Jump to content

Lanedo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lanedo
Company typeGmbH
IndustrySoftware Consulting
HeadquartersKollaukamp 10, Hamburg - Germany
Area served
Worldwide
ServicesOpen source consultancy and engineering
Websitewww.lanedo.com

Lanedo is a professional open source software development consultancy based in Germany. It operates as a European company with limited liability based in Hamburg. The company has been involved with a number of mobile and embedded platforms over the years including Maemo and MeeGo.[1] Their software development has a focus around Linux in general and targeting platforms ranging from mobile and embedded to desktop environments.

History

[edit]

In 2003, Mikael Hallendal and Richard Hult were working together on a project management application called Planner. They founded Imendio.[2][3]

After 5 years, the founders stepped back,[clarification needed] and the business and people continued in a new company called Lanedo founded by Tim Janik and Martyn Russell in early 2009. Mikael and Richard started a new company called TinyBird Interactive AB to work together and focus on OS X application development. As of February 2009 Imendio AB got split into Tinybird Interactive AB and Landeo GmbH.[citation needed] The name 'Lanedo' is based on a roughly phonetic sounding of the letters L, N, and D. These are mentioned as Linux, Networking, and Development respectively.[4]

In 2011, Lanedo joined the Document Foundation TSC (Task Steering Committee)[5] and became much more involved in the future of LibreOffice.[citation needed]

Starting in summer 2012, Lanedo, in cooperation with ITOMIG, supported the town of Munich in the LibreOffice maintenance of the LiMux project.[6]

Lanedo has also actively participated in implementing the OOXML support for LibreOffice.[7]

[edit]

These projects are contributed to[clarification needed] by Lanedians.[8]

Project Description
LibreOffice[9] Free office suite
NetworkManager[10][11] / ModemManager[12] Modem and Network connectivity suite
libqmi[13] Qualcomm's modem protocol library
libmbim[14] Mobile Broadband Interface Model (MBIM) library
Tracker[15] Semantic data store, indexer and a search engine
GIMP GNU Image Manipulation Program
GTK+[16] / GLib / GIO / GVfs Cross platform User Interface toolkit
Gossip XMPP chat client
Giggle[17] Git source code repository browser
BEAST Music composition and synthesis
Rapicorn[18] User Interface toolkit
GNU PDF[19] PDF file format library
Getting Things GNOME![20] TODO / task based graphical application
WebKit[21] Open Source web browser engine
Linux kernel[22] Operating system kernel used by Linux systems
D-Bus IPC library

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Lanedo Involvement - MeeGo". Archived from the original on 2011-10-20. Retrieved 2011-07-04.
  2. ^ Loli, Eugenia (2004-09-28). "Interview with Mikael Hallendal Founder of Imendio about company inception and purpose". osnews.com. Retrieved 2024-04-30.
  3. ^ "Home". imendio.com.
  4. ^ "Lanedo - About". lanedo.com. Archived from the original on 2011-06-11. Retrieved 2024-04-30.
  5. ^ "Document Foundation appoints Engineering Steering Committee". Archived from the original on 8 December 2013.
  6. ^ "Nehmen und Geben (German article)".
  7. ^ "Improved OOXML support for LibreOffice and OpenOffice". Archived from the original on 7 December 2013.
  8. ^ "Lanedians".
  9. ^ "Lanedo Involvement - LibreOffice".
  10. ^ "NetworkManager & ModemManager Support".
  11. ^ "Lanedo Involvement - NetworkManager".
  12. ^ "ModemManager".
  13. ^ "libqmi source code repository for Qualcomm's QMI modem protocol".
  14. ^ "libmbim source code repository for the Modem Broadband Interface Model protocol".
  15. ^ "Lanedo Involvement - Tracker".
  16. ^ "GTK+ Support". Archived from the original on 2012-04-27. Retrieved 2012-04-19.
  17. ^ "Giggle – GNOME wiki".
  18. ^ "Rapicorn".
  19. ^ "GNU PDF Project".
  20. ^ "Getting Things GNOME Project".
  21. ^ "Lanedo Involvement - WebKit".
  22. ^ "Lanedo Involvement - Linux Kernel".
[edit]