| From: |
| Amber Graner <akgraner-AT-ubuntu.com> |
| To: |
| ubuntu-news-AT-lists.ubuntu.com |
| Subject: |
| Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #203 |
| Date: |
| Tue, 27 Jul 2010 22:57:42 -0400 |
| Message-ID: |
| <AANLkTikbBvEVRweWKRTmj=wzomc2LkkJUwtDrzPW7Z2H@mail.gmail.com> |
| Archive-link: |
| Article, Thread
|
Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue 203 for the week July
18th - July 24th, 2010.
== In This Issue ==
* Last call for Maverick server papercuts
* Ubuntu Maverick open for translation
* Native readers: extending the Beta
* MOTU Interview: Maia Kozheva (sikon / LucidFox)
* An Interview With Silver Fox
* Ubuntu Developer Week Re-Cap
* Ubuntu Stats
* Approval and Re Approval Process
* LoCo Council July Meeting minutes
* Delivering the Ubuntu Colombia Contact
* Stepping Down from Ubuntu Bangladesh
* Dun Laoghaire July Geeknic
* Ubuntu-fr at Les Vieilles Charrues
* Launchpad News
* Ubuntu at Non-Technical Events
* More cleansweep.
* Discussion request: multilingual posts on Planet Ubuntu or not?
* The Official Ubuntu Book - 5th Edition
* This week in design - 23 July 2010
* Getting Started with Ubuntu 10.04 is now available in Greek!
* How to Ask Smart Questions by Martin Owens
* Ubuntu One iphone client, source code released
* Ubuntu Translation Teams Healthcheck
* An invitation to join Ubuntu's Q&A group on Shapado.com
* Akademy 30 second interviews, Eben Moglen, Helsinki, Prague
* "Blog about what you're doing"
* Bugs vs Blueprints
* In The Press
* In The Blogosphere
* Windows or Ubuntu?
* Linux Box To Market Ubuntu
* Dell drops Ubuntu PCs from website... for now
* Is Linux Too Much for One Mere Mortal to Handle?
* Rackspace's Risky Open Cloud Bet
* Featured Podcasts
* Weekly Ubuntu Development Team Meetings
* Upcoming Meetings and Events
* Updates and Security
* and much much more!
== General Community News ==
=== Last call for Maverick server papercuts ===
Thierry Carrez sends out this reminder:
The last of our Server papercuts iterations will soon start, so it is
now your last chance to nominate that annoyance that hindered your
Server experience ! Nominations for the beta iteration will end on
August 1st. Remember the steps:
1. If nobody filed a bug about it yet, just file one.
2. Look up the bug you want to nominate as a Server papercut, then
click on "Also affects project"
3. Click "Choose another project" and type in "server-papercuts",
click "Continue"
4. Click on "Add to Bug report"
Remember the guidelines:
* Bug affects a server package
* Bug has an obvious and easy fix
* Bug makes the life of the sysadmin more miserable
* Bug is not a new feature (since we'll be after Feature Freeze at that point)
As of today we only have 3 candidates for 12 open slots. So there is
plenty of room for yours ! Thanks for your help in making the Ubuntu
Server experience more (fit and) polished.
For more information on how you can help with papercuts go to:
http://fnords.wordpress.com/2010/07/23/last-call-papercuts/
=== Ubuntu Maverick open for translation ===
David Planella sends out the call for translations to begin on
Maverick in this post:
I'm pleased to announce that Ubuntu Maverick is now open for translation:
Remember that according to the release schedule translatable messages
might be subject to change until the User Interface Freeze on the 26th
of August.
During the Maverick development cycle, language packs containing the
translations are generally released twice per week. This way you can
see and test the results of the translations more frequently.
That's it, happy translating!
For more information on how you can get involved with translating
Maverick got to:
http://davidplanella.wordpress.com/2010/07/23/ubuntu-mave...
=== Native readers: extending the Beta ===
It is time to extend the Ubuntu Font Beta Testing.
We need to make sure that the Ubuntu font is being fully exercised
beyond the English language and I do not want to rely on accidental
incidents but rather explicitly add people from the translations teams
for various languages (and alphabets).
Today we have started adding language teams so, if your team gets an
email from us, we need your help!
For more information on how you can help go to:
http://design.canonical.com/?p=6001
=== MOTU Interview: Maia Kozheva (sikon / LucidFox) ===
Take a moment to learn more about MOTU Maia Kozheva aka Lucidfox in
this interview by Daniel Holbach. Maia answers the following
questions and more:
How long have you used Linux and what was your first distro?
How long have you been using Ubuntu?
When did you get involved with the MOTU team and how?
What helped you learn packaging and how Ubuntu teams work?
To find out the answers to these questions and more go to:
http://fridge.ubuntu.com/node/2088
=== An Interview With Silver Fox ===
Joe Barker interviews Silver Fox. Here is what Joe had to say in his
introduction - So, it is without further ado that I introduce my next
victim guest. Silver Fox is generally a quiet member of the Ubuntu
Beginners Team, but does good work within said team which goes -
largely - unnoticed. I thought it would be appropriate to try and
bring these to light for others to see.
Joe asks the following questions:
* Tell as much as you're willing about your "real life" like name,
age, gender, location, family, religion, profession, education,
hobbies, etc.
* When and how did you become interested in computers? in Linux? in Ubuntu?
* When did you become involved in the forums (or the Ubuntu
community)? What's your role there?
* Are you an Ubuntu member? If so, how do you contribute? If not, do
you plan on becoming one?
To find out how Silver Fox answers these questions and more go to:
http://fridge.ubuntu.com/node/2087
=== Ubuntu Developer Week Re-Cap ===
Did you miss Ubuntu Developer Week? No Problem below is a link and
description to the sessions.
* Day 1
* 16:00 UTC - 18:00 UTC:
[[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/GetStarted|Getting Started With
Development]] (dholbach): This two-hour session was one of the most
action-packed sessions I ever ran. So many great questions, so much
fun and so much topics covered. Thanks a lot everybody. We managed to
set up an initial Ubuntu development environment, talk about Ubuntu
development processes and Ubuntu in the bigger picture. In the second
part we had a look at a couple of packages that fail to build and
succeeded in fixing a few of them. Awesome!
