@item Dec 21st 2003: Mono on PowerPC Progress.

	Paolo reports today that the Mono JIT on the PowerPC was able
	to successfully run the Mono C# compiler to build its first
	programs.  This is by no means complete (exception handling is
	missing, and Boehm GC seems to fail on MacOS X), this shows
	the excellent progress Paolo has been making.

	Zoltan has added support for modules to MCS (generation and
	consumption).

@item Dec 10th, 2003: Mono Debugger 0.5 released

	Martin Baulig has <a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~martin/blog/archives/000231.html">released</a>
	a new version of the Mono Debugger.  

@item Dec 2nd, 2003: Mono 0.29 has been released

	Check out the <a
	href="http://www.go-mono.com/archive/mono-0.29.html">Release
	notes</a> for details on Mono 0.29.    

	This release includes the PPC JIT engine running `Hello World'
	and ASP.NET is considered feature-complete.
	
@item Nov 25th, 2003: Gtk# 0.14, System.DirectoryServices

	Gtk# 0.14 has been released, and it is available from <a
	href="http://gtk-sharp.sf.net">the Gtk# web site</a>.   

	Sunil has checked in the implementation of
	System.DirectoryServices as well as the Novell.Directory.Ldap
	code into Mono CVS.

@item Nov 14th, 2003: Gtk# 0.13 released.

	Mike Kestner has <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-November/016943.html">announced</a>
	the release of the <a href="http://gtk-sharp.sf.net">Gtk#</a>
	GUI toolkit for .NET and Mono.

@item Nov 13th, 2003: Managed LDAP binding for Mono and .NET

	Sunil Kumar at Novell has <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-November/016907.html">announced</a>
	the availability of a fully managed implementation of LDAP for
	Mono and the .NET Framework.

	You can obtain the library from <a
	href="http://forge.novell.com">Novell Forge's</a> <a
	href="http://forge.novell.com/modules/xfmod/cvs/cvsbrowse.php/ldapcsharp/CsharpLDAP">CSharpLDAP</a>
	module.

@item Nov 4th, 2003: Mono Roadmap announced.

	The <a href="mono-roadmap.html">Mono Roadmap</a> and <a
	href="mono-hacking-roadmap.html">Mono Hackers Roadmap</a> have
	been released.   

@item Oct 28th, 2003: Mono Get Together at the PDC.  GTK# 0.12 Released.

	We will be getting together at the West Tower Lobby on Tuesday
	28th at 6pm to talk about the Mono project. You have 24 hours to
	notify all of your friends, open source buddies and free software
	folks.

	We will bring Mono t-shirts.

	Mike Kestner released <a href="http://gtk-sharp.sourceforge.net">Gtk#</a> 0.12 today.  GTK# source tar balls
	and RPMs are available.  A windows installer was contributed by Johannes Roith.
	
@item Oct 26th, 2003: Last Minute Mono BOF

	The first in a series of undercover Mono BOFs at the PDC will take
	place tonight at 7pm on the Academy meeting, in room 411. Come join us
	to plot the evolution.


@item Oct 25th, 2003: GTK# 0.11+ Windows Installer available

	Johannes created a Windows
	Installer for GTK# 0.11+ and works
	with Mono 0.28 for Windows.

@item Oct 21st, 2003: Mono Community at Novell Forge

	Mono Developers that are looking for a public repository for
	hosting their projects can now use <a
	href="http://forge.novell.com">Novell Forge's</a> which hosts
	a <a
	href="http://forge.novell.com/modules/xfmod/community/?monocomm">Mono
	Community</a>.

	Novell Forge offers mailing lists, cvs repository, bug
	tracking and mailing list services and all the other services
	you expect.  Mono will continue to be hosted in our own CVS
	repository, and using our <a href="anoncvs.html">anonymous CVS
	servers</a>

@item Oct 13th, 2003: SPARC V9, HPPA, Internationalization, GdiPlus

	Dick Porter has checked in our rewrite of the international
	substrate in Mono that uses the <a
	href="http://oss.software.ibm.com/icu/">International
	Components for Unicode</a> library from IBM.  This means that
	we got CultureInfo support through the whole code base now.

	Alexandre Pigolkine has checked-in the new implementation of
	System.Drawing.  We have now dropped the old implementation
	with multiple-backends that we had, and replaced it with an
	implementation that P/Invokes into GDI+.  A GDI+
	implementation on top of <a
	href="http://www.cairographics.org">Cairo</a> is used on Unix
	systems.  This step vastly simplifies the development and
	maintenance of System.Drawing. 

	There are plenty of updates to Mono as well, we encourage you
	to read the <a
	href="http://www.go-mono.com/monologue">Monologue</a> to keep
	an eye on recent developments.

	Bernie Solomon just <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-devel-list/2003-October/002460.html">checked
	in</a> 64-bit support for SPARC v9 and HPPA into the Mono
	runtime.  This also improves the SPARC-32 support.

@item Oct 6th, 2003: Linux s390 Mono packages available.

	Neale Ferguson has contributed Mono packages for the
	Linux/s390.  You can get them from the <a
	href="download.html">download</a> page.

@item Oct 5th, 2003: Monologue aggregates Mono Blogs

	You can now read an aggregated view of the <a
	href="blogs.html">blogs</a> maintained by Mono developers in
	<a href="http://www.go-mono.com/monologue">Monologue</a>.
	Monologue is available as an HTML page or as an <a
	href="monologue/index.rss">RSS feed</a>.

@item Oct 2nd, 2003: Windows packages, MonoDoc 0.7

	Windows packages for Mono 0.28 are now available from our <a
	href="download.html">download</a> page.

	A new version of MonoDoc has been released.  The new version
	is available <a href="archive/monodoc-0.7.tar.gz">here</a>

@item Oct 1st, 2003: Mono 0.28 has been released.

	Check out the <a
	href="http://www.go-mono.com/archive/mono-0.28.html">Release
	notes</a> for details on Mono 0.28.  This release marks the
	completion of the SourceGear project to add web services
	functionality to Mono and improve its reliability.

@item Sep 30th, 2003: Mono Kick Start book available

	The Mono Kick Start book is now <a
	href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0672325799/qid=1064937318/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_1/103-9624440-8714218?v=glance&s=books&n=507846">available</a>
	in English.  Originally available only in <a
	href="http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3827264928/qid=1050051051/sr=2-1/ref=sr_2_3_1/028-2755135-1623712">German</a>.
	The book technical review was done by <a
	href="http://www.maurer-it.com/">Dietmar Maurer</a> JIT
	architect at the Mono team.

@item Sep 26th, 2003: DiaCanvas# 0.1 released, Gtk# 0.11 released.

	Mike Kestner has <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/gtk-sharp-list/2003-September/002475.html">released</a>
	a new version of <a href="http://gtk-sharp.sf.net">Gtk#</a>.

	Martin has also 
        <a href="http://mwh.sysrq.dk/programs/announcements/diacanvas-sharp-0.1.0.html">released</a>
	his binding to <a href="http://diacanvas.sf.net">DiaCanvas</a> for C#.

@item Sep 16th, 2003: WineLib, Authenticode, Generics, Xslt updates, Wsdl compiler, WSE.

	<b>WineLib:</b> Vladimir has added new libraries to the Wine
	process, which we will soon bring into our packages: the
	various Windows common dialogs can now be used (screenshots:
	<a href="images/colordlg.png">here</a>, <a
	href="images/fontdlg.png">here</a>, <a
	href="images/filedlg.png">here</a> and <a
	href="images/finddlg.png">here</a>.

	Johannes has patches to have Wine track the Gtk theme,
	screenshot here (link got broken).

	<b>Security:</b> New authenticode support from Sebastien has
	been checked into CVS.

	<b>Xslt:</b> Plenty of conformance updates to the managed
	implementation of Xslt, as well as breaking the libxslt speed
	barrier.  Our managed implementation is now faster than the
	C-based libxslt that we used before.

	<b>Generics:</b> Work continues on generics support, feel free
	to try it out.  The compiler is currently on a separate
	directory until we stability it (gmcs) and you need to compile
	the class libraries with the `generics' profile to try it
	out.  Sample generic programs are included in the CVS module. 

	<b>Wsdl:</b> We now have Wsdl support in Mono: a wsdl compiler
	command line tool, and support on ASP.NET to generate the wsdl
	file from an .asmx file.

	<b>AOT:</b> Many robustness updates to the ahead-of-time
	compiler and a new locking and threading system that avoids
	having "big locks" around the mono kernel, and moves to a
	fine-grained locking system.  The design includes a lattice to
	avoid deadlocks.

	<b>Dogfooding:</b> We are now running Mono's ASP.NET on
	go-mono.com to find problems.  It is currently hosting our
	Monodoc documentation.  The <a
	href="http://www.go-mono.com/docs/index.html">Apache module
	version</a> and the <a href="http://www.go-mono.com:8080/">XSP
	version</a>.

	<b>WSE:</b> The Web Services Enhancements season has begun.
	The Microsoft.Web.Services namespace and classes are now
	checked into CVS.  

@item Sep 1st, 2003: Ice for Mono;  XmlSerializer generators; Monodoc progress.

	<b>Ice:</b> Vladimir has checked into CVS (Module ginzu) an
	implementation of <a href="http://www.zeroc.com">ZeroC's</a>
	<a href="http://www.zeroc.com/ice.html">ICE</a> protocol.  It
	is implemented using Remoting.  If you were looking for an
	efficient binary protocol to use with Remoting, this is it.

	ICE is simpler to use than CORBA, and was created by people
	who were deeply involved in CORBA and wanted to fix its
	problems (you can see a <a
	href="http://www.zeroc.com/iceVsCorba.html">list of
	differences</a>).

	<b>XmlSerializer</b>: Lluis has checked in a new technology
	for use in our XmlSerializer: the XmlSerializer code
	generator.  Currently our XmlSerializer generates a
	description of instructions for serializing data, these
	instructions are later interpreted while using it: Reflection
	is used to pull all the data.  The code generator is the first
	step into turning the Serializer from an intepreter into a
	compiler and improving the performance of it.

	Currently was used internally to implement the WSDL
	serializer, in the future it will just be part of the standard
	serialization process.

	<b>MonoDoc:</b> New providers!  Thanks to <a
	href="http://www.jaggersoft.com/">Jon Jagger</a> for providing
	us with his master XML files for the C# specification we now
	have integrated the C# spec into Monodoc.  Another provider is
	the Error provider: now we include all the C# compiler errors
	in the help system.

	Alp has contributed various user interface improvement, and
	updated our list widget for key navigation; Ben made the
	matches window more useful and Joshua has helped us clean up
	the ECMA provider even more.

@item Aug 14th, 2003: Mono 0.26 has been released

	A new version of Mono is available, the new features include:
	<a href="http://www.cairographics.org/">Cairo support</a>, <a
	href="http://remoting-corba.sf.net">Remoting.Corba</a>
	support, as well as a managed XSLT implementation.  

	Existing features have been improved vastly: better
	Windows.Forms, runtime, faster compiler, web services, better
	compliance to the spec and more. 

	Check out the <a
	href="http://www.go-mono.com/archive/mono-0.26.html">Release
	notes</a> for details.

@item Aug 9th, 2003: Python for .NET Preview 2 available;  Mono Documentation site up.

	Brian Lloyd has <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-August/015313.html">announced</a>
	the availability of his Python binding to .NET.  This works
	with .NET and Mono.  For more information about it, see
	Brian's site at <a href="
	http://zope.org/Members/Brian/PythonNet/">http://zope.org/Members/Brian/PythonNet/</a>

	We have uploaded the current Mono Documentation (core
	libraries and Gtk#) to <a
	href="http://mono.ximian.com:8080"/>http://mono.ximian.com:8080</a>.
	The site is running the ASP.NET edition of <a
	href="archive/monodoc-0.6.tar.gz">MonoDoc 0.6</a> on XSP.

@item Aug 6th, 2003: Winforms samples

	Timothy Parez is coordinating the effort to create sample
	programs that exercise the various Windows.Forms controls.  We
	are using this as graphical regression test suite for the Mono
	implementation.

	The screenshots of the various widgets, together with the
	source code is available on the <a
	href="http://www.nullenvoid.com/mono/wiki/index.php/WineSamples">WineSamples</a>
	page on the <a
	href="http://www.nullenvoid.com/mono/wiki/">Mono Wiki</a>.

	A new cvs module called `winforms' has been created that
	contains the source code for the samples.  To run the samples,
	you can install the WineLib packages available from our <a
	href="download.html">download page</a>.

@item Aug 5th, 2003: New Apache Module architecture: 1.3 and 2.x supported

	Gonzalo rearchitected our Apache module for hosting Mono and
	ASP.NET.  The previous incarnation hosted a Mono runtime on
	each Apache process, which lead to a slow setup for webforms.
	The new setup uses a shared mono process for all the incoming
	requests.  Daniel later improved up the new architecture and
	added dual support, so now in addition to Apache 2.x, we
	support Apache 1.3 with the same codebase.

	The new code is available on CVS, on module `mod_mono', and
	now requires an XSP installation to be available. 

@item Aug 4th, 2003: Ximian acquired by Novell.

