Issue92

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||<tablestyle="float:right; font-size: 0.9em; width:40%; background:#F1F1ED; margin: 0 0 1em 1em;" style="padding:0.5em;">'''Contents'''[[BR]][[TableOfContents]]||

## This document contains numerous comments to help make getting
## involved with the UWN easy and to help set some guidelines/standards.

## By contributing, you understand that your contribution may be appended to,
## modified, deleted, moved, copied, and redistributed without further
## consultation. Please feel free to add comments to help explain changes
## and/or additions to the UWN to other editors.

## Final revision will be approved and mailed by Corey Burger (Burgundavia),
## Martin Albisetti (beuno) or Cody Somerville (somerville32).

## For more information, please contact ubuntu-marketing@lists.ubuntu.com or
## visit #ubuntu-marketing on irc.freenode.net

## Good Luck from Cody Somerville, Corey Burger, Melissa Draper and Martin Albisetti.

{{{
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 #92 for the week May 18th - May 24th, 2008. In this issue we cover ...

||<tablestyle="float:right; font-size: 0.9em; width:40%; background:#F1F1ED; margin: 0 0 1em 1em;" style="padding:0.5em;"><<TableOfContents>>||

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue #92 for the week May 18th - May 24th, 2008. In this issue we cover: Ubuntu Developer Summit Intrepid Ibex, Ubuntu Live canceled, new Ubuntu Membership Approval Boards to meet, new Ubuntu Universe Contributors, a new Launchpad podcast, and much, much more!
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## In this section, list major topics of interest using bullets.
## Format: * <Topic name>
## Ex: * Ubuntu overtakes Microsoft with 90% market share
 * UDS Intrepid Ibex
 * Ubuntu Live Canceled
 * New Ubuntu Membership Approval Boards to Meet
 * New Ubuntu Universe Contributors
 * Ubuntu Stats
 * Launchpad News
 * Ubuntu Forums News
 * In the Press & Blogosphere
 * In Other News
 * Meeting Summaries
 * Upcoming Meetings & Events
 * Updates & Security
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## Make each article a subsection, via ===
## These are big articles that don't fit within another section

=== UDS Intrepid Ibex(Prague) ===

At the beginning of a new development cycle, Ubuntu developers from around the world gather to help shape and scope the next release of Ubuntu. The summit is open to the public, but it is not a conference, exhibition or other audience-oriented event. Rather, it is an opportunity for Ubuntu developers -- who usually collaborate online -- to work together in person on specific tasks. This year you too can get a feel for what went on during the fast paced week of UDS by watching the 19 videos stored on youtube. The link is your portal to what developers, including Mark Shuttleworth, have to say about the next Ubuntu release, "Intrepid Ibex".
http://www.youtube.com/ubuntudevelopers

=== UDS Intrepid Ibex Report Summaries ===

Find out what direction some of the teams plan to take by reading their summaries from the UDS in Prague:
=== Ubuntu Developer Summit Intrepid Ibex ===

At the beginning of a new development cycle, Ubuntu developers from around the world gather to help shape and scope the next release of Ubuntu. The summit is open to the public, but it is not a conference, exhibition or other audience-oriented event. Rather, it is an opportunity for Ubuntu developers -- who usually collaborate online -- to work together in person on specific tasks. This year you too can get a feel for what went on during the fast paced week of UDS by watching the 19 videos available on You``Tube. The link is your portal to what developers, including Mark Shuttleworth, have to say about the next Ubuntu release, "Intrepid Ibex." http://www.youtube.com/ubuntudevelopers

 * UDS Group Photo: http://www.flickr.com/photos/nxvl/2515647319/sizes/o/
 * UDS Flickr Album: http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/udsintrepid/
 * Martijn van de Streek UDS pics: http://foodfight.org/fotos/2008/05-22%20UDS-Intrepid,%20Prague/

Ubuntu Developer Summit was broken down into tracks: community, server, platform, QA, desktop, kernel, and mobile. Sessions in each track discussed new features and processes, and ways to improve for the upcoming Intrepid Ibex release cycle. The community track had sessions covering how to improve the Brainstorm site, investigating how the new Lo``Co Council could support teams better, and figuring out ways non-English speaking developers could get involved. Server track discussed providing GUIs for administrative tasks, possible integration with Open``Change (potential Exchange server replacement), and various J2EE servlet containers to add in Intrepid. The Platform track covered faster boot cycles and Open``Office 3 upload schedules. Sessions about bug response times and escalation, and upstream bug workflow were handled by the QA track. Single Sign On and Kubuntu related requirements were on topic for the Desktop track.

More details about discussions and plans that took place at UDS in Prague can be found below (more information will be added in the coming week as well):
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 * Kernel Track: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UDS-Intrepid/Report/Kernel
 * Mobile Track: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UDS-Intrepid/Report/Mobile

Please remember these are simply discussions. There is no guarantee any mentioned features or suggestions will appear in 8.10.

=== Ubuntu Live Canceled ===

The Ubuntu Live conference, which was scheduled to take place July 21-22 in Portland, OR has been canceled. Canonical is planning to include Ubuntu content in the O'Reilly Open Source Convention (OSCON), also happening July 21-25 in Portland, Oregon. Those interested in future Ubuntu events and developments should watch www.ubuntu.com. http://en.oreilly.com/ubuntu2008/public/content/home

=== New Ubuntu Membership Approval Boards to Meet ===

The EMEA(Europe, Middle East and Africa) and the Americas Ubuntu Membership Approval Board Meeting are scheduled to take place this week to review and approve pending Ubuntu Member applicants. This will be the first new members approval for each board and everyone is welcome to attend and watch the process. Membership in the Ubuntu community means recognition of significant and sustained contribution to Ubuntu and the Ubuntu community, and expected future involvement. Contributions in all areas are welcome, from support to advocacy, programming to artwork and documentation, Loco Teams activities to core packaging. The meetings will be held in #ubuntu-meeting, and you can find the date, time and agenda by following the links to the corresponding boards.

