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Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #165

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Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue #165 for the week October

18th - October 24th, 2009. 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,

LoCo News, Launchpad: The next six months, Meet Matthew Revell,

Launchpad offline 4:00UTC - 4:30UTC October 26th, The Planet, TurnKey:

40 Ubuntu-based virtual appliances released into the cloud, and much,

much more!

 

== UWN Translations ==

 

* Note to translators and our readers: We are trying a new way of

linking to our translations pages. Please follow the link below for the

information you need.

 

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter/Translations

 

== In This Issue ==

 

* 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

 

== General Community News ==

 

=== Release Candidate for Ubuntu 9.10 now available ===

 

The Ubuntu team is pleased to announce the Release Candidate for Ubuntu

9.10 Desktop and Server editions, Ubuntu 9.10 Server for UEC and EC2,

and the Ubuntu Netbook Remix. Codenamed "Karmic Koala", 9.10 continues

Ubuntu's proud tradition of integrating the latest and greatest open

source technologies into a high-quality, easy-to-use Linux distribution.

We consider this release candidate to be complete, stable, and suitable

for testing by any user.

 

Ubuntu 9.10 Desktop Edition improves on the work of 9.04 to get you

going faster, with improved startup times and a streamlined boot experience.

 

Ubuntu 9.10 Server Edition integrates Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud setup in

the installer and provides improvements to system security with

AppArmor, including an AppArmor profile for libvirtd to further isolate

virtual machines from the host system.

 

Ubuntu 9.10 Server for UEC and EC2 brings the power and stability of the

Ubuntu Server Edition to cloud computing, whether you're using Amazon

EC2 or your own Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud.

 

The Ubuntu 9.10 family of variants, Kubuntu, Xubuntu, Edubuntu, Ubuntu

Studio, and Mythbuntu, also reach RC status today. This release sees the

first technology preview of Kubuntu Netbook.

 

The final release of Ubuntu 9.10 is scheduled for 29 October 2009 and

will be supported for 18 months on both desktops and servers. Users

requiring a longer support lifetime on the server may choose to continue

using Ubuntu 8.04 LTS, with security support until 2013, rather than

upgrade to 9.10.

 

Before installing or upgrading to Ubuntu 9.10 please review the

instructions and caveats in the release notes:

http://www.ubuntu.com/getubuntu/releasenotes/910

 

In addition, there are a small number of known bugs in the release

candidate that will be fixed before the Ubuntu 9.10 release, but warrant

highlighting for your attention:

http://www.ubuntu.com/getubuntu/releasenotes/910overview#Known%20issues

 

The purpose of the Release Candidate is to solicit one last round of

testing before the final release. Here are ways that you can help:

 

* Upgrade from Ubuntu 9.04 to the Release Candidate by following the

instructions in the release notes referenced above.

 

* Participate in installation testing using the Release Candidate CD

images, by following the testing and reporting instructions at

http://wiki.ubuntu.com/Testing/ISO

 

To perform a new installation or try out 9.10 "live" from CD, download

the Ubuntu 9.10 Release Candidate here (choose the mirror closest to you):

 

Asia:

 

* http://mirror.unej.ac.id/ubuntu-cd/9.10 (Indonesia)

* http://ubuntu.qualitynet.net/releases/9.10 (Kuwait)

* http://ftp.linux.org.tr/ubuntu-releases/9.10 (Turkey)

 

Europe:

 

* http://ubuntu.ipacct.com/releases/9.10 (Bulgaria)

* http://ucho.ignum.cz/ubuntu-releases/9.10 (Czechia)

* http://ubuntu.univ-nantes.fr/ubuntu-cd/9.10 (France)

* http://ftp.uni-kl.de/pub/linux/ubuntu.iso/9.10 (Germany)

* http://ie.releases.ubuntu.com/9.10 (Ireland)

* http://releases.ubuntu.fastbull.org/ubuntu-releases/9.10 (Italy)

* http://no.releases.ubuntu.com/9.10 (Norway)

* http://se.releases.ubuntu.com/9.10 (Sweden)

 

North America:

 

* http://mirror.anl.gov/pub/ubuntu-iso/CDs/9.10 (United States)

* http://mirror.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/ubuntu-releases/9.10 (Canada)

* http://mirrors.cat.pdx.edu/ubuntu-releases/9.10 (United States)

* http://ubuntu.media.mit.edu/ubuntu-releases/9.10 (United States)

 

Oceania/Australia:

 

* http://ftp.citylink.co.nz/ubuntu-releases/9.10 (New Zealand)

 

South America:

 

* http://mirrors.ucr.ac.cr/ubuntu-cd/9.10 (Costa Rica)

 

Rest of the world:

 

* http://releases.ubuntu.com/9.10 (Great Britain)

 

Please download using Bittorrent if possible. See

https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BitTorrent for more information about

using BitTorrent.