	Today <a href="http://www.novell.com">Novell</a> acquired <a
	href="http://www.ximian.com">Ximian</a>.  The press release is
	available <a
	href="http://www.ximian.com./about_us/press_center/press_releases/index.html?pr=novell">here</a>.

	Mono and Gnome form an integral part of the Novell strategy.

@item Jul 30th, 2003: Remoting.CORBA, Managed XSLT.

	Today Lluis announced that Mono CVS contains all the fixes to
	run <a
	href="http://remoting-corba.sourceforge.net/">Remoting.CORBA</a>:
	both client and server channels work; We are interested in people
	testing it with other ORBs.

	Ben checked-in today his managed implementation of Xslt that
	we mentioned on Jul 19th; This uncovered various limitations
	on the XPath implementation, which Piers has swifly removed.
	Monodoc, NUnit and our Corcompare work with it.  Since this is
	implementation is not completed yet, we still support the
	libxslt-based version by default.  For more details on how to
	try the new XSLT implementation, see <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-devel-list/2003-July/001681.html">Ben's
	post</a>

@item Jul 27th, 2003: Wine packages and Daily Snapshots 

	MonoWine packages (used to run System.Windows.Forms) software
	are now available from our (<a
	href="download.html">download</a> page).  You can track the
	progress on our <a
	href="http://www.nullenvoid.com/mono/wiki/index.php/WineSamples">Wiki
	page.</a>

	We're now building daily snapshots of Mono.  They come in
	three distinct flavors:

	<ul>
		* mono snapshot tarballs - These are 'release-style' tarballs and
		  contain everything necessary to setup a new
		  installation from scratch.  This includes the Mono
	 	  runtime and all the assemblies we distribute.

		* monocharge tarballs - These tarballs contain only
		  the assemblies built on that day.

		* monolite tarballs - These tarballs contain a copy of
		  'corlib.dll', 'mcs.exe', 'System.dll', 'System.Xml.dll' and
		  'Mono.CSharp.Debugger.dll'. They can be used to
		  re-bootstrap an out-of-sync installation.
	</ul>

	The daily builds are availble here: <a href="http://go-mono.com/daily">http://go-mono.com/daily</a>

	If you find that the builds are broken, please notify Duncan.

@item Jul 19th, 2003: Recent developments

	Since Mono has matured, we have limited the news on the site
	to major accomplishments that are finished, but this week, it
	is worth devoting some time to talk about some of the
	work-in-progress projects that are progressing.

	Jackson has added support to the IL assembler for generics as
	well as to the PEAPI library, and it has assembled its first
	generic program.  Support for handling images with generics
	has been on our file format reader for a while, but the JIT
	engine is still incomplete. 

	On the XSLT world, Atsushi and Ben continue to make big
	improvements.  Ben recently got the prototype managed XSLT
	implementation to run its first stylesheet.  Although
	currently Mono uses libxslt to implement the System.Xml.Xsl
	namespace, to have a fully .NET compliant implementation we
	will need a managed version, and this is the beginning of it.

	Lluis recently posted an update on the <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-devel-list/2003-July/001550.html">state
	of WSDL</a> in Mono.  Now that the web services runtime is
	ready, the WSDL compiler becomes more important as a
	development tool.

	Atsushi continues his work on the DTD validating reader in
	System.Xml, as well as improving our XML Schema support.

@item Jul 14th, 2003: New build system;  IPV6 support.

	Peter Williams has contributed a new build system that
	addresses many of the annoyance we had with our previous build
	system.  He has worked on this for a few weeks, and Gonzalo
	helped test it and get it into CVS.  We no longer have the
	historical dual build system: make for Unix and nant for
	Windows.

	This system also offers the opportunity to compile our class
	libraries with different profiles (.NET 1.0, .NET 1.1 and the
	various ECMA subsets).

	Peter explains the new build system <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-devel-list/2003-July/001506.html">here</a>

	Jerome's IPV6 code has been checked into CVS; With Peter's new
	build system, we will be able to expose it (as part of the
	NET_1_1 build).

@item Jul 9th, 2003: ASP.NET web services, coverage tools.

	Web Services keep advancing: now we also support server-side
	authoring of Web Services as well as web service clients
	(which shipped in Mono 0.25).  This works using our ASP.NET
	runtime, so it works with either XSP or the Apache module. The
	new Web Services work from Lluis added the missing bits:
	<ul>
		<li> .asmx files.
		<li> Method calls with complex parameters (whatever XmlSerializer can currently serialize, which is a quite a lot).
		<li> ref and out parameters.
		<li> Soap headers (In, Out and InOut).
		<li> Soap extensions, both global (configured in web.config) and particular to methods (configured using attributes).
	</ul>

	For more details, see Lluis <a href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-devel-list/2003-July/001449.html">post</a>

	GUI-wise: Work on <a href="http://xr.xwin.org">Xr</a> to
	implement System.Drawing continues.  This will provide a full
	GDI+ implementation for Mono, and this will be hooked up into
	Gtk# and System.Windows.Forms.

	MonoDoc keeps moving along, with a new web-based version
	coming up next, and we are also exploring a collaborative
	extension to allow people to contribute documentation through
	their web browsers.

	Zoltan's Coverage analysis tool has been checked into CVS.
	With this tool it is now possible to find which class library
	code paths are missing regression tests.  The module is
	`monocov'.  Details are <a
	href="http://www.nexus.hu/vargaz/">here</a>.  A fresh Gtk#
	version is available now.

	Jean's remoting-based Soap implenentation is also maturing.

@item Jun 26th, 2003: Mono 0.25 has been released.

	We have released Mono 0.25.  A list of the new features is
	available <a href="archive/mono-0.25.html">here</a>.  

	Packages for Windows, and various Linux distributions are
	available on our <a href="download.html">download</a> page.

@item Jun 17th, 2003: Web Services client; Profiling hooks

	Lluis and Gonzalo have checked into CVS the support for web
	services in the Mono runtime.  This allows Mono to work as a
	web services client.  We still require a WSDL compiler to
	compile the initial stub, but Erik has the beginning of a WSDL
	compiler ready and Atsushi has continued work on his
	experimental Xml Schema to C# class generator.  

	As part of this, the Mono Http runtime has been rewritten to
	increase reliability, scalability and conformance to the
	specs.  Also our io-layer has been extended to not have
	arbitrary limits.  This was done as part of our collaboration
	with SourceGear.

	Paolo has commited the new pluggable profiling API to the Mono
	runtime: now the profiler is built as a module, and a new code
	coverage analysis has been checked in (and Zoltan already
	added improvements to it).

	Mark's Mozilla bindings continue to improve, and we will shortly
	migrate the Mono documentation browser to use Mozilla, to take
	advantage of the tutorial's use of CSS.

	Jackson's work on the IL assembler and Ben on running
	regression tests have provided us with a very needed tool in
	the Mono toolkit.  One of the last missing pieces on the SDK.

	On the crypto world, we got Sebastien's certificate viewer
	checked into CVS and the crypto code keeps advancing by leaps
	and bounds.

	Alexandre and Aleksey Work continues on Windows.Forms on top
	of Wine and Gtk# (the former for full compatibility, the later
	for ease-of-authoring).

	Cesar checked in the beginning of the semantic analysis code
	for his JScript compiler, and will be working on it full time.

@item Jun 11th, 2003: SourceGear and Ximian announce partnership

	Ximian, Inc., the leading provider of desktop and server
	solutions enabling enterprise Linux adoption, today announced
	that SourceGear Corporation will use Mono\x{2122} Project
	technology to offer cross-platform versions of its
	products. In addition, the companies have entered into a
	development partnership under which Ximian will provide
	custom Mono development to enable delivery of SourceGear
	products later this year. As a result, SourceGear will offer
	both UNIX and Linux clients for its SourceGear Vault source
	code management tool, enabling broader use of its solutions in
	mixed-platform development organizations.

	<a href="http://www.ximian.com/about_us/press_center/press_releases/index.html?pr=sourcegear">Read more...</a>

	Some technical details are available <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-June/014334.html">here</a>.

@item May 20th, 2003: OpenLink releases WineLib patches.

	OpenLink <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-winforms-list/2003-May/000284.html">announced</a>
	the release of Vladimir's work to turn Wine into a library
	that can be used dynamically from Mono.  This work simplifies
	the work on System.Windows.Forms as it is no longer necessary
	have a special version of the GC, nor have a stub program.
	The patches are available <a
	href="http://www.openlinksw.com/mono/">here</a>.

	Mono packages for the Linux/s390 are available now in the <a
	href="download.html">download page</a>.

@item May 10th, 2003: Eclipse runs on Mono

	Today Zoltan Varga announced that he got the <a
	href="http://www.eclipse.org">Eclipse IDE</a> running on top
	of Mono+<a href="http://www.ikvm.net">IKVM</a>.  

	A screenshot of Eclipse running with Mono can be found <a
	href="images/ikvm-screenshot.png">here</a>

@item May 6th, 2003: Mono 0.24 ships

	We have released Mono 0.24 which includes our new code
	generation engine.  A list of the new features is available <a
	href="archive/mono-0.24.html">here</a>.  

	Packages for Windows, and various Linux distributions are
	available on our <a href="download.html">download</a> page.
	We are shipping Gtk# and MonoDoc packages for the first time.

@item Apr 21st, 2003: Virtuoso 3.0 ships.

	<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com">OpenLink's</a> released
	their <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/press/virt3rel.htm">Virtuoso
	3.0</a> database system.  Virtuoso ships on Windows and Linux.
	On Linux they use Mono as their runtime to host C#, .NET and
	ASP.NET.  Congratulations to OpenLink for their release.

	Virtuoso can be downloaded <a
	href="http://oplweb2.openlinksw.com:8080/download/virtuoso.vsp">here</a>
	and a demo is available <a
	href="http://demo.openlinksw.com:8890/tutorial/hosting/ho_s_2/ho_s_2.vsp">here</a>.

	OpenLink is contributing fixes and code to the Mono project on
	an ongoing basis. 

	Jon Udell wrote a small <a
	href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/03/03/14/11stratdev_1.html">entry</a>

@item Apr 19th, 2003: RelaxNG validating reader; Activities.

	Atsushi has created a <a
	href="http://www24.brinkster.com/ginga/RelaxngValidatingReader/">RelaxNG</a>
	validating XML reader.

	There is activity on the <a
	href="http://www.gotmono.com">GotMono forums</a> and the <a
	href="http://www.nullenvoid.com/gtksharp/wiki/">Gtk# Wiki</a>

@item Apr 11th, 2003: First Mono Book is out;  Team pages.

	The first book to cover Mono is out.  This book is currently
	only available in German, you can find it <a
	href="http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3827264928/qid=1050051051/sr=2-1/ref=sr_2_3_1/028-2755135-1623712">here</a>

	We now have a page for the <a href="team.html">Mono Team</a>
	where we include a list of some of the people who have made
	Mono possible.  If you have CVS access, please update the page
	to include your information.

@item Apr 5th, 2003: New compilation engine.

	The new Mono compilation engine has been placed on CVS, the
	details are <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-April/013269.html">here</a>

	Zoltan has commited his <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-devel-list/2003-April/000274.html">typed
	allocation</a> patches to CVS as well.

@item Apr 3rd, 2003: NUnit 2.0 GTK# GUI;  GtkMozEmbed; SWT#

	Gonzalo has checked in his <a href="http://gtk-sharp.sf.net">Gtk#</a>-based
	<a href="http://nunit.org">NUnit</a> tool.  Screenshots are <a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~gonzalo/mono/shots/running.png">here</a>
	and <a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~gonzalo/mono/shots/finished.png">here</a>

	Mark has checked his bindings for Gtk-based Mozilla into CVS,
	module name: `GtkMozEmbed'.  Read the <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-April/013247.html">details</a>

	The SWT port to C# using Gtk is <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/sd-mono-port/2003-March/000114.html">progressing</a>.  Screenshots are
	<a href="http://www.roboto.ch/swt">here</a>. 

@item Mar 28th, 2003: Mono community site.

	<a href="http://www.gotmono.com">www.gotmono.com</a> has
	openend its door: Got Mono is a Mono Community site.

@item Mar 25th, 2003: Second Mono Survey

	<table width="100%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="1" border="0" bgcolor="blue">
	   <tr>
	     <td valign="top">
	       <div style="background: #c0d0ff; margin: 0px 0px 0px 0px; padding: 1px;">
		 What do you think about Mono?

		 Is your company involved with the development and
		 deployment of web applications?  Is Linux becoming an
		 important part of your company's business application
		 strategy? Are you considering Mono for your next
		 project? Would you like to shape the future of Mono
		 and the use of Linux in business critical
		 applications?

		 If you answered yes to any of these questions, we
		 would like to talk with you. If interested, please
		 email us at <a
		 href="mailto:mbadgett@ximian.com">mbadgett@ximian.com</a>.
	       </div>
	     </td>
	   </tr>
	</table>

@item Mar 20th: Windows.Forms and Wine.

	Alexandre has provided a modified version of the GC system
	that will work with and Mono.  See the mono-winforms-list.  It
	is now possible to run our Win32-based implementation of
	Windows.Forms with Mono on Linux.

@item Mar 7th, 2003: Mono 0.23

	A new freshly baked release of Mono is available.  Release
	notes are <a href="archive/mono-0.23">here</a>.   This is mostly a
	bug fix release.  No new features.

