Issue29

Differences between revisions 16 and 18 (spanning 2 versions)
Revision 16 as of 2007-01-25 15:46:09
Size: 26939
Editor: scandic759
Comment:
Revision 18 as of 2007-01-27 05:53:03
Size: 33929
Editor: fctnnbsc15w-156034094089
Comment: Import from Gobby
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 17: Line 17:
{{{
WORK IN PROGRESS (WIP)
}}}
Line 18: Line 22:
{{{
WORK IN PROGRESS
}}}

## Edit the following to include issue number, date info, and a short list
## of the top articles in this release.

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue ## for the week MONTH DAY - DAY, YEAR. In this issue we cover ...

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue 29 for the week January 15th - 27th. In this issue we cover community news, loco news, weekly quiz news, changes in feisty, osdl survey results, "Linux Magazine names Canonical Ltd as one of the top 20 companies to watch in 2007", Technical Board meeting update, upcoming meetings and events, updates and security notices, bug stats, and much more.
Line 29: Line 27:
## In this section, list major topics of interest using bullets.
## Format: * <Topic name>
## Ex: * Ubuntu overtakes Microsoft with 90% marketshare
 * New Team: Ubuntu Scribes
 * Ubuntu Support Team
 * Ubuntu IRC Channels Statistics
 * LoCo News
 * Weekly Quiz Update
 * Changes in Feisty
 * OSDL Survey Says: Ubuntu most popular Linux Distro
 * Canonical named in top 20
 * Technical Board meeting cancellation
 * Upcoming meetings and events
 * 6.06 & 6.10 updates and security notices
 * Bug Stats
Line 35: Line 42:
## Make each article a subsection, via ===
## These are big articles that don't fit within another section
=== Ubuntu Scribes Team forming ===

Jeremy Austin-Bardo (Ausimage) and Chris Oattes (Seeker`) are forming the Ubuntu Scribes Team. This team will work to improve the process of publishing timely and effective summaries of Ubuntu-related meetings. They are planning a meeting for February 5th, 2007 at 8 pm UTC in #ubuntu-meeting. Anyone interested in sharing their ideas or helping should drop by.
=== Ubuntu Scribes Team formed ===

Jeremy Austin-Bardo (Ausimage) and Chris Oattes (Seeker`) have formed the Ubuntu Scribes Team. This team will work to improve the process of publishing timely and effective summaries of Ubuntu-related meetings. They are planning a meeting for February 5th, 2007, at 8 PM UTC in #ubuntu-meeting. Anyone interested in sharing his/her ideas or helping should drop by.
Line 43: Line 48:
The Support Team focuses on providing free support to the Ubuntu users. Ubuntu is getting more users every day, and all those users will probably need help at some point. Another goal of ours is organizing the support, so that users can get quality help fast. We will work with the different teams to identify the common usability problems in Ubuntu.

To get involved, join our team on Launchpad at http://launchpad.net/~ubuntu-helpteam and our mailing list at http://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-helpteam
The Support Team focuses on providing free support to Ubuntu users. Ubuntu is gaining users every day, and they will probably need help at some point. Another goal is organizing the support so that users can get quality help fast. The team will work to identify common usability problems in Ubuntu.

To get involved, join the team on Launchpad at http://launchpad.net/~ubuntu-helpteam. See also the mailing list at http://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-helpteam.
Line 49: Line 54:
UbuntuStats is a project lead by Tiago Faria (gouki) and aims to create IRC channels statistics parsed from IRSSI logs. The project is headquarted at http://www.UbuntuStats.HomeLinux.org and is currently monitoring 17 Ubuntu, and derivative, channels.

## Added Wiki Weekend. No formal updated news, so I linked to the forum thread :)
UbuntuStats is a project led by Tiago Faria (gouki) and aims to create IRC channel statistics parsed from IRSSI logs. The project is headquarted at http://www.UbuntuStats.HomeLinux.org and is currently monitoring 17 Ubuntu and derivative channels.
Line 54: Line 58:
First initiated by K.Mandla on Ubuntuforums (http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=319989), another special Wiki Weekend was held on January 20-21 2007 to keep the documentation up to date with Ubuntu moving so fast (https://help.ubuntu.com/community/WikiTeam/WikiWeekend).

Keep up with what has been going on here : http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=341385

The Documentation Team still needs your help on a day-to-day basis. To contribute, please read the WikiGuide, and contact the Documentation Team on IRC at #ubuntu-doc on irc.freenode.net or on their mailing list at https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-doc.
First initiated by K.Mandla on Ubuntuforums (http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=319989), another special Wiki Weekend was held on January 20th and 21st, 2007, to improve the currency of Ubuntu documentation (https://help.ubuntu.com/community/WikiTeam/WikiWeekend).

Keep up with what has been going on here: http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=341385

The Documentation Team still needs your help on a daily basis. To contribute, please read the WikiGuide, and contact the Documentation Team on IRC (irc.freenode.net) at #ubuntu-doc or on the mailing list at https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-doc.
Line 62: Line 66:
## Make each article a subsection, via === Section name ===
## Add notes about new locoteams, changed ones, meetings, etc.
=== Newly Approved Teams ===

At the Community Council meeting on January 9th, 2007, the Canadian and Iranian teams were accepted as official locoteams. Welcome aboard, guys and gals!

=== Ubuntu-Tamil tackle KDE ===

The Ubuntu Tamil Team has undertaken an effort to translate KDE into the Tamil language. Sri Ramadoss M wrote to the LoCo Contacts Mailing List to announce the following: "Glad to share with you all that we have taken the responsibility of KDE translation to Tamil. So as far as KDE is concerned the upstream - downstream problem is now resolved to a greater extent." See https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/loco-contacts/2007-January/000994.html for the announcement.

=== US LoCo Consistency ===

The US LoCo Teams are currently working towards creating a standard for LoCo Team naming within the United States. Currently team boundaries consist of conglomerates of states, individual states, cities and even suburbs. This current structure can be confusing when it comes to the naming of teams. Suggestions have also been made to rearrange teams into a per-state structure with chapters. More information will follow as discussion continues and decisions are made. You can read up on the discussion so far at https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/loco-contacts/2007-January/000996.html.
Line 69: Line 82:
Thanks to the UbuntuTrivia Team, headed by Alexandre Vassalotti, we had another exciting quiz this week.

|| '''Quizmaster''' || Alexandre Vassalotti ||
|| '''Champion''' || Travis Watkins ||
|| '''Sponsor''' || Jason Ribeiro ||
|| '''Prize''' || Ubuntu Stickers (Substitute Prize) ||
Thanks to the UbuntuTrivia Team, headed by Alexandre Vassalotti, we had another exciting quiz this week!

|| '''Quizmaster''' || Alexandre Vassalotti               ||
|| '''Champion'''  || Travis Watkins                     ||
|| '''Sponsor'''  || Jason Ribeiro                      ||
|| '''Prize'''     || Ubuntu Stickers (Substitute Prize) ||
Line 78: Line 91:
|| '''Sponsor''' || Ubuntu Germany (Julius Bloch) || || '''Sponsor''' || Ubuntu Germany (Julius Bloch)       ||
Line 91: Line 104:
## This list is pulled by Corey Burger and dumped here in raw form for parsing.
## Choose a something you wish to write about a write a short piece about what
## has changed since the last version in Ubuntu. This might mean several upstream
## releases. To find this data, use the changelog in the package and look on the web.
## If you cannot find a usable changelog, simply drop that package. Try and group packages
## together logically, such as X, the kernel or GNOME.

## After all the package sections are written, organize them logically, based
## on desktop or server, GNOME, KDE, or Xfce4, etc.

