Free Books For Approved LoCo Teams

Recently I have been talking to Prentice Hall, the rather spanky-awesome publishers of The Official Ubuntu Book by Mako, Matthew Helmke and Corey Burger, and the brand new Official Ubuntu Server Book by our friend and yours, Kyle Rankin and Mako. These books were commissioned by Debra Williams-Cauley who has been awesome getting them on the shelves, and her sidekick is one Heather Fox who I have been chatting with recently to see if we can score some free copies for our rather fantastic Ubuntu LoCo Teams. Fortunately, Heather has been able to make the magic happen.

Prentice Hall are happy to send each and every approved LoCo team one free copy of The Official Ubuntu Book and one free copy of The Official Ubuntu Server book. To be entirely clear: this is one copy of each book per team. This will be a great addition to each team’s library of Ubuntu books!

To keep this as simple as possible, you can request your books by following these steps:

  1. The team contact shown on our LoCo Team List (and only the team contact) should send Heather Fox an email at heather DOT fox AT pearson DOT com and include the following details:
    • Your full name.
    • Which team you are from.
    • Your full address (including zip/postal code, region and country).
    • Your phone number, including country and area code.
  2. Heather will process your application and let you know if it is approved.
  3. If approved, she will get your books in the post.

A few notes:

  • Only approved teams are eligible for the free copies of the books.
  • Only the team contact for each team (shown on this page) can make the request for the book.
  • There is a limit of one copy of each book per approved team.
  • Prentice Hall will cover postage, but not any import tax or other shipping fees.
  • When you have the books, it is up to you what you do with them. We recommend you share them between members of the team. LoCo Leaders: please don’t hog them for yourselves!
  • The deadline for getting your requests in Wed 12th August 2009.

If you have any questions or queries, don’t contact me or Canonical, contact Heather Fox at heather DOT fox AT pearson DOT com.

Also, for those teams who are not approved or yet to approved, you can still score a rather nice 35% discount on the books by registering your LoCo with the Prentice Hall User Groups Program.

All in all a pretty sweet deal, methinks. Enjoy!

[Discuss this on the Forums]

Originally posted by Jono Bacon here on Wednesday, July 29th, 2009 at 7:07 pm

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #152

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue #152 for the week July 19th – July 25th, 2009 is available.

In this issue we cover:

* Karmic Alpha 3 released
* Launchpad is now open source
* Ubuntu Stats
* Ubuntu-US-NY is now an approved LoCo Team
* Focusing on the Launchpad UI
* Answer contacts can assign questions
* Automatically import files to Launchpad using product release finder
* Ubuntu Forums tutorial of the week
* Kubuntu Translation Day
* In the Press & Blogosphere
* Ubuntu Podcast #31
* Upcoming Meetings & Events
* Updates & Security
* And much, much more!

The Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter is brought to you by:

* John Crawford
* Craig A. Eddy
* Dave Bush
* Isabelle Duchatelle
* Sayak Banerjee
* Liraz Siri
* Kenny McHenry
* 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

Karmic Alpha 3 released

Welcome to Karmic Koala Alpha-3, which will in time become Ubuntu 9.10.

Pre-releases of Karmic are *not* encouraged for anyone needing a stable system or anyone who is not comfortable running into occasional, even frequent breakage. They are, however, recommended for Ubuntu developers and those who want to help in testing, reporting, and fixing bugs.

Alpha 3 is the third in a series of milestone CD images that will be released throughout the Karmic development cycle. The Alpha images are known to be reasonably free of showstopper CD build or installer bugs, while representing a very recent snapshot of Karmic. You can download it here:

http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/releases/karmic/alpha-3/ (Ubuntu)
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/kubuntu/releases/karmic/alpha-3/ (Kubuntu)
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/xubuntu/releases/karmic/alpha-3/ (Xubuntu)
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/ubuntustudio/releases/karmic/alpha-3/ (Ubuntu Studio)

See http://wiki.ubuntu.com/Mirrors for a list of mirrors.

Alpha 3 includes a number of software updates that are ready for large-scale testing. This is quite an early set of images, so you should expect some bugs. For an overview of new features and a list of known bugs (that you don’t need to report if you encounter).

For Ubuntu please see:

http://www.ubuntu.com/testing/karmic/alpha3

For Kubuntu please see:

https://wiki.kubuntu.org/KarmicKoala/Alpha3/Kubuntu

If you’re interested in following the changes as we further develop Karmic, have a look at the karmic-changes mailing list:

http://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/karmic-changes

We also suggest that you subscribe to the ubuntu-devel-announce list if you’re interested in following Ubuntu development. This is a low-traffic list (a few posts a week) carrying announcements of approved specifications, policy changes, alpha releases, and other interesting events.

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

Bug reports should go to the Ubuntu bug tracker:

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

[Discuss this on the Forums]

Originally sent to the ubuntu-devel-announce mailing list by Martin Pitt on Thu Jul 23 14:57:09 BST 2009

Packaging Perl Modules

After the session from the Mono team last week we have our friends from the Debian Perl team joining us to give you details on packaging Perl modules and how to get involved with their team. gwolf and jawnsy will present the session in #ubuntu-classroom on irc.freenode.net at 23rd July, 00:00 UTC.

[Discuss this Packaging Training Session on the Forums]

Originally posted by James Westby here on July 22, 2009 at 7:21 pm

Launchpad is now open source

Hi everyone — Launchpad is now open source.

Huge congrats (and thanks) to the Canonical Launchpad team, who worked overtime to make this happen sooner rather than later.

Note that although we announced previously that we’d be holding back two components (codehosting and soyuz), we changed our minds :-). They are opened too — all the code is open. Our public announcements are here:

http://blog.canonical.com/?p=192
http://www.ubuntu.com/news/canonical-open-sources-launchpad

The Canonical launchpad developers will be on IRC in #launchpad-dev on irc.freenode.net. For real time development discussion, that’s the place to go; for usage questions, #launchpad is still the channel, as before.

The development wiki is dev.launchpad.net. Right now, only Canonical people can edit it. We’ll expand the access list eventually, but just for these first few days I’d like to leave it tightly controlled because there will be a lot of eyeballs on it, and we need to figure out the right strategy to allow the good edits while preventing vandalism and spam. (I’ve run other wikis, and spam is *by far* the majority of all edits to any open wiki, so we’ll need to do that carefully.)

The mailing list is launchpad-dev {AT} lists.launchpad.net, which you can join by visiting https://launchpad.net/~launchpad-dev and joining the team there (a team and a mailing list are sort of the same thing in Launchpad). Again, that’s the development mailing list; user questions should still go to launchpad-users {AT} lists.launchpad.net.

Canonical is continuing to host Launchpad.net, of course, so we will vet and shepherd changes onto the production servers. The wiki explains the basics of how to learn your way around the code, make patches, and get code review; these processes will evolve organically, and we’ll keep the wiki updated as they do.

Note that the images/icons are still copyrighted traditionally, to protect Launchpad’s visual identity. But they’re shipped with the code and are fine to use for development and testing purposes. Just if you launch a production server, it needs to look different — and have a different name, of course, as “Launchpad” is a trademark. From our point of view, we’re doing this to improve our hosted service, so if you feel the need to run it on your own servers, that might mean we’re doing something wrong, in which case we hope you’ll tell us what.

Please bear with us as we learn how to be an open source team. Many of the Launchpad developers have open source experience of course, but as a team we’ve been working on Launchpad in-house for some years. This is a big change. We’re eager and ready, though.

That’s everything. Questions welcome, and patches too.

[Discuss Launchpad being Open Source on the Forums]

Originally sent to the launchpad-users mailing list by Karl Fogel on Mon, 20 Jul 2009 22:31:57 -0700