* 18:00 UTC - 19:00 UTC:
[[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/Widgets|Widgetcraft]] (apachelogger): Next
up was Harald Sitter who did a great job explaining how to write KDE
widgets by using the Plasmoid infrastructure. Lots of real-life
examples, lots of excitement and slides for your reading pleasure.
* 19:00 UTC - 20:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/Desktop|Desktop
Team Overview]] (seb128): Sébastien Bacher did a great presentation of
what's going on in the Desktop Team and how you can help out. Maybe we
should have an additional "Ask Séb" session, next time. Heaps and
heaps of interested Desktop people kept him quite busy.
* 20:00 UTC - 21:00 UTC:
[[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/UpstartJobs|Authoring Upstart Jobs]]
(slangasek): Last on day 1 was Steve Langasek who dived deep into
Upstart's features and how to make best use of them. I foresee lots
and lots of good use made of it.
* Day 2
* 16:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/PackageNinja|Packaging Like A
Ninja]] (shadeslayer): Rohan Garg brought a lot of fun to UDW by
teaching us all how things work in the Kubuntu team. If I counted
correctly he even handed out three orange ninja belts.
* 17:00 UTC: «I Don't Know Anything About Translations» (dpm): By
the looks of it, David Planella managed to resolve the problem of not
knowing very very well. He gave an excellent overview over
translations and how to work with them and answered what felt like a
thousand questions.
* 18:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/QtQuickQml|Developing With Qt
Quick and QML]] (Riddell): As a seasoned KDE-hacker Jonathan Riddell
knows what's going on in the KDE and Qt world and which technologies
get you good results quickly. He gave great insight into making your
KDE apps rock very easily.
* 19:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/WorkDebian|How To Work With
Debian]] (Laney and Rhonda): Wow, what a great session. I'm
particularly excited to see people from Debian and Ubuntu collaborate
like that and see that much interest in getting the most out of our
work for both projects. Great session, lots of info, lots of good
questions.
* 20:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/Validation|Setting Up A Small
Validation Dashboard]] (zyga): The last session of the day was held by
Zygmunt Krynicki who presented an interesting way to see how low-level
changes affect the whole system and measure performance. The questions
indicate that there's a deep interest in solving this problem across
the board.
* Day 3
* 16:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/CleansweepReview|Operation
Cleansweep And Reviewing Patches]] (nigelb and bobbo): Nigel Babu is
spearheading an initiative which has the goal that there's no
unreviewed patches left by the end of it. To achieve that we set up a
process that's very easy to follow and involves QA people, Ubuntu
developers, Upstream and Debian developers. Nigel and David Futcher
did a fantastic job talking about the effort. Make sure you join in on
the fun!
* 17:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/Upstreaming|Forwarding Bugs
And Patches Upstream]] (pedro_ and nigelb): Pedro Villavicencio
Garrido is one of the best people to talk about evaluating bug reports
and patches and being in touch with loads and loads of upstream
developers about them and thus forwarding valuable information to
software authors. His session was very informative, up to the point
and it seems like there's going to be even more people hanging out in
#ubuntu-bugs soon.
* 18:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/DailyBuilds|Daily Builds And
You]] (jcastro and dholbach): Jorge Castro and I talked about Daily
Builds afterwards. This is a very exciting new technology in Launchpad
that is currently in Beta stage. If you want up-to-date software you
care about out there and users using and testing it, read the log. I
think Jorge and I were sounding something between a comedy duo and an
old couple every now and then - I hope you forgive us.
* 19:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/AppIndicators|Make Your
Applications Shine With Application Indicators]] (tedg): Ted Gould has
been working on indicators in the panel for quite a while now and it
was great to have him around to explain what's going on and how to
make best use of the technology. If your heart beats for Desktop
stuff, you wrote a Desktop application or just want to know what's
going on and how things are evolving, make sure you check out the log.
* 20:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/KernelTriage|Kernel Triage]]
(JFo): Imagine there's millions of users using all kinds of different
hardware. Imagine there's failure reports or some kind of hardware not
working exactly. How do you deal with the feedback of those users?
This is exactly that Jeremy Foshee talked about. As you can imagine
there's a lot of lessons the Kernel team learned already and lots of
experience that went into the session. If you like all things hardware
and want to give Jeremy a hand, be sure to check out the log.
* Day 4
* 16:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/QuicklyApp|Create An
Application For Ubuntu With Quickly]] (didrocks): What a great and
action-packed session it was! Didier Roche explained how to create
apps without a fuss and how Quickly makes clever decisions for you, so
you have to worry less. Seems like he was very happy about the session
himself, the audience even forgave him to try to make French the
official language of Ubuntu Development.
* 17:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/ImproveUbuntu|Improving
Ubuntu In An Evening]] (vish): Vishnoo did a great job explaining the
Hundred Papercuts project and what it is about. Participation was
great and I can already see lots of people getting involved in the
project. It indeed is a great way to improve Ubuntu in an evening.
* 18:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/ServerPapercuts|Contribute To
Ubuntu Server, Do Server Papercuts]] (ttx): Thierry Carrez was up next
and his session about Server Papercuts was a great follow up to the
Hundred Papercuts session. If you're interested in server stuff, like
making things work again, read up the session log. He explained quite
well who to talk to, how to get in touch with the same and make Ubuntu
servers rock even harder.
* 19:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/Xubuntu|How To Help With
Xubuntu]] (charlie-tca): As Xubuntu project lead, Charlie Kravetz has
a lot of insight into Xubuntu and XFCE. Heaps of good questions, lots
of interest in Xubuntu made the session fly by quickly. If you're
interested, get in touch with Charlie!
* 20:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/MergeProposals|Merge
Proposals: Life On The Sunny Side]] (beuno/mhall119): Unfortunately
Martin Albisetti got ill and could not give the session, but luckily
Michael Hall jumped in to run a Q&A session on merge proposals. We
might repeat the session in a few weeks. Stay tuned.
* Day 5
* 16:00 - 18:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/Django|Django And
You]] (mhall119): First up was Michael Hall, who had booked a double
session about Django goodness and brings in quite a bit of experience
on the topic. He did a great job explaining the concepts behind
Django, how to set up a basic project, lots of tips and tricks and
what I liked best: he plugged the LoCo Directory a couple of times.
Hope you'll get interested and see how great Django is and how much
fun projects like the Loco Directory are.
