Issue124

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## Any news from any Ubuntu Team listed here: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/TeamReports/January2008 be sure to udate to current month.
Much of the meeting was spent going over the Edubuntu Strategy Document (https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Edubuntu/StrategyDocument) and related issues including:

 * Clarification of educational level categorizations by mapping student age ranges with categories
  * DISCUSSION: Grade level and educational categorizations vary from country to country. Teachers and administrators need to know what software, artwork, etc. apply to them and their students.
  * ACTION: Rich``Ed to send email seeking comment on age ranges for preschool, primary, secondary, tertiary designations
  * ACTION: Rich``Ed will draft the South Africa and out the UK mapping tonight and send to the others for input … Laser``Jock for US, nubae for Austria, Spain, Germany
 * Edubuntu’s Launchpad team structure needs review and reworking.
  * DISCUSSION: A development team is needed to provide for things like bzr branches and PPAs. The creation of an ~edubuntu-contributors team was discussed as a less “harsh” term than “-dev”. There is also confusion as to what the difference between the ~edubuntu and ~edubuntu-members teams are for.
  * ACTION: Laser``Jock to create edubuntu-dev Launchpad team and arrange for ~edubuntu as an umbrella team to hold all official Edubuntu Launchpad teams
 * Clarification of Edubuntu’s goals/branding/naming
  * DISUCSSION: The debate about the use of “Edubuntu” and “Ubuntu Education” continued. Rich``Ed explained that Canonical would like to use “Ubuntu Education” for the .iso and contents (Canonical-supported applications) for purposes of marketing to OEMs and leveraging of Ubuntu’s brand strength. The community members agreed with this. Further, the “Edubuntu” term will be used for the project, community, and community-supported packaging.
  * ACTION: Laser``Jock to draft “Edubuntu and Ubuntu Education” clarification statement and run it by Rich``Ed et. al

Review of Jaunty specs and tasks (see Roadmap link below)

The Edubuntu Road``Map was reviewed and several ideas for Jaunty tasks were added. Laser``Jock encouraged everyone to think of bite sized, feasible tasks for the Jaunty time frame and add them to the Road``Map. This will allow the team to track efforts and give a place for new contributors to “plug in”.

    * ACTION: Everybody is going to help fill out https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Edubuntu/Devel/RoadMap

Next Edubuntu meeting is scheduled for: January 21st, 18:00 UTC in #ubuntu-meeting

Contents

newspaper-icon.jpg

WORK IN PROGRESS

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue #124 for the week January 4th - January 10th, 2009. In this issue we cover ...

UWN Translations

  • Note to translators and our readers: We are trying a new way of linking to our translations pages. Please follow the link below for the information you need.

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Translations

In This Issue

General Community News

Next Ubuntu Global Bug Jam

On the weekend of February 20th to February 22nd, 2009

Everybody knows what a great success the UbuntuBugDay is. Some LoCo teams even taken this a step further. Instead of just meeting on IRC, they make a party out of it, and meet locally to work on bugs together. Ubuntu calls this event the "Global Bug Jam". It is the classic Ubuntu Hug Day, taken to the next level, all around the world during one weekend. It's an opportunity for Local Teams to get together all around the world and concentrate on fixing bugs, meet new people, and just have a good time.

How to:

So you're interested and want to make the event ROCK in your LoCo?

More information on GlobalBugJams available at: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/GlobalBugJam

Ubuntu Developer Week Returns!

The Ubuntu Developer Week is back again.

From Jan 19th to Jan 23rd we’re going to have loads of awesome sessions where Ubuntu developer share their secret of success, spend time asking all of your questions, help you to get involved. It’s an awesome opportunity to get started, get to know a lot of people and it’s going to be a lot of fun.

A lot of things are going to stay the same: we’ll have top-class talkers, top-notch talks and time for asking lots and lots of questions. One thing I’m totally excited about is this one: we’ll have a two-hour Getting Started session in English, French, German, Italian and Spanish. Fantastic! If English is not your mother tongue and you’d like to know a bit more about how it all works to feel comfortable, this is your opportunity to ask your questions.

