LoCos

Revision 17 as of 2009-12-29 03:21:31

Clear message

*/ TODO: move some of this content to the front page so it's more visible to everyone (and not just people who click loco) */

How can I help?

Lucid Lynx Alpha 2 is coming Thursday, Jan 14th.

Lucid ISO Testing begins Tuesday, Jan 12th

  • ISO Testing overview & Open Week session - pre-release testing of Ubuntu images

    • zsync will greatly speed up downloads of iso images

    • Testdrive (after adding PPA) automates the use of kvm or virtualbox, saving it's image to ~/.cache/testdrive/.

  • join #ubuntu-testing on freenode.net

  • join ubuntu-qa for discussion

  • Please forward testing related announcements to your LoCo.

  • Weekly IRC meetings Wednesdays at 17.00 UTC in #ubuntu-meeting

  • Thursdays UbuntuBugDay in IRC #ubuntu-bugs

  • LaptopTestingTeam helping users share their experiences with hardware like theirs.

PLEASE NOTE: Development Releases are not for daily use! These releases will contain bugs. You have been warned.

Who is involved?

This page is part of a conscious effort by Ubuntu Quality Assurance Team (lp) and Testing Team (lp) to increase participation of the Ubuntu community and especially LoCo teams in testing. The roadmap and blueprint from UDS describe these efforts.

All Ubuntu Releases are included such as Kubuntu, Xubuntu and Edubuntu.

Working with the Ubuntu Community

Approved and "new" Local Community teams are natural partners in the testing process. As advocates and active users we know about the software and the perception of Ubuntu by people who are not computer experts. This perspective is extremely valuable. We hope this page provides a clear and concise jumping off point for active teams and users to learn the skills and procedures needed to test Ubuntu.

Why Test?

A benefit of using open source software is the ability to participate in it's development. Contributions to the projects that Ubuntu distributes is encouraged, however most people are first introduced to a software package by using it. Every user can be seen as a software tester. Sometimes problems are noticed that can be reported. Open source software fundamentally depends upon people participating. You are in good company because an incredibly large and growing number of people do participate every day from all parts of the world. If nobody steps forward to report issues then busy, well intentioned developers may inadvertently overlook these unintended features in the software they provide.

There is an art/science to knowing how and where to report these problems. It takes effort to isolate an issue so that one of the various parties involved can fix it, though this gets easier with practice. A great feeling of satisfaction can be found when reporting problems and seeing them fixed. While the daily work of quality assurance can be under appreciated, experienced developers recognize the value of good bug reports and are very grateful.