frogr: a flickr remote organizer for GNOME
Frogr intends to be a complete GNOME application to remotely manage a flickr account from the desktop. It uses flickcurl, from Dave Beckett to communicate with the server through the publicly available flickr REST API.
This project is Free Software and published under the terms of the GNU Public License v3.
People working in this project at some point:
- Mario Sánchez Prada: lead developer
- Adrian Perez de Castro: developer / artwork / fedora packaging
- Alberto García: debian packaging
- Alejandro Piñeiro Iglesias: Gettext support for i18n
- Javier Jardón: Cleanup and improvements for GNOME 3.0
Get Frogr
The latest stable version of frogr is 0.2. You can get pre-compiled packages for some GNU/Linux distributions in the "Featured downloads" section in the right side bar.
For older versions of frogr, or packages for other distributions, please check out the Downloads tab.
Besides, if you use archlinux you can get the PKGBUILD file from directly from here (thanks uastasi!)
In case you could not find a package ready to use with your favourite distro, you can always get frogr's source code from the source tarballs in the right side bar, or by cloning the git repository at gitorious:
git clone http://git.gitorious.org/frogr/mainline.git
Moreover, you can also get a tarball with the last version of the source code as well, in case you don't want to clone the repository.
Get involved!
We're always looking for people to collaborate with the project in every possible way, not just programming... helping with any needed issue or just providing feedback or ideas would be more than enough, but if you prefer to become even more involved in the project the better.
So don't be shy, if you're thinking on collaborate don't think it twice and let us know: just join one of the mailing lists or drop us a mail (addresses in the git log).
And remember... the more collaborative the project becomes, the better :-).
News
- 2009/10/13: Published a post announcing the 0.2 release of Frogr.
- 2009/08/22: Published a post announcing the 0.1 release of Frogr.
- 2009/06/05: Published a first post about frogr, introducing the idea and asking for people to collaborate in the project.