## Sometimes bigger changes, such as a new development policy or a major new
## thing will be mentioned under a seperate heading

{{{

linpopup 1.2.0-8.1ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: net on Mon, 15 Jan 2007 18:15:47 +0900 by Emmet Hikory <emmet.hikory@gmail.com>
 linpopup - X Window System port of Winpopup, running over Samba
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


thunar 0.5.0svn+r24382-0ubuntu1
 Component: main Section: x11 on Sun, 14 Jan 2007 16:49:28 +0100 by Gauvain Pocentek <gauvainpocentek@ubuntu.com>
 libthunar-vfs-1-2 - VFS abstraction used in thunar
 libthunar-vfs-1-dev - Development files for libthunar-vfs
 thunar - File Manager for Xfce
 LINKS:
 http://thunar.xfce.org
 http://packages.ubuntu.com

lybniz 1.3-1
 Component: universe Section: math on Fri, 12 Jan 2007 11:05:05 +0000 by Sarah Hobbs <hobbsee@gmail.com>
 lybniz - mathematical function graph plotter
 LINKS:
 http://lybniz2.sourceforge.net/
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


bibletime 1.6.2.dfsg-1ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: kde on Fri, 12 Jan 2007 21:57:29 +0100 by Michael Bienia <geser@ubuntu.com>
 bibletime - A bible study tool for KDE
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


dovecot 1.0.rc17-1ubuntu1
 Component: main Section: mail on Sun, 14 Jan 2007 10:32:43 +0000 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 dovecot-common - secure mail server that supports mbox and maildir mailboxes
 dovecot-imapd - secure IMAP server that supports mbox and maildir mailboxes
 dovecot-pop3d - secure POP3 server that supports mbox and maildir mailboxes
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


smart 0.50~rc1-1ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: admin on Sat, 13 Jan 2007 12:20:42 +0100 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 smartpm - An alternative package manager that works with dpkg/rpm
 smartpm-core - An alternative package manager that works with dpkg/rpm
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


sonata 0.9-1
 Component: universe Section: sound on Fri, 12 Jan 2007 10:42:18 +0000 by William Grant <william.grant@ubuntu.org.au>
 sonata - GTK+ client for the Music Player Daemon
 LINKS:
 http://sonata.berlios.de/
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


scanerrlog 2.01-4ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: admin on Sat, 13 Jan 2007 14:17:35 +0100 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 scanerrlog - Generate summaries from Apache error logs
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


telepathy-gabble 0.5.0-1ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: net on Fri, 12 Jan 2007 19:53:54 +0100 by Daniel Holbach <daniel.holbach@ubuntu.com>
 telepathy-gabble - Jabber/XMPP connection manager
 LINKS:
 http://telepathy.freedesktop.org/wiki/
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


pyneighborhood 0.4-0ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: net on Mon, 8 Jan 2007 01:48:14 -0400 by Cody A.W. Somerville <cody-somerville@ubuntu.com>
 pyneighborhood - An SMB network browser for Linux and X11 written in Python
 LINKS:
 http://pyneighborhood.sourceforge.net/
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


pure-ftpd 1.0.21-6ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: net on Sun, 14 Jan 2007 21:21:33 +0100 by Lionel Porcheron <lionel@alveonet.org>
 pure-ftpd - Pure-FTPd FTP server
 pure-ftpd-common - Pure-FTPd FTP server (Common Files)
 pure-ftpd-ldap - Pure-FTPd FTP server with LDAP user authentication
 pure-ftpd-mysql - Pure-FTPd FTP server with MySQL user authentication
 pure-ftpd-postgresql - Pure-FTPd FTP server with PostgreSQL user authentication
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


opensync 0.19-1.2ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: libs on Sun, 14 Jan 2007 14:48:11 +0100 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 libopensync0 - Synchronisation framework for email/pdas/and more
 libopensync0-dbg - Debug symbols for libopensync0
 libopensync0-dev - Headers and static libraries for libopensync
 opensyncutils - Command line utilities for libopensync
 python-opensync - Python bindings to the opensync synchronisation engine
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


fetchmail 6.3.6-1ubuntu1
 Component: main Section: mail on Sun, 14 Jan 2007 10:24:22 +0000 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 fetchmail - SSL enabled POP3, APOP, IMAP mail gatherer/forwarder
 fetchmailconf - fetchmail configurator
 LINKS:
 http://www.fetchmail.info
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


doodle 0.6.6-1ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: utils on Sat, 13 Jan 2007 16:13:22 +0100 by Adrien Cunin <adri2000@gmail.com>
 doodle - Desktop Search Engine (client)
 doodled - Desktop Search Engine (daemon)
 libdoodle-dev - Desktop Search Engine (development)
 libdoodle1 - Desktop Search Engine (library)
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


plplot 5.6.1-10ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: math on Mon, 15 Jan 2007 14:38:13 +0100 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 libcsiro0 - Scientific plotting library
 libplplot-c++9c2 - Scientific plotting library
 libplplot-dev - Scientific plotting library (development files)
 libplplot-fortran9 - Scientific plotting library
 libplplot9 - Scientific plotting library
 octave-plplot - Octave support for PLplot, a plotting library
 plplot-bin - Scientific plotting library (utilities)
 plplot-doc - Documentation for PLplot, a plotting library
 plplot-tcl - Tcl/Tk support for PLplot, a plotting library
 plplot-tcl-dev - Tcl/Tk development support for PLplot, a plotting library
 plplot9-driver-gd - Scientific plotting library (GD driver)
 plplot9-driver-gnome2 - Scientific plotting library (Gnome Canvas Widget driver)
 plplot9-driver-psttf - Scientific plotting library (PostScript with Unicode support)
 plplot9-driver-wxwidgets - Scientific plotting library (wxWidgets driver)
 plplot9-driver-xwin - Scientific plotting library (X11 driver)
 python-plplot - Python support for PLplot, a plotting library
 LINKS:
 http://www.plplot.org
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


gwhois 20070112ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: net on Sat, 13 Jan 2007 22:32:30 +0100 by Michael Bienia <geser@ubuntu.com>
 gwhois - generic Whois Client / Server
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


roundup 1.2.1-5ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: web on Mon, 15 Jan 2007 13:14:39 +0100 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 roundup - an issue-tracking system
 LINKS:
 http://roundup.sourceforge.net/
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


gnomescan 0.4.0.2-0ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: gnome on Mon, 15 Jan 2007 14:31:33 +0100 by Sebastien Bacher <seb128@canonical.com>
 flegita - Gnome scan utility
 flegita-gimp - Gnome Gimp scan plugin.
 gnomescan - Gnome Scan Infrastructure
 libgnomescan-common - Gnome scan widgets library
 libgnomescan-dev - Gnome scan access library
 libgnomescan-doc - Gnome scan access library
 libgnomescan0 - Gnome scan access library
 libgnomescanui-common - Gnome scan widgets library
 libgnomescanui-dev - Gnome Scan Infrastructure
 libgnomescanui-doc - Gnome scan widgets library
 libgnomescanui0 - Gnome scan widgets library
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com



capisuite 0.4.5-6ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: comm on Sat, 13 Jan 2007 13:40:28 +0000 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 capisuite - easy fax and voice box solution for ISDN/CAPI capable devices
 LINKS:
 http://www.capisuite.de/
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


pathological 1.1.3-8ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: games on Fri, 12 Jan 2007 22:39:06 -0500 by Barry deFreese <bddebian@comcast.net>
 pathological - puzzle game involving paths and marbles
 LINKS:
 http://pathological.sourceforge.net/
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


duplicity 0.4.2-10.1ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: utils on Fri, 12 Jan 2007 13:19:41 +0000 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 duplicity - encrypted bandwidth-efficient backup
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


releaseforge 1.1-1ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: devel on Mon, 15 Jan 2007 13:25:48 +0100 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 releaseforge - alternative to SourceForge's File Release System (FRS)
 LINKS:
 http://releaseforge.sourceforge.net/
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


mysql-query-browser 1.2.5beta-3ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: misc on Sat, 13 Jan 2007 00:36:52 +0100 by Michael Bienia <geser@ubuntu.com>
 mysql-query-browser - Official GUI tool to query MySQL database
 mysql-query-browser-common - Architecture independent files for MySQL Query Browser
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


acct 6.4~pre1-3ubuntu1
 Component: main Section: admin on Tue, 05 Dec 2006 01:29:51 +0000 by ville palo <vi64pa@gmail.com>
 acct - The GNU Accounting utilities for process and login accounting
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


phpsysinfo 2.5.2-0ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: web on Sun, 14 Jan 2007 16:00:58 +0100 by Adrien Cunin <adri2000@gmail.com>
 phpsysinfo - PHP based host information
 LINKS:
 http://phpsysinfo.sourceforge.net/
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