For more information on Global Bug Jam, visit: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/GlobalBugJam

New MOTU's

Thierry Carrez (Koon) is now a MOTU. Thierry has been working with the Server and Java teams, and describes his goals as "I am interested in making Ubuntu Server a market-leader solution for servers in large companies, by supporting the common featureset required in those servers and providing better integration and usage experience than the alternatives.". Please welcome him to the team. Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~tcarrez Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ThierryCarrez

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-news-team/2009-January/000333.html

Iulian Udrea (iulian) is now a MOTU. Iulian has been active in Debian collaboration, bug management, and and joys helping others to ensure the packages are in the best shape possible. Please welcome him to the team. Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~iulian Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/IulianUdrea

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-news-team/2009-January/000335.html

New Ubuntu Members

The first Americas Council Membership Approval meeting for 2009 took place this January 6th/7th where they accepted the following new members:

Charles Profitt (PrivateVoid) is the Vice President of the New York LoCo team (elected December 11th, 2008 for a two year term) and has done a tremendous job in building a healthy and thriving LoCo Team via a high level of enthusiasm and organizing local events. A number of individuals came out to show their support for Charles, and testified about not only his great LoCo Team work but also great work being done on the forums with Beginners Team. Outside of Ubuntu, Charles is a member of the K-12 Open Source Community http://community.k12opensource.com/ and is active in promoting Linux and Ubuntu in Education. Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~cprofitt Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/cprofitt

Shaun Dennie (vor) is a long time Unix hacker and has been using Ubuntu since 5.10. Dennie's experience is clearly represented by the number of tutorials written on the Ubuntu Forums as well this contributor's participation in the forum's Beginners Team and Forum Moderator Team. Shaun reports really enjoying being a part of the community and would like to take the next step to get even more involved as a developer. Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~sdennie Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ShaunDennie

Connor Imes (Rocket2DMn) has been using Ubuntu since Feisty and reports being actively contributing since day 1. Notable areas of contribution include the forums (especially the Beginners Team and as Staff) and wiki documentation. Besides his great work on the forums and impressive documentation efforts, Imes also frequents the Launchpad bug tracker and Launchpad Answers tracker to help triage bugs and answer questions. Connor was also involved in the "Summer of Documentation" effort by a handful of Ubuntu Forums Beginners Team members to help get the Community Docs up to date by working with the Ubuntu Documentation Team. Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~rocket2dmn Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Rocket2DMn

Eric Hammond (erichammond) applied for Ubuntu Membership based on his primary contributions to Ubuntu of building, maintaining, documenting, promoting, and supporting of public virtual machine images for running Ubuntu on Amazon EC2. Hammond reported on his efforts to foster an Ubuntu on EC2 community which is now around 700 registered members and growing and his work with the Ubuntu server team in an advisory and testing capacity. Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~esh Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/EricHammond

Andres Mujica's (andres-mujica) main contribution to Ubuntu is at Bug triaging as member of the bugsquad and is currently working towards becoming a member of the Ubuntu bugcontrol group. Based on work as in bug triage, and peer feedback, the board accepted Andres Mujica as a Ubuntu Member. Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~andres.mujica Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/AndresMujica

David Mandala (DavidM) introduced himself as a generalist, and a computer and electronicsgeek who enjoys coding and evangelizing Ubuntu Mobile Linux. As the manager of the Ubuntu Mobile team and project manager of the Ubuntu Mobile and MID Projects, he has naturally made significant contributions to Ubuntu Mobile and the Ubuntu Mobile community at large. Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~davidm Wiki: https://launchpad.net/~davidm

The America's Board and the Ubuntu Community wish to welcome these new Ubuntu Members! https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-news-team/2009-January/000332.html

Ubuntu Hall of Fame: James Westby

James Westby is a great guy to work with. He almost never sleeps and is truly helpful. Based in Bristol, England, he is well-known in the Bazaar community and his work on distributed development.

Making collaboration in Ubuntu development easier and more natural is one of his ambitions. James started out by writing bzr-builddeb which makes the task of building maintaining Ubuntu packages in Bazaar trivial. Working in bazaar branches, pulling changes from Upstream, maintaining them with a clear version history is getting easier andeasier by the day.

James is also well-known in the MOTU community and always has an open ear for people looking for help and seeking advice. He organised and hosted a few MOTU School sessions already and is one of the top reviewers in the sponsoring queue. Nick Ellery says: "James has done more sponsoring than any other developer during the Jaunty release. He's an asset to the new developer community, and an excellent guy towork with!" and Andrew Starr-Bochicchio adds "his work on the sponsorship queue is Hall of Fame worthy".

