Fluid : Designing Software that works - For everyone.

Fluid News The Fluid Project news feed

Page 1 of 5  > >>

Fluid Infusion 1.2 released!

by Colin Clark

Infusion 1.2 introduces support for the latest versions of jQuery and jQuery UI, enhances the mobile Fluid Skinning System, and provides a smaller, faster, and more mobile-friendly package. This release is an incremental upgrade and preserves backwards API compatibility for all production-grade components. More

Fluid Project updates Feb/March

by Jess Mitchell

Fluid Engage is about to release a beta 0.3 Mobile App that will be implemented in the McCord Museum of Canadian History mid-February.
CollectionSpace just released 0.4 on January 21st. The team is busy working on the 0.5 release.
Decapod is working toward its first, much anticipated release, scheduled for end of March.
Fluid is participating in the JASIG: Ten Years of Open Source Innovation conference in March.
and much more...
More

Fluid Infusion 1.1.2 released!

by Jacob Farber

Infusion 1.1.2 is here! This release is a combination of bug fixes to existing code plus new features aimed at giving Infusion users a better experience. Infusion 1.1.2 is an incremental upgrade and preserves backwards compatibility for all production-grade components. This release addresses some pesky bugs in Uploader, provides a sneak peak at the Mobile Fluid Skinning System, showcases a new demo portal for easier interaction, plus... More

Fluid Infusion 1.1.1 released!

by Jacob Farber

Infusion 1.1.1 is here! This release is a maintenance release, which means no new features were added but several bugs were fixed for our Inline Edit and Reorderer components. Infusion 1.1.1 is an incremental upgrade and preserves backwards compatibility for all production-grade components. More

Fluid Infusion 1.1 released!

Infusion 1.1 is here! This release introduces a handful of new features and bug fixes to the framework and components, building on the solid foundation of our Infusion 1.0 release last month. Infusion 1.1 is an incremental upgrade and preserves backwards compatibility for all production-grade components. More

Fluid is a project of the Adaptive Technology Resource Centre, University of Toronto,
funded by a grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
© the fluid project, 2009