 * http://fridge.ubuntu.com/node/1456 EMEA
 * http://fridge.ubuntu.com/node/1455 Americas

=== New Ubuntu Universe Contributors ===

The MOTU Council has determined that Emanuele Gentili has met the requirements to become Ubuntu Universe Contributors. Responsibilities include the maintenance of most of the packages in Ubuntu (the universe and multiverse components), merge of new versions from Debian, sponsored uploads of bugfixes and new packages, technical discussions with other Ubuntu developers, and the possibility to become a MOTU through the demonstration of technical skills and understanding of Ubuntu development processes. You can find his applications, feedback, and the vote at the links below.

 * https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/motu-council/2008-May/001150.html
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## 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 (#) +/- # over last week
    * Critical (#) +/- # over last week
    * Unconfirmed (#) +/- # over last week
    * Unassigned (#) +/- # over last week
    * All bugs ever reported (#) +/- # over last week
 * Open (46907) +617 # over last week
 * Critical (32) +/-0 # over last week
 * Unconfirmed (23205) +347 # over last week
 * Unassigned (37268) +544 # over last week
 * All bugs ever reported (185055) +1367 # over last week
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=== Infamous Bugs ===

## Delete if no infamous/funny bugs for this week.
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## Translation stats only take a second to do.
## Data can be found at: https://translations.launchpad.net/ubuntu/hardy (or current release)
## 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).
## List the top 5 untranslated languages.

 1. Language (#) +/- # over last week
 2. Language (#) +/- # over last week
 3. Language (#) +/- # over last week
 4. Language (#) +/- # over last week
 5. Language (#) +/- # over last week
This is the top 5, not specific languages, so the languages might change week to week.

 * Spanish (14217)
 * French (39362)
 * English (United Kingdom) (49699)
 * Swedish (53033)
 * Brazilian Portuguese (64718)
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== LoCo News ==

## Make each article a subsection, via === Section name ===
## Add notes about new locoteams, changed ones, meetings, etc.

== New in Hardy Heron ==

## 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
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Each week they're planning to give the latest news from the Launchpad team, Each week the podcast will provide the latest news from the Launchpad team,
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They've published two episodes so far: The two episodes so far:
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## This section is provided to include any interesting updates from the Ubuntu Forums.
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Cpt``Picard, from Finland, is another member active in the Programming Talk section (we already had La``Roza and Wybiral in the past weeks). A former gentoo user, his Linux journey started with Slackware 3.4.0... As he says it: "I try to enlighten people about the general, universal nature of computation." Please read the whole interview here: http://kmandla.wordpress.com/2008/05/24/an-interview-with-cptpicard/ Cpt``Picard, from Finland, is another member active in the Programming Talk section (we already had La``Roza and Wybiral in the past weeks). A former Gentoo user, his Linux journey started with Slackware 3.4.0. As he says it: "I try to enlighten people about the general, universal nature of computation." Please read the whole interview here: http://kmandla.wordpress.com/2008/05/24/an-interview-with-cptpicard/
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If you have a small home network or manage an Ubuntu lab, you might be interested in this week's tutorial pick: coolen's "HOWTO: Share updates across multiple machines".

This is a well-built and well-designed howto that gives plenty of informations about the apt-cacher tool and how to set it up right. It also makes mention of how to reverse the changes, and coolen is updating his instructions quite frequently -- both hallmarks of a superior howto.
If you have a small home network or manage an Ubuntu lab, you might be interested in this week's tutorial pick: coolen's "HOWTO: Share updates across multiple machines."

This is a well-built and well-designed howto that gives plenty of information about the apt-cacher tool and how to set it up right. It also mentions how to reverse the changes, and coolen is updating his instructions quite frequently -- both hallmarks of a superior howto.
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## 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
.

 * Ubuntu to announce its mobile Linux in June - Canonical will announce Netbook Remix, its version of Ubuntu Linux tailored for mobile devices, in two weeks, Chief Executive Mark Shuttleworth said. "We're announcing it in the first week of June. It's called the Netbook Remix," Shuttleworth said in an interview with the Guardian. "We're working with Intel, which produces chips custom-made for this sector." Ubuntu has been working on a mobile version of its operating system for months. In an April interview about the release of the new Hardy Heron version of Ubuntu, Shuttleworth said the mobile version is sufficiently important that developing it is worth pushing back the company's move to profitability.http://news.cnet.com/8301-13580_3-9950552-39.html

 * Why Linux isn't yet ready for synchronized release cycles - This discussion is likely to continue for some time as the major stakeholders articulate their various perspectives. Communication has already moved the debate forward in many ways and brought to the surface some compelling alternatives and variations on the initial proposal. The final outcome could have some broad implications for how open-source software programs and distributions handle release management, but right now none of the proposed ideas are mature enough for widespread implementation. http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080521-why-linux-isnt-yet-ready-for-synchronized-release-cycles.html

 * Linux on the desktop? Why not? - The out-of-the-box experience here is incredible. Ubuntu comes with everything I need to work -- an email reader, the Firefox browser, instant messaging client, softphone, and the Open Office productivity suite. It includes tools for managing and playing music and movies, for managing and editing photos, and for burning CDs and DVDs. It even includes several games for when you need a little play time. http://www.thestandard.com/news/2008/05/21/linux-desktop-why-not

 * Linux is a platform for people, not just specialists - In a future undominated by Windows, Ubuntu hopes to be the provider of a service ecosystem for free software. The Guardian of the UK recently sat down with Ubuntu Chief, Mark Shuttleworth to talk about himself, Canonical and its business model, the Dell/Ubuntu deal, the ultraportable sector(Netbook Remix), GNU/Linux position in the market, his stance on the ISO's handling of the Microsoft OOXML situation, and how Ubuntu has an increased responsibility to speak out as it gains importance in the computing world.http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/may/22/internet.software

