Issue288

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Kate Stewart (Ubuntu Release Manager at Canonical) announces Ubuntu 12.10 Quantal Quetzal release pointing out innovations in server, cloud and desktop versions of Ubuntu which can be found at the following links: Kate Stewart (Ubuntu Release Manager at Canonical) announces the Ubuntu 12.10 Quantal Quetzal release pointing out innovations in server, cloud, and desktop versions of Ubuntu. Her story can be found at the following links:
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Mark Shuttleworth founder of Ubuntu announces name of 13.04 release of Ubuntu, the “Raring Ringtale” along with goals that are to be achieved in the following two cycles before the LTS version of Ubuntu 14.04  is released. Mark Shuttleworth, founder of Ubuntu, announces name of 13.04 release of Ubuntu, the “Raring Ringtale”, along with goals that are to be achieved in the following two cycles before the LTS version of Ubuntu 14.04 is released.
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Mark Shuttleworth founder of Ubuntu decides to open Ubuntu development towards potential contributors from Ubuntu community even more than it is already open. In the words of Shuttleworth himself: “This would provide early community input and review, without spoiling the surprise when we think the piece is ready. It would allow community members to work on something that will be widely covered at release (at least, on OMG ).” Mark Shuttleworth, founder of Ubuntu, decides to open Ubuntu development to potential contributors from the Ubuntu community even more than it is already open. In the words of Shuttleworth himself: “This would provide early community input and review, without spoiling the surprise when we think the piece is ready. It would allow community members to work on something that will be widely covered at release (at least, on OMG ).”
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Unfortunately Mark Shuttleworth’s invitation for contributors from Ubuntu community and announcement for Ubuntu being even more open was misunderstood. A lot of people understood Shuttleworth’s post like Ubuntu’s development is becoming less transparent. Due to misunderstanding Shuttleworth wrote another post where he explains very clearly with the following: “What I offered to do, yesterday, spontaneously, is to invite members of the community in to the things we are working on as personal projects, before we are ready to share them. This would mean that there was even less of Ubuntu that was NOT shaped and polished by folk other than Canonical – a move that one would think would be well received. This would make Canonical even more transparent.” Unfortunately, Mark Shuttleworth’s invitation for contributors from Ubuntu community and announcement for Ubuntu being even more open was misunderstood. A lot of people understood Shuttleworth’s post as if Ubuntu’s development is becoming less transparent. Due to the misunderstanding, Shuttleworth wrote another post where he explains his intentions with the original announcement. “What I offered to do, yesterday, spontaneously, is to invite members of the community in to the things we are working on as personal projects, before we are ready to share them. This would mean that there was even less of Ubuntu that was NOT shaped and polished by folk other than Canonical – a move that one would think would be well received. This would make Canonical even more transparent.”
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Jim Hoddap of Canonical reports about current status considering Ubuntu TV  project which includes: Nux, Unity 3D, Lenses and scopes, Metadata and many other areas.

As always, Hoddap  puts a call for volunteers to get involved into Ubuntu TV project with the following: “If you want to get involved, please leave us a comment below so multiple people aren’t working independently on the same things.”
Jim Hoddap of Canonical reports about the current status of the Ubuntu TV project which includes: Nux, Unity 3D, Lenses and scopes, Metadata, and many other areas.