@item Mar 5th, 2003: Mono 0.22;  MonoDoc 0.2; Debugger 0.2.1: Release-o-Rama.

	Mono 0.22 has been released.  See the <a
	href="archive/mono-0.22">release notes</a>.  This is a bug fix
	release.

	A new preview of MonoDoc 0.2, the Mono Documentation browser
	has been <a href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/gtk-sharp-list/2003-March/001266.html">released</a>.

	Martin also announced a <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-March/012756.html">new
	release</a> of the Mono Debugger (both GUI and command line). 

@item Mar 3rd, 2003: The Mono Hackers Hall Of Fame welcomes Zoltan Varga

	The <a href="hackers.html">Mono Hackers Hall Of Fame</a>
	continues to show our appreciation to the excellent
	contributors that make <b>mono::</b> a successful free
	software project.

	Zoltan has contributed significantly to Mono, with bug reports and bug 
	fixes as well as pushing the envelope of the things that can be done in
	and with the mono runtime: the gcc-based ngen compiler, code coverage
	and more recently his work with Reflection.Emit that got mono to the 
	point of running the <a href="http://www.ikvm.net">IKVM</a> Java virtual 
	machine.

@item Mar 2nd, 2003: New Mono mailing list.

	A new mailing list for <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/mono-devel-list">Mono
	Development</a> has been created.

@item Feb 27th, 2003: Mono 0.21 released

	Mono 0.21 has been released.  This is only a bug fix release.
	The <a href="archive/mono-0.21">release notes</a> are available.

	Windows binary is available <a href="archive/mono-0.21-win32-1.exe">here</a>

@item Feb 25th, 2003: Mono 0.20 for Windows released;   New Apache module released.

	Packages of Mono for Windows have been <a
	href="archive/mono-0.20-stable-win32-2.exe">released</a>.
	Thanks to Daniel, Johannes and Paolo for setting this up.

	Daniel has released a new version of his Mono Apache module that
	handles ASP.NET.  The code is available at <a
	href="http://apacheworld.org/modmono/">here</a>

	Nick has posted an update on the progress on our <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-February/012467.html">regression
	tests</a>.  We are looking for more tests, and more volunteers to write them.

	Also, remember to contribute to the Gtk# documentation effort,
	momentum is picking up!  See the entry for Feb 18th for more details.

@item Feb, 23rd, 2003: Mono 0.20 released; Gtk# 0.8 released.

	Mono 0.20 has been released.  Check out the <a
	href="archive/mono-0.20">release notes</a> for an overview of
	the changes.  You can get it <a href="download.html">here</a>.
	There are no major features in this release, mostly bug fixes
	and performance improvements.  

	Gtk# 0.8 has been <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/gtk-sharp-list/2003-February/001114.html">released</a>

	<b>Important</b>: The contributed binaries for Windows
	binaries of Mono 0.20 contain a virus.  Please read <a
	href="virus.html">this</a> if you installed the binary.

@item Feb 18th, 2003: Volunteers to document Gtk#

	With the availability of a documentation browser, we are
	looking for volunteers to help us complete the documentation
	of the Gtk# binding for Mono.

	Experience with Gtk is useful, but not mandatory.  We have
	checked in stubs, and we have instructions, and resources to
	how to complete this process <a
	href="documentation.html">here</a>.  Mail the <a
	href="mailto:mono-docs-list@ximian.com">mono-docs-list@ximian.com</a>
	for further discussion.

@item Feb 14th, 2003: OpenGL# bindings for Mono;  Mono Basic updates.

	Mark Crichton has completed his OpenGL/GLUT bindings for
	Gnome.  A screenshot can be seen <a
	href="sshots/oglcs.png">here</a>.  The bindings are available
	on the Mono CVS repository on the module `glgen'.  This is a
	straight binding to the C API. 

	Marco has <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-February/011752.html">posted
	an update</a> on the current state of the free VB.NET compiler
	for Mono.

	We are looking for contributors and maintainers to the
	JavaScript compiler as well (Janet)

@item Feb 12th, 2003: New assemblies, Gtk# stub documentation, Authenticode, Polish site

	Mono now distributes a few new assemblies: Mono.Security.Win32
	as a layer to use the crypto functionality on Win32.  The
	Mono.Posix assembly which contains functionality for taking
	advantage of Unix facilities.

	A <a href="http://www.go-mono.pl/">Mono site in Poland</a>.

	Stubs for the Gtk# documentation have been checked into CVS.
	If you want to contribute please read <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-February/012108.html">this
	message</a>

	Mono development is moving quickly: Tim and Daniel have been
	improving the Oracle database provider and Sebastien Pouliot
	has got code signing to work using Authenticode with pure open
	source and managed code. Plenty of new VB.NET work from Marco
	(compiler) and Daniel (runtime).  Also Jackson has resumed
	work on the IL assembler and the fully managed library to
	generate CIL images (Sergey wrote the first Mono.PEToolkit).

@item Feb 11th, 2003: Mono Weekly News, New assemblies.

	<a href="http://monoevo.sourceforge.net/mwn/index.html">Mono
	Weekly News</a>: Includes a new interview, software
	announcements and the PHP/Mono integration.

@item Feb 5th, 2003: MonoDoc 0.1

	A <a
	href="http://www.go-mono.com/archive/monodoc-0.1.tar.gz">preliminary
	release</a> of the Mono Documentation Browser is now availble.
	Release <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-February/011935.html">notes</a>

@item Jan, 22th, 2003: Mono wins award, OpenLink releases Virtuoso.

	Mono won the `Best Open Source Project' award at the Linux
	World Expo.  A description is <a
	href="http://linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2003-01-23-024-26-OP-EV">here</a>

	Open Link has a <a
	href="http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/030123/neth013_1.html">press
	release</a> about Virtuoso 3.0: the first commercial product
	shipping that uses Mono.

@item Jan, 20th, 2003: Mono 0.19 released;  Screenshots page; Gtk# 0.7

	Mono 0.19 has been released.  Check out the <a
	href="archive/mono-0.19">release notes</a> for an overview of
	the changes.  You can get it <a href="download.html">here</a>.
	There are no major features in this release, mostly bug fixes
	and performance improvements.

	We have now a new section <a href="screenshots.html">with
	screenshots</a> of various Mono applications.  You can see
	there the new released Debugger, as well as the work in
	progress on the documentation browser.

        <a href="http://gtk-sharp.sf.net">Gtk# 0.7</a> has been <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-January/005222.html">released</a>

@item Jan, 19th, 2003: Mono Debugger released.

	After six month of extensive development, Martin Baulig has
	released the first version of the Mono debugger.  The Mono
	debugger is written in C# and can debug both managed and
	unmanaged applications, support for multiple-threaded
	applications and should be relatively easy to port to new
	platforms.  

	Details of the release are available in <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-January/005192.html">post</a>. 

	The debugger contains both Gtk# and command line interfaces.
	The debugging file format used in Dwarf (its already supported
	by our class libraries and the Mono C# compiler; To debug C
	applications, you need a recent GCC, or to pass the -gdwarf-2
	flag to gcc).
	
@item Jan, 17th, 2003: DB2 provider, MacOS X

	Christopher Bockner has contributed a DB2 System.Data client. 

	MacOS X support on the runtime has been integrated into the
	distribution, and MCS works with it.

	Zoltan has managed to get <a
	href="http://radio.weblogs.com/0109845/">IKVM</a> (a Java VM
	for .NET) to run with Mono.  The HelloWorld.class runs with
	the Mono runtime.

@item Jan, 13th, 2003: Mono 0.18 released

	Mono 0.18 has been released.  Check out the <a
	href="archive/mono-0.18">release notes</a> for an overview of
	the changes.  You can get it <a href="download.html">here</a>.

@item Jan 10th, 2003: Mono Weekly News.

	A new issue of the <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2003-January/004903.html">Mono
	Weekly News</a> has been published.

	Check out the <a href="crypto.html">Crypto status</a> page
	that Sebastien has put together.

@item Jan 3rd, 2003: Glade#, Code Coverage, Apache, MBas, Debugger.

	Rachel has made Glade# use attributes so binding C# widgets to
	the designed widgets is now easier than ever.  Alp has
	improved this to use implicit names as well.

	Martin's Mono debugger now has support for multi-thread
	debugging.  Special feature: breakpoints can be defined in a
	per-thread basis now.

	Daniel Lpez has checked in his Apache module to integrate
	Mono and Mono's ASP.NET support as an Apache module.  Gonzalo
	has folded his new Mono hosting classes into this module (they
	are now shared between XSP and mod_mono).  You can get the
	mod_apache from CVS (module name: mod_mono). 

	Mono Basic improvements: Marco has added support for more
	statements on the grammar.

	Zoltan has <a href="http://www.nexus.hu/vargaz2/">posted</a>
	his Code Coverage analysis tool for Mono.

@item Dec 17th, 2002: Mono: Commercial uses.

	<a href="http://www.tipic.com">Tipic</a> today <a
	href="http://www.ximian.com/about_us/press_center/press_releases/index.html?pr=tipic_mono">announced</a>
	their work on porting their Instant Messaging Server platform
	to run on Mono.

	<a href="http://www.winfessor.com">Winfessor</a> also <a
	href="http://www.winfessor.com/press.asp">announced</a> the
	availability of their Jabber SDK to run on Mono.

	Also two weeks ago we mentioned <a
	href="http://www.openlinksw.com">OpenLink Software's</a> <a
	href="http://www.ximian.com/about_us/press_center/press_releases/index.html?pr=openlink_mono">announcement</a>
	of their product, also using Mono.

@item Dec 10th, 2002: Gtk# 0.6 released;  Mono 0.17 packages for Windows and Debian.

	Mike Kestner <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-December/003961.html">announced
	Gtk# 0.6</a>.  This new release includes many new features and
	bug fixes, and is the perfect companion to the <a
	href="archive/mono-0.17">Mono 0.17</a> release.

	Johannes has contributed a Windows-ready package of Mono 0.17,
	and its available from our <a
	href="download.html">download</a> page.

	Alp Toker has <a href="http://www.atoker.com/mono/">Debian packages</a>

@item Dec 9th, 2002: Mono 0.17 has been released

	Mono 0.17 has been released.  Check out the <a
	href="archive/mono-0.17">release notes</a> for a more detailed
	list.   You can get it <a href="download.html">here</a>.

	Many new features as well as plenty of bug fixes.  Many new
	System.Data providers and a more mature System.Web (ASP.NET)
	which can now be hosted in any web server.  A simple <a
	href="archive/xsp-0.2.tar.gz">test web server</a> to host
	asp.net has been released as well.

	This version also integrates Neale's s390 port.

	This release also includes a new exception handling system
	that uses the gcc exception information that vastly improves
	our internalcall speed (15% faster mcs compilation times).   

@item Dec 8th, 2002: VB.NET, Oracle Provider.

	Marco has got the Mono Basic compiler up to speed (support for
	classes, modules, expressions, object creation, method
	invocation, local variables, and some statements).  The
	compiler is based on the work from Rafael Teixeira on MCS.

	Screenshots: <a
	href="http://modgb.sourceforge.net/monobasic_snap.png">in
	Windows doing Windows.Forms</a> and in Linux doing <a
	href="images/gtk-vb.png">VB with Gtk#</a> (courtesy of Alp).

	Daniel Morgan has checked in his Oracle provider to the CVS
	repository as well.

@item Nov 27th, 2002: Press release, tutorials, Windows Forms, ADO.NET, Magazine.

	<a
	href="http://www.business2.com/articles/mag/0,1640,45454,FF.html">The
	Penguin Takes Flight</a>: an article written by Erick
	Schonfeld appears on the December issue of <a
	href="http://www.business2.com/">Business 2.0</a> magazine.

	<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com">OpenLink</a> and <a
	href="http://www.ximian.com">Ximian</a> made <a
	href="http://www.ximian.com/about_us/press_center/press_releases/index.html?pr=openlink_mono">joint
	announcement</a> on the plans of OpenLink to ship their <a
	href="http://www.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/index.htm">Virtuoso</a>
	server on Unix using Mono.

	Martin Willemoes's <a href="gnometutorial">GNOME.NET
	tutorial</a> is now available from the main Mono site.  This
	tutorial is a collaborative effort to teach developers how to
	use Mono to create Mono applications using <a href="http://gtk-sharp.sf.net">Gtk#</a>

	Dennis Hayes has posted and <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-December/003800.html">update</a>
	on the work to get Windows.Forms working on Mono.  There is a
	new test application that people can use to test their
	controls.  If you are interested in working on Windows.Forms,
	you can participate in the <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/mono-winforms-list">mono-winforms
	mailing list</a>

	Brian Ritchie has been working on an ADO.NET <a
	href="http://brianritchie.webhop.net/ideas/adocodegen.aspx">data
	layer</a> and an <a
	href="http://brianritchie.webhop.net/ideas/appserver.aspx">application
	server</a> for Mono.

	Dan Morgan has checked in his Oracle provider, and Tim Coleman
	continues to work on the TDS implementation of the data classes. 

	The rest of the team has been working on bug fixing in the
	runtime, the compiler, and the class libraries.  Also,
	compilation speed has increased recently by performing a
	number of simple optimizations in the compiler.