 *
Schools set to go open source(Tender seeks suppliers for an £80m framework deal) - Officially sanctioned open source and free-to-use software could be in use across the UK education system within months after government education agency Becta issued a tender for a four-year framework agreement. Becta is looking for up to 10 software suppliers to participate in the £80m framework that will launch in October. Ian Lynch, a member of the Open Schools Alliance, said: “Canonical with Ubuntu, perhaps Mandriva, Sun Microsystems or Novell/Suse might bid, as all have integrated open source software solutions that could satisfy the framework requirements. http://www.computing.co.uk/computing/news/2217224/schools-set-open-source-4017531
 * Linux is a platform for people, not just specialists - In a future not dominated by Windows, Ubuntu hopes to be the provider of a service ecosystem for free software. The Guardian of the UK recently sat down with Ubuntu Chief, Mark Shuttleworth to talk about himself, Canonical and its business model, the Dell/Ubuntu deal, the ultraportable sector(Netbook Remix), GNU/Linux position in the market, his stance on the ISO's handling of the Microsoft OOXML situation, and how Ubuntu has an increased responsibility to speak out as it gains importance in the computing world. http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/may/22/internet.software

 * Ubuntu to announce its mobile Linux in June - Canonical will announce a Netbook Remix, a version of Ubuntu tailored for mobile devices, in two weeks, Mark Shuttleworth said in an interview with the Guardian. "We're working with Intel, which produces chips custom-made for this sector." Ubuntu has been working on a mobile version of its operating system for months. In an April interview about the release of the new Hardy Heron version of Ubuntu, Mark said the mobile version is sufficiently important that developing it is worth pushing back the company's move to profitability. http://news.cnet.com/8301-13580_3-9950552-39.html

 * Why Linux isn't yet ready for synchronized release cycles - This discussion is likely to continue for some time as the major stakeholders articulate their various perspectives. Communication has already moved the debate forward in many ways and brought to the surface some alternatives and variations on the initial proposal. The final outcome could have some broad implications for how open-source software programs and distributions handle release management, but right now none of the proposed ideas are mature enough for widespread implementation. http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080521-why-linux-isnt-yet-ready-for-synchronized-release-cycles.html

 * Linux on the desktop? Why not? - The out-of-the-box experience is incredible. Ubuntu comes with everything one needs to work -- an email reader, the Firefox browser, instant messaging client, softphone, and the Open Office productivity suite. It includes tools for managing and playing music and movies, for managing and editing photos, and for burning CDs and DVDs. It even includes several games for when you need a little play time. http://www.thestandard.com/news/2008/05/21/linux-desktop-why-not

 * Schools set to go open source(Tender seeks suppliers for an £80m framework deal) - Officially sanctioned open source and free-to-use software could be in use across the UK education system within months after government education agency Becta issued a tender for a four-year framework agreement. Becta is looking for up to 10 software suppliers to participate in the £80m framework that will launch in October. Ian Lynch, a member of the Open Schools Alliance, said: “Canonical with Ubuntu, perhaps Mandriva, Sun Microsystems or Novell/Suse might bid, as all have integrated open source software solutions that could satisfy the framework requirements." http://www.computing.co.uk/computing/news/2217224/schools-set-open-source-4017531
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 * Transition to the GNU/Linux Ubuntu Operating System - In 2007, The Garfield Guest house set up up a computer with internet access, in the breakfast room for guests to use. To help keep costs down and to reduce maintenance they installed the Ubuntu 7.04 operating system, which comes with Firefox 2, Open Office, etc. It has been a great success, with guests commenting regularly about how useful it is to have quick and easy internet access while staying with us. They also switched their office computer to Ubuntu at the same time, and have been very happy to find that they have had no issues with viruses, malware or spyware since switching. Computer maintenance time has been drastically reduced - maintenance now consisting of installing Ubuntu updates when notified by the update manager. Since installing Ubuntu, the computers have run flawlessly. Last week they decided to upgrade both the office and breakfast room computers to the latests version of Ubuntu, Hardy Heron 8.04, which was released in April 2008. http://garfieldguesthouse.blogspot.com/2008/05/transition-to-using-gnulinux-ubuntu.html

 * Ubuntu Developer Summit(Prague) - On Monday this week Barton(Sun representative) attended the first day of the Ubuntu Developer Summit in Prague. The summit which just ended , was intended to drive plans and decisions for the next Ubuntu release "Intrepid Ibex" which is due out on October 30th. Sun had about 12 folks there representing Glass Fish, Open JDK, Net Beans, Hudson, Sun Studio and MySQL. They attended sessions, had side meetings, and had a big Canonical/Sun sync up at the end of the day to talk about the slew of software they hope to get into Intrepid. See some pics of the event by following the link to Barton's blog.http://blogs.sun.com/barton808/entry/ubuntu_developer_summit_prague

 * Ubuntu - 8.04 (Review) - Ubuntu, the popular Linux distro that seems to be on the doorstep of mainstream acceptance, gets better and better with each release. Their latest release 8.04 (Hardy Heron) is certainly no exception and in fact is their most polished release to date. Hardy Heron is the second ever “LTS” (long term support) release from Ubuntu which entails 3 years of support for desktop versions and 5 years of support for server versions. With that in mind, it seems the developers from Ubuntu concentrated squarely on stability for Hardy Heron. http://techpark6.com/ubuntu-804-review.html

 * Ubuntu 8.04 behaving itself quite nicely(all of my issues have been resolved) - Steven Rosenberg says adding software, updating, and adding repositories is made easy with Ubuntu. Best of all though is that with Hardy 8.04 he can now use his flashdrive as a plug and play device, something he had problems with in earlier versions. His other problem with Suspend/Resume is also fixed. All in all, Steven is a happy camper. You should also check out the link to see his idea of an Ubuntu twelve pack. http://blogs.dailynews.com/click/2008/05/ubuntu-804-behaving-itself-qui.html

