Interview with Coffeecat

Coffeecat is someone I know from the Ubuntu Forums, where he sits with me on the Forum Council.  He has kindly taken some time out to answer the dreaded 9 simple questions…

1. Tell as much as you’re willing about your “real life” like name, age, gender, location, family, religion, profession, education, hobbies, etc.

I am male and old enough to have some grey hair and to be retired from an active profession. I live in the UK.

I was educated to post-degree level, but have little real formal training in IT. My other interests include reading, music (mostly classical), gardening and cooking.

2. When and how did you become interested in computers? in Linux? in Ubuntu?

My first contact with a computer was in the early 80s with a Sinclair Spectrum, after which I managed to inveigle myself onto an employer-sponsored 3-week course in basic computer programming and systems design, using a mainframe computer from the 70s. My first serious work desktop computer ran MS-DOS 3 and had a hard drive with the amazingly large capacity of 10 megabytes. Over the next many years I progressed through a number of PCs, at first with MS-DOS and then with a series of Windows versions from Windows 3 up to XP. In 2005 I heard about something called Linux. I tried it; I was impressed. My early experience was mostly with Fedora and whatever Suse called itself in those days. It was while using Suse 9.3 that I had an epiphany: I wasn’t dependent on Windows any more. It was a liberating moment.

I tried Ubuntu 5.04, used 5.10 and became primarily an Ubuntu user with 6.06, using every release since then. For about a year I strayed into Gentoo and used it as my primary OS. The experience taught me much but my heart was not in constant recompiling and my main OS has been Ubuntu since about 2008. In the past I’ve enjoyed trying out other distros, but I have always come back to Ubuntu.

3. When did you become involved in the forums (or the Ubuntu community)? What’s your role there?

I joined the forum the same month that Dapper/6.06 was released.  My role there is straightforward. I am an ordinary member who enjoys helping as much as I am able in the technical support categories. As my experience and expertise has grown so has my confidence that I can help others, and so has my posting record increased.

4. Are you an Ubuntu member? If so, how do you contribute? If not, do you plan on becoming one?

I am an Ubuntu member through the Ubuntu Forum Members team, admitted to membership on 7th June 2011. My main contribution to Ubuntu has been through activity on the forum, although I wish to widen my contributions into other areas, such as through community documentation.

5. What distros do you regularly use? What software? What’s your favorite application? Your least favorite?

Ubuntu is now the only distro I use routinely. I do have Windows and I also have a Mac Mini, both of which I use occasionally mainly for interest. Apart from the usual apps that most people use, Firefox, LibreOffice, Gedit, and so on, I use software for maintaining my audio and video collections. When the long winter evenings arrive I intend to learn how to use Raw Studio and/or UFRaw to complement my SLR camera, and perhaps learn how to use more of the capabilities of the GIMP. Another thing for the long winter evenings is genealogical research, for which I use gramps.

6. What’s your fondest memory from the forums, or from Ubuntu overall? What’s your worst?

My worst moment with Ubuntu involved Breezy Badger, a removable hard drive caddy and two generous glasses of a rather splendid red wine. Don’t try this at home!

I had been using Linux for only a few months and still did not have much confidence modifying partitions and I knew next to nothing about configuring and repairing bootloaders. I wanted to try out different distros but didn’t know how to go about setting up a multi-boot, so I bought a set of hard drive caddies. The holder goes into a spare optical drive bay and is connected to the hard drive header on the motherboard, and you have a removable caddy for each hard drive. I had two, a Fedora/Windows dual-boot on one and Ubuntu Breezy by itself on the other. I was intending to replace Fedora with Suse on the dual-boot hard drive, but thought I would try to run fixmbr from the Windows install disc first. I knew that I didn’t have to. I just wanted to do it for the experience and convince myself that it would work, but I put the job off until after supper. Mistake!

This was when the wine came into play. Having finished my supper and drained my wine glass, I repaired upstairs, switched on the computer, booted up with the Windows XP install CD and ran fixmbr from the repair console. I rebooted but nothing much happened. Just a black screen with a blinking cursor. That’s when I noticed that I had put the Ubuntu hard drive caddy in the machine, not the Fedora/Windows one. I had installed the Windows mbr to a hard drive without Windows and lost the ability to boot into Ubuntu. I was much grieved.

I blame the wine!

But good came out of this. The incident forced me to learn how to configure legacy grub and I soon had Breezy Badger booting once more. Having learnt how to repair a broken bootloader I became more adventurous and learnt how to set up several partitions for a multi-boot.

Three years later grub 2 arrived…

My fondest memory occurred only a few months after the red wine incident. I had an old 1999 laptop which had been running Windows 98 and was well past its best. I installed Dapper Drake on it which, considering the sub-optimal amount of RAM in the machine, worked surprisingly well, albeit slowly. Frustratingly though, I could not connect to the internet. It had no wireless, no PCMCIA slot to put a wireless card in, nor an ethernet port, just a solitary USB1 port. In a fit of unthinking enthusiasm, I drove the 15 miles or so to my nearest Maplins, bought a USB to ethernet adapter, and drove back home. But when I unpacked the box a Windows driver CD dropped out. Being fairly new to Linux I had simply not considered the need for a driver and, of course, the device packaging stated quite clearly that only Windows was supported. I briefly considered driving the 30-mile round journey again to see if the shop would consider a refund, but first I plugged it into the old laptop to see what would happen, and – you’ve guessed it – it “just worked”. I find that less surprising now but I was very impressed then and the episode greatly encouraged me to continue my Linux adventure.

As far as the forum is concerned I have mostly positive memories. I like the friendly atmosphere and am constantly pleasantly surprised at how helpful and tolerant most members are.

7. What luck have you had introducing new computer users to Ubuntu?

Moderate. Most people I help with computer problems are resolutely wedded to Windows, but I have enabled the regular use of Ubuntu in a handful of households. At the moment I am guiding a young teenager through installing and configuring Ubuntu in wubi.

8. What would you like to see happen with Linux in the future? with Ubuntu?

With Linux generally, I would like to see applications as good as or even better than their Windows or MacOS counterparts. And I would like to see viable software that doesn’t yet exist for Linux, voice-recognition and dictation for example. I have no ethical objection to proprietary software and would pay for such a program. Are you listening, Dragon/Nuance?

With Ubuntu, I would like to see it pre-reinstalled on tablet devices and easily available in high-street shops.

9. If there was one thing you could tell all new Ubuntu users, what would it be?

Be patient. It takes time to find your way around a different computing environment, but the rewards are great.

Originally Posted here on 2012-04-26

Ubuntu 12.04 Development update

Last Development Update of 12.04

Today we saw the release of Ubuntu 12.04. It is the fourth release with long-term support and the 16th Ubuntu release. Lots of hard work went into this release, so if you see Ubuntu contributors around, give them a hug!

Kate Stewart, the Release Manager sent out an email with statistics about the 12.04 release cycle: this release cycle saw 386 uploaders, saw 18630 uploads (non-rebuild, non-langpack, including auto-syncs). It was also nice to see which packages were uploaded most and who sponsored most of the uploads – which means reviewing and uploading changes for contributors without upload rights.

Also Colin Watson mentions that this release is the first to not include any outdated binaries. Kudos to everyone who helped out with this effort!

And with 12.04 seen to the door, the planning for the upcoming 12.10 (codenamed ‘Quantal Quetzal’) is already in full swing. Scott Kitterman started the discussion about which version of the boost library to use, Barry Warsaw brings up a plan to move to Python3 for the Desktop image and Steve Langasek explains the reasoning behind staying on upstart for 12.10.

The Ubuntu Algorithms Team has held their first online classes and during the first sessions about 135 people were online on the IRC channel. The notes were followed by ~30 people, so the team estimates, that we had 35 active participants. In the week before classes, about 500 people looked at docs with notes. Many of them were not from Ubuntu Community.

Letting developers speak for themselves

 

Events

Ubuntu Algorithms Team
The next classes of the Ubuntu Algorithms Team will be 27.04, 17:00 UTC in #ubuntu-classroom. Join the team and their mailing list to stay up to date.

Ubuntu Open Week
Ubuntu Open Week will happen from 2nd May to 4th May and will have lots of great sessions about all aspects of Ubuntu. If you are interested in Ubuntu Development, make sure you attend the sessions on 3rd May 14:00 UTC (Ubuntu Development – how it all works) and 3rd May, 15 UTC (Ubuntu Development – fixing bugs).

Ubuntu Release Parties
Ubuntu 12.04 is out, so go and celebrate it with your local team. There are heaps of release parties around the globe. So if you live in Egypt, South Africa, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Palestinian Territory, Phillipines, Thailand, Australia, Belarus, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Hungary, Ireland, Montenegro, Poland, Serbia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, Canada, United States, Brazil or Uruguay you should be all covered with the link above. If you live elsewhere, write to your local Ubuntu team or LUG and celebrate it anyway. 🙂

First timers!

David Henningson got upload rights for pulseaudio in Ubuntu!

Spotlight: 12.04 is out – what’s next?

You would expect all Ubuntu developers to take a very long break after a release, possibly on a remote island on the beach with hourly refills of Piña Coladas. Some lucky developers might actually do that, but for the vast majority that’s not the case.

Why? Because there is a new release to be planned, new exciting stuff to get uploaded and some bugs to fix.

Here’s what will happen in the next few days: the development release for 12.10 will be opened, packages from precise will be copied over and the toolchain (the fundamental tools to build packages) will be bootstrapped and put in. Then ‘quantal’ will be opened for public use. The mailing list for change notifications has already been set up.

Once it is open, Ubuntu developers will upload new versions of packages, quite possibly things which missed the deadlines for 12.04. Then we will start merging changes from Debian. There will be lots to get done, so if you have worked with packaging before, consider helping out.

In addition to that we will likely get bug reports and the most pressing ones will be fixed through SRUs (stable release updates). We can’t fix all of them, and some bug fixes might be too risky. The SRU wiki page explains the considerations and procedure quite well. Basically you will have to make the case for the SRU fix, get it into the development release first, make sure it fixes the issue, upload it to precise-proposed, where it will get broader testing, then it will make its way to precise-updates. All these updates will form the basis for the upcoming LTS point releases, as indicated on the 12.04 release schedule. An LTS release is important, so we will see a lot of bugs fixed post-release, but you can imagine how it will take away workforce from the 12.10 to some degree.

The most important event in the planning of 12.10 is going to be UDS (the Ubuntu Developer Summit). If you are living near Oakland in California, USA, you should consider joining in. It will be very interesting to meet everyone, work out great solutions for ‘quantal’ and have fun together. If you can’t make it, don’t despair, you can join in remotely. At UDS many topics will be discussed which will form the basis for a rocking 12.10 release. Each session will be one hour long and result in a specification with specific work-items which will be tracked during the release. Join in, plan with us, contribute to 12.10!

The Ubuntu Development News Team is looking for help

This is the last 12.04 development update. Benjamin Kerensa and Daniel Holbach have been working tirelessly to get updates out every week and are planning to shake things up a little for 12.10. A blueprint for UDS has been registered and we would love to hear your feedback: what did you like about the Dev updates? What would you like to see improved?

Also we’d like to grow our team a bit. Please comment below if you’d be interested in helping getting development news out to the masses and help bring more transparency to Ubuntu.

Getting in touch

There are many different ways to contact Ubuntu developers and get your questions answered.

Ubuntu 12.04 (Precise Pangolin) released!

Imagination is as vital to any advance in science as learning and precision are essential for starting points. – Percival Lowell

The Ubuntu team is very pleased to announce the release of Ubuntu 12.04 LTS (Long-Term Support) for Desktop, Server, Cloud, and Core products.

Codenamed “Precise Pangolin”, 12.04 continues Ubuntu’s proud tradition of integrating the latest and greatest open source technologies into a high-quality, easy-to-use Linux distribution. The team has been hard at work through this cycle, introducing a few new features and improving quality control.

To be a bit more precise about what we’re releasing today…
There are 54 product images and 2 cloud images being shipped with this 12.04 LTS release, with translations available in 41 languages.
The Ubuntu project’s 12.04 archive currently has 39,226 binary packages in it, built from 19,179 source packages, so lots of good starting points for your imagination!

For PC users, Ubuntu 12.04 supports laptops, desktops, and netbooks with a unified look and feel based on an updated version of the desktop shell called “Unity”, which introduces “Head-Up Display” search capabilities. Finding and installing software using the Ubuntu Software Centre is now easier thanks to improvements in speed, search and usability.

Ubuntu Server 12.04 has made it much easier to provision, deploy, host, manage, and orchestrate enterprise data centre infrastructure services with the introduction of new technologies such as “Metal as
a Service” (MAAS), the Juju Charm Store, and the latest OpenStack version, codenamed Essex. These technologies further position Ubuntu Server
as the best OS for scale-out computing.

Read more about the new features of Ubuntu 12.04 in the following press releases:

http://www.canonical.com/content/ubuntu-server-1204-lts-certified-available-and-ready-hyperscale-world
http://www.canonical.com/content/ubuntu-1204-lts-aims-conquer-enterprise-desktop

Long term support maintenance updates will be provided for Ubuntu 12.04 for five years, through April 2017. For those working on the ARM architecture, an 18 month supported release is also provided for the ARM server using the ARM Hard Float (HF) architecture.

Thanks to the efforts of the global translation community, Ubuntu is now available in 41 languages. For a list of available languages and detailed translation statistics for these and other languages, see:

http://people.canonical.com/~dpm/stats/ubuntu-12.04-translation-stats.html

The newest Kubuntu 12.04 (LTS), Edubuntu 12.04 (LTS), Xubuntu 12.04 (LTS), Mythbuntu 12.04, Lubuntu 12.04 and Ubuntu Studio 12.04 are also being
released today. More details can be found in their announcements:

Kubuntu: http://kubuntu.org/news/12.04-release
Xubuntu: http://xubuntu.org/news/12-04-release
Edubuntu http://edubuntu.org/news/12.04-release
Mythbuntu: http://mythbuntu.org/12.04/release
Lubuntu: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Lubuntu/Announcement/12.04
Ubuntu Studio: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuStudio/12.04release_notes

To get Ubuntu 12.04
——————-

In order to download Ubuntu 12.04, visit:

http://www.ubuntu.com/download

Users of Ubuntu 11.10 will be offered an automatic upgrade to 12.04 via Update Manager. For further information about upgrading, see:

http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/upgrade

As always, upgrades to the latest version of Ubuntu are entirely free of charge.

We recommend that all users read the release notes, which document caveats, workarounds for known issues, as well as more in-depth notes on the release itself. They are available at:

http://www.ubuntu.com/getubuntu/releasenotes

Find out what’s new in this release with a graphical overview:

http://www.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/whats-new
http://www.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/features

If you have a question, or if you think you may have found a bug but aren’t sure, you can try asking in any of the following places:

#ubuntu on irc.freenode.net
http://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-users
http://www.ubuntuforums.org
http://askubuntu.com

Help Shape Ubuntu
—————–

If you would like to help shape Ubuntu, take a look at the list of ways you can participate at:

http://www.ubuntu.com/community/get-involved

About Ubuntu
————

Ubuntu is a full-featured Linux distribution for desktops, laptops, netbooks and servers, with a fast and easy installation and regular releases. A tightly-integrated selection of excellent applications is included, and an incredible variety of add-on software is just a few clicks away.

Professional services including support are available from Canonical and hundreds of other companies around the world. For more information about support, visit:

http://www.ubuntu.com/support

More Information
—————-

You can learn more about Ubuntu and about this release on our website listed below:

http://www.ubuntu.com

To sign up for future Ubuntu announcements, please subscribe to Ubuntu’s very low volume announcement list at:

http://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-announce

Originally posted to the ubuntu-announce mailing list by Kate Stewart on Thursday 26 April 2012.

Membership Boards: Restaffing and Reorganization

On May 5th we will have a large number of Regional Membership Board members with terms expiring. The Community Council decided to take this opportunity to evaluate the effectiveness of these regional membership boards and how it make sense to go about restaffing them.

After several discussions, including those with sitting board members, we have determined that while there are values to region-based boards (there may be cultural and language similarities), it makes more sense for us to switch to time-based membership boards. We hope that with this change to time-based we can have a more established meeting times that the community is familiar with and more successful boards with board members being able to commit to a specific time rather than assuming evening is the best time in their time zone for them to attend.

The times selected are as follows:

12:00 UTC, meeting twice a month, specific days to be determined by the board

22:00 UTC, meeting twice a month, specific days to be determined by the board

These boards will each have 9 members with a quorum of 4. We are seeking to seat 10 new board members at this time across both boards (we have 8 board members whose terms are not ending).

We have the following requirements for nominees:

  • be an Ubuntu member
  • be confident that you can evaluate contributions to various parts of our community
  • be available during typical meeting times of the board in question
  • broad insight into the Ubuntu community at large is a plus

Those sitting on membership boards are people who are insightful. They are current Ubuntu Members with a proven track record of activity in the community. They have shown themselves over time to be able to work well with others and display the positive aspects of the Ubuntu Code of Conduct. They should be people who can discern character and evaluate contribution quality without emotion while engaging in an interview/discussion that communicates interest, a welcoming atmosphere, and which is marked by humanity, gentleness, and kindness. Even when they must deny applications, they should do so in such a way that applicants walk away with a sense of hopefulness and a desire to return with a more complete application rather than feeling discouraged or hurt.

To nominate yourself or somebody else (please confirm they wish to accept the nomination and state you have done so), please send a mail to the membership boards mailing list (ubuntu-membership-boards at lists.ubuntu.com). You will want to include some information about yourself (or the applicant you are nominating), a launchpad profile link and which time slot is being applied for.

We will be accepting nominations through Friday May 18 at 12:00 UTC. All nominations will be forwarded to the Community Council who will make the final decision.

Thanks in advance to you and thanks also to the dedication everybody has put into their jobs as board members.

Originally posted to the ubuntu-news-team mailing list by Elizabeth Krumbach on Wed Apr 25 16:24:34 UTC 2012

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter Issue 262

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter. This is issue #262 for the week April 16 – 22, 2012, and the full version is available here.

In this issue we cover:

The issue of The Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter is brought to you by:

  • Elizabeth Krumbach
  • Chris Druif
  • Nathan Dyer
  • Neil Oosthuizen
  • Matt Rudge
  • And many others

If you have a story idea for the Weekly Newsletter, join the Ubuntu News Team mailing list and submit it. Ideas can also be added to the wiki!

Except where otherwise noted, content in this issue is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License BY SA Creative Commons License