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-announce/2009-October/000126.html

 

=== October 21st America's Membership Board Meeting ===

 

The following contributors were accepted as Ubuntu Members at our

meeting this evening:

 

Ken VanDine: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/KenVanDine

https://launchpad.net/~ken-vandine

 

Ken VanDine works on the Ubuntu-Desktop team as an integration engineer.

By day he spends his time working with Ubuntu One and the Desktop

Experience folks. Some of his significant contributions in the karmic

cycle have been gwibber development and Empathy messaging indicator

support and AV chat work.

 

Duane Hinnen: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/duanedesign

https://launchpad.net/~duanedesign

 

Duane Hinnen is the leader for the Oklahoma LoCo which boasts monthly

meetings, a newsletter and events. He is also a member of the Ubuntu

Beginners Team where he spends a lot of time doing wiki work, bug

triage, IRC support and is the leader of the Beginners Team Launchpad

Focus Group.

 

Steve Woodruff: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/swoody https://launchpad.net/~swoody

 

Steve Woodruff joined the Ubuntu Beginners Team earlier this year where

is main focus is helping new users in the forums and on IRC. He co-leads

the Beginners Team IRC. Locally he's active in the Ubuntu Chicago team

He has also dabbled in package maintaining and is interested in going

down the MOTU path in the future.

 

The Americas Board sends congratulations and a big welcome to these new

members!

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-news-team/2009-October/000733.html

 

=== Ubuntu IRC Council Elections ===

 

Soon several members of the IRC Council (Joseph Price, Marek Spruell and

Melissa Draper) will finish their terms of 2 years. The purpose of this

email is to begin the process of electing new/re-electing members to the

council.

 

Currently, the wiki states the following regarding IRC Council members:

 

* Be appointed by the Ubuntu Community Council in consultation with the

IRC Council, IRC operators, and active contributors to the IRC channels.

Nominations would be open and public and would be considered and

evaluated by the CC. Each candidate should prepare a wiki page

summarizing their nomination and their contributions and including and

referencing testimonials (e.g., something similar to what is prepared

for Ubuntu membership). The CC commits to evaluating all nominations

on the following criteria, listed in order of importance:

 

* The nominees active status as an Ubuntu Member (essential)

 

* The nominees support from at least one active IRC Council member

(essential)

 

* Opinions and testimonials (positive and negative) from current members

of the IRC Council

 

* Opinions and testimonials from current IRC operators - Opinions and

testimonials from Ubuntu Members, Ubunteros, and other active

participants on IRC - Evidence of activity within IRC (quality, quantity

and duration)

 

* Serve terms of two (2) years. IRC Council members could serve multiple

or repeated terms. Weight will be given to proved contributors and

re-election of consistently active members should be both easy and common. "

 

from: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/IrcTeam/IrcCouncil

 

We would like to invite Ubuntu members to nominate themselves if they

wish to run for election for the Ubuntu IRC Council. Please only

nominate yourself, do not nominate others. If you are nominating

yourself, please prepare a wiki page as described above. A nomination

should be in the form of an email to the Ubuntu IRC Council email

address: irc-council at lists.ubuntu.com

 

All nominations will be passed onto the Ubuntu Community Council. Thank

you for your time and we look forward to seeing your nominations.

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-news/2009-October/000232.html

 

=== Keeping Ubuntu CD's Available ===

 

One of the ways in which many people have been able to experience Ubuntu

is via Canonical’s ShipIt program, which has shipped millions of CDs to

new users. This has provided a valuable opportunity for new users to try

Ubuntu and for our community teams to obtain CDs as part of their

advocacy efforts.