## In this section we want to highlight the blogs that are exceptionally well-written and in-depth.
## Blogs tend to ma
ke it easy for low-quality content, so be extra careful on what goes here.
## We should encourage bloggers to spread the word
, so this section might be a good way to do so.
 * Transition to the GNU/Linux Ubuntu Operating System - In 2007, The Garfield Guest House set up up a computer with Internet access, in the breakfast room for guests to use. To help keep costs down and to reduce maintenance they installed the Ubuntu 7.04. It has been a great success, with guests commenting regularly about how useful it is to have quick and easy internet access while staying at The Garfield Guest House. They also switched their office computer to Ubuntu at the same time, and have been very happy to find that they have had no issues with viruses, malware or spyware since switching. Computer maintenance time has been drastically reduced - maintenance now consisting of installing Ubuntu updates when notified by the update manager. Since installing Ubuntu, the computers have run flawlessly. Last week they decided to upgrade both the office and breakfast room computers to the latests version of Ubuntu. http://garfieldguesthouse.blogspot.com/2008/05/transition-to-using-gnulinux-ubuntu.html

 * Ubuntu Developer Summit(Prague) - On Monday this week Barton(Sun representative) attended the first day of the Ubuntu Developer Summit in Prague. The summit which just ended, is intended to drive plans and decisions for the next Ubuntu release "Intrepid Ibex" which is due out on October 30th. Sun had about 12 folks there representing Glass Fish, Open JDK, Net Beans, Hudson, Sun Studio and MySQL. They attended sessions, had side meetings, and had a big Canonical/Sun sync up at the end of the day to talk about the slew of software they hope to get into Intrepid. See some pics of the event by following the link to Barton's blog. http://blogs.sun.com/barton808/entry/ubuntu_developer_summit_prague

 * Ubuntu - 8.04 (Review) - Ubuntu seems to be on the doorstep of mainstream acceptance, gets better and better with each release. Their latest release 8.04 is certainly no exception and in fact is the most polished release to date. Hardy Heron is the second ever “LTS” (long term support) release from Ubuntu which entails 3 years of support for desktop versions and 5 years of support for server versions. With that in mind, it seems the developers from Ubuntu concentrated squarely on stability for Hardy Heron. http://techpark6.com/ubuntu-804-review.html

 * Ubuntu 8.04 behaving itself quite nicely(all of my issues have been resolved) - Steven Rosenberg says adding software, updating, and adding repositories is made easy with Ubuntu. Best of all though is that with Ubuntu 8.04, he can now use his flash drive as a plug and play device, something he had problems with in earlier versions. His other problem with Suspend/Resume is also fixed. All in all, Steven is a happy camper. You should also check out the link to see his idea of an Ubuntu twelve pack. http://blogs.dailynews.com/click/2008/05/ubuntu-804-behaving-itself-qui.html

 * Don battles the monster Ubuntu - 2 weeks ago or so, Don did the obligatory upgrade from Gutsy to Hardy. This proved to be both a good and a bad thing. His system really really didn't like it. Evolution ground to a halt - checking email would take ~ 1/2 hour to retrieve a single email, highlighting a message would take ~ 3 minutes and max the CPU. Epiphany/Firefox just hogged the CPU to the point of uselessness. Programs would randomly crash or fail to start. However, even now this has turned into a good thing. he's been using the same base system since Dapper and it was beginning to age a little. The fancy desktop effects finally work and are sane enough to try using (they're not annoying me yet). Everything feels faster, more responsive. All in all, he's liking his new system. Even if he had to spend hours and hours rebuilding jhbuild, setting up all his applications to be perfect and teaching the panel to know how he likes his system. http://donscorgie.livejournal.com/13790.html
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## Any news or links that don't fit neatly into other sections.
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A flurry of release news this week led to the recurring question: Is Linux growing homogenous? If it is, is that such a bad thing? In the end, "the fact that there are so many distros shows the strength of the Free Software ecosystem," Dean concluded. "The fact that so many exist, and are staying alive, indicates that different peoples needs are being met. Release schedules notwithstanding, "there's very little desire to make a SINGLE appearance of GNU/Linux -- in fact, it's just the opposite," says blogger Kevin Dean. Canonical's Mark Shuttleworth played a role, suggesting that perhaps the distros should coordinate their release cycles to all hit at the same time. http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/Will-Every-Linux-Distro-Soon-Look-the-Same-63048.html

=== Distribution Release: Ubuntu Muslim Edition 8.04 ===

Ubuntu Muslim Edition (UbuntuME) 8.04, an Ubuntu-based derivative distribution featuring Islamic software, a Quran study tool and a web content filtering utility, has been released. It includes an installable live desktop CD, a second CD with additional software (Open``Office.org, Arabic language packs, Quran recitations, etc.), an installable DVD (with more Quran recitations), and a script to convert standard Ubuntu installations to UbuntuME. http://www.e-linux.it/news_detail.php?id=5224
A flurry of release news this week led to the recurring question: Is Linux growing homogeneous? If it is, is that such a bad thing? In the end, "the fact that there are so many distros shows the strength of the Free Software ecosystem," Dean concluded. "The fact that so many exist, and are staying alive, indicates that different peoples needs are being met. Release schedules notwithstanding, "there's very little desire to make a SINGLE appearance of GNU/Linux -- in fact, it's just the opposite," says blogger Kevin Dean. Canonical's Mark Shuttleworth played a role, suggesting that perhaps the distros should coordinate their release cycles to all hit at the same time. http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/Will-Every-Linux-Distro-Soon-Look-the-Same-63048.html