@item Nov 19th, 2002: Crypto update; Books; Gtk# Datagrid; .NET ONE Slides

	Sebastien has got DSA and RSA signatures <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-November/003497.html">working</a>
	as well as RSA <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-November/003502.html">encryption</a>.
	We now distribute Chew Keong TAN's BigInteger classes.

	Brian has contributed a System.Data multiplexor in Mono, it
	can be found in the Mono.Data assembly.  The details of this
	new technology are <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-November/003400.html">here</a>.
	It works in Mono and the .NET Framework.

	Larry O'Brien has announced the candidate book for <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-November/003500.html">
	Thinking in C#</a>.  The book is Mono-friendly.

	Another book that covers mono (available in German only) is <a
	href="http://www.databecker.de/frames.php?PHPSESSD=4948515556575049525459495248485949485348&PHPSESSID=6cc68dbcfbcbacd7b82a984b0700d5d6&t=2">
	here</a>.

	Dan Morgan has implemented a DataGrid widget for Gtk#, you can
	see Windows screenshots for it <a
	href="images/GtkSharpDataGridScreenshot.png">here</a> and <a
	href="images/SqlSharpGtkScreenshot4.png">here</a>.

	Slides from the Mono developers for the .NET ONE conference are available now:
	<ul>
		<li><a
		href="http://primates.ximian.com/~miguel/slides-europe-nov-2002/DotNetOneKeynote.sxi">
		Mono Keynote presentation</a>

		<li><a href="http://primates.ximian.com/~lupus/slides/embed/">Hosting the Mono Runtime</a><br>
		The simple embedding of Mono in Perl is available <a
		href="http://primates.ximian.com/~lupus/slides/embed/Mono-0.01.tar.gz">here</a>

		<li><a href="http://primates.ximian.com/~lupus/slides/jit/">The Mono JIT compiler</a>

		<li><a href="http://primates.ximian.com/~miguel/slides-europe-nov-2002/Mono_C_Sharp_Overview_1007.sxi">
		Mono C# Compiler Overview</a>
	</ul>

	A couple of other presentations from Miguel's trip to Europe
	are available <a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~miguel/slides-europe-nov-2002/">here</a>
	in Open Office file format.

@item Nov 8th, 2002: Mono s390, Database work, new JIT updates.

	Neale Ferguson has contributed <a href="download.html">RPM
	packages</a> of Mono for the Linux/s390.

	Tim Coleman posted an <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-November/003329.html">update</a>
	on the improvements in the System.Data

	The new JIT engine can run 72 out of our 154 tests for the
	virtual machine, and it also got exception support this week.

@item Nov 1st, 2002: TDS, Crypto, Gtk#, Winforms, bug fixes.

	Tim's SqlClient is <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-November/003161.html">now
	capable</a> of communicating with the Microsoft SQL server
	using the TDS protocol.  A screenshot showing a sample client
	running with <a href="http://gtk-sharp.sf.net">Gtk#</a> on
	Windows is shown <a
	href="images/SqlSharpGtkSceenshot3.png">here</a>

	Sebastien has made all symetric ciphers functional on all
	supported modes; All the classes in Security.Cryptography are
	present and the X590 certificates are now in too.  Jackson has
	been working on the Security classes.

	Many bug fixes all over the place: class libraries (Dick,
	Piers, Ville, Zoltan, Gonzalo, Dan, Atsushi, Nick, Phillip),
	compiler, runtime engine.  A big thank goes for everyone who
	has been providing bug reports for us to track down.

	Gaurav has been working on multiple WebControls.  Gonzalo migrated
	the ASP.NET engine to use POST for interaction.

	In the Gtk# land saw the integration of gda, gnome-db and GStreamer
	bindings.

	Windows.Forms classes now build on Linux and Windows, check
	out the status pages for areas of collaboration.

@item Oct 24th, 2002: S390 support, XSP/ASP.NET, Win32 contributors, TDS.

	Today Neal Ferguson's support for the IBM S390 was checked
	into CVS.

	The XSP processor has been fully integrated into the
	System.Web assembly, and Gonzalo has finished the hosting
	interfaces in Mono.  This means that it is possible to embed
	ASP.NET with the same APIs used in Windows, and is possible to
	easily embed it with Apache for example.  The XSP module has
	now become a shell for testing the System.Web classes.

	We are looking for contributors that know Win32 to contribute
	to the Windows.Forms implementation.  If you want to help
	write some controls using the Win32 API, get in touch with our new <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/mono-winforms-list">mono-winforms-list@ximian.com
	list</a> mailing list. 

	Tim's TDS System.Data set of classes can now talk to SQL
	servers using the TDS protocol (version 4.2) with
	connection pooling.  Currently it can connect, run
	transactions, update/insert/delete, and read some types.  A
	data adapter is also coming soon.
	
@item Oct 21th, 2002: Crypto, Winforms list, Database, GConf, Debugger.

	Sebastien Poliot has made a lot of progress, he reports that
	DES and TripleDES have been fixed;  Rijndael and CFB modes
	still have problems in some configurations and some areas that
	are not supported by the .NET framework.

	Last week we created a new <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/mono-winforms-list">mailing
	list</a> to discuss the Mono Winforms implementation.

	Tim has started a full C# implementation of the TDS protocol
	and the providers, and Brian continues his work on his ODBC
	binding.  

	Rachel Hestilow has also checked in a binding for GConf.  This
	binding <a
	href="http://toxic.magnesium.net/~hestilow/gconfsharp/intro.html">is
	unique</a> in that it uses some features in the CLI to support
	complex data types, and allows the user to keep only one
	representation of the types instead of two (the master types
	is defined in CLI-land).  Also Property Editors (<a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~miguel/shots/gconf-shot.png">shot</a>)
	simplify the creation of user interfaces that bind their
	configuration to backend keys, following the <a
	href="http://developer.gnome.org/projects/gup/hig/1.0/">GNOME
	Human Interface Guidelines.</a>

	Martin is now on vacation, but before leaving he produced a
	number of documents detailing the state of the debugger.  The
	major missing feature is full support for debugging unmanaged
	applications (it requires dwarf-2 handlers for types).  We
	will do some polishing of the user interface (<a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~miguel/shots/debugger-4.png">new
	shot</a>) to expose the existing and rich functionality to the
	users and try to release a preview of the debugger at the same
	time as Mono 0.17.

@item Oct 14th, 2002: Crypto, Database work, Debugger, Documentation.

	Brian, Daniel and Rodrigo have been busy working on the ODBC
	provider for Mono.  Daniel posted some <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-October/002755.html">updates</a>.
	Brian posted <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-October/002758.html">details
	about the ODBC.NET</a> provider.

	Also Sebastien Pouliot has been improving the various
	cryptographic classes in Mono, something that we had not done
	in quite some time.  We are looking for a way to handle
	big-nums.  We need either a managed or unmanaged set of
	classes for handling large numbers, and some volunteers to
	expose this functionality to C# (Either as an internal
	assembly, or as a set of P/Invoke, Internal call wrappers).

	Martin has got our debugger to support adding breakpoints at
	file/line combos.  This was more complex than generic
	breakpoints in routines, because these breakpoints are set on
	routines that probably have not been JITed just yet.  Martin's
	focus now is on stabilizing our debugger and aim for a public
	release of it.

	We have also imported the ECMA documentation into a separate
	module, and with the help from Scott Bronson we will have the
	necessary XSLT tools to finish our native documentation
	browser for Mono.  This together with the work from Adam will
	be the foundation for the <a href="classlib-doc.html">Mono
	Documentation Tools</a>. 

@item Oct 9th, 2002: Various Mono updates.

	Brian Ritchie, Daniel Morgan, Rodrigo Moya and Ville Palo have
	been working on various database providers.  The MySQL has
	seen a lot of work, and a new ODBC provider is now on CVS and
	more extensive regression tests have been checked in.

	Dick Porter is our background hero and keeps fixing the
	low-level bugs in the portability layer.  Now the Mono handle
	daemon should be a lot more robust and will no longer leave IPC
	regions.  Gonzalo Paniagua has initiated the migration of XSP
	into the System.Web class libraries now that we have a
	complete HttpRuntime implementation.  This means that you are
	able to embed the ASP.NET processor into any web server you
	want.  This also includes support for the system-wide
	configuration file `machine.config'.

	Martin Baulig has been busy with the Mono Debugger, you can see how
	it looks <a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~miguel/debugger-1.png">here</a>
	and <a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~miguel/debugger-2.png">here</a>.
	Now local variables and breakpoints are supported, and we are
	working on the UI elements to simplify their use (as seen on
	the screenshot).  

	<a href="http://gtk-sharp.sf.net">Gtk#</a> has seen a lot of
	activity specially as we start to build larger applications.
	Vladimir Vukicevic, Kristian Rietveld, Rachel Hestilow, Mike
	Kestner and Miguel de Icaza have been busy improving it.
	mPhoto which is a Photo management application for Mono and
	Gtk# is seen <a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~miguel/shots/mphoto-2.jpg">here</a>.

	Chris Toshok the man behind LDAP in Evolution continues to
	work on the Mono.LDAP# implementation.

	Dietmar Maurer and Paolo Molaro are still busy working on our
	new optimized JIT/ATC engine and are making great progress.
	The code base has been designed to ease the implementation of
	more advanced compiler optimizations, and optimizations can be
	chosen individually so they can be tuned for a particular
	processor, or use profile-based information to improve the
	performance.

@item Oct 1st, 2002: Mono 0.16 released;  Debugger updates.

	Mono 0.16 has been released.  Source and RPMs are <a
	href="download.html">available</a>.  The release notes are <a
	href="archive/mono-0.16">here</a>.  

	Martin's debugger can debug both managed and unmanaged code.
	Recently Martin added support for locals, parameters, and
	breakpoints on top of the existing infrastructure (his
	debugger supported instruction-level and source-code level
	single-stepping).

@item Sep 19th, 2002: Mono Survey.

	Help us plan for the future of Mono by filing out the <a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~miguel/monosurvey">First Mono
	Survey</a>

@item Sep 17th, 2002: Mono Hackers Hall of Fame: Sergey Chaban 

	The <a href="hackers.html">Mono Hackers Hall Of Fame</a>
	continues to show our appreciation to the excellent
	contributors that made <b>mono::</b> a successful free
	software project.

	This time the Hall of Fame welcomes Sergey Chaban.  Sergey has
	been a long time contributor to the project, from the early
	work on the class libraries that were critical to Mono's
	origin: every time you use a Hashtable in Mono, it runs
	Sergey's code, to the low-level optimizations on the JIT
	engine and to his work on ILASM and the PEToolkit. 

	
@item Sep 16th, 2002: Documentation Tools, ILASM, Debugger, Mono LDAP, Winforms

	Adam Treat has started moving the documentation universe again.  We
	have a new strategy to document our APIs (given that we have
	chosen <a href="classlib-doc.html">not to document the code
	inline</a>).  This includes the use of a master reference file
	that will hold the entry points to document.  All master files
	for our assemblies have been checked into CVS now.

	Sergey Chaban's Mono.PEToolkit and ILASM tools have been
	checked into CVS.  Although ILASM is old and will soon be
	updated, we wanted to get the build issues sorted out.

	Martin Baulig's Mono Debugger is still on its early stages,
	but you can run and run step by step your C# code and C code
	(including the Mono runtime).  Dwarf-2 is required to compile
	your code.  The regular step, step-into, and assembly-level
	step and step-into are supported.  And comes with a Gtk#
	UI. The debugger is written mostly in C# with some C glue
	code.  Most of the work is on the engine, we will be working
	on making a good UI in the future.

	Chris Toshok of the Hungry Programmer's fame has checked in
	Mono.Directory.LDAP, a C# wrapper for the LDAP libraries.
	This is the substrate for implementing the
	System.DirectoryServices assembly.

	Andrew has also continued with some of the cryptographic
	classes implementation.

	After much public debate, we have chosen a new <a
	href="winforms.html">strategy to implement winforms</a>.
	Implementing a Gtk, Qt or Aqua based version of Winforms was
	going to be almost as complex as implementing Wine itself.  So
	the new strategy is to only roll out a WineLib-based
	implementation. 

@item Sep 4th, 2002: .NET One 2002 Program available

	The <a
	href="http://www.sigs-datacom.de/sd/kongresse/dotnet_2002/index.htm">.NET
	ONE 2002</a> conference in Frankfurt is now available.  Paolo
	will be talking about the Mono JIT and embedding the Mono
	runtime in your Windows and Linux applications.  Mike Kestner
	will talk about <a href="http://gtk-sharp.sf.net">Gtk#</a> and
	the automatic binding generator used by Gtk# and Miguel will
	be talking about the Mono project on Monday's keynote and on
	the Mono C# compiler on Tuesday.

@item Sep 3rd, 2002: Apache integration

	<a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-September/001862.html">Sterling</a>
	announced an Apache module that hosts
	Mono, and allows CIL code to run from within Apache, giving the
	module access to the Apache runtime.  This uses the Mono embedding
	API.

@item Aug 24th, 2002: Gtk# 0.4 released

	Shortly after <a href="download.html">Mono 0.15</a> was
	released a fresh version of <a
	href="http://gtk-sharp.sf.net">Gtk#</a> was <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-August/001702.html">announced</a>.