* 18:00 - 19:00 UTC:
[[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/AdoptUpstrean|Adopt-An-Upstream]] (jcastro):
Jorge was the best possible person to talk about one of the most
awesome projects we have in the Ubuntu landscape: the essence of
Adopt-An-Upstream is to be a tie between the Ubuntu project and others
projects: you take on real responsibility by sharing information, by
helping others making informed decisions and improve Ubuntu in a very
real sense. Great session!
* 19:00 - 20:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/Edubuntu|How To Help
With Edubuntu]] (highvoltage): I'm glad we had Jonathan Carther with
us who talked about Edubuntu, how it's set up, how the team works and
what the plans for the future are. Great!
* 20:00 - 21:00 UTC: [[MeetingLogs/devweek1007/QA|Me, myself and
QA]] (warp10, gaspa): Last sesion of the day and of whole UDW was
about how to help with Quality Assurance in Ubuntu: basically making
packages rock harder. Easy tasks, how to find them, what various terms
like NBS mean, was all part of the session. Thanks a lot to the Ubuntu
Italian Mafia Famiglia (no that name is not my invention ).
For more information on Ubuntu Developer Week go to:
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuDeveloperWeek
== Ubuntu Stats ==
=== Bug Stats ===
* Open (77847) +252 over last week
* Critical (31) +2 over last week
* Unconfirmed (37115) +158 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 Lucid ===
1. English (United Kingdom) (0) +/-0 over last week
2. Spanish (8917) -98 over last week
3. Brazilian Portuguese (34603) -37 over last week
4. French (38230) +/-0 over last week
5. German (54272) -21 over last week
Remaining strings to translate in Ubuntu 10.04 "Lucid Lynx", see more
at: https://translations.launchpad.net/ubuntu/lucid/
=== Ubuntu Brainstorm Top 5 this week ===
* Is difficult to see Ubuntu One sync progress -
http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/25417/
* There is still no user-friendly and solid way to backup your system
and MBR - http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/25425/
* USB Modem installation - using a Wizard -
http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/25406/
* Intelligent input for mail addresses -
http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/25423/
* Outbound traditional marketing Ubuntu the right way -
http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/25424/
Ubuntu Brainstorm is a community site geared toward letting you add
your ideas for Ubuntu. You can submit your own idea, or vote for or
against another idea. http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/
== LoCo News ==
=== Approval and Re Approval Process ===
Laura Czajkowski of the Ubuntu LoCo Council writes about the approval
and re approval process in this blog post.
I've had some time recently to review a lot of wiki applications for
LoCos. It is truly amazing the amount of work some teams do and is a
great source of ideas to try for other teams.
With that said, I've also seen some wiki pages which are less than
clear on what the team is doing which makes it very hard to judge. So
I thought I'd put down some best practices to make it clearer what is
expected.
So firstly let's recap:
The LoCo Council has been tasked with identifying Approved LoCo teams
which were approved over 2 years ago and thus are due for re-approval.
The criteria for re approval is the same as for approval which is
outlined on the getting approved instructions and the LoCo Council
guidelines can be found at the team approval guidelines.
It should be noted that from the day your LoCo is approved, you should
continue to document all events and history of your LoCo for this re
approval process to make it clear and visible to all.
Now it is safe to say some teams do not continue documenting their
work so when it comes to re approval time it's panic stations, all
hands on deck! Things you can do to help elevate this are the
following
* Use the LoCo Directory to log all of your events it will make it
easier to write up about them and possibly in the future link to past
events
* MONTHLY Reports folks, only a handful of teams use them and there
are more teams there that SHOULD be writing monthly reports, list your
IRC meeting, any real life meet up, projects people are working on in
relation to Ubuntu.
* Take photos of your events it'll help in the long run, assign
someone at each event to take photos and even create a gallery in one
place to link to them
When it comes to the creation of the Application be it for Approval or
ReApproval it's the same thing just NAMED DIFFERENTLY. You just need
to document it. LOTS OF DETAILS PLEASE! We'd rather have too much then
not enough details as the meeting is short and we have a lot of teams
to get through.
To read more about the LoCo approval and re approval process go to:
http://www.lczajkowski.com/?p=793
=== LoCo Council July Meeting minutes ===
The LoCo Council meets on the 3rd Tuesday of the month to re approval
and approve LoCo Teams. The meeting is open to everyone, not just
teams that are going through the process. We encourage others to come
and learn how the process is done but to also ask questions.
This months meeting summary:
* LoCo Team {re}approvals
* Ubuntu-RO - Nobody present for application - Council taking it to
mailing list instead
* Ubuntu-US-MA - Not re-approved
* Ubuntu-IT - Re-approved
* Ubuntu-FR - Re-approved
* Ubuntu-GR - Re-approved
* Ubuntu-EG - Abstained
* Ubuntu-NL - Abstained
* For those LoCo teams that were not re-approved, or for which the
LoCo council could not reach agreement, the council agreed to work
with the LoCo teams to help them get re-approved.
For more information go to:
http://www.lczajkowski.com/?p=790
=== Delivering the Ubuntu Colombia Contact ===
Last Monday (July 19th) at the Ubuntu Colombia Council meeting, i've
passed the role of Ubuntu Colombia LoCo Team Contact and Administrator
to Andres Mujica. Since February 21st 2008, I was put in charge of
Ubuntu Colombia by Fabian Rodríguez when our Community presented
itself as Official Comunity at the LoCo Council.
By now, I believe that i fullfilled a complete cycle on my Contact
duty for the Ubuntu Colombia community. A lot of goals, plans,
proyects and personal objectives were accomplished hand to hand with
the Community and now is time for new members of Ubuntu Colombia take
the shot for the Contact role, new members with much more time,
willingness and dedication to accomplish a lot more things that i
could have done until now.
I'm not going away from the Team, I'll be working harder than ever as
an active member, supporting all the projects I'm working on within
Ubuntu Colombia.
I'm wishing the best of the lucks to Andrés on his new role and a lot
of success to become in order to fulfill our LoCo Team goals.
It's important for me to let you all now about our Reapproval wiki at
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ColombianTeam/TeamReApproval2010, in this wiki
all the activities and grow that our community has experienced are
shown. And thanks to Colombian community for their support on this.
For more information and to read the full post by Hollman Enciso go to:
http://www.hollmanenciso.com/en/content/delivering-the-ub...