=== Distribution Release: UbuntuME 8.04(Muslim Edition) ===

UbuntuME 8.04(Ubuntu Muslim Edition), an Ubuntu-based derivative distribution featuring Islamic software, a Quran study tool and a web content filtering utility, has been released. It includes an installable live desktop CD, a second CD with additional software (Open``Office.org, Arabic language packs, Quran recitations, etc.), an installable DVD (with more Quran recitations), and a script to convert standard Ubuntu installations to UbuntuME. http://www.e-linux.it/news_detail.php?id=5224
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  * Recent problems in the Ubuntu IRC world were discussed with members of the Ubuntu Community (`Paladine` and `emma`), members of the IRC Council, members of the Freenode staff (`christel`).
  * Core Issues that were identified and possible solutions that were pointed out:
  * Recent problems in the Ubuntu IRC world were discussed with members of the Ubuntu Community, members of the IRC Council, members of the Freenode staff.
  * Core issues that were identified and possible solutions that were pointed out:
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  * Open applications: Emanuele Gentili, Stefan Ebner, Pedro Fragoso, Steve Stalcup.
* Improved UbuntuDevelopers: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuDevelopers to
  * Improved Ubuntu Developers: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuDevelopers to:
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 * Stefan Ebner - Stefan has been working to bring in most of the universe package changes in Debian since the beginning of the year, and has been very active in the development community becoming the 21st most active developer in the Hardy cycle. He also participates in the German language support forums. https://launchpad.net/~sebner
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  * Open applications: Steve Stalcup, Pedro Fragoso, Emanuele Gentili, Stefan Potyra
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## Data pulled from mailing lists and http://fridge.ubuntu.com
## Either use bullets or sub-headings to organize content.
## Format:
##
## === Friday, March 16, 2007 ===
##
## ==== MOTU Meeting ====
## * Start: 10:00
## * End: 12:00
## * Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
## * Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MOTU/Meetings

== Community Spotlight ==

## 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.
=== Tuesday, May 27, 2008 ===

==== EMEA Ubuntu Membership Approval Board Meeting ====
 * Start: 20:00 UTC
 * End: 21:30 UTC
 * Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
 * Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Membership/RegionalBoards/EMEA

=== Wednesday, May 28, 2008 ===

==== Platform Team Meeting ====
 * Start: 06:00 UTC
 * End: 07:00 UTC
 * Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
 * Agenda: Not Listed as of Publication

==== Launchpad users meeting ====
 * Start: 17:00 UTC
 * End: 18:00
 * Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
 * Agenda: https://help.launchpad.net/UsersMeeting

==== Server Team Meeting ====
 * Start: 21:00 UTC
 * End: 22:00 UTC
 * Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
 * Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ServerTeam/Meeting

==== Americas Ubuntu Membership Approval Board Meeting ====
 * Start: 20:00 America/EST
 * End: 21:30 America/EST
 * Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
 * Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Membership/RegionalBoards/Americas

=== Thursday, May 29, 2008 ===

==== Desktop Team Meeting ====
 * Start: 13:00 UTC
 * End: 14:00 UTC
 * Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
 * Agenda: http://wiki.ubuntu.com/DesktopTeam/Meeting

=== Friday, May 30, 2008 ===

==== MOTU Meeting ====
 * Start: 12:00 UTC
 * End: 13:00 UTC
 * Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
 * Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MOTU/Meetings
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## 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-612-7] OpenSSH update - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-security-announce/2008-May/000711.html
 * [USN-613-1] GnuTLS vulnerabilities - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-security-announce/2008-May/000712.html
 * [USN-612-8] openssl-blacklist update - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-security-announce/2008-May/000713.html
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## https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes
## List all uploads since last UWN.
## Format: * <packagename> - <link to mailing list message>
## Ex: * postgresql-8.1_8.1.11-0ubuntu0.6.10.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/edgy-changes/2008-January/008478.html
 * openssh-blacklist 0.1-1ubuntu0.6.06.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2008-May/012698.html
 * openssh_4.2p1-7ubuntu3.4 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2008-May/012699.html
 * openssl-blacklist 0.1-0ubuntu0.6.06.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2008-May/012700.html
 * gnutls12 1.2.9-2ubuntu1.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2008-May/012701.html
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## https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/feisty-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/feisty-changes/2007-March/008083.html
 * openssl-blacklist 0.1-0ubuntu0.7.04.4 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/feisty-changes/2008-May/008932.html
 * gnutls13_1.4.4-3ubuntu0.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/feisty-changes/2008-May/008933.html
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## https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/gutsy-changes
## List all uploads since last UWN.
## Format: * <packagename> - <link to mailing list message>
## Ex: * tzdata 2007h-0ubuntu0.7.10 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/gutsy-changes/2007-October/009951.html
 * openssl-blacklist 0.1-0ubuntu0.7.10.4 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/gutsy-changes/2008-May/010232.html
 * gnutls13_1.6.3-1ubuntu0.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/gutsy-changes/2008-May/010233.html
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## https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/
## List all uploads since last UWN.
## Format: * <packagename> - <link to mailing list message>
## Ex: * tzdata 2007h-0ubuntu0.8.04 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/009951.html


== UWN #: A sneak peek ==

## Articles that should have made it into this release but have been deferred should be listed here.
## Delete if unnecessary.
 * evolution-data-server 2.22.1.1-0ubuntu3 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/011537.html
 * audacious 1.5.0-2ubuntu2~hardy1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/011538.html
 * apport 0.108.2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/011539.html
 * gnome-keyring 2.22.1-1ubuntu1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/011540.html
 * openssl-blacklist 0.1-0ubuntu0.8.04.4 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/011541.html
 * gtk-vnc 0.3.4-0ubuntu2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/011542.html
 * xorg-server 2:1.4.1~git20080131-1ubuntu9.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/011543.html
 * base-installer 1.86ubuntu2.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/011545.html
 * apt-setup 1:0.31ubuntu8 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/011544.html
 * gnutls13_2.0.4-1ubuntu2.1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/011546.html
 * gdm 2.20.6-0ubuntu2 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/011547.html
 * xserver-xorg-video-geode 2.9.0-1ubuntu1 - https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-May/011548.html
Line 348: Line 318:

## The following list is in chronological order.
Line 355: Line 323:
 * Your Name Here
Line 360: Line 327:
## Common acronyms  1. ISO - International Standards Organization
 1. OOXML - Microsoft's Office Open eXtensible Markup Language

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue #92 for the week May 18th - May 24th, 2008. In this issue we cover: Ubuntu Developer Summit Intrepid Ibex, Ubuntu Live canceled, new Ubuntu Membership Approval Boards to meet, new Ubuntu Universe Contributors, a new Launchpad podcast, and much, much more!