@item Aug 23rd, 2002: Mono 0.15 released

	Mono 0.15 has been released.  Source and RPMs are <a
	href="download.html">available</a>.  The release notes are <a
	href="archive/mono-0.15">here</a>

@item Aug 21th, 2002: Portable.NET encodings integrated into Mono.

	Rhys Weatherley has contributed the Portable.NET encoders to
	the Mono class libraries.  This is a great step towards
	cooperation between these projects.  Thanks to Paolo for doing the
	merger on our side.

	His encoders are more complete than the iconv-based approach
	that mono used, which was unreliable under certain
	circumstances.  

@item Aug 20th, 2002: Remoting work, Resources, SPARC checkins, ADO.NET

	<b>San Francisco</b>: August 14th.  Linux World Expo.

	Mark Crichton has checked in his patches to get the SPARC port
	on par with the PPC port.

	Dick has checked-in the resource reader and resource writers
	to the class libraries, and Dietmar checked in the C# support
	code for the remoting infrastructure.  

	More work on System.Data: the LibGDA (our OleDB backend) based
	providers are quickly maturing, and recently they executed
	their first query.

@item Aug 13th, 2002: MCS news, Gtk# progress, Windows.Forms, ADO.NET

	Martin Baulig has been fixing all the known bugs in the C#
	compiler and now has moved into improving the compilation
	speed and the generated code quality of MCS.  Today we got a
	50% speedup in the bootstrap of MCS going from 24 seconds to 12 seconds. 

	Gtk# has been making a lot of progress, some interesting
	corner cases are now supported:, you can now create canvas items as
	well as using the tree widget.  Here is a shot of <a
	href="images/mocil.png">MonoCIL</a>.

	On the runtime front, focus has been on improving remoting
	support, exception handling, as well as completing the support
	for structure marshaling.  

	Patrik is also back in action: the HttpRuntime infrastructure
	is rapidly improving, and Gonzalo is working into moving XSP
	into our main class library and providing the missing pieces
	to integrate with Patrik's code.

	Dennis and his team are working on a WineLib-based
	implementation of Windows Forms to guarantee that the corner
	cases of Windows.Forms can be handled, and we are back on track again.

	A lot more work on the ADO.NET and WebServices has also been
	checked into CVS.

@item Aug 1st, 2002: Mono Hackers Hall of Fame

	The <a href="hackers.html">Mono Hackers Hall Of Fame</a> has been started
	to show our appreciation to the excellent contributors that made <b>mono::</b>
	a successful free software project.

	The first, deserved, entry goes to
	Nick Drochak, who joined us in the first days of Mono and built the testing 
	infrastructure for the C# assemblies, fixed tons of bugs and even adventured 
	himself in the lands of the C runtime. His work is invaluable for keeping
	Mono on the right track through the daily changes in the codebase.

@item Looking for volunteers

	We are looking for volunteers to help complete various pieces
	of Mono and help move the project forward, we need
	contributions to:

	<ul>
		* More tests to the existing class libraries.
	
		* Finish existing class libraries, check our <a
		href="class-status.html">class status</a> pages to see
		all the missing things.  There are open tasks all over
		the place: XML, Database access, enterprise services,
		configuration, ASP.NET, Drawing APIs, and more.

		* Since we have now ASP.NET running, we would like to 
		create an ASP.NET application to maintain our class
		library documentation.

		We have some special needs (read them <a
	 	href="classlib-doc.html">here</a>).     There is a
		prototype written using Windows.Forms, but we believe
		it will be faster to have this done using ASP.NET (and
		it is also a nice way of stress testing it).

		* Support for the VB runtime: we need contributions
		to make our VB runtime mature enough to host
		applications compiled with the VB.NET to run with
		Mono.

		* We need people to help write the documentation: you
		can start editing our XML files by hand, and once we
		have the ASP.NET tool, upgrade to that. 
	</ul> 

@item July 31st, 2002: Flow Analysis

	Martin has checked into CVS the data flow analysis patch for
	MCS, this means that we now correctly implement definite
	assignment in the C# language.

@item Jul 31st, 2002: Most ASP.NET controls render, Gtk# structs.

	Gonzalo <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-August/001234.html">posted
	an update</a> on the ASP.NET widgets that are still pending.  Patrik is back, and he is 
	working with Gonzalo to streamline the pipeline

	Rachel quietly committed to Gtk-Sharp support for marshaling
	structures (very important for Gtk#).  This uses extensively
	the new marshaling code that Dietmar added to the runtime.

	Dietmar is also now sharing more code for P/Invoke using his
	intermediate representation.  Another step to share more code, and 
	simplify the porting and maintenance process. 

@item Jul 27th, 2002: NGEN tool for Mono.

	Zoltan <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-July/001117.html">announced</a>
	the availability of his CIL to C compiler.  This allows your Mono assemblies to be pre-compiled
	and optimized by GCC in your platform, increasing the speed significantly of your code. 

@item Jul 26th, 2002: Mono 0.13 has been released.

	<b>Mono 0.13 has been released!</b> (details <a
	href="archive/mono-0.13">here</a>).  Get
	your sources for the <a
	href="archive/mono-0.13.tar.gz">runtime</a> and
	<a href="archive/mcs-0.13.tar.gz">compiler and class libraries</a>.
	<p>
	Alp made Debian packages and they are <a
	href="http://www.atoker.com/mono/">here</a>.  Cristophe made
	packages for Red Hat and they are <a
	href="http://mono.baselabs.org/software">here</a>.
	And Windows packages have been <a href="http://www.superin.formativ.net/mono/mono.htm">contributed</a>

@item Jul 23rd, 2002: Mono Verifier, System.Web.Services, ASP.NET samples.

	Mono now has a verifier.  It is used by the runtime, or you can invoke it manually to 
	verify an image by using the `pedump' tool.

	Tim Coleman has started work on the System.Web.Services
	assembly (you can also track the status here on the web page).
	Contact him if you want to help in this assembly or with the
	associated web service tools.  

	Various samples for ASP.NET have landed in CVS. 

@item Jul 20th, 2002: Spanish Mono Tutorial.

	A Spanish tutorial on using Mono is <a
	href="http://mono.es.gnome.org/tutoriales/mono-linux/">here</a>.
	Also the <a
	href="http://mono.es.gnome.org/tutoriales/mono-puf/">FAQ</a>
	has been translated as well.

@item Jul 19th, 2002: File handle redirection, Embeddable Mono and Mono Linux compilation.

	Dick's code for file handle redirection is complete and has
	now landed on the CVS repository.

	The Mono runtime can now be embedded into your application
	(also known as "CLR hosting").  See the sample in
	mono/samples/embed.  This allows your application to link with
	the Mono runtime, then your C code can call into the C#/CIL
	universe and back.

	Peter Williams and Martin contributed some Makefiles to
	compile all of Mono on Linux.  Details are <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-July/000916.html">here</a>.

@item Jul 17th, 2002

	The first documentary on Ximian's development team is now
	available online, from young director <a
	href="mailto:erik.pukinskis@uconn.edu">Erik Pukinskis</a>: <a
	href="http://www.ximian.com/devzone/projects/codemonkey.html">"Code
	Monkey At Work"</a>.

	A Tutorial on getting Mono installed from sources is now <a
	href="http://www.go-mono.com/mono-beginning/x70.html">online</a>.

	More progress on the ASP.NET front: user defined controls are
	now being rendered, as well as many of the sample programs
	from www.asp.net.  Gonzalo's work can be found on module XSP
	(this implements the .aspx compiler).

	Sergey Chaban has got Gtk# working on Windows, you can see
	some screenshots: <a href="sshots/Gtksharp-1.jpg">sample apps</a> and
	<a href="sshots/Gtksharp-2.jpg">running with a Russian charset</a>.

@item Jul 16th, 2002

	Paolo today got mono to complete host itself on Linux.  This
	means that we can now compile the `corlib' using the Mono C#
	compiler and the Mono runtime.

	Compiling the corlib was rather tricky, because the types that
	the compiler uses during the compilation process will come
	from the source code it is compiling.  

	After a few months of work, we have finally fleshed out all
	the remaining bugs.  Now the next step is to update the makefiles
	to compile with the Mono tool-chain.

	A recapitulation:
	<ul>
		* The Mono C# compiler was able to compile itself on December 28th, 2001.
		  The resulting image contained errors though.

		* The Mono C# compiler was able to self-compile in on
		  January 3rd, 2002.  Becoming a self-hosting compiler on Windows.

		* The Mono runtime matured enough by March 12, 2002 that it
		  was able to bootstrap the Mono C# compiler on Linux using our interpreter.
		  This means that our development tool was self sufficient.

		* On March 26th, the JIT engine was fixed, so we could use this to
		  run the compiler on Linux.

		* Martin fixed the remaining bugs in the compiler that stopped it from
	 	  compiling the `corlib'.  The resulting image still contained errors though.

		* On July 8th, Radek got the PowerPC port to bootstrap
		  the C# compiler.  This is important, because it exposed
	  	  various tricky issues in a big-endian system.

		* Today: we can bootstrap the compiler using libraries
		  and the compiler compiled with itself on Linux.  The process is complete.
	</ul>

	In the meantime, Dietmar has quietly implemented the remaining
	pieces of Marshalling in the Mono runtime.   This is very
	important for the Gtk# guys to move on with their bindings.

	To make things more interesting, he replaced most of the
	architecture specific code generation for trampolines
	(delegates, invocations, function and p/invoke trampolines) to
	use CIL.  This CIL is then compiled on the flight by the JIT
	Compiler engine.  By doing this, we have reduced the burden to
	port the JITer to new architectures, and that our trampoline
	code is cross platform.

@item Jul 9th, 2002

	Ajay was the first to notice <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-July/000641.html">
	Mono's first birthday</a>.

	In a year, we have achieved plenty:
	<ul>
		* 94 contributors with CVS access (84 non-Ximian developers).
		* A complete CLI implementation:
		<ul>
			<li> A fast and performing x86 JIT engine (inlining, constant propagation).
			<li> An interpreter for other systems (PPC, Sparc, StrongArm).
		</ul>
		* A self-hosting C# compiler, which can compile its class libraries.
		* 37,140 file changes in CVS.
		* 92,000 lines of C code.
		* 437,000 lines of C# code (compiler, classes, tests)
		* A working core for ASP.NET and ADO.NET.
		* Major subsystems are functional: RegularExpressions,
		  System.XML, XML.Schema, System.Data, System.Web.
		* The Gtk# project, which is maturing rapidly.
	</ul>

	Thanks to everyone who has made Mono possible with their
	feedback, regression tests, their comments, their help on the mailing
	list, code contributions, complete classes, bug reporting, the
	countless hours of bug hunting.  This project would not have
	been possible without every contribution.  

	It has been a great year for everyone involved in the
	project.  I think we have built a new and exciting community.

	Now we have a solid foundation to build on, so this next year
	looks even more exciting: not only because we will see more
	Mono applications, but we will begin using Mono as an
	`library' to be linked with applications that want to get
	scripting-like features; Gtk# is our ticket to create nice
	GNOME applications; And we will be developing CORBA bindings
	to integrate with other object systems.

	Also, for those interested in optimizations and tuning, this
	year we will get to play with more advanced optimizations and
	all kinds of interesting research ideas for improving Mono
	code generation.

	A special thanks to the Mono developers at Ximian for managing
	to survive their manager and a special thanks to our
	regression test marshal Nick Drochak, who has been hunting
	down, and fixing code in our class libraries and keeping us on
	track for so long.

@item Jul 8th, 2002

	Radek today fixed the last bugs to get Mono to self host on
	Linux/PowerPC.

	Alp Toker has released version 0.5 of <a
	href="http://www.atoker.com/phonic/">Phonic</a>, a media
	player for .NET. Phonic makes extensive use of Mono-developed
	technologies such as Gtk# and csvorbis (Ogg player ported by
	Mark). Hopefully we will be seeing many more exciting
	applications like these in the near future.

	Dietmar has been moving a lot of the architecture specific
	code in the JIT engine to our internal representation.  This
	means that porting the JIT is simpler now, as there is less
	architecture-specific code to maintain.  The inliner, constant
	folder and constant propagation are also done at the
	architecture independent layer.

	Gonzalo is now running the sample ASP.NET applications on
	Linux with the Mono runtime.  It still needs polishing though,
	and help with the various ASP.NET controls would be
	appreciated.  The ASP.NET community seems more poor than the
	PHP community, we need to have a few open source controls to
	do things dynamic rendering (libart+gdk-pixbuf again can do
	most of the work), charts and components like the kind of
	thing you see in the PHP universe: to bring nice GPL code to
	the masses of Windows developers, lure them into the world of
	Linux.

	Dick has also got us the new Process implementation that
	implements the Win32 semantics.  Now only redirection is
	missing.