 

Due to the sheer growth of Ubuntu, we are making a few changes to ShipIt

which I wanted to ensure I share with you. For the details, I am going

to turn the mic over to everyone’s favorite Canonical COO, Jane Silber

who updated us on the Canonical blog:

 

* The ShipIt program has been at the core of the Ubuntu project since

its inception. The goal was to make sure that there are no restrictions,

as far as was possible, to people having access to Ubuntu. In the last

five years we have shipped millions of CDs and seen Ubuntu’s popularity

and reach grow in ways that would be impossible without ShipIt.

https://shipit.ubuntu.com/

 

And that aim continues. We need to make Ubuntu available to as many

people who need it, particularly those for whom the download options are

limited. The goal has not been to supply a CD to every Ubuntu user of

every version of Ubuntu. Remember, one of the coolest things about

Ubuntu is the way you can upgrade from one version of Ubuntu to another

– without the need for a CD!

 

While these CDs are often referred to as “free CDs”, they are of course

not free of cost to Canonical. We want to continue this programme, but

Ubuntu’s growth means that some changes are necessary. Therefore we are

adjusting how we handle CD requests to try to find the right balance

between availability of CDs and the continued viability of the ShipIt

programme.

 

We will continue to supply CDs to LoCo teams and Ubuntu members. And we

hope to make CDs available to everyone who is just discovering Ubuntu.

And we continue to search for additional ways to make Ubuntu and Ubuntu

materials available to everyone. But we are limiting shipments to people

that we think have alternative paths of getting Ubuntu. For instance,

 

* you can upgrade to the new release without a CD:

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

* you can download your own CD for free:

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

* you will be able to download the CD wallet artwork:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DIYMarketing/#CD%20Distribution%20Materials

* becoming an Ubuntu member by contributing to Ubuntu, and thereby

becoming eligible for more CDs:

http://www.ubuntu.com/community/processes/newmember

* And finally, you can purchase CDs: http://shop.canonical.com/

 

We will change the language on the ShipIt site to make it clearer what

we are doing. We hope that you support this effort and realise that the

intent is to continue to make Ubuntu available on CD to everyone who

needs it.

 

Jane Silber, Canonical

 

http://www.jonobacon.org/2009/10/21/keeping-ubuntu-cds-available/

 

== Ubuntu Stats ==

 

=== Bug Stats ===

 

* Open (67983) +1401 # over last week

* Critical (29) 0 # over last week

* Unconfirmed (32933) +1105 # over last week

* Unassigned (59252) + 1331 # over last week

* All bugs ever reported (332397) + 3843 # over last week

 

As always, the Bug Squad needs more help. If you want to get started,

please see https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BugSquad

 

=== Translation Stats Jaunty ===

 

* Spanish (10077) -181 over last week

* French (36303) -65 over last week

* Brazilian Portuguese (41453) -4379 over last week

* Swedish (52520) -751 over last week

* English (United Kingdom) (53068) -263 over last week

 

Remaining strings to translate in Ubuntu 9.04 "Jaunty Jackalope," see

more at: https://translations.launchpad.net/ubuntu/jaunty/

 

=== Translation Stats Karmic ===

 

* Spanish (14878) -148 over last week

* Brazilian Portuguese (49668) -15423 over last week

* French (50840) -9375 over last week

* Swedish (68581) -660 over last week

* English (Uk) (78225) -9880 over last week

 

Remaining strings to translate in Ubuntu 9.10 "Karmic Koala", see more

at: https://translations.launchpad.net/ubuntu/karmic/

 

=== Ubuntu Brainstorm Top 5 this week ===

 

* Mounting ISO images should be easier -

http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/21937/

* Audio CD icon on the desktop is not very descriptive -

http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/21989/

* Make the Software Center social - http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/21923/

* Icons preview standardisation - http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/21988/

* Make it easier to restart the network -

http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/21953/

 

Ubuntu Brainstorm is a community site geared toward letting you add your

ideas for Ubuntu. You can submit your own idea, or vote for or against

another idea. http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/

 

== LoCo News ==

 

=== Ubuntu Zimbabwe LoCo Team at ICT Africa 2009 ===

 

The Ubuntu Zimbabwe LoCo Team recently took part in the ICT Africa 2009

expo, held in Harare, Zimbabwe. It was a great event and well worth the

effort. Full report and photos available on our site:

 

* Report: http://www.ubuntu.org.zw/node/24

 

* Photos: http://www.ubuntu.org.zw/node/23

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-news-team/2009-October/000729.html

 

=== Austin's Karmic Release Party ===

 

Join the team in Austin between 6pm - 9pm on Thursday, October 29, 2009

at Aussie's Grill and Beach Bar, at 306 Barton Springs Road, just east

of the corner of Riverside and Barton Springs Road, south of the river.

