the Windows installation went smoothly on my
Vista (32 bit) machine, I couldn't run any programs other than the
launcher without incurring a crash. I don't know if this is a problem
with my machine, or a more general issue (it's a pretty basic Vista
setup), but if I can send crash reports somewhere, please let me know.
Over the long run, I was curious whether using GNUStep as a foundation
for native Windows development is a robust strategy. As a software
developer myself, I understand well the challenges of deploying robust
code, but I doubt that my users will be as understanding. If there's
something obviously wrong that I'm doing, please let me know.
Thank you.
-Chris
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