=== Stepping Down from Ubuntu Bangladesh ===
Ubuntu Bangladesh was formed in 28th April 2006, more than 4 years ago
with the vision to create a solid platform for Ubuntu users and
contributors in Bangladesh. We're the official local community team in
Bangladesh, recognised by Ubuntu Community Council and Ubuntu's
sponsor Canonical Ltd. It's been a long journey, and I'm really glad
that with all of your help, support, and contributions we've been able
to achieve most of our major goals.
I've been working as the team leader of Ubuntu Bangladesh throughout
these years, and I've decided to step down and hand over the team
leadership to two of our very active volunteers, Shahriar Tariq and
Shabab Mustafa. They have made a tremendous contribution for our team,
for Ubuntu, and for Linux as a whole, and I strongly believe that
Ubuntu Bangladesh will prosper even more under their new leadership
and vision.
I'll still be around, will help to administer our Launchpad page,
mailing list, IRC channel, and our site.
Thanks to each and everyone who've helped me throughout the years,
thank you for your never-ending support! Long live Linux, long live
Ubuntu!
For more information go to:
http://russelljohn.net/journal/2010/07/stepping-down-from...
=== Dun Laoghaire July Geeknic ===
Laura Czajkowski writes about another successful Geeknic.
It went ahead even if it was a miserable wet and windy? Summers day!
At least the rain held for the time we all met up and had some lovely
food from the farmers market. Well worth going to if you are in the
area. 1st Sunday of the month there is a farmers market in people's
park in Dun Laoghaire.
Thanks to those who came along and braved the cold it was nice to meet
some new folks as well and exchange some ideas and thoughts on Ubuntu
and Open Souce and what people were doing. Big thanks to Jeffrey to
organised the Geeknic also!
To find more about the Geeknic as well as see photos from the event go to:
http://www.lczajkowski.com/?p=800
=== Ubuntu-fr at Les Vieilles Charrues ===
Les Vieilles Charrues had their festival on the 15th, 16th, 17th and
18th of July this year, and invited us to hold a webcafe on Ubuntu. It
was a pleasure to take over from olive who had organised everything
but couldn't attend this event. We took over in the webcafe with the
valued help of kinouchou, Lust, Snip and spineaker, and with the two
Eric from Infothema, Didier from Linux MAO, and Julia, Sonny and Kevin
from Mozilla. Olive was with us all the time online to monitor the
computers and guide us.
This webcafe for the festival-goers was the space where they can check
their mails, their facebook account, twit or do everything they want
on internet. We haven't put any restrictions, only no saving of the
history and the passwords on firefox. For the same reasons, we haven't
configured Ubuntu to let people try it. We only made a custom start
page for Firefox.
To find out more about Ubuntu-fr at Les Vieilles Charrues and to read
the post in full go to:
http://blog.yoboy.fr/post/2010/07/Ubuntu-fr-at-Les-Vieill...
== Launchpad News ==
=== Testing new designs on Launchpad users ===
Matthew Revell writes about testing new designs on Launchpad users.
Recently, I've been working with Charline, from Canonical's design
team, to talk to Launchpad's users about how Launchpad fits into their
work and what they think of new features we're planning.
You may have seen my requests for participants on identi.ca and Twitter
In the past, someone working on a new, or improved, feature would
mock-up some ideas and post them to ourdevelopment mailing list. A
good discussion would result but often, not always, people who use
Launchpad, rather than develop it, wouldn't see the implementation
until it was available in their browsers.
Sometimes, this meant that minor, avoidable, mistakes were made. Other
times it meant that somewhat eccentric workflows made it into
production and dampened the impact of what was, otherwise, a cool new
feature.
To read more about these efforts go to:
http://blog.launchpad.net/?p=1638
== The Planet ==
=== Alan Pope: Ubuntu at Non-Technical Events ===
We seem to be quite good at turning up to technical events such as LUG
meetings, technical conferences and other self-organised events and
telling everyone how great Ubuntu is. However we seem to spend a lot
of time preaching to the converted, speaking to people who already run
Ubuntu or some other distro, rather than ?converting' people who have
little or no exposure to Ubuntu.
Amber Graner recently wrote about her experience evangelising and
advocating at a local Goat Festival. She was also interviewed about
this on the Full Circle Magazine podcast recently.
When I heard about this it made me think that it's something we should
think about. Not specifically Goat festivals, but non-technical
events. I wanted to canvass the group to see what events people might
want to have a presence at. I'm not (at this point) asking for
volunteers, but just ideas of events where people go and we might be
able to have a stand where we could talk to people about Ubuntu and
how they might want to use it.
To find out more information and how you can present Ubuntu at
Non-Technical events go to:
http://popey.com/blog/?p=1114
=== Jorge Castro: More cleansweep. ===
Here's the status for this week, as we continue to grind through
patches from contributors. 2 patches that need more work, 12 forwaded
upstream, 2 to Debian, and one patch accepted (and one rejected) by an
upstream.
Wanna help? https://wiki.ubuntu.com/OperationCleansweep
* Total bugs with patches: 2263 (0)
* Reviewed patches: 347 (+16)
* Bugs with ?patch-needswork': 88 (+2)
* Bugs with ?patch-forwarded-upstream': 145 (+12)
* Bugs with ?patch-forwarded-debian': 43 (+2)
* Bugs with ?indicator-application': 44 (0)
* Bugs with ?patch-accepted-upstream': 48 (+1)
* Bugs with ?patch-accepted-debian': 13 (0)
* Bugs with ?patch-rejected-upstream': 16 (+1)
* Bugs with ?patch-rejected-debian': 1 (0)
http://castrojo.tumblr.com/post/831814104
=== Sense Hofstede: Discussion request: multilingual posts on Planet
Ubuntu or not? ===
To keep in spirit with the content that has appeared on Planet Ubuntu
the last few days I would like to start a discussion about
multilingual content on Planet Ubuntu.
I started to wonder about the use and desirableness of non-English
posts on Planet Ubuntu after a commentfrom LoCo Council member Laura
Czajkowski on my blog post Realise native English speakers are
privileged. She said: We have many ubuntu members who do not post on
planet.ubuntu.com as they feel it has to be in English which is
unfortunate as I'd love to read them - we all can use a web
translator.
That is something I personally agree with. I see Planet Ubuntu as a
window into the general Ubuntu community, not necessarily just the
English speaking part of it. After all, when you want
language-specific content your LoCo can always provide their own
Planet.
