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Ubuntu Weekly News #12

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter - Issue #12

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter - Issue #12 for the week of August 27 - Sept 2, 2006

You can always find this and other Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter Issues at: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter

In This Issue

Welcome to this weeks issue of the Weekly news. The main news this week in the Ubuntu world has been the release of a milestone image and call for testing—you can read about that below. We also have a roundup of news from the Google Summer-of-Code student projects and sneak preview news of another little project, 'upstart', by Ubuntu Developer Scott James Remnany and designed to change the way that Ubuntu boots for the first time in 30years.

Edgy Eft Knot-2 released

Knot-2, the latest development release of Edgy Eft (which will become Ubuntu 6.10), has been released. This release brings the addition of several new desktop applications (for example, Tomboy note-taking program and F-Spot photo manager), a new Kubuntu theme, and much more. You can read more at [http://www.ubuntu.com/testing/knot2 the Knot-2 page on Ubuntu.com] or [http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/releases/edgy/knot-2/ download Knot-2].

Upstart reaches a new milestone

Upstart, Ubuntu's new event-based service management daemon, has reached the point where it can replace the sysvinit package. Steady progress is being made by the author, Scott James Remnant, working towards the goal of replacing the legacy sysvinit as the default system init for Edgy. You can read more, including what and how to test, on [http://www.netsplit.com/blog/work/canonical/upstart2.html Scott's blog], where he also talks about various event types and how to get involved in development. Upstart has even gained a logo, created by Alexandre Vassalotti, as seen on Scott's blog.

Google Summer of Code finishes for another year

Google's Summer of Code projects were handed in on August 21 and we can now see the final results. As previously reported, Ubuntu started with 22 projects, as can be seen at [http://code.google.com/soc/ubuntu/about.html Google's page of Ubuntu projects]. First, lets start by looking at the Ubuntu-specific projects.

**BRAINDUMP CURRENTLY, NEEDS EDITING**

Ubuntu projects

The vast majority of the projects were for Ubuntu specifically and they covered a diverse range of topics.

Samba GUI by Camille Percy

Ubuntu Welcome Centre by Parag M. Baxi

Panel Switcher and Session Backup (originally Applications to Improve Ubuntu) by Peter Moberg

GLaunchpad/Consiel : GNOME Launchpad front-end by Dricot Lionel - http://ploum.frimouvy.org/?115-conseil-001-in-the-middle-of-the-boxes

  • Status - Released
  • Project page -
  • Blog -

Google Calendar Desklet by Teresa Thomas

Creation of a offline package updater/installer for Ubuntu by Baishampayan Ghose

Ubiquity Migration Assistant by Evan Dandrea

Incremental Updates for Debian Packages by Felix Feyertag

Network Authentication by Andrew Mitchell

Kubuntu projects

There were 4 Kubuntu specific projects. Jonathon Riddell, head developer of Kubuntu, has created a [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/KubuntuSummerOfCode2006 status page on the Ubuntu wiki]

LVM support in Kubuntu installer by Armindo Manuel Sampaio da Silva

KDE formatting tool by Mickael Minarie

Kubuntu OEM Redistribution Tools by Anirudh Ramesh

KControl/KDE-guidance module for Wine by Yuriy Kozlov

Edubuntu projects

3 Edubuntu-specific projects were accepted,

Willow package and configuration GUI by Travis Watkins

Spec changed to creation of new filter, due to quality of code of Willow

pyeducation/pyq -A testing/quizzing system for Edubuntu by Ryan Rousseau

Safety Boat by Anselmo Lacerda Silveira de Melo

Accessibility projects

As part of the general effort to improve accessiblity in Ubuntu, Henrik Omma led two students to create two new tools.

On-screen keyboard targeted at tablets by Chris Jones

  • Status - Released

Chris Jones says: "[The package is] reasonably feature complete and i'm getting quite a lot of positive feedback from users. Heno [Henrik Nilsen Omma], my SoC mentor and one of the Ubuntu-a11y team is hoping to get it in main for edgy and hopefully on the CD too. (...) It's an on-screen keyboard meant to be a simpler alternative to the current gnome on-screen keyboard. It concentrates on point-and-click based users, leaving GOK to handle switching scanning users."