As always, Hoddap puts out a call for volunteers to get involved in the Ubuntu TV project with the following: “If you want to get involved, please leave us a comment below so multiple people aren’t working independently on the same things.”
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Jim Hoddap of Canonical and the entire Ubuntu TV team put a call for more active community participation. Hoddap states that there are three specific ways that the community can help the Ubuntu TV project with immediately: Jim Hoddap of Canonical and the entire Ubuntu TV team put out a call for more active community participation. Hoddap states that there are three specific ways the community can immediately help the Ubuntu TV project:
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Jono Bacon writes about his experience with “upgrading a four-year old Ubuntu installation  to a current installation via SSH without problem.” Jono Bacon writes about his experience with “upgrading a four-year old Ubuntu installation to a current installation via SSH without problem.”
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Jorge Castro reports about new Juju web interface which was demoed at the Open``Stack Developer Summit by Mark Shuttleworth. Castro states: “While Juju command line is great for building your own deployment, when you have little boxes you can drag around and connect together it enables people to really model things in a quick and easy manner.” Code of Juju GUI can be retrieved from the following link: http://launchpad.net/juju-gui Demo of Juju GUI can be found at the following link: http://uistage.jujucharms.com:8080 Jorge Castro reports on the new Juju web interface which was demoed at the Open``Stack Developer Summit by Mark Shuttleworth. Castro states: “While Juju command line is great for building your own deployment, when you have little boxes you can drag around and connect together it enables people to really model things in a quick and easy manner.” The Juju GUI code can be retrieved from the following link: http://launchpad.net/juju-gui Demo of Juju GUI can be found at the following link: http://uistage.jujucharms.com:8080
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Matt Fischer reports about bugs triage and fix of an apport script for lightdm. Fischer points out  that “there’s no apport script for any of the the greeters, at least not that he knows of for unity-greeter or lightdm-gtk-greeter, but they’d need the same data. The only thing that this script doesn’t do is get a screencap/picture.” Fischer also points out that people will be able to file bugs for lightdm by writing a simple command: ubuntu-bug lightdm Matt Fischer reports about bugs triage and fix of an apport script for lightdm. Fischer points out that “there’s no apport script for any of the the greeters, at least not that he knows of for unity-greeter or lightdm-gtk-greeter, but they’d need the same data. The only thing that this script doesn’t do is get a screencap/picture.” Fischer also points out that people will be able to file bugs reports for lightdm by writing a simple command: ubuntu-bug lightdm
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Many people would think that Randall Ross is writing what to tweak after a fresh version of Ubuntu is installed. What Ross recommends is “the only thing you need to do after installing Ubuntu is to install community. Find the people in your town that love it and want it to succeed. Find others that you can talk to face-to-face to share tips, tricks, and your unique knowledge of the amazing things it can do.” Randall Ross writes about a different type of "thing to do after installing Ubuntu 12.10". He recommends "the only thing you need to do after installing Ubuntu is to install community. Find the people in your town that love it and want it to succeed. Find others that you can talk to face-to-face to share tips, tricks, and your unique knowledge of the amazing things it can do.”
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Jono Bacon highlights his discussion with Ivo Weevers (head of the Canonical Design Team) due to an increment of the Ubuntu Design community. Considering the mentioned challenge (increasing Ubuntu Design community), Bacon pointed out some of the solutions and calls the Ubuntu community to give some feedback about this. Jono Bacon highlights his discussion with Ivo Weevers (head of the Canonical Design Team) due to an increment of the Ubuntu Design community. Considering the mentioned challenge (increasing Ubuntu Design community), Bacon pointed out some of the solutions and calls the Ubuntu community to give some feedback.
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There have been dozens of reviews for the latest release of Ubuntu 12.10 (Quantal Quetzal)! The following are a several selected by our editors for inclusion this week. There have been dozens of reviews for the latest release of Ubuntu 12.10 (Quantal Quetzal)! The following are a several of them selected by our editors for inclusion this week.
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Michael Larabel of Phoronix compares Ubuntu 12.10 and Windows 7 performances,  and brings us “benchmarks of an AMD Radeon HD 6870 graphics card when running a variety of Open``GL workloads from Ubuntu 12.10, Kubuntu 12.10 (the KDE desktop version of Ubuntu 12.10 to avoid the Unity desktop overhead), and Microsoft Windows 7 Professional x64.” Michael Larabel of Phoronix compares Ubuntu 12.10 and Windows 7 performances, and brings us “benchmarks of an AMD Radeon HD 6870 graphics card when running a variety of Open``GL workloads from Ubuntu 12.10, Kubuntu 12.10 (the KDE desktop version of Ubuntu 12.10 to avoid the Unity desktop overhead), and Microsoft Windows 7 Professional x64.”
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Tualatrix Chou author of the Ubuntu Tweak app stops the Ubuntu Tweak development. Chou explained this sudden and unexpected decision with the following: “You may ask why I made this decision to stop the development of Ubuntu Tweak, I may write 10,000 words to describe how I start this project, how I feel happy from this project, how I feel bad from this project… But I just want to say: If making free software is not free any more, why still doing this?” Tualatrix Chou, author of the Ubuntu Tweak app ,,stops the Ubuntu Tweak development. Chou explained this sudden and unexpected decision with the following: “You may ask why I made this decision to stop the development of Ubuntu Tweak, I may write 10,000 words to describe how I start this project, how I feel happy from this project, how I feel bad from this project… But I just want to say: If making free software is not free any more, why still doing this?”
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Stephen Michael Kellat brings us news considering Ubuntu 12.10 Quantal Quetzal release, Ubuntu release party plans, who is sticking with Ubuntu and who wandered away,  and much more. Stephen Michael Kellat brings us news on the Ubuntu 12.10 Quantal Quetzal release, Ubuntu release party plans, who is sticking with Ubuntu and who wandered away, and much more.
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 * Your Name Here  * Jim Connett
* Your name here


