Interview with Penelope Stowe

Penelope Stowe

Isabell Long: Firstly, please tell us a little about yourself.

Penelope Stowe: I’ve been an Ubuntu user on and off for almost 3 years now (my “other distro” is, admittedly, MacOS). Until recently, I was working in publishing, but I’ve quit my job and am now exploring possibilities for what I’ll do next. I figure it’s a good time to be adventurous and push past things I’d planned, and look at new possibilities.

I tend to be interested in everything, and, while I don’t believe in knowledge for knowledge’s sake, I do believe that anything you learn can be useful and often is.

IL: What inspired you to get involved in the Ubuntu community?

PS: The short and immediate answer is that a friend badgered me about it enough over about 6 months before I got actively involved. The longer answer is that I finally got to the point where I stopped being too shy to get involved, which had to do a lot with having friends who were involved and were enthusiastic about getting me involved. I’d been using Ubuntu long enough beforehand that it wasn’t a huge jump to getting involved, just a personal hurdle.

As for why I started using Ubuntu, I’ve always had friends who were Linux geeks, and I finally got around to giving it a try in 2007, and everyone told me Ubuntu was the way to go. I’ll admit I’m not a full-time user and I’m not sure I’ll ever be. However, I’ve always been interested in free culture, so using free software is a natural progression from that. I’m much more a philosophical user than I am a “this just works” person, especially as I increasingly need accessibility tools, many of which don’t “just work” yet in any Linux distribution.

Also, working on Ubuntu is something I can do when I’m physically unable to do much else. I have a physical disability, and sometimes am limited to things I can do lying down, but as long as I have my laptop I can still be doing things for Ubuntu.

Finally, I love the Ubuntu community. It’s one of the friendliest communities I know of any type, and I do think the community is the strongest part of the operating system.

IL: What are your roles within the Ubuntu community?

PS: My current big project is trying to revive the Ubuntu Accessibility Team. It’s been going on quietly as a support only team using the mailing list and forums for a few years, but I’m hoping to get it to a point where it’s updating documentation for what’s available, and where there’s some organisation addressing what the team would like to see in future Ubuntu releases as well as some coordination with upstream. There’s been a lot of enthusiasm from people for this, so I’m hoping it all comes together. Accessibility is such a difficult thing because it is so varied. What I need is completely different from what someone with a visual impairment needs. Even people with other mobility problems may have different needs than I have. There’s also a huge emphasis on discussions to focus on development, and I’d like to branch that out some – because we really need to update documentation and awareness. Ubuntu could open itself up to a large group of new users if accessibility could be improved, or even if people knew what already existed.

I am also one of the team that runs the Ubuntu User Days for new users. We started Ubuntu User Days to provide a day of more basic “how to” for setting-up and using Ubuntu, and the first one was a great success. The next one is June 5th. I’m hoping it goes as well as the first. We’ve got so many ideas for what we want to have happen. It’s nice to see it all come together.

Finally, I’m active in Ubuntu Women where I have been helping to get the mentoring program running again, and have been doing anything else they ask me to do. I was a little less active towards the end of the Lucid cycle. However, I’ll be getting more involved again as I have more time.

IL: You’ve done quite a lot in the short time you have been involved in Ubuntu. Is there anything you haven’t done that you’d like to try?

PS: A better question is if there’s anything I haven’t done that I don’t want to try. I definitely want to get involved with documentation. I think it’s really important, plus it’s somewhere that I can put skills I already have to use. I’d also like to learn how to bug triage and help out the bug squad. Also, one of the things I’m going to do – when not working – is try to learn to program. I took a couple of programming courses in college, and so will probably try to refresh my memory of those languages and pick up Python. I’m sure there are other things I either haven’t thought of, or am not remembering that I want to do, but generally it comes down to: if I hear about it, it’s probably on my long list of things to learn or do eventually when I have time/energy/resources.

IL: What other things are you interested in outside of OSS and Ubuntu?

PS: I’m a pretty solid book geek (mostly fantasy, but I do branch out). My main client at the job I just left was a science fiction and fantasy publisher, so it was a wonderful way to feed my book addiction. I’m also very interested in disability studies and disability rights, and I’m quite interested in how much of the disability rights and studies movements these days happens online as well as offline.

My non-techblog is wheeledtraveler.blogspot.com, although it’s seen less use recently as I’ve traveled less and not been spending time blogging. Since I theoretically have more time now, that should change.

[Discuss Penelope Stowe’s Interview on the Forum]

Originally posted by Isabell Long in Full Circle Magazine Issue #37 on May 28, 2010

Announcing this week's Bug Day target – Epiphany Browser – Thursday, May 27th, 2010

This week’s Bug Day target is *drum roll please* Epiphany Browser!

  • 66 New bugs need a hug
  • 16 Incompletes bugs
  • 19 Confirmed bugs need a review
  • 6 Bugs need to be forwarded upstream

Bookmark it, add it to your calendars, turn over those egg-timers!

Are you looking for a way to start giving some love back to your adorable Ubuntu Project?

Did you ever wonder what Triage is? Want to learn about that?