cdbs 0.4.48ubuntu1
 Component: main Section: devel on Mon, 15 Jan 2007 13:04:23 +0100 by Martin Pitt <martin.pitt@ubuntu.com>
 cdbs - common build system for Debian packages
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


gfaim 0.30-0ubuntu1
 Component: multiverse Section: misc on Sun, 19 Nov 2006 11:46:23 +0100 by Albin Tonnerre <lut1n.tne@gmail.com>
 gfaim - A small utility that allows you to find quickly a lot of recipes
 gfaim-data - A utility that allows you to find lots of recipes written in Fren
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


lighttpd 1.4.13-9ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: web on Sat, 13 Jan 2007 21:38:05 +0100 by Adrien Cunin <adri2000@gmail.com>
 lighttpd - A fast webserver with minimal memory footprint
 lighttpd-doc - Documentation for lighttpd
 lighttpd-mod-cml - Cache meta language module for lighttpd
 lighttpd-mod-magnet - Control the request handling module for lighttpd
 lighttpd-mod-mysql-vhost - MySQL-based virtual host configuration for lighttpd
 lighttpd-mod-trigger-b4-dl - Anti-deep-linking module for lighttpd
 lighttpd-mod-webdav - WebDAV module for lighttpd
 LINKS:
 http://www.lighttpd.net
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


gaphor 0.8.1-5ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: devel on Sun, 14 Jan 2007 07:43:16 -0500 by Daniel T Chen <crimsun@ubuntu.com>
 gaphor - UML modeling tool
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com

gnuradio 3.0.2-2
 Component: universe Section: comm on Fri, 12 Jan 2007 13:37:07 +0000 by Michael Bienia <michael@vorlon.ping.de>
 gnuradio - Software Defined Radio
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com

soundkonverter 0.3-0ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: kde on Sat, 13 Jan 2007 21:07:49 +0100 by Luka Renko <lure@ubuntu.com>
 soundkonverter - KDE frontend to various audio converters
 LINKS:
 http://kde-apps.org/content/show.php?content=29024
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


marble 0.2-2
 Component: universe Section: misc on Fri, 12 Jan 2007 12:49:58 +0000 by Jordan Mantha <jordan@laserjock.us>
 marble - generic geographical map widget
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


config-manager 0.3-3ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: devel on Sun, 14 Jan 2007 23:42:59 +0100 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 config-manager - manage directories with Arch, CVS, HTTP, FTP and/or Subversion
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


driconf 0.9.0-2ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: x11 on Sat, 13 Jan 2007 13:41:26 +0100 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 driconf - DRI configuration applet
 LINKS:
 http://dri.freedesktop.org/wiki/DriConf
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


clamtk 2.27-0ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: utils on Fri, 12 Jan 2007 18:54:38 +0100 by Daniel Holbach <daniel.holbach@ubuntu.com>
 clamtk - graphical front-end for ClamAV
 LINKS:
 http://clamtk.sourceforge.net/
 http://packages.ubuntu.com



catfish 0.1-0ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: utils on Fri, 12 Jan 2007 22:54:55 -0400 by Cody A.W. Somerville <cody-somerville@ubuntu.com>
 catfish - A file search tool that support several different engines
 LINKS:
 http://software.twotoasts.de/?page=catfish
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


hubackup 0.0.7
 Component: universe Section: admin on Sat, 13 Jan 2007 13:44:47 +0100 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 hubackup - Concise and easy to use backup application for the desktop user
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


sqlite3 3.3.10-0ubuntu1
 Component: main Section: misc on Thu, 11 Jan 2007 16:28:46 +0100 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 lemon - The Lemon Parser Generator
 libsqlite3-0 - SQLite 3 shared library
 libsqlite3-dev - SQLite 3 development files
 libsqlite3-tcl - SQLite 3 TCL bindings
 sqlite3 - A command line interface for SQLite 3
 sqlite3-doc - SQLite 3 documentation
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


kvm 11-0ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: misc on Fri, 12 Jan 2007 10:44:27 -0500 by Kyle McMartin <kyle@ubuntu.com>
 kvm - Full virtualization on x86 hardware
 kvm-source - Source for the kvm driver
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


refit 0.7-3ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: admin on Sat, 13 Jan 2007 22:47:50 +0000 by Colin Watson <cjwatson@ubuntu.com>
 gptsync-udeb - MBR/GPT synchronization tool
 refit - graphical bootloader for EFI-based ia32 systems
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


synopsis 0.9-0ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: devel on Sun, 14 Jan 2007 13:41:10 +0100 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 libsynopsis8 - The runtime library for Synopsis
 libsynopsis8-dev - The runtime library for Synopsis (development files)
 synopsis - A Source-code Introspection Tool
 synopsis-doc - Documentation for synopsis
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


kftpgrabber 0.8.0-0ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: kde on Mon, 15 Jan 2007 14:19:58 +0100 by Anthony Mercatante <tonio@ubuntu.com>
 kftpgrabber - KDE FTP client
 LINKS:
 http://kftpgrabber.sourceforge.net/
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


icewm 1.2.30-1ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: x11 on Sun, 14 Jan 2007 22:09:23 +0100 by Lionel Porcheron <lionel@alveonet.org>
 icewm - wonderful Win95-OS/2-Motif-like window manager
 icewm-common - wonderful Win95-OS/2-Motif-like window manager
 icewm-experimental - wonderful Win95-OS/2-Motif-like window manager
 icewm-gnome-support - GNOME support files for IceWM
 icewm-lite - wonderful Win95-OS/2-Motif-like window manager
 LINKS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com


pastescript 1.0-1ubuntu1
 Component: universe Section: python on Mon, 15 Jan 2007 14:18:02 +0100 by Matthias Klose <doko@ubuntu.com>
 python-pastescript - serving web applications, creating file layouts for python packag
 LINKS:
 http://www.pythonpaste.org/script/
 http://packages.ubuntu.com
}}}
Thunar is a modern file manager for the Xfce Desktop Environment. Thunar has been designed from the ground up to be fast and easy-to-use. Its user interface is clean and intuitive, fast and responsive with fast startup time and directory load time. A new version has entered Feisty, Thunar 0.5.0, that includes improvements to removable device managment, translations and more extensive documentation.

Lybniz is an easy to use mathematical function graph plotter using pyGTK. In version 1.3-1, more documentation, minor bug fixes, under-the-hood changes (many for PEP8 conformance), and internationalisation support were added.

BibleTime is a Bible Study application for KDE 3.x and provides a simple to use but powerful user interface. Major improvements have been made to the search capability, and old leftover code that caused problems has been removed. The current version is 1.6.2.

Dovecot is an open source IMAP and POP3 server for Linux/UNIX-like systems written with security in mind. Dovecot works with standard mbox and Maildir formats, and it's fully compatible with UW-IMAP and Courier IMAP servers' implementations of them as well as with mail clients accessing the mailboxes directly. Dovecot 1.0.rc17 has been added to Feisty with many bug fixes.

The Smart Package Manager project has the ambitious objective of creating smart and portable algorithms for solving adequately the problem of managing software upgrades and installation. This tool works in all major distributions and will bring notable advantages over native tools currently in use (APT, APT-RPM, YUM, URPMI, etc.). The Smart 0.50~rc1 release has a load of bug fixes, small improvements, and one huge feature that was being planned for a long time. Smart 0.50~rc1 now integrates changes in the transaction algorithm that make it able to survive massive whole-distribution upgrades with good results and in acceptable timings!

Sonata is a lightweight GTK+ music client for the Music Player Daemon (MPD). It aims to be efficient (no toolbar, main menu, or statusbar), user-friendly, and clean. Sonata 1.9-1 has improved artwork support by checking if it exists on disk before fetching it, has added stream support, now allows specifying search terms for remote album art, and has additional fixes.

ScanErrLog 2.01 is a Python module that allows you to parse Apache error_log files and present their data in decreasing occurrence order of error messages. This is particularly useful if you want to quickly solve the most annoying problems Web visitors encounter on your site. It also includes minor tweaks and bug fixes.

pyNeighborhood is a GUI frontend for samba tools such as smbclient, smbmount, etc. It's written in Python and uses the GTK+ 2 toolkit with pyGTK implementation. It's used as an SMB network browser for Linux and X11. pyNeighborhood 0.4, packaged by Cody A.W. Somerville, introduces GUI improvements, features an improved share-scanning algorithm and group browsing using "msbrowse", and contains other bug fixes.