@item Jul 3rd, 2002

	Listen to Paolo Molaro do a talk on Mono at the WebIT
	conference in Padova, Italy this coming friday.  Details are
	<a href="http://www.webbit2001.org/event/eventview/534/">here</a>

	You can also see a trip report from the Gnome in the South trip:
	<a href="http://primates.ximian.com/~miguel/sur.html">here</a>

	Miguel will be doing a couple of talks at the O'Reilly
	conference about Mono: status update, progress and developing
	applications with it.  Details are <a
	href="http://conferences.oreillynet.com/cs/os2002/view/e_sess/2994">here</a>
	and <a
	href="http://conferences.oreillynet.com/cs/os2002/view/e_sess/2996">here</a>

@item Jun 30, 2002

	Martin Baulig fixed the remaining bugs that prevented MCS to
	compile our corlib.  The compilation was tricky because of the way
	MCS bootstraps the compile (internally mcs uses the types that are
	being defined at that point to perform compares).

	Martin and Paolo have been working hard on fixing the
	remaining issues.  Currently 102 test pass and 15 fail with
	our resulting corlib.

	Jesus' SoapFormatter classes are now in CVS.

	I have been redoing the type lookup system for MCS.  The
	interesting bit is that I did most of this work on an airplane
	using MCS itself.  Which is a good test that the compiler is 
	now a good development tool.

	Duncan, Mike and Rachel have been hard at work with Gtk#, now
	there are bindings for the GtkHTML widget (the one used by
	Evolution's composer).  And Rachel also got the beginning of GNOME
	bindings, that should simplify application development.

	A big thanks goes to Dennis Hayes for getting the
	Windows.Forms work together, and committing so many stubs for Windows.Forms. 

@item Jun 25, 2002

	I am updating the Mono site from the UNESCO offices in
	Uruguay, the <a href="http://www.gnome.org/resources/calendar/roadshow/GNOMEenelSur.html">South-America trip</a>
	to promote free software is going very well.

	Many news in Mono-land this week so far:

	Mike Kestner got bindings for GtkHTML last night for Gtk#,
	this is using GtkHTML 2.0.  

	On Monday Piers Haken <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-June/000380.html">contributed</a>
	the core to support XPath in Mono: most of the w3c spec is
	implemented (modulo a few pending bits).

	Dick checked in his implementation of the Process classes:
	process forking and waiting support committed, with some functions to
	query status.  This was complex as we had to emulate the Win32
	environment, but this is another step to be fully compatible.
	This means for example that any process can check on the
	status of any other process (without the parent/child relationship)

	Of course, those interested
	in only the Unix semantics can always P/Invoke the Unix calls.

@item Jun 24, 2002


        Duncan has written a few sample <a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~duncan/Mono">Gtk# demo
	applications</a> (<a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~duncan/Mono/img/ImageViewer.png">screen
	shot</a>, <a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~duncan/Mono/img/ImageBrowser.png">another</a>)

	Rachel also got the beginning of Gnome bindings (<a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~tvgm/gnome-hello.png">screenshot</a>).
	She also got some <a
	href="http://primates.ximian.com/~tvgm/gtk-sharp-docs/">documentation</a>
	up now.

@item Jun 22, 2002

	Mono's ASP.NET has rendered its first page on Linux for the
	first time (Gonzalo and Paolo).  

	Also, we are getting close to
	self hosting.  Paolo posted a <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-June/000345.html">list
	of pending issues</a> which are now very small.

	Steam is picking up in <a
	href="http://gtk-sharp.sf.net">Gtk#</a> as the bindings become more
	complete and small applications are starting to emerge.  Gtk#
	now compiles completely on Linux.  This uses a lot of the XML
	libraries, which is nice to see.

@item Jun 20, 2002

	Gonzalo has got the Mono ASP.NET implementation can now render all Html
	Controls, and 21 out of the 26 Web Controls.  Session tracking is
	next.  Look in xsp/test for a collection of tests that render with Mono.

	Ajay has been very busy improving and extending the
	XmlSerialization code.  All fields had to be re-ordered to
	match the Microsoft implementation.

@item Jun 19, 2002

	You can now download a fresh tarball of the libraries and the MCS 
	compiler daily from <a href="http://www.atoker.com/mono/">Alp Toker's
	website</a>.
      
	New libgc RPMS for Redhat 7.3 are available on <a href="
	http://java.thn.htu.se/~toor/">Richard Torkar's site</a>.

@item Jun 10, 2002

	Ajay <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-June/000128.html">announced</a>
	today that the reading code for XmlSchemas is almost complete.

@item Jun 7, 2002

	<b>Mono 0.12 is out!</b> More classes!  More working code!
	Better compiler!  Faster runtime!  Less bugs! 

	You can get it <a
	href="download.html#jun-7">Here</a> (quick links: <a
	href="archive/mono-0.12.tar.gz">runtime</a> and <a
	href="archive/mcs-0.12.tar.gz">compiler/classes</a>).

@item Jun 3rd, 2002

	CodeDOM implementation from Daniel Stodden has got C# output support.

@item May 31, 2002

	Gonzalo got the Mono XSP page parser to render its first ASP.NET
	.aspx file today without using MS System.Web.Hosting classes.
	It is currently on its infancy.  But very good news, now we need to 
	upgrade our System.Web runtime to run natively on Linux.

	Sergey's code for architecture and size-specific CPBLK has
	been checked into CVS.

	Paolo has checked the configuration code for Mono (to map
	PInvoke dlls to other libraries).

	<a href="ado-net.html">ADO support</a>: Daniel has checked in
	a modified version of the MySQL data provider from Brad.  And Rodrigo
	started the OleDB using LibGDA.

@item May 27, 2002

	An <a href="index.rss">RSS feed</a> is now available for the
	Mono news.  I find it surprising that there are so many tools
	that process this data.  

	Binaries for <a href="http://www.superin.formativ.net/mono/mono.htm">Windows</a> are
	now location independent, do not require Cygwin and come with a Wizard.

@item May 26, 2002

	Daniel Morgan checked in his Sql# Cli tool into the
	System.Data class library.

@item May 24, 2002

	Ajay <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-patches/2002-May/003953.html">has
	checked in</a> a major update to the System.Xml.Schema namespace.

	Gonzalo moved XSP along this week: Added support for
	templates, columns inside DataGrid, HTML comments, code render
	and data binding tags, style properties in style tags,
	ListItem inside list controls, float and double properties.

@item May 22, 2002

	<a href="http://monologo.sourceforge.net/">MonoLogo</a> runs
	on the Mono runtime.  This <a
	href="http://monologo.sourceforge.net/gtk.png">screenshot</a> shows
	MonoLogo running Gtk#.

@item May 21, 2002

	Martin has improved the debugging infrastructure in Mono, now
	it is possible to get <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-May/005717.html">line
	number</a> information on stack traces.

@item May 20, 2002

	XSP <a href="asp-net">our ASP.NET</a> .aspx page parser is now
	available on the AnonCVS servers.  This is part of the ASP.NET
	support in Mono.  Gonzalo is the developer on charge of it.

	Many updates to the <a href="ado-net.html">ADO.NET
	implementation</a> from Dan, Tim and Rodrigo.  

	Radek got the Mono C# compiler running on Linux/PPC and
	compiling most of our regression test suite.

	Lawrence has been working really hard in fixing, improving and
	polishing the underlying network infrastructure.

	The Rafael and Chris have committed the beginning of the
	VisualBasic.NET runtime support to CVS.

	Jesus has contributed the beginning of the SoapFormatter

@item May 9, 2002

	Linear register allocator has been deployed in the Mono JIT
	engine.  Read <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-May/005489.html">about
	it</a>

@item May 5, 2002

	We are able to retrieve simple data from the database 
	using our ADO.NET like functionality.  Only string and integer data
	types are supported right now but more are in the works.
	
	You can find more information 
	at <a href="http://www.go-mono.com/ado-net.html">The Mono ADO-NET Page</a>
	
	Thanks goes to Chris, Daniel, Duncan, Gonzalo, Miguel, Rodrigo, Tim, 
	and others for these bits.

@item May 4th, 2002

	Rodrigo Moya announced <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-May/005366.html">new
	LibGDA</a>: LibGDA is an ADO-like library for Unix systems.
	This one removes all the CORBA and GConf dependencies, which
	should make it easier to use and compile. 

	This is another milestone for our <a
	href="ado-net.html">ADO.NET implementation plans</a>

	We have a little surprise for everyone tracking the news on Tuesday ;-)

@item May 2nd, 2002

	Mark Crichton csvorbis port (C# port of Vorbis player) and
	Richard Hestilow's <a href="http://monologo.sf.net">MonoLogo compiler</a> are now
	on the CVS, and you can get them from AnonCVS.

	Dick implemented inter-process sharing of handles as well as
	simplifying the implementation of WaitForMultipleObjects, now
	we have a `handles' subsystem in Mono.  This is needed to fully
	emulate the handle behavior that Win32 exposes, and that the .NET API
	expose to applications.

	News from the <a
	href="http://gtk-sharp.sourceforge.net">Gtk#</a> front: <a
	href="http://gtk-sharp.sourceforge.net/menu.png">Menu
	support</a>, Mike <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/gtk-sharp-list/2002-May/000064.html">tells
	the story</a>	

@item May 1st, 2002

	Daily packages for <a href="http://www.debian.org">Debian</a> are available
	<a href="http://www.atoker.com/mono/">here</a>

@item Apr 26, 2002

	Binary packages of Mono 0.11 are available for <a
	href="http://www.superin.formativ.net/mono/mono.htm">Windows</a>
	(Thanks to Johannes Roith) and for
	<a
	href="http://mono.baselabs.org/index.php/software/">Linux</a> (thanks
	to BaseLabs).

@item Apr 24, 2002

	<b>Mono 0.11 is out!</b> Mostly performance improvements, bug
	fixes and more classes are included.

	A new version of the runtime, compiler and class libraries has
	been packaged for your download pleasure.  Binaries are
	included.  The <a href="archive/mono-0.11">Release Notes</a>
	are available.

	You can get it <a
	href="download.html#apr-24">Here</a> (quick links: <a
	href="archive/mono-0.11.tar.gz">runtime</a> and <a
	href="archive/mcs-0.11.tar.gz">compiler/classes</a>).

@item Apr 23, 2002

	SharpDevelop 0.88a <a href="http://www.icsharpcode.net/OpenSource/SD">is out!</a>

	Congratulations to the developers behind SharpDevelop for
	their new release.

@item Apr 20, 2002

	Some updates from the hacking lines:

	<b>The web:</b> Patrik Torstensson last week contributed the
	http runtime support and started work on thread pools.  This
	is part of the ASP.NET support.

	<b>Docs:</b> John Barnette, John Sohn and Adam Treat have been
	hacking on MonoDoc.

	<b>ADO.NET:</b> Daniel Morgan and Rodrigo Moya have been
	working on the <a href="ado-net">ADO.NET</a> support, and got
	the first signs of life this week (we can connect, insert
	rows; do transactions: commit/rollback; SQL errors and
	exceptions work).  Check <a
	href="mailing-lists.html">mono-patches</a> for all the
	goodies.

	<b>Optimizations:</b> A number of optimizations in the runtime
	made the compiler twice as fast this week:

	Early this week Patrik started the string
	rewrite in the runtime.  Today Dietmar finished the
	constructors and deployed the new layout. 

	Paolo got the JIT engine to generate profiles, which were in
	turn used to find hot spots in Reflection, which he improved.

	Daniel Lewis (of Regex fame) noticed the performance issues
	with our current array layout, and contributed a new array
	representation.

	At the same time Dietmar started the the JIT inline code and
	implemented constant propagation.  These two optimizations
	together are very powerful.

	<b>Bug fixing:</b> And of course everyone has been helping out
	with the bug fixing (Duncan, Gonzalo, Jonathan, Miguel, Nick,
	Ravi, Sergey)


@item Apr 18, 2002

	Dietmar's inlining for the JIT engine just landed into
	CVS. This is only a first cut and more improvements will come later.

	Patrik, Paolo, Dietmar and Gonzalo have been busy optimizing
	our class libraries and runtime engine to become faster. Many changes
	on CVS as well.

@item Apr 11, 2002

	Gtk# 0.1 "ButtonHook" has been <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/gtk-sharp-list/2002-April/000048.html">released</a>

	Binaries for the Mono Regression Test Suite are <a
	href="archive/mono-tests.tar.gz">available</a> for
	people porting the Mono Runtime to new platforms.

@item Apr 6, 2002

	<a href="http://www.dotnetremoting.cc/book/AdvancedDotNetRemoting.asp">
	Advanced .NET Remoting</a> from Ingo Rammer is now available. Ingo
	helped us to implement the proxy support and the book is a valuable
	resource for anyone interested in remoting.

@item Apr 5, 2002

	Transparent proxy support has been finished, congrats to
	Dietmar.  Our JIT engine on CVS contains the implementation.
	This should enable people to test the remoting framework on
	Mono.

@item Mar 28, 2002

        Debugging information is now generated by the compiler thanks
        to Martin's work.  The resulting dwarf file can be used to
        single step C# code in GDB.  A document will be shortly published with
        the details.

@item Mar 27, 2002

	<b>Mono 0.10 is out!</b> The self hosting release of Mono has
	been released.

	A new version of the runtime, compiler and class libraries has
	been packaged for your download pleasure.  Binaries are
	included.  The <a href="archive/mono-0.10">Release Notes</a>
	are available.

	You can get it <a
	href="download.html#mar-27">Here</a> (quick links: <a
	href="archive/mono-0.10.tar.gz">runtime</a> and <a
	href="archive/mcs-0.10.tar.gz">compiler/classes</a>).