Contents

  1. In This Issue
  2. General Community News
    1. Ubuntu 12.10 (Quantal Quetzal) released!
    2. Not the Runty Raccoon, the Rufflered Rhino or (even) the Randall Ross
    3. Raring community skunkworks
    4. “in addition to”
    5. Welcome New Members and Developers
  3. Ubuntu Stats
    1. Bug Stats
    2. Translation Stats Quantal
    3. Ubuntu Brainstorm Top this week
    4. Ask Ubuntu Top 5 Questions this week
  4. The Planet
    1. Ubuntu TV Weekly Update #11
    2. Ubuntu TV: Call for More Active Community Participation
    3. Jono Bacon: Ubuntu Server Community, You Rule
    4. Jorge Castro: Announcing the Juju web UI
    5. Matt Fischer: UBUNTU-BUG IS FOR LIGHTDM, SOON!
    6. Randall Ross: The Most Important Thing To Do After You've Installed Ubuntu 12.10
    7. Jono Bacon: Growing Our Design Community
  5. Canonical News
    1. Ubuntu 12.10 breaks down the barrier between the PC and the web
  6. In The Press
    1. Shuttleworth: Ubuntu 12.10 available with OpenStack "Folsom" today
    2. Asus Deploys New Ubuntu Netbooks (Yes, Netbooks)
  7. In The Blogosphere
    1. 12.10 Release coverage
  8. In Other News
    1. AMD Catalyst: Ubuntu 12.10 vs. Windows 7
    2. The development of Ubuntu Tweak is stopped
  9. Other Articles of Interest
  10. Featured Audio and Video
    1. Burning Circle Episode 87
    2. Video: Victor Palau: Nexus 7 Raring to go to Copenhagen
  11. Weekly Ubuntu Development Team Meetings
  12. Upcoming Meetings and Events
  13. Updates and Security for 8.04, 10.04, 11.04, 11.10 and 12.04
    1. Security Updates
    2. Ubuntu 8.04 Updates
    3. Ubuntu 10.04 Updates
    4. Ubuntu 11.04 Updates
    5. Ubuntu 11.10 Updates
    6. Ubuntu 12.04 Updates
  14. Subscribe
  15. Archives
  16. Additional Ubuntu News
  17. Conclusion
  18. Credits
  19. Glossary of Terms
  20. Ubuntu - Get Involved
  21. Feedback

newspaper-icon41.jpg

WORK IN PROGRESS

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue 288 for the week October 15 - 21, 2012.

In This Issue

General Community News

Ubuntu 12.10 (Quantal Quetzal) released!

Kate Stewart (Ubuntu Release Manager at Canonical) announces the Ubuntu 12.10 Quantal Quetzal release pointing out innovations in server, cloud, and desktop versions of Ubuntu. Her story can be found at the following links:

http://www.canonical.com/content/ubuntu-server-1210-all-you-need-cloud http://www.canonical.com/content/ubuntu-1210-breaks-down-barrier-between-pc-and-web

“The newest Kubuntu 12.10, Edubuntu 12.10, Xubuntu 12.10, Lubuntu 12.10 and Ubuntu Studio 12.10 are also released. More details can be found in their announcements:”

Kubuntu: http://kubuntu.org/news/12.10-release

Xubuntu: http://xubuntu.org/news/12-10-release

Edubuntu http://edubuntu.org/news/12.10-release

Lubuntu: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Lubuntu/Announcement/12.10

Ubuntu Studio: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/QuantalQuetzal/ReleaseNotes/UbuntuStudio

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-announce/2012-October/000164.html

Not the Runty Raccoon, the Rufflered Rhino or (even) the Randall Ross

Mark Shuttleworth, founder of Ubuntu, announces name of 13.04 release of Ubuntu, the “Raring Ringtale”, along with goals that are to be achieved in the following two cycles before the LTS version of Ubuntu 14.04 is released.

http://www.markshuttleworth.com/archives/1195

Raring community skunkworks

Mark Shuttleworth, founder of Ubuntu, decides to open Ubuntu development to potential contributors from the Ubuntu community even more than it is already open. In the words of Shuttleworth himself: “This would provide early community input and review, without spoiling the surprise when we think the piece is ready. It would allow community members to work on something that will be widely covered at release (at least, on OMG ).”

http://www.markshuttleworth.com/archives/1200

“in addition to”

Unfortunately, Mark Shuttleworth’s invitation for contributors from Ubuntu community and announcement for Ubuntu being even more open was misunderstood. A lot of people understood Shuttleworth’s post as if Ubuntu’s development is becoming less transparent. Due to the misunderstanding, Shuttleworth wrote another post where he explains his intentions with the original announcement. “What I offered to do, yesterday, spontaneously, is to invite members of the community in to the things we are working on as personal projects, before we are ready to share them. This would mean that there was even less of Ubuntu that was NOT shaped and polished by folk other than Canonical – a move that one would think would be well received. This would make Canonical even more transparent.”

http://www.markshuttleworth.com/archives/1207

Welcome New Members and Developers

Results for the 2200 Board Meeting October 18th, 2012:

Both Ladislav and Bojan are from Serbia, where they are the current LoCo Serbia team admins. They are both very active on promoting Ubuntu and Free Software throughout Serbia.

Plus, the Developer Membership Board approved Luis Henriques ( https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LuisHenriques/ ) for linux-* packages upload rights, and Andreas Hasenack ( https://wiki.ubuntu.com/AndreasHasenack/ ) for the landscape-client package upload rights.

Congratulations to all of them!

Ubuntu Stats

Bug Stats

  • Open (100893) +569 over last week
  • Critical (91) +3 over last week
  • Unconfirmed (50198) +163 over last week

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

Translation Stats Quantal

  1. English (United Kingdom) (10140) +610 over last week
  2. Spanish (14730) +723 over last week
  3. English (Australia) (17175) +726 over last week
  4. Brazilian Portuguese (38860) +706 over last week
  5. Bosnian (40613) +204 over last week

Remaining strings to translate in Ubuntu 12.10 "Quantal Quetzal", see more at: https://translations.launchpad.net/ubuntu/quantal/ and https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Translations

Ubuntu Brainstorm Top 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/

Ask Ubuntu Top 5 Questions this week

Ask (and answer!) your own questions at http://askubuntu.com

The Planet

Ubuntu TV Weekly Update #11

Jim Hoddap of Canonical reports about the current status of the Ubuntu TV project which includes: Nux, Unity 3D, Lenses and scopes, Metadata, and many other areas.