XGL-based screen magnifier by Sven Jaborek

Bazaar projects

Bazaar, a distrbuted revision control system, also had 2 projects for Summer of Code

Olive - Graphical User Interface for Bazaar-NG version control system (bzr-gui) by Szilveszter Farkas

Submit bzr merge requests by email by Hermann Kraus -

Security Updates

Ubuntu 6.06 LTS Updates

OpenOffice.org 2.0.3 has been uploaded to dapper-proposed, the testing archive for updates to Ubuntu 6.06. Using the -proposed archive helps ensure new updates are free of serious bugs before they are released to the general -updates archive. If you are able, please help us test this update. You can find more information at FIXME (location of wiki page that talks about how to test dapper-proposed)

(FIXME: Can't find a good way to put "help the developers avoid issues such as the X.org breakage." without it sounding really negative)

Backports

The following apps where backported to 6.06 this week: checkinstall 1.6.0-2ubuntu1~dapper1 config-manager 0.3-3~dapper bluefish 1.0.5-2~dapper1 amarok 2:1.4.2-0ubuntu2~dapper1 kboincspy 0.9.1-3~dapper1 seahorse 0.9.3-0ubuntu5~dapper1 konversation 1.0-0ubuntu1~dapper1 scribus-ng 1.3.3.2.dfsg-1~dapper1 kopete 4:3.5.4+kopete0.12.2-0ubuntu1~dapper1 debootstrap 0.3.3.0ubuntu3~dapper1 ilibtunepimp 0.4.2-3ubuntu3~dapper1 mod-cband 0.9.7.4-1~dapper1 libvisual 0.4.0-1~dapper1 xmoto 0.1.16-3~dapper1 xchat 2.6.6-0ubuntu1~dapper1 taglib 1.4-4~dapper1 squirrelmail 2:1.4.8-1~dapper1 spamassassin 3.1.3-1ubuntu1~dapper1 powersave 0.12.20-1ubuntu1~dapper1 phpmyadmin 4:2.8.1-1~dapper1 kpowersave 0.6.2-2ubuntu1~dapper1 gxine 0.5.7-1ubuntu4~dapper1 cacti 0.8.6h-3~dapper1

New Apps In Edgy

What a week it was.

Anyone using DBUS has to thank Sebastian Droege, Michael Biebl, Sjoerd Simons, Anthony Baxter, Daniel Stone, David Zeuthen, Michel Daenzer, Daniel Silverstone, Kevin Ottens, Daniel Holbach, and they are just the ones I know about this week. There were 56 bugs squashed in the work undertaken here. Why is this so important? DBUS is what makes GNOME work, it is the underlying engine that allows one part of gnome communicate with others. Your author is seriously impressed with this. Giuseppe Borzi brought in keyTouch editor 2, which should make people's lives easier with this program to configure the extra function keys of the keyboard.

Matthias Klose has brought in some new Java material. A Java runtime environment using GIJ, a Java runtime environment with GCJ, and a web browser plugin to execute Java (tm) applets.

Daniel T Chen has brought in quodlibet an audio library manager and player for GTK+ and has closed some of the delta between Ubuntu and Devian, some of this work depended on the work of Bastian Kleineidam.

Maintainer: Matthias Klose <doko@debian.org> Changed-By: Lucas Nussbaum <lucas@lucas-nussbaum.net> Description:

  • sqlrelay - Database connection pooling, proxying and load balancing

Closes: 348387 353947 Changes:

  • sqlrelay (1:0.37.1-1) unstable; urgency=low
    • New upstream version. Urgency: low

Maintainer: Stephen Gran <sgran@debian.org> Changed-By: J?r?mie Corbier <jcorbier@ubuntu.com> Description:

  • freeradius - a high-performance and highly configurable RADIUS server

Closes: 380204 Changes:

  • freeradius (1.1.3-1) unstable; urgency=low
    • [ Stephen Gran ]
    • Add and rework ubuntu /var/run/tmpfs patch
    • Add LSB init script headers
    • Actually trap errors in init script, how about?
    • [ Mark Hymers ]
    • New upstream version.
    • New version of autotools in 1.1.3. Closes: #380204
    • Remove previous patches merged upstream:
      • - 01-actually_check_for_unset_password.dpatch
    • Only do user creation, group addition, chmod and chown stuff in postinst
      • on an initial install to avoid clobbering local changes.
    • Do not build the java support on arm, mips, mipsel, hppa; FTBFS.
    • Create the sqlrelay user in sqlrelay's postinst. Closes: #353947.
    • Remove ${DESTDIR} from the pkgconfig files. Closes: #348387.