This is a perfect time!, Everybody can help in a Bug Day! Open your IRC Client and go to #ubuntu-bugs (FreeNode) the BugSquad will be happy to help you to start contributing!

Wanna be famous? Is easy! remember to use 5-A-day so if you do a good work your name could be listed at the top 5-A-Day Contributors in the Ubuntu Hall of Fame page!

We are always looking for new tasks or ideas for the Bug Days, if you have one add it to the Planning page https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuBugDay/Planning

If you’re new to all this, head to https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Bugs

[Discuss Announcing this week’s Bug Day target – Epiphany Browser – Thursday, May 27th, 2010]

Originally sent to the ubuntu-devel-announce Mailing List by Kamus on Wed May 26 16:42:55 BST 2010

Kernel Team Meeting Minutes

Meeting Minutes

IRC Log of the meeting.

Agenda

2010-25-05 Meeting Agenda

Outstanding actions from last meeting

Item: ogasawara to email out reminder regarding blueprint disposition
Status: done
   
Item: smb to add work item for updating karmic fsl-imx51 in line with lucid
Status: done
   
Item: jfo to explain new bug review process
Status: in progress

Maverick Release Status: Bugs

Alpha 1 Milestoned Bugs (0) Release Targeted Bugs (34 accross all packages)
linux 0 1

Bugs with Patches Attached: 130 (down 2 from last week)

Launchpad Report

Breakdown by status

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-apparmor

Working on dfa translation for the compatibility patch for old kernel interface, and will use this to cross verify the upstreaming interface changes. So current upstreaming code isn’t yet compatible with lucid

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-firewire-stack

I emailed out a description of what needs to be done, and why we need to do it to the ukml. Waiting on responses. Looks like we need help from foundations, will CC foundations on the email.

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-misc

Tim has pulled out the -preempt flavour from Maverick with a view to it being a community supported flavour from its own source package. The new ubuntu-debian.git repository is up and seeded with Maverick debian plus some fixes developed following testing on Karmic and Lucid; scripts now exist to apply this back to those releases. Finally the broadcom wl driver has been fixed for Maverick.

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-new-kernel-on-lts

LTS backport is undergoing tests (no problems so far). I’ve uploaded to the kernel PPA at http://ppa.launchpad.net/kernel-ppa/ppa/ubuntu. I’ve also created a new branch in the Lucid repository called lts-backport-maverick

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-pv-ops-ec2-kernel

Playing with paravirt-ops kernel for legacy /dev/tty and /dev/sdX used by EC2 and integrating in to the virtual kernel, currently /dev/hvc -> /dev/tty changes require !VT Have built and Produce kernels with paravirt-ops enabled for testing, but they aren’t quite ready for hand off to scott and others for further testing

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-tracing-support

I’m currently in the process of reviewing the configs for tracers in maverick, other work (tooling packaging) has yet to be started

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-ubuntu-delta-review

I’m hoping to update iscsitarget today. apw had a rather large set of patches associated to his name during the delta review, so I could see him extending this work item to Alpha2. manjo only has one patch to follow up on, so I suspect he should be able to complete this by next week, ie. Alpha1.

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-union-mounts

kernels are up for testing in my purple PPA, no feedback as yet from foundations

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-config-review

The two bugs/work items are Fix Committed and should close when I upload today. This will then complete the blueprint.

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-bug-handling

Working on the wiki pages with input from apw, ogasawara and smb. This work will be reflected on this BP and will be removed from the kernel-maverick-misc BP.

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-upstart

Leann has written up the new modules.builtin rules exceptions. Other progress is slow but still hoped to hit Alpha-1.

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-reducing-dkms-packages-required-for-hardware-enablement

Nothing new this week.

Blueprint: kernel-maverick-bios-test-automation

 
 * Identified some tests "low-hanging fruit"
 * Git repo: http://kernel.ubuntu.com/git?p=cking/ubuntu-firmware-test-suite/.git;a=summary
   * Test suite framework complete (fancy logging, execution mechanism, kernel log parsing, etc..)
   * Test added in past week:
     * dmi_decode:  test DMI/SMBIOS tables for errors
     * acpiinfo:    general ACPI sanity check
     * syntaxcheck: check for DSDT AML syntax errors
     * klog:        check for generic errors in kernel log
     * wakealarm:   ACPI wakealarm test
     * s3:          suspend/resume test (in progress)
     * with the help of some code lifted from the Intel Firmware Test kit
   * Working on:
     * common:      check common kernel log errors
     * s4:          hibernate/resume test
     * semanticAML: some semantic AML checking

Maverick: Lucid

It’s been almost a week since I’ve uploaded and I’ve accumulated quite a bit of patches since then. We’ve pulled in the -omap flavour, tweaked multiple config options per our UDS config review, and dropped a number of patches based on our UDS delta review. We’re also now carrying the two security kernel hardening patches for hardlink/symlink protections. That being said, I’ll be uploading 2.6.34-4.11 today (note the ABI bump). I’ll likely do one last upload on Friday, so get your patches to the list and ack’d before then if you want something to land in the Alpha1 kernel. Also, please test once 2.6.34-4.11 is uploaded if you are able to.

