Short answer: NO.
Long answer: NodeView is theoretically capable of running on Windows
because NodeView is designed from the ground up to be very portable
since it is based on the Qt multi-platform toolkit. The only problem is
that a GPL version of Qt for Windows is not available. To compile
NodeView on Windows, I must have access to a licensed commercial version
of Qt 3. Now this costs $$$. So unless I sell commercial versions of
OpenKiosk, this is unlikely to happen.
Yes. GPLed Qt for OS X is available.
I will be very happy to hear your suggestions for the project but I
can't guarantee that I will implement them right away.
Every now and then, I will also post a sneak preview of the
technologies that will be included in OpenKiosk in a future release. The
features that you want could be in there. So visit the project website
from time to time!
However, please keep in mind that the project is done in my spare time.
I still need to eat you know. If you really want to have a particular
feature implemented, kindly consider paying for it.
Either your version of Berkeley DB is old and you haven't bothered upgading to the latest release or you are installing Berkeley DB in a non-standard location and the compiler can't see the headers. See this: System requirements and Getting the source
You haven't bothered updating your LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable to include the Berkeley DB libraries and NodeView cannot find those. See this: Compilation
First browse the projects forums and mailing lists, see if your problem is already described there and solved. If you really think it is a bug, you can submit a new bug report to the OpenKiosk Bug Tracker. Important! Kindly include in your report: