Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #167

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue #167 for the week November 1st – November 7th, 2009 is available.

In this issue we cover:

* Lucid open for development
* Ubuntu Open Week review
* Updating the Ubuntu Code of Conduct
* Ubuntu Marketing Team revival and SpreadUbuntu
* Ubuntu Stats
* LoCo News: Tunisia, Norway, New York State, Massachusetts
* Ubuntu Forums Tutorial of the Week
* Ubuntu Hits Italian National TV (again)
* In the Press & Blogosphere
* Canonical Matching Creative Commons Donations
* LugRadio Documentary – Now Available Online
* Team Meeting Summaries: October 2009
* Upcoming Meetings & Events
* Updates & Security
* And much, much more!

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

* John Crawford
* Craig A. Eddy
* Dave Bush
* Sayak Banerjee
* Amber Graner
* Isabelle Duchatelle
* Nathan Handler
* 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 LicenseAttribution 3.0 License

Ubuntu Open Week in a Nutshell

Ever wonder what all the excitement about? Did you miss a day of Ubuntu Open Week or maybe a session you really wanted to participate in? Let’s review this week of EDUCATIONAL EXCITEMENT, COLLABORATIVE CURRCULA, and INCLUSIVE INSTRUCTION.

Ubuntu Open Week had 40 hours of session, with each session hovering at about 300 people per session. Imagine a week long 300+ conference somewhere. If you have ever attended a conference of this size you can appreciate the significance this many participants from across the world coming together across multiple timezones, without the expense of hotel rooms, travel, AV needs and food. Online conferences such as Ubuntu Open Week afford people the ability to learn in the comfort of their own homes or office.

The way people participated in Ubuntu Week was to the IRC Channels on Freenode via the Ubuntu Open Week wiki or through their IRC Chat client of their choice. The channels needed to participate were #ubuntu-classroom where each session was taught, and #ubuntu-classroom-chat where people could talk about the ongoing session and ask questions to the Presenter. Participants were encouraged to ask questions in the #ubuntu-classroom-chat channel using the following format: QUESTION: Then state their question. The purpose for using the “Question: question stated” format is so that the person who is either presenting or helping the presenter can find the questions easily and paste them in the #ubuntu-classroom channel.

Lets review what Ubuntu Open Week is (from the Ubuntu Open Week Wiki)

Ubuntu Open Week is a series of online workshops where you can:

  • learn about the Ubuntu landscape
  • talk to some of the key developers from the Ubuntu project
  • find out about the Community and its relationship with Canonical
  • participate in an open Q&A with Mark Shuttleworth, the founder of Ubuntu

Nathan Handler gives an awesome summary of the Day one activities in his Blog: UOW: Summary Day 1 – OutLook Day 2. For a Summary of Day 2, Day 3, Day 4, and Day 5, I followed in the style of Nathan and tried to give summaries of each day. Both Nathan and I have links to the Logs for each day.

Again if you missed any part of Ubuntu Open Week the check out the wiki. If you want a quick summary of the sessions check out the links above.If you want to know more about each session and those presenters then a look at the Ubuntu Open Week Booklet is just the thing you are looking for. Also the Wiki for this event can be found here, and the Logs for the week can be found here.

A big shout of “Thanks” goes out to ALL the presenters, and participants who made Ubuntu Open Week – Karmic amazing, exciting, and just awesome. Hope to see everyone back again in May 2010 for the next Open week and next time bring a friend or two.

[Discuss Ubuntu Open Week on the Forums]

Originally posted by Amber Graner here on Saturday, November 7, 2009

Lucid open for development

I’m happy to report that the Lucid Lynx is now open for uploads.

We do not recommend that users upgrade to Lucid at this time; it is likely to be in very considerable flux until the initial round of merges is complete. As ever, any developers wishing to take the plunge at this early stage should ensure that they are comfortable with recovering from anything up to complete system failure.

Automatic syncs from Debian will begin shortly. Because Lucid is an LTS, autosyncing will track the Debian testing series for this cycle, rather than Debian unstable as we normally do.

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LTS

We expect this more conservative policy for package syncing will enable us to prepare a more stable long-term support release. The cost of this approach is that not only regressions will be delayed from reaching Lucid – bugfixes uploaded to Debian unstable will be delayed too (packages uploaded to Debian unstable normally don’t reach Debian testing for at least 10 days). If you believe a newer package version from unstable is needed for any reason, please don’t hesitate to request a sync using the normal process:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SyncRequestProcess

Likewise, package merges from either testing or unstable are perfectly ok, as needed. Merge-o-Matic (https://merges.ubuntu.com/) currently points at Debian unstable; we hope to be able to provide merge data for Debian testing in a week or so, in the meantime please be aware of this fact when preparing any merges.

As usual, the release schedule for Lucid is available at <https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LucidReleaseSchedule>. This year, the first milestone will come in mid-December, well after UDS, and the end of automatic Debian package syncs is not planned until February – shortly before feature freeze itself. Since this cycle’s schedule includes a significant number of changes compared with respect to past releases, there’s been a lot of feedback, some of which is still being incorporated.
This may still result in some fine-tuning of the more specific freezes on the timeline; you can expect this to all be finalized by the end of this week.

[Discuss Lucid Being Open For Development on the Forums]

Originally sent to the ubuntu-devel-announce mailing list by Steve Langasek on Tue Nov 3 11:40:22 GMT 2009

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #166

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue #166 for the week October 25th – October 31st, 2009 is available.

In this issue we cover:

* Ubuntu 9.10 released
* Ubuntu Open Week
* Ubuntu One Blog: File sync status update
* Canonical Blog: Landscape 1.4 Adds UEC Support
* Asia Oceania Membership Board – 27 Oct 09
* New MOTU
* Ubuntu Stats
* Ubuntu LoCo News: AZ, Dublin, Tamil, El Salvador, & Italy
* Meet Francis Lacoste
* Accessing Git, Subversion and Mercurial from Bazaar
* Commenting on questions
* The PLanet: Jono Bacon, Jamie Strandoge, Miguel Ruiz, & Amber Graner
* In the Press & Blogosphere
* Full Circle Magazine #30
* Ubuntu Rescue Remix
* Upcoming Meetings & Events
* Updates & Security
* And much, much more!

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

* John Crawford
* Craig A. Eddy
* Dave Bush
* Sayak Banerjee
* Amber Graner
* 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 LicenseAttribution 3.0 License

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #165

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue #165 for the week October 18th – October 24th, 2009 is available.

In this issue we cover:

* Release Candidate for Ubuntu 9.10 now available
* October 21st America’s Membership Board Meeting
* Ubuntu IRC Council Elections
* Keeping Ubuntu CD’s Available
* Ubuntu Stats
* Ubuntu Zimbabwe LoCo Team at ICT Africa 2009
* Austin’s Karmic Release Party
* Launchpad: The next six months
* Meet Matthew Revell
* Launchpad offline 4:00UTC – 4:30UTC October 26th
* The Planet
* In the Press & Blogosphere
* TurnKey: 40 Ubuntu-based virtual appliances released into the cloud
* Upcoming Meetings & Events
* Updates & Security
* And much, much more!

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

* John Crawford
* Craig A. Eddy
* Dave Bush
* Amber Graner
* Sayak Banerjee
* Liraz Siri
* 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 LicenseAttribution 3.0 License