Pure-FTPd is a free, secure, production-quality and standards-conformant FTP server. It doesn't provide useless bells and whistles but focuses on efficiency and ease of use. It provides simple answers to common needs, plus unique useful features for personal users as well as hosting providers. Pure-FTPd 1.0.2 now has UTF-8 support and client-to-fs charset conversions. Large files are supported by default. OPTS MLST and SITE UTIME commands have been implemented. Pure-FTPd 1.0.21 is probably the release with the best performance ever: Thanks to some network optimizations, there have been huge performance improvements while transferring many small files.

OpenSync is a synchronization framework that is platform- and distribution-independent. It consists of a powerful sync-engine and several plugins that can be used to connect to devices. OpenSync is very flexible and capable of synchronizing any type of data, including contacts, calendars, tasks, notes and files. OpenSync 0.19 now runs each plugin as a separate process, adds a VCalendar converter, improves the ICalendar converter, and adds support for a wide range of applications and devices.

Fetchmail is a full-featured, robust, well-documented remote mail retrieval and forwarding utility intended to be used over on-demand TCP/IP links (such as SLIP and PPP connections). It supports every remote mail protocol in use on the Internet: POP2, POP3, RPOP, APOP, KPOP, all flavors of IMAP, ETRN, and ODMR. It even supports IPv6 and IPSEC. Fetchmail 6.3.6 fixes two security issues: a password disclosure vulnerability and a denial of service vulnerability.

Doodle is a desktop search engine for Linux. It searches your hard drive for files using pattern matching on metadata. It extracts file format-specific metadata, allowing the index to be searched rapidly. It is similar to locate but can take advantage of information such as ID3 tags. Doodle 0.6.6 fixes a bug on big-endian systems and an error in handling empty metadata entries. It also adds support for pkg-config.

gwhois is a generic whois client (and server) that strives to know the right server to query for each and every top level domain (TLD) and IP address. The gwhois 20070112 release adds a method to make multiple lookups for the same query. This is needed for the .vg TLD, which provides different (complementing) data through whois vs. the Web interfaces.

Roundup is a simple-to-use and -install issue-tracking system with command-line, web and e-mail interfaces. It is based on the winning design from Ka-Ping Yee in the Software Carpentry "Track" design competition. Roundup 1.2.1 is a minor bug fix release.

CapiSuite is an ISDN telecommunication suite providing easy-to-use telecommunication functions that can be controlled from Python scripts. It uses a CAPI-compatible driver for accessing the ISDN-hardware. CapiSuite 0.4.5 fixes some important bugs in the stable 0.4.x branch, whose bugs are now (hopefully) fixed. Some changes were made necessary by new versions of external tools and libraries.

Pathological is an enriched clone of the game "Logical" by Rainbow Arts. To solve a level, fill each wheel with four marbles of matching color. Various board elements such as teleporters, switches, filters, etc., make the game interesting and challenging. The Pathological 1.1.3 release is a small bug fix and polish release.

Duplicity backs up directories by producing encrypted tar-format volumes and uploading them to a remote or local file server. Because duplicity uses librsync, the incremental archives are space-efficient and only record the parts of files that have changed since the last backup. Duplicity 0.4.2 adds a few user-submitted patches to fix a few bugs.

ReleaseForge is an open source utility designed for the administrators and release engineers of SourceForge projects. ReleaseForge allows you to easily create new SourceForge project releases and edit existing releases in a quicker and friendlier manner than the SourceForge web interface. ReleaseForge 1.1 contains a fix for a bug introduced in 1.0 that occurred when creating a new release. Additionally, a "Re-Guess" feature was added to effortlessly reset all file attributes when editing an existing release.

MySQL Query Browser is a visual tool for creating, executing, and optimizing SQL queries for your MySQL Database Server. The MySQL Query Browser gives you a complete set of drag-and-drop tools to visually build, analyze, and manage your queries. MySQL Query Browser 1.2.5beta fixes errors on 64-bit arches when connecting to pre-MySQL 5.x.

PHPSysInfo is a customizable PHP Script that parses /proc and formats information nicely. It will display information about system facts like Uptime, CPU, Memory, PCI devices, SCSI devices, IDE devices, Network adapters, Disk usage, and more. PHPSysInfo 2.5.2 is a bug fix release.

LightTPD is a webserver with focus on security, speed, compliance, and flexibility. It has a small memory footprint compared to other webservers, effective management of the cpu-load, and an advanced feature set (FastCGI, CGI, Auth, Output-Compression, URL-Rewriting and many more). LightTPD 1.4.13 solves a few longstanding bugs, and a general polish has been applied.

GNU Radio is a collection of software that, when combined with minimal hardware, allows the construction of radios where the actual waveforms transmitted and received are defined by software. The GNU Radio 3.0.2 release is a minor bug fix release. Automake 1.10 is now supported, and a few missing files were added to the distribution.

soundKonverter is a frontend developed for the KDE desktop to various audio converters. It is extensible via plugins and supports a large range of backends. soundKonverter 0.3 is a major release involving big makeovers like CD ripping, tagging support, basic support for hybrid compression, and general GUI cleanup.

Marble is meant to be a generic geographical map widget. It shows the earth as a sphere but doesn't make use of any hardware acceleration (NO OpenGL). So although it might look similar to professional applications like Google Earth or Nasa World Wind it's rather meant to be a lightweight multipurpose widget for KDE. For more information about Marble, see http://www.kdedevelopers.org/node/2412.

ClamTk is a GUI front-end for ClamAV using gtk2-perl. It is designed to be an easy-to-use frontend for Linux systems. Version 2.27, uploaded by Daniel Holbach, includes new artwork, minor GUI enhancements, additional translations, the ability to select multiple files with the "scan file" option, improvements to stop functionality, and numerous other tweaks.

Catfish, a new package to Feisty, is a handy file searching tool for Linux and UNIX. Basically, it is a frontend that provides a unified interface for different search engines (daemons). The interface is intentionally lightweight and simple, using only GTK+ 2. You can configure it to your needs by using several command line options. Supported backends are currently find, (s)locate, doodle, tracker and beagle. 0.1, packaged by Cody A.W. Somerville, is the first stable release and includes numerous bug fixes and UI improvements.

SQLite is a small C library that implements a self-contained, embeddable, zero-configuration SQL database engine. Version 3.3.10 includes the following changes: Fix bugs in the implementation of the new sqlite3_prepare_v2() API that can lead to segfaults; Fix 1-second round-off errors in the strftime() function; Enhance the windows OS layer to provide detailed error codes; Work around a win2k problem so that SQLite can use single-character database file names; Correctly set user_version and schema_version pragma column names in the result set; Update documentation.

IceWM is a window manager for the X Window System. The goal of IceWM is speed, simplicity, and not getting in the user's way. IceWM 1.2.30 changes include battery status cleanups, a new option (BatteryPollingPeriod), a bug fix for focus after minimizing all windows, a migration of Themes selection to the Settings menu, an addition of Settings -> Focus menu (config saved to ~/.icewm/focus_mode as FocusMode=1,2 or 0), a bug fix for the startMinimized window option, and the new settings MapInactiveOnTop (default 1) and RequestFocusOnAppRaise (when FocusOnAppRaise=0).
Line 498: Line 162:
## Things Ubuntu-specific are great, but general Linux goings-on are good to, to an extent.
## We don't need to replicate Digg & Slashdot, but certain things are of special interest.
## Just pulling one example from my memory, the story about Indiana schools piloting
## a classroom Linux deployment, a portion of which was Ubuntu, are good. Ubuntu
## release reviews are also common items in this section.
=== Linux Magazine names Canonical Ltd. as one of the top 20 companies to watch in 2007 ===

Canonical Ltd. announced that it has been named one of the 'Top 20 Companies to Watch in 2007' by Linux Magazine. Canonical was selected as one of the companies best positioned in the coming year to spur Linux and Open Source adoption while delivering on the immediate needs of the marketplace.

For more information, see http://www.ubuntu.com/news/CanonicalInLinuxMagsTop20.
Line 506: Line 170:
Kubuntu was on hand at the World Social Forum in Nairobi, according to allAfrica.com. Windows was banned and all the conference's machines were running GNU/Linux. "Participants attending WSF say that this was a gesture done as a way of promoting the free social movement at the same time also as a way of fighting Microsoft's 'imperialistic tendencies.'" The International South Group Network were giving out Kubuntu CDs.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200701230831.html
Kubuntu was on hand at the World Social Forum in Nairobi, according to allAfrica.com. Windows was banned and all the conference's machines were running GNU/Linux. "Participants attending WSF say that this was a gesture done as a way of promoting the free social movement at the same time also as a way of fighting Microsoft's 'imperialistic tendencies.'" The International South Group Network distributed Kubuntu CDs.

=== OSDL 2006 Desktop Linux Client Survey ===

Each year the OSDL's (now part of the new Linux Foundation) Desktop Linux Working Group conducts a survey of how and why Linux is and isn't being used on the Desktop in various deployment situations. The purpose of this survey is to identify both technical and social barriers to Linux adoption as well as the key factors and trends driving current adoption. Among the more general findings were that application availability was the leading barrier - but not in terms of a lack of applications generally, moreso the lack of the particular applications people have grown accustomed to, and that factors pushing deployment were cost savings and that drivers for wireless and printing had improved, among other technical points.

Of particular interest for the Ubuntu community is question #6, "Which Linux Distributions is your organization running on the desktop?" In this section Ubuntu was named in 1280 responses - a whopping 49%! Other notable ones on the list were of course OpenSUSE/SLED, Fedora/RHEL, Debian, and Gentoo. So, way to go everybody for making Ubuntu awesome enough for that widespread acceptance, and we look forward to continuing progress and gains for both Ubuntu and Linux in general in next year's survey.

To read the full analysis, see http://developer.osdl.org/dev/dtl/2006survey-analysis.pdf.
Line 512: Line 182:
## Data pulled from mailing lists and http://fridge.ubuntu.com
## Either use bullets or sub-headings to organize content.
Line 517: Line 184:
This meeting of the Technical Board Meeting could not be held due to a lack of quorum, primarily as a result of linux.conf.au. An additional meeting may be scheduled during the week of 2007-01-22/26 (watch `ubuntu-devel-announce`), otherwise it will resume as scheduled on 2007-01-30. This meeting of the Technical Board Meeting could not be held due to a lack of quorum, primarily as a result of linux.conf.au (LCA). An additional meeting may be scheduled during the week of 2007-01-22/26 (watch `ubuntu-devel-announce`); otherwise it will resume as scheduled on 2007-01-30.
Line 522: Line 189:

===== Fiesty Developer Sprint =====

 * End: 23:59
 * Start: 2007-01-22 09:00
 * End: 2007-01-26 23:59
 * Location: Oslo, Norway

==== Friday, January 26, 2007 ====
Line 530: Line 206:

==== Friday, January 26, 2007 ====

===== Fiesty Developer Sprint =====

 * End: 23:59
 * Start: 2007-01-22 09:00
 * End: 2007-01-26 23:59
 * Location: Oslo, Norway
Line 565: Line 231:
Line 576: Line 241:
## Specification Spotlight

## This section highlights an approved specification that is going to be implemented
## in Feisty. See the list at https://blueprints.launchpad.net/distros/ubuntu/feisty
## In general, choose user visible features, as the audience are mostly end users.
## Also try and group specs together that belong together, such as network or X.

## Feature of the week

## Pick a feature, piece of software, or package that you'd like to feature.
## Give a brief description, whats so special about it, who works on it,
## where to find it/install it, etc.

## Team of the week

## Pick a team (a ubuntu team) that you'd like to feature.
## Give a brief description of the team, what they work on, what they've
## accomplished, who is involved, how to get involved/join, etc.
=== Feature of the Week: Gnome Control Center ===

Gnome Control Center (g-c-c) is a centralized interface containing a variety of configuration applets ("capplets") for changing system settings and preferences, similar to KDE's KControl, Mac OS's System Preferences, and the MS Windows Control Panel. It includes such things as accessibility configuration, desktop fonts, keyboard and mouse properties, sound setup, desktop theme and background, user interface properties, and screen resolution, among other things. It is currently maintained in Ubuntu by the Ubuntu Core Development team.

While traditionally GNOME has employed the cascading System > Preferences / Administration, g-c-c provides an intuitive interface to the above settings without cluttering the menus as much. This has advantages and disadvantages, namely that it takes an extra click to launch an applet when opening g-c-c first, but is, for many, more comfortable aesthetically. In the newest version, it also catagorizes capplets and has a search filter to help locate the one you want.

Gnome Control Center is available on all supported versions of Ubuntu, but in various forms. Here is a glance at what it looks like in Edgy:

http://ubuntuforums.org/gallery/data/500/Screenshot232.png

If you would like to add it to your system, install the gnome-control-center package with your favorite package management application.

Now, g-c-c has also been given a bit of a facelift in more recent developments. As noted before, the version in Feisty has a slightly different interface layout and some extra features, making it significantly more usable. Currently, Feisty has Gnome Control Center rather than the old menu layout by default. Here's a sneak peak of what things look like as of Herd 2:

http://ubuntuforums.org/gallery/data/500/g-c-c.png

If you're testing Feisty, this could be a fun item to watch, and if not, you're in for a pleasant change if you upgrade in April. Someone (goes by luna6) wrote a review of the version in Herd 2, and notably included a slew of fabulous screenshots, which you can check out at http://lunapark6.com/?p=2728 if you're curious.
Line 599: Line 263:
## http://www.ubuntu.com/usn
## List all security advisories since last UWN.
## Format: * USN-###-#: <package name> vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-###-#
## Ex: * USN-389-1: GnuPG vulnerability - [WWW] http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-389-1
 * USN-398-4: Firefox regression - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-398-4
 * USN-410-2: teTeX vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-510-2
 * USN-414-1: Squid vulnerabilities - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-414-1
 * USN-413-1: BlueZ vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-413-1
 * USN-412-1: GeoIP vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-412-1
 * USN-411-1: libsoup vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-411-1
 * USN-410-1: poppler vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-4010-1
 * USN-409-1: ksirc vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-409-1
 * USN-408-1: krb5 vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-408-1
 * USN-407-1: libgtop2 vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-407-1
 * USN-406-1: OpenOffice.org vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-406-1
 * USN-405-1: fetchmail vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-405-1
Line 606: Line 278:
## https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes
## List all uploads since last UWN.
## Format: * <packagename> - <link to mailing list message>
## Ex: * lvm2 2.02.02-1ubuntu1.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2006-November/012305.html
 * mousepad 0.2.2-2ubuntu5.1~proposed - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012328.html
 * dosbox 0.65-1~dapper1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012329.html
 * gnome-commander 1.2.3-1~dapper1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012330.html
 * liferea 1.0.23-0ubuntu2~dapper1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012331.html
 * langpack-locales 2.3.18.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012332.html
 * glibc 2.3.6-0ubuntu20.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012333.html
 * flashplugin-nonfree 9.0.31~ubuntu1~dapper1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012334.html
 * linux-source-2.6.15 2.6.15-50.61 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012335.html
 * qpsmtpd 0.31.1-4ubuntu0.1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012336.html
 * dosemu 1.2.2-3ubuntu0.1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012337.html
 * app-install-data-commercial 5.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012338.html
 * synaptic 0.57.8ubuntu12 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012339.html
 * app-install-data-commercial 5.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012340.html
 * glibc 2.3.6-0ubuntu20.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012341.html
 * lvm2 2.02.02-1ubuntu1.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2007-January/012342.html
Line 613: Line 296:
## https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes
## List all uploads since last UWN.
## Format: * <packagename> - <link to mailing list message>
## Ex: * lvm2 2.02.06-2ubuntu3.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2006-November/008083.html
 * gnome-vfs2 2.16.1-0ubuntu5 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008130.html
 * gnome-vfs2 2.16.1-0ubuntu6 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008131.html
 * pouetchess 0.2.0-0ubuntu1.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008132.html
 * vino 2.16.0-0ubuntu2.4 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008133.html
 * gtetrinet 0.7.10-1ubuntu0.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008134.html
 * tzdata 2006p-0ubuntu6.10 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008135.html
 * beagle 0.2.14-0ubuntu3~edgy1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008136.html
 * cli-common 0.4.6~edgy1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008137.html
 * dosemu-freedos 1:0.0.b9r5a-3~edgy1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008138.html
 * flexbackup 1.2.1-5ubuntu3~edgy1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008139.html
 * gajim 0.11-0ubuntu1~edgy1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008140.html
 * lzma 4.43-3~edgy1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008141.html
 * mailman 1:2.1.9-4ubuntu1~edgy1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008142.html
 * supertux 0.3.0-0ubuntu1~edgy1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008143.html
 * wine 0.9.29-0ubuntu1~edgy1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008144.html
 * ubuntu-docs 6.10.4.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008145.html
 * libnss-ldap 251-5.2ubuntu1~proposed - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008146.html
 * xdg-utils 1.0-0ubuntu2.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008147.html
 * idjc 0.6.5-0ubuntu1.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008148.html
 * eclipse 3.2.1-0ubuntu2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008149.html
 * totem 2.16.2-0ubuntu3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008150.html
 * glibc 2.4-1ubuntu12.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008151.html
 * gnome-hearts 0.1.2-1ubuntu1.1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008152.html
 * rpy 0.99.2-4ubuntu1~prop1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008153.html
 * kdbus 0.8.6-0ubuntu2.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008154.html
 * kiso 0.8.3-0ubuntu3.1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008155.html
 * siege 2.65-2ubuntu1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008156.html
 * wxwidgets2.6 2.6.3.2.1.5ubuntu0.1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008157.html
 * apt 0.6.45ubuntu14.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008158.html
 * popularity-contest 1.33ubuntu2.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008159.html
 * kxdocker 1.1.4a-0ubuntu2.1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008160.html
 * qpsmtpd 0.32-3ubuntu0.1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008161.html
 * linux-source-2.6.17 2.6.17.1-50.50 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008162.html
 * update-manager 0.45.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008163.html
 * obconf 1.5-3ubuntu0.1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008164.html
 * evolution-jescs 2.8.2-0ubuntu1.1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008165.html
 * flashplugin-nonfree 9.0.31~ubuntu1~edgy1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008166.html
 * xfce4-xkb-plugin 0.4.1-0ubuntu5.1~prop1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008167.html
 * cinepaint 0.20-1-2ubuntu0.1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008168.html
 * spampd 2.30-11ubuntu0.1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008169.html
 * update-notifier 0.43.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008170.html
 * curl 7.15.4-1ubuntu2.1~proposed1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008171.html
 * glibc 2.4-1ubuntu12.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008172.html
 * app-install-data-commercial 6.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008173.html
 * xubuntu-system-tools 2.15.5-0ubuntu2~prop1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008174.html
 * app-install-data-commercial 6.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008175.html
 * lvm2 2.02.06-2ubuntu3.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008176.html
 * gnome-system-tools 2.15.5-0ubuntu5 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008177.html
 * system-tools-backends 1.9.7-0ubuntu5 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008178.html
 * xubuntu-system-tools 2.15.5-0ubuntu2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008179.html
 * gnome-applets 2.16.1-0ubuntu4 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008180.html
 * gnome-netstatus 2.12.0-5ubuntu7 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008181.html
 * app-install-data-commercial 6.3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008182.html
 * gnome-panel 2.16.1-0ubuntu4 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2007-January/008183.html
Line 620: Line 353:
## Bug stats only take a second to do.
## Data can be found at: http://launchpad.net/distros/ubuntu/+bugs
## See last week's UWN to calculate change over last week.
## NOTE: To be done ONLY on the release date of the UWN (or latter if late).

    * Open (21098) +/- # over last week
    * Critical (22) +/- # over last week
    * Unconfirmed (10607) +/- # over last week
    * Unassigned (15949) +/- # over last week
    * All bugs ever reported (72617) +/- # over last week

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

Check out the bug statistics: [WWW] http://people.ubuntu-in.org/~carthik/bugstats/

=== Infamous Bugs ===

## Delete if no infamous/funny bugs for this week.

== UWN #: A sneak peek ==

## Articles that should have made it into this release but have been deferred should be listed here.
## Delete if unnecessary.
    * Open (21098) + 225 over last week
    * Critical (22) + 1 over last week
    * Unconfirmed (10607) - 99 over last week
    * Unassigned (15949) + 139 over last week
    * All bugs ever reported (72617) + 1366 over last week

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

Check out the bug statistics: http://people.ubuntu-in.org/~carthik/bugstats/
Line 646: Line 365:
You can always find older Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter issues at:: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter You can always find older Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter issues at: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter
Line 671: Line 390:
## The following list is in chronological order.
Line 675: Line 392:
 * anyone else that contributes  * Martin Albisetti
 * Tony Yarusso
 * Daniel T. Chen

WORK IN PROGRESS (WIP)

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue 29 for the week January 15th - 27th. In this issue we cover community news, loco news, weekly quiz news, changes in feisty, osdl survey results, "Linux Magazine names Canonical Ltd as one of the top 20 companies to watch in 2007", Technical Board meeting update, upcoming meetings and events, updates and security notices, bug stats, and much more.

In This Issue

  • New Team: Ubuntu Scribes
  • Ubuntu Support Team
  • Ubuntu IRC Channels Statistics
  • LoCo News

  • Weekly Quiz Update
  • Changes in Feisty
  • OSDL Survey Says: Ubuntu most popular Linux Distro
  • Canonical named in top 20
  • Technical Board meeting cancellation
  • Upcoming meetings and events
  • 6.06 & 6.10 updates and security notices

  • Bug Stats

General Community News

Ubuntu Scribes Team formed

Jeremy Austin-Bardo (Ausimage) and Chris Oattes (Seeker`) have formed the Ubuntu Scribes Team. This team will work to improve the process of publishing timely and effective summaries of Ubuntu-related meetings. They are planning a meeting for February 5th, 2007, at 8 PM UTC in #ubuntu-meeting. Anyone interested in sharing his/her ideas or helping should drop by.

Ubuntu Support Team

The Support Team focuses on providing free support to Ubuntu users. Ubuntu is gaining users every day, and they will probably need help at some point. Another goal is organizing the support so that users can get quality help fast. The team will work to identify common usability problems in Ubuntu.

To get involved, join the team on Launchpad at http://launchpad.net/~ubuntu-helpteam. See also the mailing list at http://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-helpteam.

Ubuntu IRC Channels Statistics

UbuntuStats is a project led by Tiago Faria (gouki) and aims to create IRC channel statistics parsed from IRSSI logs. The project is headquarted at http://www.UbuntuStats.HomeLinux.org and is currently monitoring 17 Ubuntu and derivative channels.

Ubuntu Wiki Weekend

First initiated by K.Mandla on Ubuntuforums (http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=319989), another special Wiki Weekend was held on January 20th and 21st, 2007, to improve the currency of Ubuntu documentation (https://help.ubuntu.com/community/WikiTeam/WikiWeekend).

Keep up with what has been going on here: http://www.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=341385

The Documentation Team still needs your help on a daily basis. To contribute, please read the WikiGuide, and contact the Documentation Team on IRC (irc.freenode.net) at #ubuntu-doc or on the mailing list at https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-doc.

LoCo News

Newly Approved Teams

At the Community Council meeting on January 9th, 2007, the Canadian and Iranian teams were accepted as official locoteams. Welcome aboard, guys and gals!

Ubuntu-Tamil tackle KDE

The Ubuntu Tamil Team has undertaken an effort to translate KDE into the Tamil language. Sri Ramadoss M wrote to the LoCo Contacts Mailing List to announce the following: "Glad to share with you all that we have taken the responsibility of KDE translation to Tamil. So as far as KDE is concerned the upstream - downstream problem is now resolved to a greater extent." See https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/loco-contacts/2007-January/000994.html for the announcement.

US LoCo Consistency

The US LoCo Teams are currently working towards creating a standard for LoCo Team naming within the United States. Currently team boundaries consist of conglomerates of states, individual states, cities and even suburbs. This current structure can be confusing when it comes to the naming of teams. Suggestions have also been made to rearrange teams into a per-state structure with chapters. More information will follow as discussion continues and decisions are made. You can read up on the discussion so far at https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/loco-contacts/2007-January/000996.html.