He stays calm in heated discussions, can easily look at problems from a new angle and comes up with great ideas.

He loves all kinds of music, particularly Drum'n'Bass music and DJed at two "Ubuntu Allstar" parties. James also likes cooking, so go and check out his blog, he has a few recipes on there.

We can only say: Rock on James and give us more of the Distributed Development goodness! http://hall-of-fame.ubuntu.com/?feature=james-westby

Good People, Great Teams

Jono recently asked everyone to re-connect with the Ubuntu ethos.[1] Ethos is important, critical in fact. It is the glue that will bind us through the turbulent years ahead as Ubuntu continues to grow. Ubuntu has made huge progress in recent years, and have managed to capture some real mindshare. We now need to get out there finish the job.

The next level of the game is going to require many skills. Diversity is going to be the key to Ubuntu flourishing. Great packaging, software development, bug-fixing, rocking documentation, translations, testing, lots of feedback, training, support for new users, and the ability to focus our energy positively will be crucial.

Ubuntu, and the wider Open Source and Free Software ethos is all about people working together, uniting behind an opportunity to make their own world better. Fortunately making your own world better often means making someone else’s world better too. The way Ubuntu is going to win is to enable good people to do great work. Good people is what drives the Ubuntu community forward.

It is LoCo Teams that are on the ground talking to potential users, giving out CDs, talking to local businesses and charities and more. They are a huge asset to Ubuntu. Ubuntu has hundreds of teams around the world doing incredible work, spreading the message of Ubuntu far and wide. They themselves exhibit the very ethos that Ubuntu is sharing with others.

Jono is keen to hear stories concerning you LoCo team. He would like each of you on a LoCo Team to share a story on your blog, or in the comments at this articles link below. He wants to begin building a compendium of stories that showcases the kind of excellent work that LoCos are doing. This is the first step in getting our LoCo Teams better coordinated, sharing experiences and advice, and changing the world one user at a time. http://www.jonobacon.org/2009/01/08/good-people-great-teams/

[1] http://www.jonobacon.org/2008/12/19/the-ubuntu-ethos/

Debian Import Freeze

A short reminder that per https://wiki.ubuntu.com/JauntyReleaseSchedule the DebianImportFreeze[1] is now in effect. Please remember that if you are waiting for bug fixes from Debian for Jaunty, you will now need to file your sync requests explicitly.

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel-announce/2009-January/000517.html

Ubuntu Stats

Bug Stats

  • Open (47568)-198 over last week
  • Critical (23) +/-0 over last week
  • Unconfirmed (18741)-44 over last week
  • Unassigned (40223) +/-0 # over last week
  • All bugs ever reported (241586)+1645 over last week

As always, the Bug Squad needs more help. If you want to get started, please see https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BugSquad

Infamous Bugs

Translation Stats Intrepid

  • Spanish (15849)-22 over last week
  • French (61779)-136 over last week
  • Swedish (72541) +/-0 over last week
  • Brazilian Portuguese (76929)-883 over last week
  • English (UK) (81297)-163 over last week

Remaining strings to translate in Ubuntu 8.10 "Intrepid Ibex," see more at: https://translations.launchpad.net/ubuntu/intrepid/

5-a-day bug stats

Top 5 contributors for the past 7 days

  • crimsun (174)
  • chrisccoulson (74)
  • thelupine (46)
  • vorian (37)
  • dholbach (31)

Top 5 teams for the past 7 days

  • dcteam (174)
  • ubuntu-us-florida (82)
  • ubuntu-us-ohio (42)
  • ubuntu-de-locoteam (35)
  • ubuntu-berlin (34)

5-A-Day stats provided by Daniel Holbach. See http://daniel.holba.ch/5-a-day-stats/

Ubuntu Brainstorm Top 5 this week

Ubuntu Brainstorm is a community site geared toward letting you add your ideas for Ubuntu. You can submit your own idea, or vote for or against another idea. http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/

LoCo News

New in Jaunty Jackalope

Launchpad News

Joey Stanford informs us of changes to the launchpad Legal Page[1]:

1) The Dev wiki [2] is now called out explicitly as having a CC content license. Previously the Dev wiki proclaimed it was licensed under CC but was not listed on our Legal page.

