Issue9

Differences between revisions 12 and 13
Revision 12 as of 2006-08-10 05:00:03
Size: 6074
Editor: S0106000fb085cc63
Comment: add projects, very rought
Revision 13 as of 2006-08-12 23:44:16
Size: 5309
Editor: S0106000fb085cc63
Comment: add stuff of SoC
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 14: Line 14:
== Preparing for the 6.06 point release == == The 6.06 point release ==
Line 16: Line 16:
Colin Watson and the rest of the Ubuntu Development Team have been preparing for the upcoming Ubuntu 6.06.1 point release. This is a first of what is likely to be several security and updates rollups that are going to be released during the 6.06 support lifecycle. If you are already running 6.06, there is no need to download this and install it, as your machine should already have all the security and updates already installed. This is a good time to make certain you are getting security updates... Colin Watson and the rest of the Ubuntu Development Team have prepared and released for the upcoming Ubuntu 6.06.1 point release. This is a first of what is likely to be several security and updates rollups that are going to be released during the 6.06 support lifecycle. If you are already running 6.06, there is no need to download this and install it, as your machine should already have all the security and updates already installed. This is a good time to make certain you are getting security updates...
Line 47: Line 47:
Aside from the 6.06.1 point release, there were no updates to 6.06 this week.
Line 49: Line 51:
Ubuntu was awarded 22 projects as part of Google's Summer of Code. We covered two last week, but here is the lastest information about how the projects are going: Ubuntu was awarded 22 projects as part of Google's Summer of Code. We covered two last week, but here is the lastest information about how two more projects are doing:
Line 51: Line 53:
On-screen keyboard targeted at tablets by Chris Jones '''Consiel''', a GNOME Launchpad front-end by Ploum: This application has been hit 0.1 and can read bugs. More information can be found on his blog at http://ploum.frimouvy.org/?116-conseil-01-grand-canal
Line 53: Line 55:
Add LVM support to Kubuntu Installer by Armindo Manuel sampaio da Silva

A Decent GUI for SAMBA/Easy Network setup by camille percy

Simple Programming Application by Gregory Cignavitch

Source Control Plugin for Gedit by Brian Davis

Ubuntu Welcome Center by Parag M. Baxi: Development has moved to [http://code.google.com/p/ubuntu-welcome-center/ Ubuntu Welcome Center] with a public Subversion repository.

Safety Boat by Anselmo Lacerda Silveira de Melo

Applications to improve Ubuntu by Peter Moberg

KDE formating tool by Mickael Minarie

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

GLaunchpad : GNOME Launchpad front-end by Dricot Lionel

Submit merge requests by email by Hermann Kraus

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

Google Calendar Desklet by Teresa Thomas

Kubuntu OEM Redistribution Tools by Anirudh Ramesh

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

XGL-based screen magnifier by Sven Jaborek

willow-ng proxy and content filter by Travis Watkins: see [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Issue8 Issue 8], nothing new

KControl/KDE-guidance module for Wine by Yuriy Kozlov, mentored by Simon Brett Edwards

Migration Assistant by Evan Dandrea: see [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Issue8 Issue 8], nothing new

Incremental Updates for Debian Packages by Felix Feyertag

Network Authentication by Andrew Mitchell
'''py-education/amenity''' - A testing/quizzing system for Edubuntu by Ryan Rousseau: Formerly pyq, this has expanded to be py-education, a set of educational applications for the GNOME desktop, much as KDE-edu is for KDE. There are currently two applications being worked on, Amenity, an activity management system and Quizzical, a quiz management system. Both of these have had several releases. More information can be found at the py-education homepage: http://py-education.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php/Main_Page

WORK IN PROGRESS

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter - Issue #9

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter - Issue #9 for the week of August 6 - 12, 2006.