Security & Bugfix Kernels

 
 * Dapper:      2.6.15-55.83  (updates)
 * Hardy:       2.6.24-27.69  (updates)
 * Intrepid:    --- End of Support ---
 * Jaunty:      2.6.28-18.60  (updates)
 * Karmic:      2.6.31-21.59  (updates)
    - mvl-dove  2.6.31-213.27 (updates)
    - fsl-imx51 2.6.31-111.27 (updates)
    - ec2       2.6.31-306.14 (updates)
 * Lucid:       2.6.32-22.33  (updates)
    - mvl-dove  2.6.32-204.16 (release)
    - fsl-imx51 2.6.31-607.13 (release)
    - ti-omap   2.6.33-500.6  (release)
    - qcm-msm   2.6.31-800.2  (release)
    - ec2       2.6.32-305.9  (release)

Incoming Bugs: Regressions

Current regression stats (broken down by release):

regression-potential (up 130)

Maverick Lucid    
3 302    

regression-update

Lucid Karmic Jaunty Hardy
25 9 5 2

regression-release

Lucid Karmic Jaunty Hardy
149 50 20 3

regression-proposed

Lucid Karmic    
1 1    

Incoming Bugs: Bug day report

Bug Days will start back next week. I plan to send out an announcement for the next one later this week with a reminder the business day before. The current plan is to review Bugs with Patches attached to eliminate misreported patches and prepare the list for team review. I am however, open to suggestion should the Bug day topic need to change. I assume we’d like to focus on those as a team at some point as well so we can see what is cruft and what is not so I am open to a Kernel Bug Day soon too.

Open Discussion or Questions

abogani Who could review my -lowlatency package (https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/kernel-team/2010-May/010707.html) ?
  cnd and apw have it on their lists to review.
 
cjwatson would it be hard to get at least fbcon built-in in the near future (https://wiki.ubuntu.com/FoundationsTeam/Grub2BootFramebuffer)? I guess vesafb might require a bit mo

ogra vesafb might get tricky with arm
ogra agrees fully on fbcon
ogasawara I can look into it, can you open me a bug so it doesn’t fall off the radar

[Discuss Kernel Team Meeting Minutes on the Forum]

Originally posted to the Canonical Voices by Brad Figg on Tue, May 25, 2010

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #194

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter. This is Issue #194 for the week May 16th -May 22nd, 2010 and is available here.

In this issue we cover:

  • Ubuntu Mentioned on CBS’s The Big Bang Theory
  • Audio from UDS Sessions Now Available
  • Taking a Long Term View of the Release
  • Next Americas Regional Membership Board Meeting Announced
  • Why Launchpad Rocks
  • Kubuntu Maverick All Planned Out at UDS
  • Ubuntu Stats
  • Ubuntu Uruguay Approved Team
  • Ubuntu-my (Malaysia) Workshop Monash University
  • Ubuntu-my (Malaysia) Lucid Release Party
  • Ubuntu Catalan LoCo Team Release Party
  • Ubuntu Brazil Release Party Pictures
  • Ubuntini Recipe Released
  • LoCo Items for Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter
  • Debian and Ubuntu
  • Archive / Permissions Reorg confusion
  • Ubuntu Maverick UDS Group Photo made with the Hugin Panorama Creator
  • Melissa Draper: UW World Play Day 2010 Competition: The Movie
  • In The Press
  • In the Blogosphere
  • In Other News
  • Upcoming Meetings and Events
  • Updates and Security
  • and much much more!
  • This issue of The Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter is brought to you by:

    • Amber Graner
    • John Crawford
    • Dave Bush
    • Chris Johnston
    • Penelope Stowe
    • Liraz Siri
    • J Scott Gwin
    • And many others
    • If you have a story idea for the Weekly News, 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

Announcing this week's Bug Day target – Update Manager – Thursday, May 20th, 2010

This week’s Bug Day target is *drum roll please* Update Manager!

  • 100 New bugs need a hug.
  • 100 Confirmed bugs need a review.
  • 100 Incomplete bugs need a status check.

Bookmark it, add it to your calendars, turn over those egg-timers!

Are you looking for a way to start giving some love back to your adorable Ubuntu Project?

Did you ever wonder what Triage is? Want to learn about that?

This is a perfect time!, Everybody can help in a Bug Day! Open your IRC Client and go to #ubuntu-bugs (FreeNode) the BugSquad will be happy to help you to start contributing!

Wanna be famous? Is easy! remember to use 5-A-day so if you do a good work your name could be listed at the top 5-A-Day Contributors in the Ubuntu Hall of Fame page!

We are always looking for new tasks or ideas for the Bug Days, if you have one add it to the Planning page https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuBugDay/Planning

If you’re new to all this, head to http://wiki.ubuntu.com/Bugs

[Discuss Announcing this week’s Bug Day target – Update Manager – Thursday, May 20th, 2010 on the Forum]

Originally sent to the ubuntu-devel-announce Mailing List by Pedro Villavicencio Garrido on Wed May 19 14:27:27 BST 2010