HP brought Enyo — the open source object-oriented JavaScript framework for webOS — out of beta this week, six months after the ill-fated operating system was contributed to the open source community. Enyo 2.0 now has a community of developers, a broad set of cross-platform user interface widgets, and a layout library for building apps that work across all form factors, from mobile phones to desktops. Announced in November of 2010, Enyo replaced Palm’s Mojo application framework, which was also created in the JavaScript language.
Richard, first - appreciate the Peter Gabriel shoutout ;-)
Second - xTuple, an open source ERP provider, has adopted Enyo for its next-gen mobile app, a massive project that is going quite well:
Enyo's Out of Beta - but Will Devs Give it Love?
Posted by: Richard Adhikari July 25, 2012 08:00 AMHP brought Enyo — the open source object-oriented JavaScript framework for webOS — out of beta this week, six months after the ill-fated operating system was contributed to the open source community. Enyo 2.0 now has a community of developers, a broad set of cross-platform user interface widgets, and a layout library for building apps that work across all form factors, from mobile phones to desktops. Announced in November of 2010, Enyo replaced Palm’s Mojo application framework, which was also created in the JavaScript language.
Second - xTuple, an open source ERP provider, has adopted Enyo for its next-gen mobile app, a massive project that is going quite well:
http://www.xtuple.org/a-shorter-letter-enyo
http://www.xtuple.com/beta
Cheers,
Ned Lilly
xTuple CEO