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

In This Issue

General Community News

The 6.06 point release

Colin Watson and the rest of the Ubuntu Development Team have prepared and released for the upcoming Ubuntu 6.06.1 point release. This is a first of what is likely to be several security and updates rollups that are going to be released during the 6.06 support lifecycle. If you are already running 6.06, there is no need to download this and install it, as your machine should already have all the security and updates already installed. This is a good time to make certain you are getting security updates...

Welcoming Jono Bacon, the new Ubuntu community manager

With the exit of Jeff Waugh comes the entrance of Jono Bacon, recently hired by Canonical to be the Ubuntu Community Manager. (community manager, prononuced koo-moon-ity man-ager, it is Swahili for "herder of felines"). While we here at UWN are not quite sure what he is going to be doing, we are pleased to have him aboard. He has impeccable credientals, working on such high-brow shows as Lugradio and such software as Jokosher, which has been in use for literally ages.

Educating Ubuntu users and developers

Upcoming MOTU School Session

Have you always wanted to learn about development in Ubuntu?

Now you can enter the world of packaging and development in Ubuntu with this IRC lecture on "Ubuntu packaging basics" presented by raging Ubuntu-aholic MOTU [https://launchpad.net/people/mantha/ JordanMantha (LaserJock)], to be held at [http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/fixedtime.html?year=2006&month=8&day=11&hour=01&min=0&sec=0 August 11 01:00 UTC] in #ubuntu-motu-school on irc.freenode.net.

More information is available at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MOTU/School

Security Updates

USN-333-1 libwmf vulnerability http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-333-1

New Apps in Edgy

The ever busy Sebastian Bacher and Daniel Holbach, the former described by the GNOME hackers as sebuild (a play on their jhbuild, which is used to build bleeding edge GNOME) have finished uploading GNOME 2.15.91, otherwise known as Beta 2. GNOME 2.16, of which these are the betas, is scheduled to be release on September 6th.

Chuck Short has been busy packaging Xen for Ubuntu and has recently uploaded support for amd64.

Don't forget quick installation notes, instructions for enabling extra repositories, using g-a-i when possible, etc...

Updates to 6.06 LTS

Aside from the 6.06.1 point release, there were no updates to 6.06 this week.

Summer of Code Updates

Ubuntu was awarded 22 projects as part of Google's Summer of Code. We covered two last week, but here is the lastest information about how two more projects are doing:

Consiel, a GNOME Launchpad front-end by Ploum: This application has been hit 0.1 and can read bugs. More information can be found on his blog at http://ploum.frimouvy.org/?116-conseil-01-grand-canal

py-education/amenity - A testing/quizzing system for Edubuntu by Ryan Rousseau: Formerly pyq, this has expanded to be py-education, a set of educational applications for the GNOME desktop, much as KDE-edu is for KDE. There are currently two applications being worked on, Amenity, an activity management system and Quizzical, a quiz management system. Both of these have had several releases. More information can be found at the py-education homepage: http://py-education.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php/Main_Page

Ubuntu specific news

Kubuntu specific news

Edubuntu specific news

Xubuntu specific news

Bug Stats

New Bugs: # BR Closed Bugs: #

Upcoming meetings

Various groups and teams in the Ubuntu community hold meetings on a regular basis. These meetings are held in #ubuntu-meeting on irc.freenode.org and are open all. A complete schedule can also be found in that channel or on the [http://fridge.ubuntu.com Fridge calendar]

The Ubuntu Development team has a meeting scheduled for

The Kubuntu Development team has a meeting scheduled for

The Edubuntu team has a meeting scheduled for

In The Press

Feature Of The Week - ???

Additional News Resources

As always you can find more news and announcements at:

and

Conclusion

Thank you for reading the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter. See you next week!

Credits

The Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter is brought to you by:

  • Corey Burger
  • Matt Galvin
  • Jerome Gotangco
  • Jonathan Riddell
  • And many others of the Ubuntu Documentation and Marketing teams

Feedback

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

UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Issue9 (last edited 2008-08-06 16:59:41 by localhost)