To read the full post go to:
http://sensehofstede.nl/?p=573
=== Joe Barker: The Official Ubuntu Book - 5th Edition ===
I received my copy of the new Ubuntu book on Monday. Happy times! I
have Matthew Helmke to thank for the copy of the book as well. I guess
at this point, I should point out that I was asked to review said
book.
From what I read, the book can prove incredibly useful to newcomers,
and old-timers alike. I really do think it's well written, helpful,
and I would quite happily recommend it to anybody looking for a book
on Ubuntu. Not to mention, the book is compact (much thinner, but
equally as full as, some other Ubuntu books I own), and very
stylish?that's my opinion of course?but I think this book would look
quite the part sitting on anybody's bookshelf.
For more information go to:
http://blog.joeb454.com/?p=441
=== Canonical Design Team: This week in design - 23 July 2010 ===
This week's summaries include:
* Stoked about The Stack!
* Ubuntu development
* The Ubuntu font
* Guidelines
* Could you walk for 24hrs?
To find out more go to:
http://design.canonical.com/2010/07/this-week-in-design-2...
=== Benjamin Humphrey: Getting Started with Ubuntu 10.04 is now
available in Greek! ===
Yes, that's right - after a couple of months and many, many delays,
we can finally release the first translated version of Getting Started
with Ubuntu 10.04 in Greek. Hopefully this will pave way for some more
translations to be available in the next few weeks, such as German,
Galician and English UK which are almost completed.
For more information and to see who you can get a copy go to:
http://humphreybc.wordpress.com/?p=973
=== Elizabeth Krumbach: How to Ask Smart Questions by Martin Owens ===
Elizabeth Krumbach takes a closer look at Martin Owens' "How to Ask
Smart Questions."
Here are some of the suggestions Martin has for asking smart(er) questions:
* Research the Problem
* Ask the Right People
* Don't Ask to Ask
* Ask everyone
* Don't Ask When Busy
* Be Clear
* Include Purpose
* Be Patient
To read more about what Lyz had to say about this guide or to get a
link to Martin's PDF go to:
http://princessleia.com/journal/?p=3248
=== Martin Albisetti's blog: Ubuntu One iphone client, source code released ===
We should have released the source for the iphone client right after
we did the upload to the appstore, but a bunch of bureaucracy and
crazy work deadlines postponed this until now.
We're going to be doing some work for the Ubuntu 10.10 release on the
iphone client as well as on a new Android client, both clients are
going to be open source, like all our other Ubuntu One clients.
We've created the projects on Launchpad, pushed the initial source
code for the iphone client, and will start pushing Android as soon as
we get out of the exploration stage.
The projects are available at:
iphone: https://launchpad.net/ubuntuone-ios-client
android: https://launchpad.net/ubuntuone-android-client
Stay tuned for more on our new mobile services!
http://beuno.com.ar/archives/205
=== David Planella: Ubuntu Translation Teams Healthcheck ===
David Planella updates everyone on the health of the Ubuntu
translation efforts. Here is some of what David had to say:
Some weeks ago I ran the Ubuntu Translation teams healthcheck survey.
The main goal was getting in touch with the teams to have some
feedback on how they were doing, if they needed help in any particular
area and make sure that they were aware of the latest changes in
translation policies. While the results were available on the wiki, I
hadn't had a chance to post a summary.
The summary includes:
* Language info
* Translation team policies
* Translation team workflow
David concludes with the following:
It would have been interesting to compare results with previous data
from a couple of cycles ago, but having been part of it for a long
time now, my feeling is that the Ubuntu Translations community is
developing in the right direction, and I hope that this survey also
serves as a testimonial to show external translation communities how
Ubuntu translators work. The points about the importance of a defined
workflow, team communication, quality assurance and upstream
coordination are most definitely getting across.
Some areas in which we'll have to concentrate is seeing how we can
help those teams that are or have become inactive, better communicate
the Ubuntu translation policies and work with the teams who don't have
translation guidelines to start developing some. I will also go back
to the teams who explicitly asked for help in particular areas.
This has also offered me an invaluable insight on each team and their
current situation and workflow, which will help me working with them
in the future.
Thanks to everyone who took the time to complete it, as the input has
been very valuable to know more about the Ubuntu translations
community.? You allow millions of users to use Ubuntu in their own
language every day, and you truly rock.
To find out more about this translation healthcheck survey go to:
http://davidplanella.wordpress.com/2010/07/21/ubuntu-tran...
=== Fabian Rodriguez: An invitation to join Ubuntu's Q&A group on
Shapado.com ===
This is an invitation to anyone interested in joining a multi-lingual,
freely-licensed Ubuntu Q&A site to check http://ubuntu.shapado.com.
As a disclaimer I should mention that I work at Canonical as a senior
support analyst for Ubuntu support (both desktop and server) and I
also train other people to provide Ubuntu support. I am also the admin
and creator of the Ubuntu group in Shapado (10 months ago). So I
constantly switch my community and professional hats.
I use the Answers system in Launchpad extensively (including its FAQ
facility) but it lacks two big features:
* Non-English language support - also known as "l10n" or
"localization". That would beBug #81419.
* A reputation / trust system
As you can see that bug report is in an odd deadlock. My
interpretation of it is Answers and Launchpad itself were not planned
from the beginning to be multilingual. It's so big now that this can't
be done quickly or easily.
To find out more about more about Fabian's invitation and Shapado.com go to:
http://www.fabianrodriguez.com/blog/2010/07/19/an-invitat...
=== Jonathan Riddell: Akademy 30 second interviews, Eben Moglen,
Helsinki, Prague ===
Jonathan Riddell posts interviews from Akademy. To watch these videos
and to find out more information on this video series go to:
http://www.kdedevelopers.org/node/4284
=== Jorge Castro: "Blog about what you're doing" ===
In this post Jorge challenges everyone to blog about what they are
doing in the Ubuntu Community to help deliver a great product. Here
is what Jorge had to say:
People have been doing awesome work lately:
* Cody Russell and Neil Patel have been rocking Unity.
* Paul Hummer and Aaron Bentley have been doing amazing work fixing
tons of bugs so that we can offer people an easy way to offer daily
builds.
* Happiness is seeing the LoCo council working with individual teams
through reapproval and the level of detailed work going on there.
