RSS DAILY NEWS TICKER EXAMPLE


home > overview

Community News: BlueStatic Releasing MacGDBp (Native OS X Debugger) for PHP




Software company BlueStatic will be releasing their native Mac debugger, MacGDBp tomorrow (June 18th) to the community.

Here's more information from their press release:

Blue Static today is announcing the release date of MacGDBp, a native Cocoa application that allows Web developers to debug their PHP applications. The tool makes use of the Xdebug (http://www.xdebug.org) PHP extension that provides remote debugging functionality. Blue Static will be releasing the software under the GNU GPL version 2 on the morning of Tuesday, 17 June 2008.

The interface for the application is modeled after the XCode product from Apple to help integrate it more fully into the OS look and feel. It will require Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard to run and screenshots of the tool can be found here and here.




click here to see original article or to find similar articles

 RSS DAILY HEADLINES

HEADLINES

Todd: Obamas night for the history books

Sen. Barack Obama becomes the first African-American presidential nominee of a major political party. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports. (NBC News Web Extra)Will these nights simply be a page in the history of America or the start of a completely new chapter?  NBC Political Director Chuck Todd previews Obama's acceptance speech.


Pakistans next president: Mr. 10 Percent? (AP)

A Pakistani lawyer tears down a poster of Bhutto's widower and political successor, Asif Ali Zardari, who will run for president in the Sept. 6 election by lawmakers, during a demonstration in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Thursday, Aug. 28, 2008. Hundreds of lawyers are rallying in major Pakistani cities and disrupting traffic to pressure the government to reinstate dozens of judges fired by ex-President Pervez Musharraf. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)AP - Asif Ali Zardari, the man poised to become Pakistan's next president, is still known as "Mr. 10 Percent" because of corruption allegations. Now his own lawyers say he may have suffered from mental health problems within the past year.


Automakers face conflicting safety rules worldwide (AP)

In this Aug. 2008 file photo provided by the Ford Motor Co. an assemblyman works on the Ford Fiesta in Cologne, Germany. While Ford hurries to curtail billions of dollars in losses and shift from its reliance on selling bigger vehicles with bigger profit margins, one reason why Ford says it can't get its European cars to the U.S. market before 2010 is a web of different safety regulations covering everything from the positioning of crash test dummies to the color of rear turn signals.  (AP Photo/Ford Motor Co., Friedrich Stark, file)AP - It seems like an easy solution: Americans are looking for more fuel-efficient vehicles, so Ford Motor Co. is bringing over some of the small, gas-sipping cars it's been selling to Europeans for years.



Find this article in Google