@item Mar 26, 2002

	Paolo finally fixed the last bug in the JITer that stopped
	us from using it to run the Mono C# compiler.  Goodies are on
	CVS.

	<a href="http://gtk-sharp.sourceforge.net">Gtk#</a> runs <a
	href="http://gtk-sharp.sourceforge.net/gtk-hello-world.png">Hello
	World</a>.  Mike posted some <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/gtk-sharp-list/2002-March/000034.html">details.</a>


@item Mar 19, 2002

	Martin has been working on our debugging infrastructure, both
	on the JIT side of things (adding dward support) as well as on
	the class libraries (so that MCS can start generating
	debugging information).
	
	Jason and Kral keep working on the System.Xml namespace,
	allowing Mike to move more to self-hosting his Gtk# code.  

	The System.Web classes are now part of the build (and they are
	also part of the class status now).  Ajay contributed a large
	chunk of code to the System.Xml.Schema namespace

	Dan (of regex fame) has been working on internal calls
	support: moving more code from the old monowrapper to become
	internal calls.

	Paolo and Dietmar are working steadily on our runtime
	environment, fixing bugs, adding missing features and allowing
	us to run the compiler on Linux.

	Remember to post your bug reports.

	The nice class status on the right is brought to you by
	endless hacking hours from Piers and Nick.  These status
	report pages have been helping us track down various mistakes
	in our classes (very useful, check it out for yourself)

@item Mar 12, 2002

        At midnight, in Italy, Paolo got the Mono C# compiler to self
        host on Linux, the last bug has been squashed to self
        hostingness.  We have now a fully self hosting compiler in Linux.

        A release will follow up shortly.

@item Mar 9, 2002

	Updated the <a href="class-status.html">class status</a>, now
	it is possible to use the right-side menu to browse a specific
	assembly.

@item Mar 7, 2002

	MCS compiles on Linux!   

	Today Paolo got the <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-March/003726.html">MCS
	compiler compiling itself on Linux</a>
	completely for the first time!  The resulting image still contains
	some errors, but the whole compiler process goes now.  Later in the day
	and a couple of small optimizations and bug fixes, the compile
	speed was improved in 400%

	We are very close to have a complete self hosting environment now.

	Mono is temporarily using the Bohem GC garbage collector while
	we deploy the more advanced ORP one. 

@item Mar 5, 2002

	The CVS repository <a href="http://cvs.hispalinux.es/cgi-bin/cvsweb/?hidenonreadable=1&f=u&logsort=date&sortby=file&hideattic=1&cvsroot=Mono">can be browsed</a>

	Jason has got an incredible amount of work on the Xml
	classes during the weekend, and Gaurav is very close to have
	the complete System.Web.UI.WebControls namespace implemented.   

	Martin and Duco have been killing bugs by using the recently
	revamped regression test suite.

	Piers has updated our <a href="class-status.html">class
	status</a> page again, with even more information available.

	The C# compiler has full constant folding implemented now and Ravi
	killed bugs of bugs in the <a href="http://bugzilla.ximian.com/buglist.cgi?product=Mono%2FClass+Libraries&product=Mono%2FMCS&product=Mono%2FRuntime&bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_status=REOPENED&email1=&emailtype1=substring&emailassigned_to1=1&email2=&emailtype2=substring&emailreporter2=1&changedin=&chfieldfrom=&chfieldto=Now&chfieldvalue=&short_desc=&short_desc_type=substring&long_desc=&long_desc_type=substring&bug_file_loc=&bug_file_loc_type=substring&keywords=&keywords_type=anywords&op_sys_details=&op_sys_details_type=substring&version_details=&version_details_type=substring&cmdtype=doit&order=%27Importance%27&form_name=query">Mono Bug List</a>

@item Mar 1, 2002

	RPMs of Mono 0.9 are available at <a href="http://mono.baselabs.org/#download">mono.baselabs.com</a>

@item Feb 28, 2002

	<a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-February/003464.html">Christophe</a>
	has setup his <a href="http://mono.baselabs.org">First Steps in Mono</a> web site, which 
	shows you a step-by-step process on getting Mono running on your system.

	RPMs of Mono 0.9 are available at <a href="http://mono.baselabs.org/index.php/software/">mono.baselabs.org</a>

@item Feb 27, 2002

	New <a href="class-status.html">class status</a> engine that
	provides detailed information about missing functionality in
	our class libraries.  Nick built the cormissing tool and Piers
	did the XSLT and DHTML magic.

	More compiler progress on Linux: our support runtime now
	enables the compiler to compile `MIS' on Linux (MIS being
	Dick's Mono sample HTTP server ;-)

@item Feb 26, 2002

	Paolo posted a list of <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-February/003266.html">ways
	you can help</a> if you do not have Windows right now.  Sergey followed up with 
	<a href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-February/003268.html">his</a>
	suggestions.

@item Feb 25, 2002

	StrongARM port from Sergey Chaban has been checked into CVS.  

@item Feb 24, 2002

	SPARC: 44 out of 74 tests pass now (Jeff)

	Power PC: delegates are working now (Radek)

@item Feb 22, 2002

	<b>Mono 0.9 has been released!</b>

	A new version of the runtime, compiler and class libraries has
	been packaged for your download pleasure.  The <a
	href="archive/mono-0.9">Release Notes</a>

	You can get it <a
	href="download.html#feb-22">Here</a> (quick links: <a
	href="archive/mono-0.9.tar.gz">runtime</a> and <a
	href="archive/mcs-0.9.tar.gz">compiler/classes</a>).

@item Feb 21, 2002

	Paolo got our compiler natively to compile 117 of our tests.
	Self hosting is closer every day.

	Unsafe support is finished in the C# compiler.

@item Feb 20, 2002

	Gaurav got DataGrid and DataGridItemCollection done.

	C# compiler: Unsafe support is mostly complete (only stackalloc is missing). 

	New easy to run scripts for compiling Mono on Unix and Windows
	is <a href="download.html">available</a>.  We can now easily compile
	Mono on Windows and Linux.  If you had trouble before, use the
	above scripts which will get the setup right for you.

	There are now three machines that can provide AnonCVS, just
	use anoncvs.go-mono.com as the hostname for your CVSROOT and
	you will get one of the machines.

@item Feb 19, 2002

	Do you want to see what <a href="http://people.debian.org/~lupus/mono/">Mono Looks Like?</a>

@item Feb 18, 2002

	Application Domains now support the two LoaderOptimization
	modes: share code or do not share code, and you can control
	this with the --share-code command line option.

	Paolo has now 100+ test cases run on Linux now with our class
	libraries.

	PowerPC and SPARC ports are moving along (Radek and Jeff)

@item Feb 13, 2002

	Excellent news since the 11th, here is a quick rundown:

	AppDomains have been deployed (Dietmar).  Socket work is done
	(Dick).  Corlib compiled with no refs to mscorlib (Dan).  New
	comprehensive tests for corlib bits (David).  Nick is driving the
	regression test suite efforts and class library completeness.
	New System.Data work (Chris). Bug fixes (Paolo, Duncan, Ravi, Miguel)

	Miguel is off to the <a
	href="http://www.fosdem.org">FOSDEM</a> conference in Brussels.

@item Feb 11, 2002

	<b>Mono 0.8 has been released!</b>

	A new version of the runtime, compiler and class libraries has
	been packaged for your download pleasure.  

	You can get it <a
	href="download.html#feb-11">Here</a> (quick links: <a
	href="archive/mono-0.8.tar.gz">runtime</a> and <a
	href="archive/mcs-0.8.tar.gz">compiler/classes</a>)

@item Feb 11, 2002

	We would like to welcome all the new developers that have
	joined the project in the last couple of days.  The classes
	are rapidly moving.

	An explanation of the relationship between <a
	href="http://mail.gnome.org/archives/gnome-hackers/2002-February/msg00031.html">GNOME
	and Mono</a>.  

	Nick is still leading our test suite platform.  I can not
	stress how important it is to have a good regression test suite
	for our platform, as buggy class libraries are what are
	stopping the compiler from running completely on Linux.

	We are of course psyched to see Mono run on
	non-Linux systems.  Work is moving on native code generation
	for StrongARM, PowerPC, and SPARC as well as porting Mono to
	other systems.

	There are a couple of debates on the Mono list on implementing
	a set of web server classes for <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-February/002911.html">enabling
	ASP.NET</a> on Mono.

	Paolo also <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-February/002944.html">
	posted a list of pending tasks</a> to enable the compiler to run on Linux

@item Feb 10, 2002

	Mike Kestner has posted an <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/gtk-sharp-list/2002-February/000024.html">Update
	on his Gtk#</a> activities.

@item Feb 4, 2002

	Adam has done <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-February/002808.html">Qt
	bindings</a> for .NET.  Adam is cool.

@item Jan 29, 2002

	Dan Lewis has contributed a major missing set of classes to
	Mono: <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-January/002745.html">
	System.Text.RegularExpressions</a>.

	This is a fully .NET compatible implementation of the .NET regular expressions,
	fully Unicode aware.  This contribution is very appreciated, as implementing this
	was not entirely trivial (supporting Unicode, plus a regex engine which is a super
	set of the Perl regex engine). 

@item Jan 28, 2002

	The Mono contributors have relicensed the Class Libraries under
	the terms of the
	<a href="http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.html">MIT X11</a> license.

	This license is an Open Source license, and is used by other projects
	(most notably, the XFree86 project).   

	The runtime (JIT, metadata library, interpreter) remains under
	the LGPL and the C# compiler remains under the GPL.

	Our <a
	href="http://www.ximian.com/about_us/press_center/press_releases/mono_partners.html">Press
	Release</a>

	Press coverage: <a
	href="http://news.com.com/2100-1001-823734.html">CNet</a>, <a
	href="http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,50037-2,00.html">Wired</a>, 
	<a href="http://www.infoworld.com/articles/hn/xml/02/01/28/020128hnopennet.xml">InfoWorld</a>, 
	<a href="http://www.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=02/01/27/2232231">NewsForge</a>.

@item Jan 23, 2002

	New mailing list: <a href="mailto:mono-patches-request@ximian.com">mono-patches@ximian.com</a>.
	This mailing list will receive automatically the patches that are submitted
	to the Mono CVS to any of its modules.

	This allows anyone who wants to participate in the peer-review of the
	code submitted to CVS to receive patches on e-mail.  It should also
	expose to everyone the changes that are being done by the team every day.

@item Jan 21, 2002

	Dick has got a simple web server running with Mono (`MIS: Mono
	Internet Server') that is mostly used to test our IO layer, a
	<a href="http://primates.ximian.com/~miguel/dick-mis-server.png">screenshot</a>

	Paolo and Dietmar are busy making our runtime self sufficient on 
	non-Windows platforms.  

	C# compiler front:  A lot of focus in the past weeks after
	the C# became self hosting has been in making the compiler a useful
	tool for development: improve error handling, provide better error
	reports, fixing all known bugs, and finally profiling of the compiler
	has begun.

@item Jan 8, 2002

	Our compiler has been self-supporting since January 3rd.  In
	the meantime, we have been busy working on making it run on
	Linux.  Today Paolo got more work done on Reflection.Emit and
	the compiler compiled `console.cs' (a sample Mono program) on
	Linux.

@item Jan 4, 2002

	Dietmar landed the Unicode support patch.  Class libraries and
	runtimes are now fully Unicode aware.  The details are <a href=
	"http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2002-January/002409.html">
	here</a>

	Last minute breaking news: Paolo got our compiler in Linux to
	compile fib.cs, patches are coming tomorrow once we have
	ChangeLog entries.   

@item Jan 4, 2002

	Mike Kestner posted an update on Gtk# <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/gtk-sharp-list/2002-January/000021.html"><i>New
	year, new direction</i></a>.

	Gtk# will be our foundation on which we will be implementing
	System.Windows.Forms.  

@item Jan 3, 2002

	Mono C# compiler becomes self-sufficient.  We can now continue
	development of the compiler with itself.  

	Work on the class libraries is still underway for having a full
	self hosting system.  We hope to achieve our goal of self-hosting
	on Linux before the end of the month.

	Join the fun by downloading either tonight's <a
	href="snapshots">snapshot</a> or getting your sources from our
	<a href="anoncvs.html">Anonymous CVS server</a>.

@item Dec 28, 2001

	After a lot of work, the C# compiler can compile itself.
	There are still errors in the generated image, but they are
	being fixed quickly.

	We will soon have the first non-Microsoft C# implementation!

@item Dec 18, 2001

	JIT: More work on our IO abstraction layer (Dick). 

	JIT: exception handling for unmanaged code (Dietmar)

	System.Reflection: Support for PropertyInfo and
	PropertyBuilder as well as the various queries for MethodBase.

	C#: Pre-processor; Rewrite of MemberLookup which fixed many of
	the outstanding issues.  More bug fixing allows it to compile
	more programs.

@item Dec 14, 2001

	Dietmar has improved the register allocation and now Mono performs
	two to three times as fast as it did yesterday.  Amazing.

	The compiler keeps moving along, explicit interface
	implementation is there.