Maintainer: Roy Hiu-yeung Chan <hychan@glink.net.hk> Changed-By: Gauvain Pocentek <gauvainpocentek@gmail.com> Description:

  • stardict - International dictionary written in GTK+ 2.x

Closes: 289996 361667 378807 379152 Changes:

  • stardict (2.4.7-2.1) unstable; urgency=medium
    • Non-maintainer upload to Fix Failure To Build From Source due to a
      • compilation problem in 64bit architectures.
    • Added debian/patches/fix64bit.diff. Thanks to Mike O'Connor for the
      • patch. (Closes: #379152)
    • Added debian/patches/libtool_is_a_fool.diff, that fixes the rpath problem
      • of libtool for stardict.
  • stardict (2.4.7-2) unstable; urgency=low
    • FTBFS: Forgot to add bzip2 build-dependency. Thanks to Aarom Ucko
      • for the reminder! (Closes: Bug#378807)
    • Also: Build-Depends: libpcre3-dev, needed by dsl2dict in stardict-tools.
    • [debian/patches/00list]: Actually enable jm2stardict.diff this time.
  • stardict (2.4.7-1) unstable; urgency=low
    • New upstream version. (Closes: Bug#361667)
    • Changed packaging method: Now the pristine upstream bzip2 tarball is
      • placed as-is within the Debian source package. The autogen.sh is also run at build time. (Closes: Bug#289996)
    • Upgraded Standards-Version from 3.6.2 to 3.7.2.
    • Updated package description and copyright information.

Bug Stats

In The Press

Feature Of The Week - Gobby

Have you ever tried working on a same document with many peoples? You may have discovered how difficult it is. You may have seen this happen in company or charity offices around the world.

You may have been wondering how programmers, such as those working on Ubuntu manage. The Ubuntu developers are spread out across several continents, time-zones and countries so collaboration can be hard. One of the main assets that computer programmers have had access to over time have been somethings called "revision control", or "version control" tools. Version control comes from idea of there being many different variations on a similar document and the need to integrate each of those improvements indiviually.

In the office environment you may start of with a draft that everyone nearly agrees on. The lawyers take the draft away and add a disclaimer, Kelly from accounts improves one of the graphs, Sam in press-relations spices up some of the language. When the three teams meet again at the end of the day, there are now three copies, all slightly different. The next step might be to appoint one person to stitch together and integrate the three changes. This is the stage where the programmers win, the automatic revision control tools take over and attempt to detect each change and splice it into the final copy.

With everyone online it would be great to have those same features available but without having to be programmers. The answer to that "Gobby", which you can easily install from the Add/Remove programs menu.

<screenshot>

After starting up Gobby and connecting to a central server (or having other people connect to your own machine) you can share editing of a document. You can see in the screenshot above several of the Weekly News editors working together, can you guess what the document is? Changes are easy to follow in real-time with text from each connected user appearing in a different colour. There's no restrictions about two people updating the same paragraph at the same time, you can start editing a sentence even the previous person is continuing to type words. As soon as each character is typed, the letter immediately flashes up on everyone else's screen.

Real-time editing is a real beauty to work with, so much so that Gobby is now frequently used at Ubuntu conferences or summits. When there ten, or a dozen,

Additional News Resources

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:

  • Corey Burger
  • Paul O'Malley
  • Jenda Vancura
  • Paul Sladen
  • And many others

Feedback

This document is maintained by the Ubuntu Marketing Team. Please feel free to contact us regarding any concerns or suggestions by either sending an email to ubuntu-marketing at lists.ubuntu.com or by using any of the other methods on the [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MarketingTeam Ubuntu Marketing Team Contact Information Page]Ubuntu Weekly News #12

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter - Issue #12

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter - Issue #12 for the week of August 27 - Sept 2, 2006

You can always find this and other Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter Issues at: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter

In This Issue

Welcome to this weeks issue of the Weekly news. The main news this week in the Ubuntu world has been the release of a milestone image and call for testing—you can read about that below. We also have a roundup of news from the Google Summer-of-Code student projects and sneak preview news of another little project, 'upstart', by Ubuntu Developer Scott James Remnany and designed to change the way that Ubuntu boots for the first time in 30years.

