Winning countdown banners chosen

I’m excited to say that the winning countdown banners have been chosen and published to the website. There were many superb entries and it was hard to agree on which should be selected. I’d like to thank Riku, Takashtuka and Dave for contributing the artwork that made the final cut.

You can see the winning designs here.

Help spread the word about Ubuntu by adding the image to your blog or website or by telling your friends about the banners. If you’ve already put the banner on your website you should notice that it updated to the latest version automatically.

Originally sent to the ubuntu-news-team mailing list by Matthew Nuzum on Fri Apr 8 17:16:25 UTC 2011

Another wiki.ubuntu.com Upgrade Update

Back on March 9th I posted a wiki.ubuntu.com Upgrade Update which outlined a tentative timeline for the upgrade of wiki.ubuntu.com. Today the Community Council received another update from Charlie Schluting of Canonical:

We have openid (with teams) working in the latest moin. A test upgrade (of another wiki) that we started working on this week has resulted in data migration scripts doing “the wrong thing” with some links. We’ve not gotten past that yet, but it’s actively being worked on right now, and should be a fairly quick fix.

I still want to upgrade some smaller wikis first, because the audience/impact is much smaller. I expect us to have at least a test environment for wiki.ubuntu.com up near Natty release time (a few weeks). When we have that test wiki.ubuntu.com up, I’ll be soliciting for help with testing!

Thanks again to the Canonical team working on this, and for patience of the community as they work through these problems!

Originally posted by Elizabeth Krumbach here on Thursday, April 7th, 2011 at 4:08 pm

Shipit Discontinued, Long Live LoCo Teams

Today it was announced that ShipIt, the free CD service that Canonical has been running since the inception of Ubuntu will be discontinued. I know some LoCo Teams may be worried about this, so I wanted to clarify some details right away.

  • Why? – a few reasons. Firstly, CD distribution is not really as effective as it used to be, and it is expensive. These days, particularly with the availability of low cost hi-speed Internet growing across the world, more and more people are simply downloading the ISO images and burning them to a CD or installing from a USB stick. Canonical felt like it would make better sense to reduce the investment in snail-mail CD distribution and focus it more on LoCo Teams and use those savings to invest in other areas of the project.
  • What about LoCo Teams? – here is the key point – we are still going to provide Approved LoCo Teams with CDs! We recognize the hugely valuable contribution LoCo teams make in advocating Ubuntu and helping people to use it and enjoy the freedoms in it, and we will continue to provide Approved LoCo teams with CDs that they can use for this advocacy work. As before, we encourage these CDs to be shared and re-used – Ubuntu CDs sat in a closet gathering dust don’t benefit anyone! Get the CDs, share them and re-use them. :-)
  • How do LoCo Teams get CDs? – there is a new form to fill in. Simple go here to request your CDs.
  • Why can only approved LoCo teams get CDs? – the provision of free CDs from Canonical is an expensive service intended to empower LoCo teams in spreading the word of Ubuntu. Approved LoCo teams have demonstrated significant and sustained contributions in this area and based on this strong reputation we trust those resources won’t be wasted. Non-approved teams have not yet built that reputation, but when they do and get approved, they are welcome to apply for CDs too.

Alright, I think that covers the main points. Any questions, feel free to ask in the comments. :-)

Originally posted here by Jono Bacon on Tuesday, April 5th, 2011.

New EMEA and Americas Membership Board Members

Back in January the Community Council did a call for restaffing of a few vacated positions on the Regional Membership Boards.

Today I’m happy to announce the new members of these boards.

EMEA

Iulian Udrea – https://launchpad.net/~iulian

Americas

Mathieu Trudel-Lapierre – https://launchpad.net/~mathieu-tl
Penelope Stowe – https://launchpad.net/~pendulum

Congratulations and welcome to these new board members!

Originally sent to the ubuntu-news-team mailing list by Elizabeth Krumbach on Tue Apr 5 16:07:30 UTC 2011

Ubuntu 11.04 Beta 1 (Natty Narwhal) Released.

The Ubuntu team is pleased to announce the release of Ubuntu 11.04 beta.

Codenamed “Natty Narwhal”, 11.04 continues Ubuntu’s proud tradition of integrating the latest and greatest open source technologies into a high-quality, easy-to-use Linux distribution.