This Week's Quiz

Thanks to the UbuntuTrivia Team, headed by Alexandre Vassalotti, we had another exciting quiz this week!

Quizmaster

Alexandre Vassalotti

Champion

Travis Watkins

Sponsor

Jason Ribeiro

Prize

Ubuntu Stickers (Substitute Prize)

Upcoming for next week:

Sponsor

Ubuntu Germany (Julius Bloch)

Prize

Ubuntu 6.10 (Edgy Eft) DVD Edition.

To participate in the quiz, join #ubuntu-trivia on irc.freenode.net on Friday and/or Saturday UTC-nights - the topic will usually tell you when the next quiz is scheduled.

To give a quiz, contact Alexandre Vassalotti (theCore) - we will probably find you a spot.

To donate a prize, please contact Jenda Vančura (jenda) - your generosity is appreciated. The generic prize is an Ubuntu Poster ($5 value).

The quiz usually has a theme, and the quizmaster will sometimes tell you what the theme of the quiz will be. If not, you can always bribe him/her. By winning the quiz and foregoing the prize, you donate it for the next quiz. This is especially appreciated if you are a frequent winner.

Changes In Feisty

Thunar is a modern file manager for the Xfce Desktop Environment. Thunar has been designed from the ground up to be fast and easy-to-use. Its user interface is clean and intuitive, fast and responsive with fast startup time and directory load time. A new version has entered Feisty, Thunar 0.5.0, that includes improvements to removable device managment, translations and more extensive documentation.

Lybniz is an easy to use mathematical function graph plotter using pyGTK. In version 1.3-1, more documentation, minor bug fixes, under-the-hood changes (many for PEP8 conformance), and internationalisation support were added.

BibleTime is a Bible Study application for KDE 3.x and provides a simple to use but powerful user interface. Major improvements have been made to the search capability, and old leftover code that caused problems has been removed. The current version is 1.6.2.

Dovecot is an open source IMAP and POP3 server for Linux/UNIX-like systems written with security in mind. Dovecot works with standard mbox and Maildir formats, and it's fully compatible with UW-IMAP and Courier IMAP servers' implementations of them as well as with mail clients accessing the mailboxes directly. Dovecot 1.0.rc17 has been added to Feisty with many bug fixes.

The Smart Package Manager project has the ambitious objective of creating smart and portable algorithms for solving adequately the problem of managing software upgrades and installation. This tool works in all major distributions and will bring notable advantages over native tools currently in use (APT, APT-RPM, YUM, URPMI, etc.). The Smart 0.50~rc1 release has a load of bug fixes, small improvements, and one huge feature that was being planned for a long time. Smart 0.50~rc1 now integrates changes in the transaction algorithm that make it able to survive massive whole-distribution upgrades with good results and in acceptable timings!

Sonata is a lightweight GTK+ music client for the Music Player Daemon (MPD). It aims to be efficient (no toolbar, main menu, or statusbar), user-friendly, and clean. Sonata 1.9-1 has improved artwork support by checking if it exists on disk before fetching it, has added stream support, now allows specifying search terms for remote album art, and has additional fixes.

ScanErrLog 2.01 is a Python module that allows you to parse Apache error_log files and present their data in decreasing occurrence order of error messages. This is particularly useful if you want to quickly solve the most annoying problems Web visitors encounter on your site. It also includes minor tweaks and bug fixes.

pyNeighborhood is a GUI frontend for samba tools such as smbclient, smbmount, etc. It's written in Python and uses the GTK+ 2 toolkit with pyGTK implementation. It's used as an SMB network browser for Linux and X11. pyNeighborhood 0.4, packaged by Cody A.W. Somerville, introduces GUI improvements, features an improved share-scanning algorithm and group browsing using "msbrowse", and contains other bug fixes.

Pure-FTPd is a free, secure, production-quality and standards-conformant FTP server. It doesn't provide useless bells and whistles but focuses on efficiency and ease of use. It provides simple answers to common needs, plus unique useful features for personal users as well as hosting providers. Pure-FTPd 1.0.2 now has UTF-8 support and client-to-fs charset conversions. Large files are supported by default. OPTS MLST and SITE UTIME commands have been implemented. Pure-FTPd 1.0.21 is probably the release with the best performance ever: Thanks to some network optimizations, there have been huge performance improvements while transferring many small files.

OpenSync is a synchronization framework that is platform- and distribution-independent. It consists of a powerful sync-engine and several plugins that can be used to connect to devices. OpenSync is very flexible and capable of synchronizing any type of data, including contacts, calendars, tasks, notes and files. OpenSync 0.19 now runs each plugin as a separate process, adds a VCalendar converter, improves the ICalendar converter, and adds support for a wide range of applications and devices.

Fetchmail is a full-featured, robust, well-documented remote mail retrieval and forwarding utility intended to be used over on-demand TCP/IP links (such as SLIP and PPP connections). It supports every remote mail protocol in use on the Internet: POP2, POP3, RPOP, APOP, KPOP, all flavors of IMAP, ETRN, and ODMR. It even supports IPv6 and IPSEC. Fetchmail 6.3.6 fixes two security issues: a password disclosure vulnerability and a denial of service vulnerability.

Doodle is a desktop search engine for Linux. It searches your hard drive for files using pattern matching on metadata. It extracts file format-specific metadata, allowing the index to be searched rapidly. It is similar to locate but can take advantage of information such as ID3 tags. Doodle 0.6.6 fixes a bug on big-endian systems and an error in handling empty metadata entries. It also adds support for pkg-config.

gwhois is a generic whois client (and server) that strives to know the right server to query for each and every top level domain (TLD) and IP address. The gwhois 20070112 release adds a method to make multiple lookups for the same query. This is needed for the .vg TLD, which provides different (complementing) data through whois vs. the Web interfaces.

Roundup is a simple-to-use and -install issue-tracking system with command-line, web and e-mail interfaces. It is based on the winning design from Ka-Ping Yee in the Software Carpentry "Track" design competition. Roundup 1.2.1 is a minor bug fix release.

CapiSuite is an ISDN telecommunication suite providing easy-to-use telecommunication functions that can be controlled from Python scripts. It uses a CAPI-compatible driver for accessing the ISDN-hardware. CapiSuite 0.4.5 fixes some important bugs in the stable 0.4.x branch, whose bugs are now (hopefully) fixed. Some changes were made necessary by new versions of external tools and libraries.

Pathological is an enriched clone of the game "Logical" by Rainbow Arts. To solve a level, fill each wheel with four marbles of matching color. Various board elements such as teleporters, switches, filters, etc., make the game interesting and challenging. The Pathological 1.1.3 release is a small bug fix and polish release.

Duplicity backs up directories by producing encrypted tar-format volumes and uploading them to a remote or local file server. Because duplicity uses librsync, the incremental archives are space-efficient and only record the parts of files that have changed since the last backup. Duplicity 0.4.2 adds a few user-submitted patches to fix a few bugs.

ReleaseForge is an open source utility designed for the administrators and release engineers of SourceForge projects. ReleaseForge allows you to easily create new SourceForge project releases and edit existing releases in a quicker and friendlier manner than the SourceForge web interface. ReleaseForge 1.1 contains a fix for a bug introduced in 1.0 that occurred when creating a new release. Additionally, a "Re-Guess" feature was added to effortlessly reset all file attributes when editing an existing release.

MySQL Query Browser is a visual tool for creating, executing, and optimizing SQL queries for your MySQL Database Server. The MySQL Query Browser gives you a complete set of drag-and-drop tools to visually build, analyze, and manage your queries. MySQL Query Browser 1.2.5beta fixes errors on 64-bit arches when connecting to pre-MySQL 5.x.

PHPSysInfo is a customizable PHP Script that parses /proc and formats information nicely. It will display information about system facts like Uptime, CPU, Memory, PCI devices, SCSI devices, IDE devices, Network adapters, Disk usage, and more. PHPSysInfo 2.5.2 is a bug fix release.

LightTPD is a webserver with focus on security, speed, compliance, and flexibility. It has a small memory footprint compared to other webservers, effective management of the cpu-load, and an advanced feature set (FastCGI, CGI, Auth, Output-Compression, URL-Rewriting and many more). LightTPD 1.4.13 solves a few longstanding bugs, and a general polish has been applied.