UWN Translations

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

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

In This Issue

  • UDS Intrepid Ibex
  • Ubuntu Live Canceled
  • New Ubuntu Membership Approval Boards to Meet
  • New Ubuntu Universe Contributors
  • Ubuntu Stats
  • Launchpad News
  • Ubuntu Forums News
  • In the Press & Blogosphere

  • In Other News
  • Meeting Summaries
  • Upcoming Meetings & Events

  • Updates & Security

General Community News

Ubuntu Developer Summit Intrepid Ibex

At the beginning of a new development cycle, Ubuntu developers from around the world gather to help shape and scope the next release of Ubuntu. The summit is open to the public, but it is not a conference, exhibition or other audience-oriented event. Rather, it is an opportunity for Ubuntu developers -- who usually collaborate online -- to work together in person on specific tasks. This year you too can get a feel for what went on during the fast paced week of UDS by watching the 19 videos available on YouTube. The link is your portal to what developers, including Mark Shuttleworth, have to say about the next Ubuntu release, "Intrepid Ibex." http://www.youtube.com/ubuntudevelopers

Ubuntu Developer Summit was broken down into tracks: community, server, platform, QA, desktop, kernel, and mobile. Sessions in each track discussed new features and processes, and ways to improve for the upcoming Intrepid Ibex release cycle. The community track had sessions covering how to improve the Brainstorm site, investigating how the new LoCo Council could support teams better, and figuring out ways non-English speaking developers could get involved. Server track discussed providing GUIs for administrative tasks, possible integration with OpenChange (potential Exchange server replacement), and various J2EE servlet containers to add in Intrepid. The Platform track covered faster boot cycles and OpenOffice 3 upload schedules. Sessions about bug response times and escalation, and upstream bug workflow were handled by the QA track. Single Sign On and Kubuntu related requirements were on topic for the Desktop track.

More details about discussions and plans that took place at UDS in Prague can be found below (more information will be added in the coming week as well):

Please remember these are simply discussions. There is no guarantee any mentioned features or suggestions will appear in 8.10.

Ubuntu Live Canceled

The Ubuntu Live conference, which was scheduled to take place July 21-22 in Portland, OR has been canceled. Canonical is planning to include Ubuntu content in the O'Reilly Open Source Convention (OSCON), also happening July 21-25 in Portland, Oregon. Those interested in future Ubuntu events and developments should watch www.ubuntu.com. http://en.oreilly.com/ubuntu2008/public/content/home

New Ubuntu Membership Approval Boards to Meet

The EMEA(Europe, Middle East and Africa) and the Americas Ubuntu Membership Approval Board Meeting are scheduled to take place this week to review and approve pending Ubuntu Member applicants. This will be the first new members approval for each board and everyone is welcome to attend and watch the process. Membership in the Ubuntu community means recognition of significant and sustained contribution to Ubuntu and the Ubuntu community, and expected future involvement. Contributions in all areas are welcome, from support to advocacy, programming to artwork and documentation, Loco Teams activities to core packaging. The meetings will be held in #ubuntu-meeting, and you can find the date, time and agenda by following the links to the corresponding boards.

New Ubuntu Universe Contributors

The MOTU Council has determined that Emanuele Gentili has met the requirements to become Ubuntu Universe Contributors. Responsibilities include the maintenance of most of the packages in Ubuntu (the universe and multiverse components), merge of new versions from Debian, sponsored uploads of bugfixes and new packages, technical discussions with other Ubuntu developers, and the possibility to become a MOTU through the demonstration of technical skills and understanding of Ubuntu development processes. You can find his applications, feedback, and the vote at the links below.

Ubuntu Stats

Bug Stats

  • Open (46907) +617 # over last week
  • Critical (32) +/-0 # over last week
  • Unconfirmed (23205) +347 # over last week
  • Unassigned (37268) +544 # over last week
  • All bugs ever reported (185055) +1367 # 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 Hardy

This is the top 5, not specific languages, so the languages might change week to week.

  • Spanish (14217)
  • French (39362)
  • English (United Kingdom) (49699)
  • Swedish (53033)
  • Brazilian Portuguese (64718)

Remaining strings to translate in Ubuntu 8.04 "Hardy Heron," see more at: https://translations.launchpad.net/ubuntu/hardy/

Launchpad News

The Launchpad team have started a new podcast, with the superb name Launchpod!

Each week the podcast will provide the latest news from the Launchpad team, have interviews with people who've done interesting things with Launchpad and answer questions from listeners.

The two episodes so far:

Send your questions or feature suggestions to feedback@launchpad.net

Subscribe to the podcast feed at http://news.launchpad.net/category/podcast/feed

Ubuntu Forums News

Ubuntu Forums Interview

CptPicard, from Finland, is another member active in the Programming Talk section (we already had LaRoza and Wybiral in the past weeks). A former Gentoo user, his Linux journey started with Slackware 3.4.0. As he says it: "I try to enlighten people about the general, universal nature of computation." Please read the whole interview here: http://kmandla.wordpress.com/2008/05/24/an-interview-with-cptpicard/

Tutorial of the Week

If you have a small home network or manage an Ubuntu lab, you might be interested in this week's tutorial pick: coolen's "HOWTO: Share updates across multiple machines."