Edgy Eft Knot-2 released

Knot-2, the latest development release of Edgy Eft (which will become Ubuntu 6.10), has been released. This release brings the addition of several new desktop applications (for example, Tomboy note-taking program and F-Spot photo manager), a new Kubuntu theme, and much more. You can read more at [http://www.ubuntu.com/testing/knot2 the Knot-2 page on Ubuntu.com] or [http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/releases/edgy/knot-2/ download Knot-2].

Upstart reaches a new milestone

Upstart, Ubuntu's new event-based service management daemon, has reached the point where it can replace the sysvinit package. Steady progress is being made by the author, Scott James Remnant, working towards the goal of replacing the legacy sysvinit as the default system init for Edgy. You can read more, including what and how to test, on [http://www.netsplit.com/blog/work/canonical/upstart2.html Scott's blog], where he also talks about various event types and how to get involved in development. Upstart has even gained a logo, created by Alexandre Vassalotti, as seen on Scott's blog.

Google Summer of Code finishes for another year

Google's Summer of Code projects were handed in on August 21 and we can now see the final results. As previously reported, Ubuntu started with 22 projects, as can be seen at [http://code.google.com/soc/ubuntu/about.html Google's page of Ubuntu projects]. First, lets start by looking at the Ubuntu-specific projects.

**BRAINDUMP CURRENTLY, NEEDS EDITING**

Ubuntu projects

The vast majority of the projects were for Ubuntu specifically and they covered a diverse range of topics.

Samba GUI by Camille Percy

Ubuntu Welcome Centre by Parag M. Baxi

Panel Switcher and Session Backup (originally Applications to Improve Ubuntu) by Peter Moberg

GLaunchpad/Consiel : GNOME Launchpad front-end by Dricot Lionel - http://ploum.frimouvy.org/?115-conseil-001-in-the-middle-of-the-boxes

  • Status - Released
  • Project page -
  • Blog -

Google Calendar Desklet by Teresa Thomas

Creation of a offline package updater/installer for Ubuntu by Baishampayan Ghose

Ubiquity Migration Assistant by Evan Dandrea

Incremental Updates for Debian Packages by Felix Feyertag

Network Authentication by Andrew Mitchell

Kubuntu projects

There were 4 Kubuntu specific projects. Jonathon Riddell, head developer of Kubuntu, has created a [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/KubuntuSummerOfCode2006 status page on the Ubuntu wiki]

LVM support in Kubuntu installer by Armindo Manuel Sampaio da Silva

KDE formatting tool by Mickael Minarie

Kubuntu OEM Redistribution Tools by Anirudh Ramesh

KControl/KDE-guidance module for Wine by Yuriy Kozlov

Edubuntu projects

3 Edubuntu-specific projects were accepted,

Willow package and configuration GUI by Travis Watkins

Spec changed to creation of new filter, due to quality of code of Willow

pyeducation/pyq -A testing/quizzing system for Edubuntu by Ryan Rousseau

Safety Boat by Anselmo Lacerda Silveira de Melo

Accessibility projects

As part of the general effort to improve accessiblity in Ubuntu, Henrik Omma led two students to create two new tools.

On-screen keyboard targeted at tablets by Chris Jones

  • Status - Released

Chris Jones says: "[The package is] reasonably feature complete and i'm getting quite a lot of positive feedback from users. Heno [Henrik Nilsen Omma], my SoC mentor and one of the Ubuntu-a11y team is hoping to get it in main for edgy and hopefully on the CD too. (...) It's an on-screen keyboard meant to be a simpler alternative to the current gnome on-screen keyboard. It concentrates on point-and-click based users, leaving GOK to handle switching scanning users."

XGL-based screen magnifier by Sven Jaborek

Bazaar projects

Bazaar, a distrbuted revision control system, also had 2 projects for Summer of Code

Olive - Graphical User Interface for Bazaar-NG version control system (bzr-gui) by Szilveszter Farkas

Submit bzr merge requests by email by Hermann Kraus -

Security Updates

Ubuntu 6.06 LTS Updates

OpenOffice.org 2.0.3 has been uploaded to dapper-proposed, the testing archive for updates to Ubuntu 6.06. Using the -proposed archive helps ensure new updates are free of serious bugs before they are released to the general -updates archive. If you are able, please help us test this update. You can find more information at FIXME (location of wiki page that talks about how to test dapper-proposed)

(FIXME: Can't find a good way to put "help the developers avoid issues such as the X.org breakage." without it sounding really negative)

Backports

The following apps where backported to 6.06 this week: checkinstall 1.6.0-2ubuntu1~dapper1 config-manager 0.3-3~dapper bluefish 1.0.5-2~dapper1 amarok 2:1.4.2-0ubuntu2~dapper1 kboincspy 0.9.1-3~dapper1 seahorse 0.9.3-0ubuntu5~dapper1 konversation 1.0-0ubuntu1~dapper1 scribus-ng 1.3.3.2.dfsg-1~dapper1 kopete 4:3.5.4+kopete0.12.2-0ubuntu1~dapper1 debootstrap 0.3.3.0ubuntu3~dapper1 ilibtunepimp 0.4.2-3ubuntu3~dapper1 mod-cband 0.9.7.4-1~dapper1 libvisual 0.4.0-1~dapper1 xmoto 0.1.16-3~dapper1 xchat 2.6.6-0ubuntu1~dapper1 taglib 1.4-4~dapper1 squirrelmail 2:1.4.8-1~dapper1 spamassassin 3.1.3-1ubuntu1~dapper1 powersave 0.12.20-1ubuntu1~dapper1 phpmyadmin 4:2.8.1-1~dapper1 kpowersave 0.6.2-2ubuntu1~dapper1 gxine 0.5.7-1ubuntu4~dapper1 cacti 0.8.6h-3~dapper1

New Apps In Edgy

What a week it was.

Anyone using DBUS has to thank Sebastian Droege, Michael Biebl, Sjoerd Simons, Anthony Baxter, Daniel Stone, David Zeuthen, Michel Daenzer, Daniel Silverstone, Kevin Ottens, Daniel Holbach, and they are just the ones I know about this week. There were 56 bugs squashed in the work undertaken here. Why is this so important? DBUS is what makes GNOME work, it is the underlying engine that allows one part of gnome communicate with others. Your author is seriously impressed with this. Giuseppe Borzi brought in keyTouch editor 2, which should make people's lives easier with this program to configure the extra function keys of the keyboard.

Matthias Klose has brought in some new Java material. A Java runtime environment using GIJ, a Java runtime environment with GCJ, and a web browser plugin to execute Java (tm) applets.

Daniel T Chen has brought in quodlibet an audio library manager and player for GTK+ and has closed some of the delta between Ubuntu and Devian, some of this work depended on the work of Bastian Kleineidam.

Maintainer: Matthias Klose <doko@debian.org> Changed-By: Lucas Nussbaum <lucas@lucas-nussbaum.net> Description:

  • sqlrelay - Database connection pooling, proxying and load balancing

Closes: 348387 353947 Changes:

  • sqlrelay (1:0.37.1-1) unstable; urgency=low
    • New upstream version. Urgency: low

Maintainer: Stephen Gran <sgran@debian.org> Changed-By: J?r?mie Corbier <jcorbier@ubuntu.com> Description:

  • freeradius - a high-performance and highly configurable RADIUS server

Closes: 380204 Changes:

  • freeradius (1.1.3-1) unstable; urgency=low
    • [ Stephen Gran ]
    • Add and rework ubuntu /var/run/tmpfs patch
    • Add LSB init script headers
    • Actually trap errors in init script, how about?
    • [ Mark Hymers ]
    • New upstream version.
    • New version of autotools in 1.1.3. Closes: #380204
    • Remove previous patches merged upstream:
      • - 01-actually_check_for_unset_password.dpatch
    • Only do user creation, group addition, chmod and chown stuff in postinst
      • on an initial install to avoid clobbering local changes.
    • Do not build the java support on arm, mips, mipsel, hppa; FTBFS.
    • Create the sqlrelay user in sqlrelay's postinst. Closes: #353947.
    • Remove ${DESTDIR} from the pkgconfig files. Closes: #348387.

Maintainer: Roy Hiu-yeung Chan <hychan@glink.net.hk> Changed-By: Gauvain Pocentek <gauvainpocentek@gmail.com> Description:

  • stardict - International dictionary written in GTK+ 2.x

Closes: 289996 361667 378807 379152 Changes:

  • stardict (2.4.7-2.1) unstable; urgency=medium
    • Non-maintainer upload to Fix Failure To Build From Source due to a
      • compilation problem in 64bit architectures.
    • Added debian/patches/fix64bit.diff. Thanks to Mike O'Connor for the
      • patch. (Closes: #379152)
    • Added debian/patches/libtool_is_a_fool.diff, that fixes the rpath problem
      • of libtool for stardict.
  • stardict (2.4.7-2) unstable; urgency=low
    • FTBFS: Forgot to add bzip2 build-dependency. Thanks to Aarom Ucko
      • for the reminder! (Closes: Bug#378807)
    • Also: Build-Depends: libpcre3-dev, needed by dsl2dict in stardict-tools.
    • [debian/patches/00list]: Actually enable jm2stardict.diff this time.
  • stardict (2.4.7-1) unstable; urgency=low
    • New upstream version. (Closes: Bug#361667)
    • Changed packaging method: Now the pristine upstream bzip2 tarball is
      • placed as-is within the Debian source package. The autogen.sh is also run at build time. (Closes: Bug#289996)
    • Upgraded Standards-Version from 3.6.2 to 3.7.2.
    • Updated package description and copyright information.

Bug Stats

In The Press

Feature Of The Week - Gobby

Have you ever tried working on a same document with many peoples? You may have discovered how difficult it is. You may have seen this happen in company or charity offices around the world.

You may have been wondering how programmers, such as those working on Ubuntu manage. The Ubuntu developers are spread out across several continents, time-zones and countries so collaboration can be hard. One of the main assets that computer programmers have had access to over time have been somethings called "revision control", or "version control" tools. Version control comes from idea of there being many different variations on a similar document and the need to integrate each of those improvements indiviually.

In the office environment you may start of with a draft that everyone nearly agrees on. The lawyers take the draft away and add a disclaimer, Kelly from accounts improves one of the graphs, Sam in press-relations spices up some of the language. When the three teams meet again at the end of the day, there are now three copies, all slightly different. The next step might be to appoint one person to stitch together and integrate the three changes. This is the stage where the programmers win, the automatic revision control tools take over and attempt to detect each change and splice it into the final copy.

With everyone online it would be great to have those same features available but without having to be programmers. The answer to that "Gobby", which you can easily install from the Add/Remove programs menu.

<screenshot>

After starting up Gobby and connecting to a central server (or having other people connect to your own machine) you can share editing of a document. You can see in the screenshot above several of the Weekly News editors working together, can you guess what the document is? Changes are easy to follow in real-time with text from each connected user appearing in a different colour. There's no restrictions about two people updating the same paragraph at the same time, you can start editing a sentence even the previous person is continuing to type words. As soon as each character is typed, the letter immediately flashes up on everyone else's screen.

Real-time editing is a real beauty to work with, so much so that Gobby is now frequently used at Ubuntu conferences or summits. When there ten, or a dozen,

Additional News Resources

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:

  • Corey Burger
  • Paul O'Malley
  • Jenda Vancura
  • Paul Sladen
  • And many others

Feedback

This document is maintained by the Ubuntu Marketing Team. Please feel free to contact us regarding any concerns or suggestions by either sending an email to ubuntu-marketing at lists.ubuntu.com or by using any of the other methods on the [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MarketingTeam Ubuntu Marketing Team Contact Information Page]