I figured an Australian-themed bar would have to work, in honor of the

home of our lovely mascot, the Karmic Koala!

 

* Aussie's Grill and Beach Bar: http://www.aussiesbar.com/

* 306 Baron Springs Road:

http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&ie=UTF8&f=d&daddr=306%2BBarton%2BSprings%2BRd%2BAustin,%2BTX%2B78704&fb=1&geocode=5447858427608913353,30.258795,-97.747836&cd=1&z=16

 

Burning CD's is so '90s... If you'd like a bootable/installable copy of

Ubuntu 9.10 Karmic Koala, bring an empty USB stick, 1GB or bigger, and

we'll gladly burn an image for you. There should be a couple of laptops

to demo the new release. I'm planning on bringing two, to demo the

Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud (UEC), powered by Eucalyptus, which I've been

working on for the last few months.

 

http://blog.dustinkirkland.com/2009/10/austins-karmic-release-party.html

 

== Launchpad News ==

 

=== Launchpad: The next six months ===

 

A couple of weeks ago, the Launchpad team leads at Canonical gathered in

Millbank Tower to talk about what we’ll be doing over the next six

months. We talked with each other, we talked with Martin Pool from

Bazaar, we talked with people on the Ubuntu Platform team, we talked

with Mark Shuttleworth, we talked a lot.

 

Over the week, two very important things slowly began to dawn on us.

I’ll talk about one of them now, and leave the other one to hang

tantalizingly in the air like some forbidden fruit that’s learned how to

hover.

 

The first important thing we realized is that Launchpad was originally

conceived as a way of helping better connect the Ubuntu operating system

to the upstream projects on which it depends. We further realized that

could do that much better than we are right now.

 

A flood of bugs:

 

Zillions of bugs get filed against Ubuntu every day. While some of them

are introduced when the Ubuntu community packages software, many are

really bugs in the underlying upstream code.[citation needed] And quite

often they’re already fixed in the latest upstream version — it’s just

that the Ubuntu package doesn’t have the fix yet.

 

Yet even though Ubuntu is drowning in this sea of bugs, it can’t simply

forward them upstream indiscriminately. Upstreams shouldn’t be bothered

with old bugs; they only want to hear about bugs that are still in their

code. And Ubuntu needs to know when such a bug has been found, both to

tell users that a fix is coming and to help plan packaging updates.

 

Package of the day:

 

Launchpad should be doing much more to help rescue Ubuntu from this

deluge. With PPAs and source package branches, Launchpad ought to be

able to make it really easy to create a packaged version of the tip of

any upstream, to test against, and to file bugs and provide patches

directly to that upstream. That is,

Launchpad needs to make Ubuntu Daily Builds rock.

 

That’s going to be our overall focus now. At the same time, we’re also

aware that we need to spend time polishing what we already have. So, for

this month and for UDS, we’re going to be focusing only on reducing

technical debt, fixing OOPSes and cleaning up the UI.

 

Where to now:

 

The Canonical Launchpad team are going to be focused on “bridging the

gap” between Ubuntu and its upstreams. We’ll focus on better, faster bug

triage, on making it really easy to get upstream tip on the Ubuntu

desktop and really tight translations integration between Ubuntu & its

upstreams. Early next week, we’ll email out a high-level roadmap of

where we want to go.

 

We are interested in getting real-user feedback about our solution to

better integrating upstreams and Ubuntu developers. If you are an

upstream or Ubuntu developer interested by that problem, please contact us.

 

PS. If you’ve read this far, you are probably wondering what the second

Very Important Thing was. I’m afraid you’ll just have to wait.

 

http://blog.launchpad.net/general/launchpad-the-next-six-months

 

=== Meet Matthew Revell ===

 

Julian Edwards has turned the tables on Launchpad's communications

expert Matthew Revell by interviewing him. As you may well know, Matthew

is the one usually asking the questions and letting the Ubuntu community

know what is going on with Launchpad. This time however, we get a little

look into what is going on in Matthew's life. Read the full interview at

the link below.