I'm going to make an effort to stop blogging about "what I am doing"
and talk about the people who are enabling me to do stuff because I
can't catch them all, but if we think about our team members more we
can collectively tell our story.
Lately I think we've gotten in a collective funk of "here's what I
think about this." followed by "Oh yeah, well here's what I think of
that", and "Allow me to retort!" and then getting stuck in a rabbit
hole of distractions.
So screw that, let's share some stories Like this. And this. And talk
about the people that are inspiring you that enables us to deliver
this stuff to people.
To read more about what Jorge is asking folks to do as well as the
examples he is pointing to go to:
http://castrojo.tumblr.com/post/848936347
=== Monty Taylor: Bugs vs Blueprints ===
In this posting by Monty Taylor he goes over the difference between
bugs and blueprints.
Launchpad has two facilities for filing tasks that need to be done in
a source tree, Bugs and Blueprints. I've spoken to folks who think the
two should be collapsed in to one thing, and folks who think they need
to remain separate. I'm in the latter camp, so I thought I'd weigh in
real quick with a quick explanation of what I think the difference
between the two is. Whether they are fundamentally the same object in
the backend object model is irrelevant to me - I'm talking about
developer workflow and thought.
In my view, it's really simple:
* A Bug is a record of something that needs to be done - the what
* A Blueprint is a record of how something will be done - the how
To read the rest of what Monty had to say on the subject of bugs and
blueprints go to:
http://inaugust.com/post/80
== In The Press ==
=== Why NASA uses Open Source ===
Sean Michael Kerner writes about NASA and how they use Open Source.
Sean writes:
With Billions of dollars and massive technology needs that are
literally out-of-this-world, NASA has a lot of unique computing
requirements. As it turns out, some of those requirements can be
fulfilled by technology that isn't all that different from what
regular enterprises need too.
In order to save the data from distant spacecraft, satellites and
other scientific endeavors, NASA is leveraging open source tech
(including Ubuntu Linux) and regular enterprise networking components
to meet their mission.
I had the privilege of speaking with NASA's CTO for IT Chris Kemp this
week around theOpenStack project in which NASA is participating. Kemp
told me that NASA's Nebula cloud IT environment was built for science
and research and has been optimized for low cost and massive
scalability.
He added that NASA is using KVM on Ubuntu's Lucid LTS. Surprisingly to
me, he noted that NASA isn't paying Canonical for support either at
this point -- NASA is simply using Ubuntu as a freely available
operating system (so no money for Shuttleworth and company, yet)
To read the full post go to:
http://blog.internetnews.com/skerner/2010/07/why-nasa-use...
=== How to get RGBA support in Ubuntu ===
Jack Wallen, TechRepublic reports on how Ubuntu users can get RGBA
support in Ubuntu.
RGBA stands for Red Green Blue Alpha. When applied to the computer
desktop it means a whole world more. It means full-blown transparency
with the ability to control the transparency like never before.
This feature was supposed to make it into Ubuntu 10.04, but because of
some show-stopping issues, it was pulled. It is now slated to make it
into 10.10 and, judging from how well it is working now, it will do
just that.
To read the article in full and to see how you can enable RGBA in Ubuntu go to:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/how-to-get-rgba-support-in-ubunt...
=== Canonical, IBM plunk DB2 databases on Ubuntu ===
Commercial Linux distributor Canonical has won the buzzword bingo for
the week by putting Ubuntu, cloud, and appliance in the same sentence
in announcing a partnership with IBM. It's meant to bring the latter
company's DB2 databases to the latest Ubuntu 10.04 Server Edition
Linux.
The deal has two parts. First, Canonical has taken IBM's DB2 Express-C
database, which is a lightweight relational database with PureXML
integrated XML features like the real DB2 databases, and hardened it
for Ubuntu 10.04 Server Edition and wrapped it all up in a loving
Amazon Machine Image (AMI) format so it can be deployed on Amazon's
Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) utility.
For the full story go to:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/07/21/ibm_canonical_db2...
== In The Blogosphere ==
=== 4 Reasons Every Windows User Should Have An Ubuntu Live CD ===
Justin Pot at makeuseof.com writes the four reasons why every Windows
user ought to have an Ubuntu Live CD:
* Recover data from unbootable systems
* Run memtest
* Find out about your hard drive
* Edit partitions
For explanations of his reasons and other information see:
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/4-reasons-windows-user-ubunt...
=== THE BEST ADVERT FOR UBUNTU YOU PROBABLY NEVER SAW ===
OMG!Ubuntu has a Dell/Ubuntu promotional video that no one ever saw.
For the video see:
http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2010/07/best-advert-for-ubuntu...
=== Seven Ubuntu Derivatives worth Checking Out ===
Jeff Hoogland writes on his blog about seven Ubuntu derivatives he
believes are worth checking out and why.
The list includes:
* Pinguy OS
* Linux Mint
* Zorin
* Lubuntu
* Jolicloud
* Netrunner
* Moon OS
To read more about Jeff's picks or comment on his findings go to:
http://jeffhoogland.blogspot.com/2010/07/seven-ubuntu-der...
=== Will Canonical-IBM Relationship Attract Oracle to Ubuntu? ===
Joe Panettieri, WorksWithU, discusses the expanded relationship
between Canonical and IBM. Joe writes - The latest move involves a
virtual appliance, comprising IBM's DB2 Express-C software running on
the Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud. At first glance the Canonical-IBM
relationship is a nice win for Ubuntu. But perhaps there's a deeper
story angle here? involving Canonical's continued pursuit of Oracle on
Ubuntu. Here's the speculation.
IBM's DB2 has a solid reputation in the database market. DB2 gained
fame on IBM mainframes before carving out a niche for itself on Unix,
Linux and Windows servers. But ultimately, DB2 trails Oracle and
Microsoft's SQL Server in the Linux and Windows server markets,
respectively.
To read the article in full go to:
http://www.workswithu.com/2010/07/22/will-canonical-ibm-r...
=== Firewall Tools for Ubuntu Security ===
Christopher Tozzi, WorksWithU explains Ubuntu Firewall tools in this article.
Tozzi notes in this artlcle - "Does Ubuntu have a firewall, and how do
I turn it on?" is a popular question among new Ubuntu users. The
answer is a bit complicated, but it's an understandable inquiry for
those migrating from the Windows world. WorksWithU addresses that
question below by taking a look at Ubuntu's firewall and some of the
tools available for managing it.