2) The Content License section was updated for clarity. This was a housekeeping task and does not effect any Legal changes.

3) Future notifications of legal changes will be sent only to the Launchpad Announcement list [3]. Previously they were sent to the Launchpad Users list and News blog.

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/launchpad-announce/2009-January/000024.html

Open Sourcing Launchpad

The code that runs Launchpad.net will be open-sourced. The process will be completed by 21 July 2009, coinciding with the 3.0 release (see the schedule of releases).[1] Most of the code, except for a few that are heavily customized for Canonical's workflow, will be released by that date. The process includes the modularization of elements into independent packages over the next 6 months. Some of that has already been done.

There will also be a number of non-coding tasks that will be accomplished according to the schedule listed on the announcement. Other information includes the podcast Launchpod 15.[2]

https://dev.launchpad.net/OpenSourcing

12 Days of Launchpad

The previous 5 days were reported in UWN 123: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Issue123

Look for more of the 12 days of Launchpad here: http://news.launchpad.net/

http://news.launchpad.net/

Ubuntu Forums News

In The Press

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/11/business/11ubuntu.html

http://news.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/0,1000000091,39587602,00.htm

http://www.manilastandardtoday.com/?page=business6_jan6_2009

http://www.itwire.com/content/view/22545/1141/1/0/ (Be sure to include some of the last 2 paragraphs from the article please)

http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&taxonomyName=Operating+Systems&articleId=9124087&taxonomyId=89&pageNumber=2 (Title the piece:"Hands on Linux" and only use page 2 about ubuntu please)

In The Blogosphere

http://meandubuntu.wordpress.com/2009/01/09/ways-you-can-contribute-to-ubuntu/

http://www.epa.net/launch/news/localnws/item?item_id=648395

http://www.enterprisenetworkingplanet.com/_featured/article.php/3794176/One-Last-Look--What-You-Were-Reading-in-2008.htm

In Other News

Ubuntu Podcast #16

Josh Chase and Nick Ali from the Georgia US LoCo released episode #16. Some of the topics covered in this episode include:

  • Upcoming interview with Jorge Castro to discuss his work and the Global Bug Jam
  • Notifications in 9.04
  • LoCos on TV

  • Ubuntu Privacy Remix
  • Tabbed Browsing in Nautilus

http://ubuntupodcast.net/2009/01/07/ubuntu-podcast-episode-16/

Freescale Tosses it's hat into the netbook ring

http://www.internetnews.com/hardware/article.php/3794316 (Include a link to the freescale news website: http://media.freescale.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=196520&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1240267&highlight= and include Canonical's partner comment: Canonical: “The increasing uptake of Ubuntu by computer manufacturers demonstrates how it is ideally suited to meet customer expectations for netbooks,” said Canonical's director of OEM Services, Chris Kenyon. “Netbook buyers want small form factor, lightweight devices that offer all day computing, fast access to Web, email and entertainment, and a mobile-oriented user interface. The i.MX515 processor’s onboard graphics and performance and power consumption characteristics make it a great platform to run Ubuntu.”

Meeting Summaries

Edubuntu Meeting Minutes

Much of the meeting was spent going over the Edubuntu Strategy Document (https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Edubuntu/StrategyDocument) and related issues including:

  • Clarification of educational level categorizations by mapping student age ranges with categories
    • DISCUSSION: Grade level and educational categorizations vary from country to country. Teachers and administrators need to know what software, artwork, etc. apply to them and their students.
    • ACTION: RichEd to send email seeking comment on age ranges for preschool, primary, secondary, tertiary designations

    • ACTION: RichEd will draft the South Africa and out the UK mapping tonight and send to the others for input … LaserJock for US, nubae for Austria, Spain, Germany

  • Edubuntu’s Launchpad team structure needs review and reworking.
    • DISCUSSION: A development team is needed to provide for things like bzr branches and PPAs. The creation of an ~edubuntu-contributors team was discussed as a less “harsh” term than “-dev”. There is also confusion as to what the difference between the ~edubuntu and ~edubuntu-members teams are for.
    • ACTION: LaserJock to create edubuntu-dev Launchpad team and arrange for ~edubuntu as an umbrella team to hold all official Edubuntu Launchpad teams

  • Clarification of Edubuntu’s goals/branding/naming
    • DISUCSSION: The debate about the use of “Edubuntu” and “Ubuntu Education” continued. RichEd explained that Canonical would like to use “Ubuntu Education” for the .iso and contents (Canonical-supported applications) for purposes of marketing to OEMs and leveraging of Ubuntu’s brand strength. The community members agreed with this. Further, the “Edubuntu” term will be used for the project, community, and community-supported packaging.