This is a well-built and well-designed howto that gives plenty of information about the apt-cacher tool and how to set it up right. It also mentions how to reverse the changes, and coolen is updating his instructions quite frequently -- both hallmarks of a superior howto.

http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=564301

In The Press

  • Linux is a platform for people, not just specialists - In a future not dominated by Windows, Ubuntu hopes to be the provider of a service ecosystem for free software. The Guardian of the UK recently sat down with Ubuntu Chief, Mark Shuttleworth to talk about himself, Canonical and its business model, the Dell/Ubuntu deal, the ultraportable sector(Netbook Remix), GNU/Linux position in the market, his stance on the ISO's handling of the Microsoft OOXML situation, and how Ubuntu has an increased responsibility to speak out as it gains importance in the computing world. http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/may/22/internet.software

  • Ubuntu to announce its mobile Linux in June - Canonical will announce a Netbook Remix, a version of Ubuntu tailored for mobile devices, in two weeks, Mark Shuttleworth said in an interview with the Guardian. "We're working with Intel, which produces chips custom-made for this sector." Ubuntu has been working on a mobile version of its operating system for months. In an April interview about the release of the new Hardy Heron version of Ubuntu, Mark said the mobile version is sufficiently important that developing it is worth pushing back the company's move to profitability. http://news.cnet.com/8301-13580_3-9950552-39.html

  • Why Linux isn't yet ready for synchronized release cycles - This discussion is likely to continue for some time as the major stakeholders articulate their various perspectives. Communication has already moved the debate forward in many ways and brought to the surface some alternatives and variations on the initial proposal. The final outcome could have some broad implications for how open-source software programs and distributions handle release management, but right now none of the proposed ideas are mature enough for widespread implementation. http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080521-why-linux-isnt-yet-ready-for-synchronized-release-cycles.html

  • Linux on the desktop? Why not? - The out-of-the-box experience is incredible. Ubuntu comes with everything one needs to work -- an email reader, the Firefox browser, instant messaging client, softphone, and the Open Office productivity suite. It includes tools for managing and playing music and movies, for managing and editing photos, and for burning CDs and DVDs. It even includes several games for when you need a little play time. http://www.thestandard.com/news/2008/05/21/linux-desktop-why-not

  • Schools set to go open source(Tender seeks suppliers for an £80m framework deal) - Officially sanctioned open source and free-to-use software could be in use across the UK education system within months after government education agency Becta issued a tender for a four-year framework agreement. Becta is looking for up to 10 software suppliers to participate in the £80m framework that will launch in October. Ian Lynch, a member of the Open Schools Alliance, said: “Canonical with Ubuntu, perhaps Mandriva, Sun Microsystems or Novell/Suse might bid, as all have integrated open source software solutions that could satisfy the framework requirements." http://www.computing.co.uk/computing/news/2217224/schools-set-open-source-4017531

In The Blogosphere

  • Transition to the GNU/Linux Ubuntu Operating System - In 2007, The Garfield Guest House set up up a computer with Internet access, in the breakfast room for guests to use. To help keep costs down and to reduce maintenance they installed the Ubuntu 7.04. It has been a great success, with guests commenting regularly about how useful it is to have quick and easy internet access while staying at The Garfield Guest House. They also switched their office computer to Ubuntu at the same time, and have been very happy to find that they have had no issues with viruses, malware or spyware since switching. Computer maintenance time has been drastically reduced - maintenance now consisting of installing Ubuntu updates when notified by the update manager. Since installing Ubuntu, the computers have run flawlessly. Last week they decided to upgrade both the office and breakfast room computers to the latests version of Ubuntu. http://garfieldguesthouse.blogspot.com/2008/05/transition-to-using-gnulinux-ubuntu.html

  • Ubuntu Developer Summit(Prague) - On Monday this week Barton(Sun representative) attended the first day of the Ubuntu Developer Summit in Prague. The summit which just ended, is intended to drive plans and decisions for the next Ubuntu release "Intrepid Ibex" which is due out on October 30th. Sun had about 12 folks there representing Glass Fish, Open JDK, Net Beans, Hudson, Sun Studio and MySQL. They attended sessions, had side meetings, and had a big Canonical/Sun sync up at the end of the day to talk about the slew of software they hope to get into Intrepid. See some pics of the event by following the link to Barton's blog. http://blogs.sun.com/barton808/entry/ubuntu_developer_summit_prague

  • Ubuntu - 8.04 (Review) - Ubuntu seems to be on the doorstep of mainstream acceptance, gets better and better with each release. Their latest release 8.04 is certainly no exception and in fact is the most polished release to date. Hardy Heron is the second ever “LTS” (long term support) release from Ubuntu which entails 3 years of support for desktop versions and 5 years of support for server versions. With that in mind, it seems the developers from Ubuntu concentrated squarely on stability for Hardy Heron. http://techpark6.com/ubuntu-804-review.html

  • Ubuntu 8.04 behaving itself quite nicely(all of my issues have been resolved) - Steven Rosenberg says adding software, updating, and adding repositories is made easy with Ubuntu. Best of all though is that with Ubuntu 8.04, he can now use his flash drive as a plug and play device, something he had problems with in earlier versions. His other problem with Suspend/Resume is also fixed. All in all, Steven is a happy camper. You should also check out the link to see his idea of an Ubuntu twelve pack. http://blogs.dailynews.com/click/2008/05/ubuntu-804-behaving-itself-qui.html

  • Don battles the monster Ubuntu - 2 weeks ago or so, Don did the obligatory upgrade from Gutsy to Hardy. This proved to be both a good and a bad thing. His system really really didn't like it. Evolution ground to a halt - checking email would take ~ 1/2 hour to retrieve a single email, highlighting a message would take ~ 3 minutes and max the CPU. Epiphany/Firefox just hogged the CPU to the point of uselessness. Programs would randomly crash or fail to start. However, even now this has turned into a good thing. he's been using the same base system since Dapper and it was beginning to age a little. The fancy desktop effects finally work and are sane enough to try using (they're not annoying me yet). Everything feels faster, more responsive. All in all, he's liking his new system. Even if he had to spend hours and hours rebuilding jhbuild, setting up all his applications to be perfect and teaching the panel to know how he likes his system. http://donscorgie.livejournal.com/13790.html

In Other News

Will Every Linux Distro Soon Look the Same?