As always, Hoddap puts out a call for volunteers to get involved in the Ubuntu TV project with the following: “If you want to get involved, please leave us a comment below so multiple people aren’t working independently on the same things.”

http://www.doadjustyourset.com/2012/10/15/ubuntu-tv-weekly-update-11/

Ubuntu TV: Call for More Active Community Participation

Jim Hoddap of Canonical and the entire Ubuntu TV team put out a call for more active community participation. Hoddap states that there are three specific ways the community can immediately help the Ubuntu TV project:

  • Re-creating the TV user interface using the Nux toolkit (Unity 3D) instead of Qt/QML (Unity 2D).
  • Integrating a full MythTV backend into the TV UI, meaning live TV tuning (EPG) and recording infrastructure.
  • Researching and finalizing the hardware acceleration of GStreamer video sinks for nVidia, Intel and AMD graphic cards.

http://www.doadjustyourset.com/2012/10/18/call-for-more-active-community-participation

Jono Bacon: Ubuntu Server Community, You Rule

Jono Bacon writes about his experience with “upgrading a four-year old Ubuntu installation to a current installation via SSH without problem.”

http://www.jonobacon.org/2012/10/15/ubuntu-server-community-you-rule/

Jorge Castro: Announcing the Juju web UI

Jorge Castro reports on the new Juju web interface which was demoed at the OpenStack Developer Summit by Mark Shuttleworth. Castro states: “While Juju command line is great for building your own deployment, when you have little boxes you can drag around and connect together it enables people to really model things in a quick and easy manner.” The Juju GUI code can be retrieved from the following link: http://launchpad.net/juju-gui Demo of Juju GUI can be found at the following link: http://uistage.jujucharms.com:8080

http://www.jorgecastro.org/2012/10/16/announcing-the-juju-web-ui/

Matt Fischer: UBUNTU-BUG IS FOR LIGHTDM, SOON!

Matt Fischer reports about bugs triage and fix of an apport script for lightdm. Fischer points out that “there’s no apport script for any of the the greeters, at least not that he knows of for unity-greeter or lightdm-gtk-greeter, but they’d need the same data. The only thing that this script doesn’t do is get a screencap/picture.” Fischer also points out that people will be able to file bugs reports for lightdm by writing a simple command: ubuntu-bug lightdm

http://www.mattfischer.com/blog/?p=262

Randall Ross: The Most Important Thing To Do After You've Installed Ubuntu 12.10

Randall Ross writes about a different type of "thing to do after installing Ubuntu 12.10". He recommends "the only thing you need to do after installing Ubuntu is to install community. Find the people in your town that love it and want it to succeed. Find others that you can talk to face-to-face to share tips, tricks, and your unique knowledge of the amazing things it can do.”

http://randall.executiv.es/wearemakingubuntu

Jono Bacon: Growing Our Design Community

Jono Bacon highlights his discussion with Ivo Weevers (head of the Canonical Design Team) due to an increment of the Ubuntu Design community. Considering the mentioned challenge (increasing Ubuntu Design community), Bacon pointed out some of the solutions and calls the Ubuntu community to give some feedback.

http://www.jonobacon.org/2012/10/16/growing-our-design-community/

Canonical News

Ubuntu 12.10 breaks down the barrier between the PC and the web

Canonical announces the desktop version of Ubuntu 12.10, the latest release of the popular open source operating system. As part of Canonical’s objective to make all content easier to access, Ubuntu 12.10 introduces innovations that bring together desktop and cloud-based experiences, representing the next stage in the transition to a multi-device, cloud-based world.

http://www.canonical.com/content/ubuntu-1210-breaks-down-barrier-between-pc-and-web