GNU Radio is a collection of software that, when combined with minimal hardware, allows the construction of radios where the actual waveforms transmitted and received are defined by software. The GNU Radio 3.0.2 release is a minor bug fix release. Automake 1.10 is now supported, and a few missing files were added to the distribution.

soundKonverter is a frontend developed for the KDE desktop to various audio converters. It is extensible via plugins and supports a large range of backends. soundKonverter 0.3 is a major release involving big makeovers like CD ripping, tagging support, basic support for hybrid compression, and general GUI cleanup.

Marble is meant to be a generic geographical map widget. It shows the earth as a sphere but doesn't make use of any hardware acceleration (NO OpenGL). So although it might look similar to professional applications like Google Earth or Nasa World Wind it's rather meant to be a lightweight multipurpose widget for KDE. For more information about Marble, see http://www.kdedevelopers.org/node/2412.

ClamTk is a GUI front-end for ClamAV using gtk2-perl. It is designed to be an easy-to-use frontend for Linux systems. Version 2.27, uploaded by Daniel Holbach, includes new artwork, minor GUI enhancements, additional translations, the ability to select multiple files with the "scan file" option, improvements to stop functionality, and numerous other tweaks.

Catfish, a new package to Feisty, is a handy file searching tool for Linux and UNIX. Basically, it is a frontend that provides a unified interface for different search engines (daemons). The interface is intentionally lightweight and simple, using only GTK+ 2. You can configure it to your needs by using several command line options. Supported backends are currently find, (s)locate, doodle, tracker and beagle. 0.1, packaged by Cody A.W. Somerville, is the first stable release and includes numerous bug fixes and UI improvements.

SQLite is a small C library that implements a self-contained, embeddable, zero-configuration SQL database engine. Version 3.3.10 includes the following changes: Fix bugs in the implementation of the new sqlite3_prepare_v2() API that can lead to segfaults; Fix 1-second round-off errors in the strftime() function; Enhance the windows OS layer to provide detailed error codes; Work around a win2k problem so that SQLite can use single-character database file names; Correctly set user_version and schema_version pragma column names in the result set; Update documentation.

IceWM is a window manager for the X Window System. The goal of IceWM is speed, simplicity, and not getting in the user's way. IceWM 1.2.30 changes include battery status cleanups, a new option (BatteryPollingPeriod), a bug fix for focus after minimizing all windows, a migration of Themes selection to the Settings menu, an addition of Settings -> Focus menu (config saved to ~/.icewm/focus_mode as FocusMode=1,2 or 0), a bug fix for the startMinimized window option, and the new settings MapInactiveOnTop (default 1) and RequestFocusOnAppRaise (when FocusOnAppRaise=0).

In The Press

Linux Magazine names Canonical Ltd. as one of the top 20 companies to watch in 2007

Canonical Ltd. announced that it has been named one of the 'Top 20 Companies to Watch in 2007' by Linux Magazine. Canonical was selected as one of the companies best positioned in the coming year to spur Linux and Open Source adoption while delivering on the immediate needs of the marketplace.

For more information, see http://www.ubuntu.com/news/CanonicalInLinuxMagsTop20.

Kubuntu at World Social Forum

Kubuntu was on hand at the World Social Forum in Nairobi, according to allAfrica.com. Windows was banned and all the conference's machines were running GNU/Linux. "Participants attending WSF say that this was a gesture done as a way of promoting the free social movement at the same time also as a way of fighting Microsoft's 'imperialistic tendencies.'" The International South Group Network distributed Kubuntu CDs.

OSDL 2006 Desktop Linux Client Survey

Each year the OSDL's (now part of the new Linux Foundation) Desktop Linux Working Group conducts a survey of how and why Linux is and isn't being used on the Desktop in various deployment situations. The purpose of this survey is to identify both technical and social barriers to Linux adoption as well as the key factors and trends driving current adoption. Among the more general findings were that application availability was the leading barrier - but not in terms of a lack of applications generally, moreso the lack of the particular applications people have grown accustomed to, and that factors pushing deployment were cost savings and that drivers for wireless and printing had improved, among other technical points.

Of particular interest for the Ubuntu community is question #6, "Which Linux Distributions is your organization running on the desktop?" In this section Ubuntu was named in 1280 responses - a whopping 49%! Other notable ones on the list were of course OpenSUSE/SLED, Fedora/RHEL, Debian, and Gentoo. So, way to go everybody for making Ubuntu awesome enough for that widespread acceptance, and we look forward to continuing progress and gains for both Ubuntu and Linux in general in next year's survey.

To read the full analysis, see http://developer.osdl.org/dev/dtl/2006survey-analysis.pdf.

Meetings and Events

Technical Board 2007-01-16

This meeting of the Technical Board Meeting could not be held due to a lack of quorum, primarily as a result of linux.conf.au (LCA). An additional meeting may be scheduled during the week of 2007-01-22/26 (watch ubuntu-devel-announce); otherwise it will resume as scheduled on 2007-01-30.

Upcoming Meetings and Events

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Fiesty Developer Sprint
  • End: 23:59
  • Start: 2007-01-22 09:00
  • End: 2007-01-26 23:59
  • Location: Oslo, Norway

Friday, January 26, 2007

Fiesty Developer Sprint
  • End: 23:59
  • Start: 2007-01-22 09:00
  • End: 2007-01-26 23:59
  • Location: Oslo, Norway

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Technical Board Meeting

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Edubuntu Meeting

Xubuntu Meeting

Thursday, February 1, 2007

Ubuntu Development Team Meeting
  • Start: 21:00
  • End: 23:00
  • Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting

Community Spotlight

Feature of the Week: Gnome Control Center

Gnome Control Center (g-c-c) is a centralized interface containing a variety of configuration applets ("capplets") for changing system settings and preferences, similar to KDE's KControl, Mac OS's System Preferences, and the MS Windows Control Panel. It includes such things as accessibility configuration, desktop fonts, keyboard and mouse properties, sound setup, desktop theme and background, user interface properties, and screen resolution, among other things. It is currently maintained in Ubuntu by the Ubuntu Core Development team.

While traditionally GNOME has employed the cascading System > Preferences / Administration, g-c-c provides an intuitive interface to the above settings without cluttering the menus as much. This has advantages and disadvantages, namely that it takes an extra click to launch an applet when opening g-c-c first, but is, for many, more comfortable aesthetically. In the newest version, it also catagorizes capplets and has a search filter to help locate the one you want.

Gnome Control Center is available on all supported versions of Ubuntu, but in various forms. Here is a glance at what it looks like in Edgy:

http://ubuntuforums.org/gallery/data/500/Screenshot232.png

If you would like to add it to your system, install the gnome-control-center package with your favorite package management application.

Now, g-c-c has also been given a bit of a facelift in more recent developments. As noted before, the version in Feisty has a slightly different interface layout and some extra features, making it significantly more usable. Currently, Feisty has Gnome Control Center rather than the old menu layout by default. Here's a sneak peak of what things look like as of Herd 2:

http://ubuntuforums.org/gallery/data/500/g-c-c.png

If you're testing Feisty, this could be a fun item to watch, and if not, you're in for a pleasant change if you upgrade in April. Someone (goes by luna6) wrote a review of the version in Herd 2, and notably included a slew of fabulous screenshots, which you can check out at http://lunapark6.com/?p=2728 if you're curious.

Updates and security for 6.06 and 6.10

Security Updates

Ubuntu 6.06 LTS Updates

Ubuntu 6.10 Updates

Bug Stats

  • Open (21098) + 225 over last week
  • Critical (22) + 1 over last week
  • Unconfirmed (10607) - 99 over last week
  • Unassigned (15949) + 139 over last week
  • All bugs ever reported (72617) + 1366 over last week

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

Check out the bug statistics: http://people.ubuntu-in.org/~carthik/bugstats/

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:

  • Cody A.W. Somerville
  • Isabelle Duchatelle
  • Martin Albisetti
  • Tony Yarusso
  • Daniel T. Chen
  • 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@lists.ubuntu.com or by using any of the other methods on the Ubuntu Marketing Team Contact Information Page (https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MarketingTeam). If you'd like to contribute to a future issue of the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, please feel free to edit the appropriate wiki page.

UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Issue29 (last edited 2008-08-06 16:59:47 by localhost)