    • ACTION: LaserJock to draft “Edubuntu and Ubuntu Education” clarification statement and run it by RichEd et. al

Review of Jaunty specs and tasks (see Roadmap link below)

The Edubuntu RoadMap was reviewed and several ideas for Jaunty tasks were added. LaserJock encouraged everyone to think of bite sized, feasible tasks for the Jaunty time frame and add them to the RoadMap. This will allow the team to track efforts and give a place for new contributors to “plug in”.

Next Edubuntu meeting is scheduled for: January 21st, 18:00 UTC in #ubuntu-meeting

Upcoming Meetings and Events

3rd Ubuntu Developer Week

The Ubuntu Developer Week is back again.

From Jan 19th to Jan 23rd we’re going to have loads of awesome sessions where Ubuntu developer share their secret of success, spend time asking all of your questions, help you to get involved. It’s an awesome opportunity to get started, get to know a lot of people and it’s going to be a lot of fun.

A lot of things are going to stay the same: we’ll have top-class talkers, top-notch talks and time for asking lots and lots of questions. One thing I’m totally excited about is this one: we’ll have a two-hour Getting Started session in English, French, German, Italian and Spanish. Fantastic! If English is not your mother tongue and you’d like to know a bit more about how it all works to feel comfortable, this is your opportunity to ask your questions.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Server Team Meeting

Kernel Team Meeting

  • Start: 17:00 UTC
  • End: 18:00 UTC
  • Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
  • Agenda: Not listed as of publication

LoCo Council Meeting

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Foundation Team Meeting

  • Start: 16:00 UTC
  • End: 17:00 UTC
  • Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
  • Agenda: None listed as of publication

QA Team Meeting

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Forum Council Meeting

Ubuntu Mobile Team Meeting

  • Start: 12:00 UTC
  • End: 13:00 UTC
  • Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
  • Agenda: None listed as of publication

Desktop Team Meeting

Ubuntu Java Meeting

  • Start: 14:00 UTC
  • End: 15:00 UTC
  • Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
  • Agenda: None listed as of publication

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Beginners Team Eduaction Focus Group

Community Spotlight

Updates and Security for 6.06, 7.10, 8.04, and 8.10

Security Updates

Ubuntu 6.06 Updates

  • None Reported

Ubuntu 7.10 Updates

  • None Reported

Ubuntu 8.04 Updates

Ubuntu 8.10 Updates

UWN #: A sneak peek

Archives and RSS Feed

You can always find older Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter issues at: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter

You can subscribe to the Ubuntu Weekly News via RSS at: http://fridge.ubuntu.com/uwn/feed

Additional Ubuntu News

As always you can find more news and announcements at:

and

Conclusion

Thank you for reading the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter.

See you next week!

Credits

The Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter is brought to you by:

  • Nick Ali
  • John Crawford
  • Craig A. Eddy
  • Kenny McHenry

  • And many others

Glossary of Terms

Ubuntu - Get Involved

The Ubuntu community consists of individuals and teams, working on different aspects of the distribution, giving advice and technical support, and helping to promote Ubuntu to a wider audience. No contribution is too small, and anyone can help. It's your chance to get in on all the community fun associated with developing and promoting Ubuntu. http://www.ubuntu.com/community/participate

Feedback

This document is maintained by the Ubuntu Weekly News Team. If you have a story idea or suggestions for the Weekly Newsletter, join the Ubuntu News Team mailing list at https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/Ubuntu-news-team and submit it. Ideas can also be added to the wiki at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Ideas. If you'd like to contribute to a future issue of the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, please feel free to edit the appropriate wiki page. If you have any technical support questions, please send them to ubuntu-users@lists.ubuntu.com.

Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License CCL.png Creative Commons License 3.0 BY SA

UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Issue124 (last edited 2009-01-11 20:22:40 by bzq-79-183-154-179)