To read the article in full and to find out more about the firewall tools go to:
http://www.workswithu.com/2010/07/19/firewall-tools-for-u...
== In Other News ==
=== Windows or Ubuntu? ===
Dell's European site has a very simple list to compare whether you
should "Choose Ubuntu or Windows", to see the page visit the link
below:
http://www1.euro.dell.com/content/topics/segtopic.aspx/wi...
=== Linux Box To Market Ubuntu ===
Canonical has now joined forces with The Linux Box, a software
consulting firm that customizes open source projects for clients
across a variety of sectors, to sell, install and support customized
Ubuntu-based solutions to organizations running Linux. For the
complete story, read more below:
http://wwj.cbslocal.com/2010/07/21/linux-box-to-market-ub...
=== Dell drops Ubuntu PCs from website... for now ===
A search on Dell's UK website will reveal only one Latitude 2100
laptop in it's business section, apparently Dell has made an attempt
to "simplify their offerings online" and will only be selling laptop's
preloaded with Ubuntu via phone. For the complete story, read below:
http://www.pcpro.co.uk/news/359740/dell-drops-ubuntu-pcs-...
=== Is Linux Too Much for One Mere Mortal to Handle? ===
Katherine Noyes,LinuxInsider, asks, "Is Linux Too Much for One Mere
Mortal to Handle?"
Is it time for Linus Torvalds to share more of the responsibility for
Linux that he's been shouldering? "If Linux wants to keep up with the
competition there is much work to do, more than even a man of Linus's
skill to accomplish," argued Slashdot blogger hairyfeet. "Don't be
fooled that Linus has to scale," countered Robert Pogson. "He has to
work hard, but he is the team captain and doorman."
To read more of what Katherine had to say go to:
http://www.linuxinsider.com/rsstory/70461.html?wlc=128024...
=== Rackspace's Risky Open Cloud Bet ===
Katherine Noyes, LinuxInsider writes, Rackspace Hosting on Monday
announced the launch of OpenStack, an open source cloud platform
designed to foster technology standards and cloud interoperability.
NASA is collaborating on the project. Rackspace is donating the code
that powers its Cloud Files and Cloud Servers public-cloud offerings
to OpenStack, while NASA will provide the technology that powers the
NASA Nebula Cloud Platform. Through joint technology development,
Rackspace and NASA plan to leverage the efforts of open source
software developers worldwide.
For more information and to read Katherine's article in full go to:
http://www.linuxinsider.com/rsstory/70442.html
== Featured Podcasts ==
=== Ubuntu UK Podcast: The Country Fair ===
Laura Cowen, Ciemon Dunville, Tony Whitmore and Alan Pope return with
episode 12 of season 3 of the Ubuntu Podcast from the UK LoCo Team!
In this week's show:-
* We talk about about what we've been doing including ebaying
computer equipment, using DBAN to wipe disks, posing questions on the
HomeCamp Google Group, getting a mention on HomeCamp Podcast as a
result, installing Ubuntu on a MacBookPro Laptop after @daviey helped
fix a bug in the kernel, going cold turkey on holiday.
* We interview Jo Shields (@directhex) about his contributions to
Ubuntu and Debian, Mono, Silverlight and Chinchillas
* In the news:-
* Spotify preview Linux version of their music streaming app
* Google announces AppInventor Android development app
* Linux Mint mulling moving to Debian for upstream
* IBM moves to Firefox as default browser
* We mention some upcoming events:-
* ORGCon - 24th July, London
* Geeknic - 8th August, Hyde Park, London
* SFD - 18th September, All around the world!
* We discuss promotion of Ubuntu at non-technical events
* We mention some Ubuntu related news in the
Gerald/bit-about-Ubuntu/ecosphere:-
* Evan puts the call our for an Ubuntu Stack Exchange site
* The Free Culture Showcase rolls on
* Maverick Meerkat shaping up
* Alfresco Certified for use on Ubuntu
* Dell tell us Ubuntu is great for programmers
* Finally we have your feedback.
. OGG HIGH - http://podcast.ubuntu-uk.org/download/uupc_s03e12_high.ogg
. OGG LOW - http://podcast.ubuntu-uk.org/download/uupc_s03e12_low.ogg
. MP3 HIGH - http://podcast.ubuntu-uk.org/download/uupc_s03e12_high.mp3
. MP3 LOW - http://podcast.ubuntu-uk.org/download/uupc_s03e12_low.mp3
For more information on the Ubuntu UK Podcast go to:
http://podcast.ubuntu-uk.org/?p=1342
== Weekly Ubuntu Development Team Meetings ==
* Ubuntu Desktop Team Meeting Minutes for July 20, 2010 -
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DesktopTeam/Meeting/2010-07-20
* Ubuntu Mobile Team Meeting Minutes from July 20, 1010 -
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MobileTeam/Meeting/2010/20100720
* Ubuntu Server Team Meeting Minutes for July 20, 2010 -
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MeetingLogs/Server/20100720
* Ubuntu Kernel Team Meeting Minutes for July 20, 2010 -
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/KernelTeam/Meeting/2010-07-20
* Ubuntu Foundations Team Meeting Minutes for July 21, 2010
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/FoundationsTeam/Meetings/2010/0721
* Ubuntu Release Team Meeting Minutes for July 23, 2010 -
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ReleaseTeam/Meeting/2010-07-21
== Upcoming Meetings and Events ==
=== Monday, July 26, 2010 ===
==== Security Team Catch-up ====
* Start: 17:00 UTC
* End: 17:30 UTC
* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
* Agenda: nothing formal, just a weekly catch-up. Weekly Ubuntu
Security Team catch-up meeting. Anyone is welcome to join if they want
to watch, contribute, etc.