Ubuntu 11.04 now combines Ubuntu Desktop Edition and Ubuntu Netbook Edition. This edition introduces the Unity environment as the default desktop.

Ubuntu 11.04 Netbook edition will still be produced for the ARM platform, and the team is proud to introduce a Headless edition with 11.04 for ARM.

Ubuntu 11.04 Server has made it easier to provision servers, and reduce power consumption.

Ubuntu 11.04 Server for EC2 is available as well, with a new kernel and improved initialization and configuration options.

The Ubuntu 11.04 family of Kubuntu, Xubuntu, Edubuntu, Mythbuntu, and Ubuntu Studio, also reach beta status today.

Ubuntu features

Unity is now the default Ubuntu desktop session. The Unity launcher has many new features, including drag and drop re-ordering of launcher icons, full keyboard navigation support, launcher activation through keyboard shortcuts, right-click context menu quick-list and switching between running applications.

Ubuntu 11.04 comes with the latest Firefox 4.0 as standard web browser.

LibreOffice 3.3.2 has been included in 11.04 as the default office package.

Banshee 1.9.5 is the standard music player now and has been integrated into the sound menu.

X.org 1.10.0 and Mesa 7.10.1 are the new versions included with 11.04.

11.04 Beta 1 includes the 2.6.38-7.39 kernel which is based on the latest mainline kernel, 2.6.38.

GNU toolchain has transitioned to be based off of gcc 4.5 for i386, amd64, ARM omap3/omap4 and PowerPC architecture

All main packages have now been built and and are installable with Python 2.7

dpkg 1.16.0-pre brings us up-to-date with staged changes for the upcoming Debian 1.16.0 dpkg release, as well as pulling in the current version of the in-progress multiarch work

Upstart has been updated to 0.9.4-1. There are a lot of new features: its now “chroot-aware”, there is support for basic job/event visualization, there are two new initctrl commands (show-config, check-config), a socket bridge is now provided, the latest D-Bus version now allows D-Bus services to be activated via Upstart, a manual job configuration stanza, and override file support is now available.

The Ubuntu One control panel now allows selective syncing, and the launcher icon now displays sync progress. File syncing speed has been improved as well.

The Ubuntu Software Center now allows users to “rate & review” installed applications, share reviews via integration with social networking services added into Gwibber, and has other usability improvements.

Please see http://www.ubuntu.com/testing/natty/beta for details.

Ubuntu Netbook on ARM

The ARM version is the first one to ship with our new Unity 2D interface by default.

The 2.6.38 kernel for OMAP4 has had many driver improvements, most notably the display driver was switched to use the HDMI port by default and auto detect the monitor resolution.

Ubuntu Headless developer image is being introduced for omap3 and omap4 hardware. Headless is fully set up for the serial port and contains a minimal command line install.

Ubuntu Server

cobbler and mcollective have been included, which will make provisioning servers a bit easier.

Powernap 2.0 uses a new method to reduce power consumption and can now monitor user activity (Console, Mouse, Keyboard), system activity (load, processors, process IO), and network activity (wake-on-lan, udp ports tcp ports)

Default dhcpd server updated from dhcp3 to isc-dhcp (version 4).

Eucalyptus is now the latest stable point release (2.0.2) with security and efficiency fixes. (Known bug against the dhcpd server)

OpenStack (nova) in Universe is a technology preview, with a recent snapshot of 2011.2 (Cactus) release.

libvirt is updated to 0.8.8 with new features and bug fixes (see upstream change log for full information 0.8.3->0.8.8)

Ubuntu Cloud

cloud-init has been updated to 0.60. This feature includes support resizing of / at first boot, adds minimal OVF transport (iso) support and allow setting of hostname when first booting. Rightscale support has been added to cloud-config and cloud-init.

Webscale technologies have been packaged and included, Cassandra 0.7.0, ZeroMQ, Membase, and XtraBackup.

Running images in EC2, t1.micro is currently limited to arch amd64.

Kubuntu

Kubuntu 11.04 Beta 1 sports the latest KDE software including KDE Platform 4.6.1.

Kubuntu now provides a working Samba file sharing module that lets you add and manage shares from the folder’s Properties dialogs.

The new Language Selector module allows you to add, remove, and manage system languages directly from System Settings.

An updated system-config-printer-kde brings a number of bug fixes to Kubuntu’s printer management tool.

Please see https://wiki.kubuntu.org/NattyNarwhal/Beta1/Kubuntu for details.

Xubuntu

Xubuntu wallpaper has been updated for this release. The wallpaper is designed to integrate well with the new graybird theme.

The installation slide show has been updated for Natty Narwhal, and really displays the best of Xubuntu.

The Elementary Xubuntu icon theme has been updated.

Xubuntu is using the Droid font by default, since it is a lightweight, good visibility font.

The newly released Xfce 4.8 is included. The menus in Xfce 4.8 are now editable with any menu editor that meets the freedesktop.org standards. The suggested editor is alacarte.

Edubuntu

You can test Edubuntu 11.04 directly from your web browser by going at http://www.edubuntu.org/weblive

WebLive is also directly integrated in the Ubuntu Software Center letting you test the most popular apps without installing them on your machine. Just click the “Test drive” button.

Ubiquity now has an additional step allowing users to fine-tune which applications should be installed on the final system.

Edubuntu now ships with Arkose, which provides application sandboxing for downloaded apps.

New software packages in Edubuntu include Pencil, Geogebra, Calibre, LibreCAD, Freemind and Stellarium.

Theming improvements include a new LDM theme when installing LTSP from the Edubuntu installer. The text-mode boot mode now displays “Edubuntu” instead of “Ubuntu”. Our ongoing menu refinements include new icons where they were missing, and more consistent case use in menu entries.

Edubuntu 11.04 ships with the classical Gnome desktop by default but Unity is available as an option in the installer.

For more details on what has changed in Edubuntu 11.04, please refer to http://edubuntu.org/2011-03-03/edubuntu-1104-beta-1-released

Ubuntu Studio

The task selections during installation have been updated. The audio tasks have been parsed into two groups: generation and recording.

Currently, Ubuntu Studio is shipping the -generic kernel. We are working with the Ubuntu Kernel Team to get a -low latency kernel into the archives. An interim -lowlatency kernel is available in Allesio Bogani’s PPA.

network-manager has replaced gnome-network-admin.

The packages shipped in Ubuntu Studio are now more focused to support identified tasks and their derived work flows.

Ubuntu Studio does not currently use Unity. As the user logs in it will default to Gnome Classic Desktop (i.e. Gnome2).

Mythbuntu

The Mythbuntu-bare (Backup and Restore for the database and configuration files) Mythbuntu Control Center plugin now has the ability to schedule backups on a daily, weekly, or monthly basis.

Android and iOS devices can now be used as remote controls.

MythTV 0.24 is now integrated into the builds.

Please see http://www.ubuntu.com/testing/natty/beta for more details on the above products.

About Ubuntu

Ubuntu is a full-featured Linux distribution for desktops, laptops, 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 technical support is available from Canonical Limited and hundreds of other companies around the world. For more information about support, visit http://www.ubuntu.com/support.

To Get Ubuntu 11.04 Beta 1

To upgrade to Ubuntu 11.04 Beta 1 from Ubuntu 10.10, follow these instructions:

https://help.ubuntu.com/community/NattyUpgrades

Or, download Ubuntu 11.04 Beta 1 images from a location near you:

http://www.ubuntu.com/testing/download (Ubuntu and Ubuntu Server)

In addition, they can be found at the following links:

The final version of Ubuntu 11.04 is expected to be released in April 2011.

Feedback and Participation

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/participate/

Your comments, bug reports, patches and suggestions will help turn this Beta into the best release of Ubuntu ever. Please note that, where possible, we prefer that bugs be reported using the tools provided, rather than by visiting Launchpad directly. Instructions can be found at:

https://help.ubuntu.com/community/ReportingBugs

If you have a question, or if you think you may have found a bug but are not sure, first try asking on the #ubuntu IRC channel on freenode, on the Ubuntu Users mailing list, or on the Ubuntu forums:

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

http://www.ubuntuforums.org/

More Information

You can find out more about Ubuntu and about this preview release on our website, IRC channel and wiki. If you are new to Ubuntu, please visit:

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 sent to the ubuntu-announce mailing list by Kate Stewart on Thu Mar 31 21:56:38 UTC 2011