In The Press

Shuttleworth: Ubuntu 12.10 available with OpenStack "Folsom" today

Paula Rooney of ZDNet reports about recently held OpenStack Developer Summit. Rooney states: “Although a total of four Ubuntu releases have incorporated OpenStack, this is the first Ubuntu release that incorporates the new 'Quantum" networking features of "Folsom" as well as multi-cluster support to allow customers to support thousands of nodes on a cloud.”

http://www.zdnet.com/shuttleworth-ubuntu-12-10-available-with-openstack-folsom-today-7000005877/

Asus Deploys New Ubuntu Netbooks (Yes, Netbooks)

Christoper Tozzi of the Var Guy informs us that Asus will be shipping netbooks with Ubuntu preinstalled. For now, netbooks are only available in Germany and Italy. Tozzi speculates why Asus is offering netbooks with Ubuntu Linux with the following: ”Perhaps the reason is that Asus is unsure how successful the newest version of Windows will prove on its hardware.”

http://www.thevarguy.com/2012/10/17/asus-deploys-new-ubuntu-netbooks-yes-netbooks/

In The Blogosphere

12.10 Release coverage

There have been dozens of reviews for the latest release of Ubuntu 12.10 (Quantal Quetzal)! The following are a several of them selected by our editors for inclusion this week.

In Other News

AMD Catalyst: Ubuntu 12.10 vs. Windows 7

Michael Larabel of Phoronix compares Ubuntu 12.10 and Windows 7 performances, and brings us “benchmarks of an AMD Radeon HD 6870 graphics card when running a variety of OpenGL workloads from Ubuntu 12.10, Kubuntu 12.10 (the KDE desktop version of Ubuntu 12.10 to avoid the Unity desktop overhead), and Microsoft Windows 7 Professional x64.”

http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=amd_ubuntu1210_win7&num=1

The development of Ubuntu Tweak is stopped

Tualatrix Chou, author of the Ubuntu Tweak app ,,stops the Ubuntu Tweak development. Chou explained this sudden and unexpected decision with the following: “You may ask why I made this decision to stop the development of Ubuntu Tweak, I may write 10,000 words to describe how I start this project, how I feel happy from this project, how I feel bad from this project… But I just want to say: If making free software is not free any more, why still doing this?”

http://blog.ubuntu-tweak.com/2012/10/19/the-development-of-ubuntu-tweak-is-stopped.html

Burning Circle Episode 87

Stephen Michael Kellat brings us news on the Ubuntu 12.10 Quantal Quetzal release, Ubuntu release party plans, who is sticking with Ubuntu and who wandered away, and much more.

http://ohio.ubuntu-us.org/node/119

Video: Victor Palau: Nexus 7 Raring to go to Copenhagen

Victor Palau posts a short demo video of Nexus 7 with Ubuntu on it.

http://victorpalau.net/2012/10/19/nexus-7-raring-to-go-to-copenhaguen/

Weekly Ubuntu Development Team Meetings

Upcoming Meetings and Events

For upcoming meetings and events please visit the calendars at fridge.ubuntu.com: http://fridge.ubuntu.com/calendars/

Updates and Security for 8.04, 10.04, 11.04, 11.10 and 12.04

Security Updates

Ubuntu 8.04 Updates

Ubuntu 10.04 Updates

Ubuntu 11.04 Updates

Ubuntu 11.10 Updates

Ubuntu 12.04 Updates

Subscribe

Get your copy of the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter delivered each week to you via email at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-news

Archives

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

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:

  • Elizabeth Krumbach
  • Jasna Benčić
  • José Antonio Rey
  • Mathias Hellsten
  • John Kim
  • Jim Connett
  • Your name here
  • And many others

Glossary of Terms

Other acronyms can be found at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/glossary

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, this issue of the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 License CCL.png

UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Issue288 (last edited 2012-10-22 17:37:32 by user80)