News

Android has just got a good quality new framework for building applications, while Qt, already being one of the most widely portable toolkits, has just become a little more portable.
That gives Qt developers access to more than 100 million Nokia devices for their apps today and will include another 150 million Symbian devices before the transition to Windows Phone.
Digia has acquired the Qt framework from Nokia, giving it full control over the application framework, and now plans to expand support to more platforms, it said on Thursday. Digia, based in ...
Digia plans to pick up where Nokia left off: continuing Qt development, but renewing the toolkit’s focus on cross-platform support. The financial terms of the agreement have not been disclosed.
Digia is eyeing porting the development platform, used to code applications for Symbian and Meego, to Windows 8 (the PR doesn't mention Windows Phone 8), Android and iOS in the near future.
Qt Mobile includes the industry-renowned cross-platform C++-based Qt libraries, Qt Enterprise-level tools, Qt Creator IDE with additional value-adding functionality meant to supercharge mobile app ...
Amidst all the chaos surrounding the Qt project, the power of open source software has shown itself. The Romanian developer Bogdan Vatra has ported Qt to Android. To avoid trademark conflicts, the ...
Seems like it, lets see what Futurice have to say … Michael Samarin, Head of Mobile Development at Futurice, talks about the Nokia Trailers and Transformers 3 apps they developed using Qt and QML.