A flurry of release news this week led to the recurring question: Is Linux growing homogeneous? If it is, is that such a bad thing? In the end, "the fact that there are so many distros shows the strength of the Free Software ecosystem," Dean concluded. "The fact that so many exist, and are staying alive, indicates that different peoples needs are being met. Release schedules notwithstanding, "there's very little desire to make a SINGLE appearance of GNU/Linux -- in fact, it's just the opposite," says blogger Kevin Dean. Canonical's Mark Shuttleworth played a role, suggesting that perhaps the distros should coordinate their release cycles to all hit at the same time. http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/Will-Every-Linux-Distro-Soon-Look-the-Same-63048.html

Distribution Release: UbuntuME 8.04(Muslim Edition)

UbuntuME 8.04(Ubuntu Muslim Edition), an Ubuntu-based derivative distribution featuring Islamic software, a Quran study tool and a web content filtering utility, has been released. It includes an installable live desktop CD, a second CD with additional software (OpenOffice.org, Arabic language packs, Quran recitations, etc.), an installable DVD (with more Quran recitations), and a script to convert standard Ubuntu installations to UbuntuME. http://www.e-linux.it/news_detail.php?id=5224

New group advocates for FOSS in libraries

A new advocacy group, the Public Software Foundation (PSF)[1], is working to make free and open source software available to local libraries so it can be checked out and used just like a book or video. The premise is simple: hand out one CD and maybe you've taught one person; make it available in a library and perhaps you'll reach hundreds or thousands. Future plans call for the PSF plans to increase the number of software titles it offers, but currently it provides four Linux distributions -- Edubuntu, Fedora, Knoppix, and Ubuntu -- and the Open Office.org office suite. http://www.linux.com/feature/134393

[1] http://publicsoftwarefoundation.org/

Meeting Summaries

Community Council

  • Meeting 2008/05/06:
    • Recent problems in the Ubuntu IRC world were discussed with members of the Ubuntu Community, members of the IRC Council, members of the Freenode staff.
    • Core issues that were identified and possible solutions that were pointed out:
      • Unacceptable behaviour by some ops was complained about and everybody agreed that the Ubuntu Code of Conduct should be upheld, especially by leaders of the community.
      • The team of Ubuntu Ops is understaffed.
      • More regular IRC Council meetings
      • More transparency about escalation processes.
    • The advertisement of the ##ubuntu-uncensored channel was discussed.

    • The IRC Council was asked to deal with the complaints about the IRSeek service first.

MOTU Council

  • Established the Universe Contributors launchpad group, allowing separation of the grant of Ubuntu Membership from the grant of Ubuntu Developer.
  • Recommended Till Kamppeter for Ubuntu Core Developer
  • Recommended Jamie Strandboge for Ubuntu Core Developer
  • Rick Clark (a.k.a. dendrobates on IRC) is the newest addition to the MOTU team. Rick is also the technical lead of the Ubuntu Server team. https://launchpad.net/~dendrobates

  • MC 'Call' May 7th 2008:
  • MC 'Call' May 14th 2008:
    • Existing discussion of ubuntu-bugs@ thread regarding use of Malone for workflow bugs highlighted for focus at UDS
    • Review of updated MC reporting practices (Team Report + Email report)

Full Circle Magazine

  • Unfortunately Matthew Rossi no longer has the time to devote to the podcast so the podcast is now defunct.
  • #13 is finished its second round of proof-reading and the marketing preview will be sent out on Monday 26th with release date set at Friday 30th May.
  • #11 in both Chinese traditional and simplified, and #11 Italian are up for download.
  • Robert Clipsham has had to devote some of his time to real-life 'stuff' so as of #14 will hand over his Q&A section to Tommy Alsemgeest.

  • The Brazilian magazine Command.com (which covers both Windows and Linux) has asked if they could include some issues of FCM on their cover CD which we have of course agreed to.
  • We always welcome new articles especially My Opinion, My Story and/or Reviews.

Upcoming Meetings and Events

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

EMEA Ubuntu Membership Approval Board Meeting

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Platform Team Meeting

  • Start: 06:00 UTC
  • End: 07:00 UTC
  • Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
  • Agenda: Not Listed as of Publication

Launchpad users meeting

Server Team Meeting

Americas Ubuntu Membership Approval Board Meeting

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Desktop Team Meeting

Friday, May 30, 2008

MOTU Meeting

Updates and Security for 6.06, 7.04, 7.10, and 8.04

Security Updates

Ubuntu 6.06 Updates

Ubuntu 7.04 Updates

Ubuntu 7.10 Updates

Ubuntu 8.04 Updates

Archives and RSS Feed

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

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

Additional Ubuntu News

As always you can find more news and announcements at:

and

Conclusion

Thank you for reading the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter.

See you next week!

Credits

The Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter is brought to you by:

  • Nick Ali
  • John Crawford
  • Isabelle Duchatelle
  • Craig A. Eddy
  • And many others

Glossary of Terms

  1. ISO - International Standards Organization
  2. OOXML - Microsoft's Office Open eXtensible Markup Language

Feedback

If you would like to submit an idea or story you think is worth appearing on the UWN, please send them to ubuntu-marketing-submissions@lists.ubuntu.com. 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. If you have any technical support questions, please send then ubuntu-users@lists.ubuntu.com.

UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Issue92 (last edited 2008-08-06 17:00:49 by localhost)