=== Tuesday, July 27, 2010 ===
==== Ubuntu Mobile Team Meeting ====
* Start: 13:00 UTC
* End: 14:00 UTC
* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
* Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MobileTeam/Meeting
==== Technical Board Meeting ====
* Start: 14:00 UTC
* End: 15:00 UTC
* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
* Agenda: None listed as of publication
==== Desktop Team Meeting ====
* Start: 16:30 UTC
* End: 17:30 UTC
* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-desktop
* Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DesktopTeam/Meeting
==== Kernel Team Meeting ====
* Start: 17:00 UTC
* End: 18:00 UTC
* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
* Agenda: Not listed as of publication
==== Ubuntu Mobile Team Meeting ====
* Start: 17:00 UTC
* End: 18:00 UTC
* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
* Agenda: Not listed as of publication
=== Wednesday, July 28, 2010 ===
==== Weekly Ubuntu Foundations team meeting ====
* Start: 15:00 UTC
* End: 16:00 UTC
* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
* Agenda: https:/wiki.ubuntu.com/FoundationsTeam/Meetings/YYYY/MMDD *
Info: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/FoundationsTeam
==== QA Team Meeting ====
* Start: 17:00 UTC
* End: 18:00 UTC
* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-quality
* Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/QATeam/Meetings/
==== Jono Bacon @ Home Videocast : Various Topics and Q+A ====
* Start: 18:00 UTC
* End: 19:00 UTC
* Location: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/at-home-with-jono-bacon
* Agenda: This is a weekly videocast by the Ubuntu Community Manager,
Jono Bacon in which he discusses a range of topics and also provides a
regular weekly Q+A.
==== Installing a LAMP server ====
* Start: 18:00 UTC
* End: 19:00 UTC
* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-classroom
* Agenda: http://people.ubuntu.com/~nhandler/slides/misc/Installing...
==== Edubuntu Meeting ====
* Start: 19:00 UTC
* End: 20:00 UTC
* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
* Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Edubuntu/Meetings/Agenda
=== Thursday, July 29, 2010 ===
==== Ayatana UX team meeting ====
* Start: 12:00 UTC
* End: 12:30 UTC
* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
* Agenda: * Introductions * Review team charter * Organize first UX
activity * Brainstorm future UX activities
=== Friday, July 30, 2010 ===
==== Maverick Weekly Release Meeting ====
* Start: 15:00 UTC
* End: 16:30 UTC
* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting
* Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ReleaseTeam/Meeting/Agenda
=== Saturday, July 31, 2010 ===
==== BugJam ====
* Start: 20:00 UTC
* End: 22:00 UTC
* Location: #ubuntu-us-dc , #ubuntu-bugs
* Agenda: Bugs & Creepie Crawlies
=== Sunday, August 01, 2010 ===
==== None Listed ====
== Updates and Security for 6.06, 8.04, 9.04, 9.10, and 10.04 ==
=== Security Updates ===
* USN-963-1: FreeType vulnerabilities - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/USN-963-1
* USN-940-2: Kerberos vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/USN-940-2
* USN-927-6: NSS vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/USN-927-6
* USN-927-7: nspr update - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/USN-927-7
* USN-957-1: Firefox and Xulrunner vulnerabilities -
http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/USN-957-1
* USN-927-8: Thunderbird update - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/USN-927-8
* USN-930-4: Firefox and Xulrunner vulnerabilities -
http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/USN-930-4
* USN-930-5: ant, apturl, Epiphany, gluezilla,
gnome-python-extras, liferea, mozvoikko, OpenJDK, packagekit, ubufox,
webfav, yelp update - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/USN-930-5
=== Ubuntu 6.06 Updates ===
* freetype 2.1.10-1ubuntu2.7 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/dapper-changes/2010-Jul...
=== Ubuntu 8.04 Updates ===
* freetype 2.3.5-1ubuntu4.8.04.3 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2010-July...
* zarafa 6.30.15-21229-1 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2010-July...
=== Ubuntu 9.04 Updates ===
* freetype 2.3.9-4ubuntu0.2 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/jaunty-changes/2010-Jul...
=== Ubuntu 9.10 Updates ===
* freetype 2.3.9-5ubuntu0.1 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/karmic-changes/2010-Jul...
=== Ubuntu 10.04 Updates ===
* samba 2:3.4.7~dfsg-1ubuntu3.1 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* software-center 2.0.7 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* freetype 2.3.11-1ubuntu2.1 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* deja-dup 14.2-0ubuntu0.1 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* openvpn 2.1.0-1ubuntu1.1 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* python-apt 0.7.94.2ubuntu6.2 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* sugar-flipsticks-activity 1-0ubuntu1.10.04.1 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* sugar-pollbuilder-activity 17-0ubuntu2.10.04.1 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* sugar-logviewer-activity 6-0ubuntu1.10.04.1 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* sugar-memorize-activity 26-0ubuntu1.10.04.1 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* krb5 1.8.1+dfsg-2ubuntu0.2 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* xorg-server 2:1.7.6-2ubuntu7.3 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* gdm 2.30.2.is.2.30.0-0ubuntu3 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* mysql-dfsg-5.1 5.1.41-3ubuntu12.4 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* linux-ports-meta 2.6.32.24.18 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* linux-meta-ec2 2.6.32.308.9 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* linux-meta-mvl-dove 2.6.32.207.10 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* ubiquity 2.2.25 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
* gparted 0.5.1-1ubuntu3 -
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/lucid-changes/2010-July...
== UWN Translations ==
* Note to translators and our readers please follow the link below
for the information you need.
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Translations
== UWN A Sneak Peek ==
* Canonical Seeks Ubuntu Cloud Wins at HostingCon -
http://www.workswithu.com/2010/07/18/canonical-seeks-ubun...
* Tax office goes Ubuntu for AUSkey Linux standard -
http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/353946/tax_office...
== Subscribe ==
Get your copy of the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter delivered each week to
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== Archives and RSS Feed ==
You can always find older Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter issues at:
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You can subscribe to the Ubuntu Weekly News via RSS at:
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== Additional Ubuntu News ==
As always you can find more news and announcements at:
http://www.ubuntu.com/news
and
http://fridge.ubuntu.com/
== Conclusion ==
Thank you for reading the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter.
See you next week!
== Credits ==
The Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter is brought to you by:
* Amber Graner
* J Scott Gwin
* Liraz Siri
* Nathan Handler
* Penelope Stowe
* Daniel Calab
* And many others
== Glossary of Terms ==
Other acronyms can be found at
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/glossary
== Ubuntu - Get Involved ==
The Ubuntu community consists of individuals and teams, working on
different aspects of the distribution, giving advice and technical
support, and helping to promote Ubuntu to a wider audience. No
contribution is too small, and anyone can help. It's your chance to
get in on all the community fun associated with developing and
promoting Ubuntu. http://www.ubuntu.com/community/participate
== Feedback ==
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Except where otherwise noted, content in this issue is licensed under
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