@item Dec 11, 2001

	The JIT engine can now run all the compiler regression tests as 
	well as assorted other programs, many more opcodes added
	recently.  Currently the JIT engine uses a very simplistic register
	allocator (just enough to allow us to focus on feature completeness)
	and that will be the next major task to improve performance and
	reduce spills and reloads. 

	On the C# compiler front: language features are now pretty
	much complete.  The big missing tasks are unsafe code support,
	visibility, explicit interface implementation plus static flow
	analysis.  There are many small bugs that need to be addressed.

	You can get your copy of the <a href="snapshots">latest Mono</a>

	More work is also required on fixing the foundation class
	libraries, it is easy to find spots now since Nick got the
	`make test' going.

@item Dec 1, 2001

	AnonCVS access to Mono is here (updated every hour).  Thanks
	to <a href="http://www.hispalinux.es">HispaLinux</a> and Jesus
	Climent for helping to set this up.

@item Nov 30, 2001

	All tests from the mono runtime work with the JIT engine now
	(Dietmar).

	Recursive enumeration definition in the C# compiler are
	working now (Ravi).

	More work on the Web classes (Gaurav).

@item Nov 28, 2001

	JIT land: Paolo got GDB support into the JIT engine while
	Dietmar added exceptions support to it.

	The C# compiler supports all array initializations now, and the
	switch statement as well as fixing many existing bugs.  Many
	new more tests.
	
	Nick keeps working on improving our class library test suite.

	Dick has almost completed the Mono IO layer.

@item Nov 16, 2001

<blockquote>
	Mike Kestner has posted an <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/gtk-sharp-list/2001-November/000015.html">update</a>
	on Gtk# development.
</blockquote>

@item Nov 14, 2001

<blockquote>
	Paolo today got the Mono C# compiler running <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2001-November/001941.html">on
	Linux</a>.  It compiles a sample program and then the sample
	program is executed.

	Mutator unary operators (++ and --) in the compiler are fully
	functional, they used to only work on variables, and now they
	are complete.

	To sum things up: The Mono C# compiler is written in C# and
	uses the .NET classes to get its work done.  To make this work
	on Linux work has to happen in various fronts:
<ul>
		* The C# compiler is being worked on and can compile
		  many programs now (our test suite at this point is 
		  made up of 40 tests).

		* The class libraries need to be mature enough to support
		  the compiler, particularly System.Reflection.Emit (which is 
		  what Paolo has been working on lately). 

	  	  The compiler currently requires 103 classes from the
		  .NET runtime (you can get the list by running: <b>monodis --typeref mcs.exe</b>

		* The interpreter should be mature enough to run the actual
		  compiler byte codes and the corlib bytecodes.
</ul>

	At the same time, Dietmar is working on the JIT engine which will
	replace our interpreter in production.
</blockquote>

@item Nov 12, 2001

<blockquote>
	Dietmar got value types working on the JIT engine.  Sean has
	got assembly loading in the runtime (required for NUnit).

	More progress on enumerations and attributes from Ravi.

	Nick keeps working on improving our class libraries. 
</blockquote>

@item Nov 8, 2001

<blockquote>
	Enumerations, array access and attributes for the C# compiler are into the CVS now.

	Full array support is not complete, but moving along.
</blockquote>

@item Nov 5, 2001

<blockquote>
	Dietmar's new set of patches to the JIT have 20 out of 33
	tests running now.
</blockquote>

@item Nov 4, 2001

<blockquote>
	Mike Kestner, main Gtk# contributor has posted a very interesting <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/gtk-sharp-list/2001-November/000013.html">
	update</a> on his work on Gtk#.  

	Ravi committed the initial support for Attributes in the
	compiler. 

	Many HTML Controls from Leen checked into CVS.

	Paolo checked in his new System.Reflection and
	System.Reflection.Emit implementations.  He has been working
	steadily on this huge task for a few weeks now.  This is the
	foundation for the Mono C# compiler, and hence a very
	important piece of the puzzle.
</blockquote>

@item Nov 3, 2001

<blockquote>
	Many clean ups have been going into the class library by Nick Drochak. 

	Mega patch from Dietmar: he committed the flow analysis code
	for the JITer. 

	A lot of work has been going into the WebControls by Gaurav (4
	new controls plus improved and bug fixed base classes).
</blockquote>

@item Nov 1, 2001

<blockquote>
	Ravi committed the caller-side method selection of methods with
	variable length arguments.  Now he depends on Miguel finishing
	the array handling support. 
</blockquote>

@item Oct 27, 2001

<blockquote>
	Lots of classes for System.Web from Gaurav were committed this
	morning.

	Some large recent developments:

	The Decimal implementation from Martin Weindel has been
	partially integrated (we need to put the internalcalls in
	place now and compile and link the decimal code).

	Derek Holden committed recently the IntegerFormatter code into
	the CVS, so we got a pretty comprehensive integer formatting
	engine that we can finally use all over the place. 

	Compiler got support for lock as well as assorted bug fixes.
	Ravi is still working on array support (and then we can
	optimize foreach for the array case).   

	Dietmar is busy working on flow analysis on the JITer, the
	previous mechanism of generating the forest was wrong.  Paolo
	has been a busy bee reworking the System.Reflection.Emit
	support code, and we should have some pretty nice stuff next
	week.  Dick on the other hand is still working on the
	WaitOne/WaitAll emulation code.  WaitAll is like select on
	steroids: it can wait for different kinds of objects: files,
	mutexes, events and a couple of others.

	Mike Kestner is busy working on Gtk# which is now using the
	.defs files to quickly wrap the API.
</blockquote>

@item Oct 18, 2001

<blockquote>
	Reworking expressions to support cleanly indexers and
	properties.  <a href="http://www.nat.org/evolution.php3">11
	days</a> until Evolution 1.0 ships.  

	Ximian users around the world <!--a
	href="http://www.bez.it/IMAGES/nora.jpg"-->rejoice<!--/a--> with
	recent C# compiler progress.
</blockquote>

@item Oct 17, 2001

<blockquote>
	Delegate support has been checked into the compiler
	(definition and invocation); break/continue implemented.
</blockquote>

@item Oct 15, 2001

<blockquote>
	JIT engine supports many of the object constructs now (object
	creation, vtable setup, interface table setup).  

	The C# compiler now has almost full property support (only
	missing bit are pre-post increment/decrement operations),
	delegates are now created (still missing delegate invocation).
	try/catch/finally is also supported in the compiler now.

	System.Decimal implementation is in, as well as many crypto
	classes.
</blockquote>

@item Oct 5, 2001

<blockquote>
	Sergey has released his first version of the <b>ilasm</b>
	assembler written in C#.  You can get it from his web page:
	<a
	href="http://mono.eurosoft.od.ua">http://mono.eurosoft.od.ua</a>.

	The plan is to integrate ildasm into the Mono CVS soon.  This
	component should in theory also be reusable for SharpDevelop
	eventually.
</blockquote>

@item Oct 4, 2001

<blockquote>
	Our System.Reflection.Emit implementation created its first
	executable today.  This means that a very simple .NET program
	that was compiled on Windows was able to generate a .NET program
	while running on Linux using the Mono runtime.

	The various piece of the puzzle are starting to get together:
	the compiler can compile simple programs now and we are
	basically focusing on completeness now.  
</blockquote>

@item Sep 28, 2001

<blockquote>
	<a
	href="http://www.icsharpcode.net/OpenSource/SD/default.asp">Sharp
	Develop 0.80</a> was released today.
</blockquote>

@item Sep 26, 2001

<blockquote>
	More progress: more opcodes are working (Paolo); The compiler
	runs up to a point in Mint (Paolo); operator overloading works
	(both unary and binary) all over the place (Miguel); Completed decimal
	type conversions (Miguel); New build system in place based on
	Ant (Sean and Sergey);  Refactored and documented the
	internals of the JIT engine (Dietmar);  StatementExpressions
	handled correctly (Miguel).
</blockquote>

@item Sep 21, 2001

<blockquote>
	A couple of news-worthy items: Dick got the initial thread
	support into mint; Paolo implemented many new opcodes; Dietmar
	got long operations and mul/div working on the JITer; Ravi rewrote
	the Method selector for expressions to be conformant; Miguel
	got i++ working.   All in tonight's snapshot
</blockquote>

@item Sep 19, 2001

<blockquote>
	Paolo has written a section on <a href="porting.html">Porting
	Mono</a> to other architectures.
</blockquote>

@item Sep 18, 2001

<blockquote>
	<A a href="download.html#sep-18">Mono 0.7</a> has been
	released (runtime engine, class libraries
	and C# compiler).  Check the <a href="archive/mono-0.7">Mono
	0.7 announcement</a> for details
</blockquote>

@item Sep 17, 2001

<blockquote>
	Mike Kestner's Gtk# (Gtk-sharp) was checked into the CVS
	repository.  Gtk# can run a simple hello world application.
	The binding is nice, as it maps Gtk+ signals to delegates in
	C#.  You can see the Gtk# Hello World program <a href="src/HelloWorld.cs">here</a>

	Gtk-sharp should be available on the next snapshot set.
</blockquote>

@item Sep 10, 2001

<blockquote>
	Dietmar checked in his CIL tree/forest regeneration and most
	importantly, the x86 instruction selector burg grammar.
</blockquote>


@item Sep 5, 2001

<blockquote>
	The MCS compiler <b>can compile the sample Hello World</b>
	application and generate a Windows/CIL executable that runs!

	This executable runs with the Mono Interpreter of course (see
	August 28)
</blockquote>

@item Sep 4, 2001

<blockquote>
	Dietmar checked into CVS the `monoburg' architecture
	independent instruction selector for the JIT engine.
</blockquote>

@item Aug 28, 2001

<blockquote>
	<b>.NET Hello World is working under Mono!</b>  The latest snapshots
	will let you run it.   

	Hello World consists of 1821 CIL instructions, 
        performs 66 subroutine calls and loads 12 classes from the corlib.dll

	Good work Mono team!
</blockquote>

@item Aug 23, 2001

<blockquote>
	Lloyd Dupont has announced his OpenGL bindings for C#, they
	are available here: <a
	href="http://csgl.sourceforge.net">http://csgl.sourceforge.net</a>
</blockquote>

@item Aug 22, 2001

<blockquote>
	New version of the Mono Runtime, Compiler and Classes has been
	<a
	href="download.html#august-22">released.</a> Check the <a
	href="archive/mono-0.6">0.6 announcement</a>.
</blockquote>
	
@item Aug 20, 2001

<blockquote>
	A new <a href="contributing.html#compile-service">Compilation
	service</a> has been made available by Derek to allow people
	without access to the <a
	href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/downloads/default.asp?url=/downloads/sample.asp?url=/msdn-files/027/000/976/msdncompositedoc.xml&frame=true">.NET SDK</a>
</blockquote>

@item Aug 3, 2001

<blockquote>
	Daily snapshots of mcs and mono are now available, they will
	run every night at 10pm Boston time.  
</blockquote>

@item Jul 29, 2001

<blockquote>
	Mono Runtime 0.5 has been <a
	href="download.html#july-29">released.</a> Check the <a
	href="archive/mono-0.5">release notes</a>
</blockquote>

@item Jul 25, 2001

<blockquote>
	The slides for <A href="Presentations/O-Reilly">my
	presentation</a> at <a href="http://www.oreilly.com">O'Reilly
	Open Source Software Convention</a>
</blockquote>

@item Jul 22, 2001

<blockquote>
	Another release of the class libraries is out, check the <a
	href="archive/mcs-22">MCS 22-July Release Notes</a>.  You can
	get the new class libraries from <a
	href="download.html#july-22">here</a>
</blockquote>

@item Jul 19, 2001

<blockquote>
	Another release of the class libraries is out, check the <a
	href="archive/mcs-19">MCS 19-July Release Notes</a>.  You can
	get the new class libraries from <a
	href="download.html#july-19">here</a>
</blockquote>
	
@item Jul 17, 2001

<blockquote>
	Another release of the class libraries is out, check the <a
	href="archive/mcs-17">MCS 17-July Release Notes</a>.  You can
	get the new class libraries from <a
	href="download.html#july-17">here</a>

	Do not forget to check out the updated <a href="faq.html">FAQ</a>.

	Got Sean's new Class
	Status web pages up.  These are a lot better than mine, and
	we are now keeping better track of contributors.
</blockquote>

@item Jul 15, 2001

<blockquote>
	Another release of Mono is out, check the <a
	href="archive/mono-0.4">Mono 0.4 Release Notes</a>.  Get it <a
	href="download.html#july-15">here</a>.
</blockquote>

@item Jul 14, 2001

<blockquote>
	A <a
	href="http://lists.ximian.com/archives/public/mono-list/2001-July/000399.html">new
	release</a> of the
	runtime, compiler and classes has been made.  Get it <a href="download.html#july-14">here</a>
</blockquote>

@item Jul 12, 2001

<blockquote>
	I keep getting questions about my opinion on Passport, even when
	Mono has <b>nothing</b> to do with it.  I finally <a
	href="passport.html">wrote something.</a>
</blockquote>

@item Jul 9, 2001

<blockquote>
	Project launched.
</blockquote>

@item O'Reilly

<blockquote>
	Brian posted a story on <a
	href="http://www.oreillynet.com/dotnet">O'Reilly Network .NET</a>
</blockquote>