 

http://blog.launchpad.net/meet-the-devs/meet-matthew-revell

 

=== Launchpad offline 4:00UTC - 4:30UTC October 26th ===

 

Launchpad will be offline for roughly 30 minutes from 04.00 UTC on

Monday October 26th, 2009 for database maintenance.

 

http://blog.launchpad.net/notifications/launchpad-offline-04-00-04-30-utc-26th-october

 

== The Planet ==

 

=== Meet the Platform Team Managers ===

 

Amber Graner brings us 5 new interviews from her "Where Karmic's Karma

comes From" series. The Platform Team is made up of the following teams:

Foundations, Kernel, Desktop, QA, Mobile, Community, and Server teams.

 

* Rick Spencer - Engineering Manager for Canonical's Desktop Team:

http://www.ubuntu-user.com/Online/Blogs/Amber-Graner-You-in-Ubuntu/Meet-the-Platform-Team-Managers-Rick-Spencer

 

* David Mandalla - Canonical Mobile Team Manager:

http://www.ubuntu-user.com/Online/Blogs/Amber-Graner-You-in-Ubuntu/Meet-the-Platform-Team-Managers-David-Mandala

 

* Robbie Williamson - Ubuntu's Foundations Team Manager:

http://ubuntu-user.com/Online/Blogs/Amber-Graner-You-in-Ubuntu/Meet-the-Platform-Team-Managers-Robbie-Williamson

 

* Canonical Kernel Team Manager – Pete Graner:

http://www.ubuntu-user.com/Online/Blogs/Amber-Graner-You-in-Ubuntu/Meet-the-Platform-Team-Managers-Pete-Graner

 

* Ubuntu Community Manager - Jono Bacon:

http://www.ubuntu-user.com/Online/Blogs/Amber-Graner-You-in-Ubuntu/Meet-the-Platform-Team-Managers-Jono-Bacon

 

http://amber.redvoodoo.org/2009/10/you-in-ubuntu-meet-platform-team_3230.html

 

=== Jono Bacon: Wild and Wicked Wolverhampton Weekend ===

 

I'm fly to England back to Wolverhampton for LugRadio Live 2009. I have

been over in California now for over a year and it will be the first

time I have got to see many of my friends since I moved. It will also be

the final re-union of the LugRadio team for the last ever live show and

last ever LugRadio Live. It is going to be a blast! Tomorrow I fly to

England back to Wolverhampton for LugRadio Live 2009. I have been over

in California now for over a year and it will be the first time I have

got to see many of my friends since I moved. It will also be the final

re-union of the LugRadio team for the last ever live show and last ever

LugRadio Live. It is going to be a blast! http://www.lugradio.org/live/2009/

 

Although LugRadio Live is entirely sold out of tickets, there is going

to be one hell of a party on the Friday night at The Hogshead, 186

Stafford Street, Wolverhampton, WV1 1NA from 7.30pm and also on the

Saturday night at the The Connaught Hotel, 40-50 Tettenhall Rd,

Wolverhampton, WV1 4SW from 8pm. On the Saturday there will be Karaoke.

Oh yes. Everyone is welcome to both parties, and I would love to see you

all there!

 

The fun doesn’t end there though, oh no! On the Sunday, the first ever

OggCamp is going to take place at The Connaught Hotel in Wolverhampton,

and it is shaping up to be an incredible event. The organizers behind

it, the venerable Ubuntu UK and Linux Outlaws podcasts, have worked hard

to make it a rocking event and I can’t wait for it! I really hope it

becomes a staple in the UK Open Source event calendar.

 

What a rollicking weekend of Open Source goodness, firmly seated in the

great British heartlands:

 

* Friday 23rd October – Party at The Hogs Head in Wolverhampton.

* Saturday 24th October – LugRadio Live 2009 and party at The Connaught

Hotel in Wolverhampton.

* Sunday 25th October – OggCamp at The Connaught Hotel in Wolverhampton.

 

http://www.jonobacon.org/2009/10/22/wild-and-wicked-wolverhampton-weekend/

 

=== Dustin Kirkland: Linux Magazine: Ubuntu Encrypted Home ===

 

Back in April, Linux Magazine ran what I considered to be an inaccurate

account of the OS-level security provided by our Ubuntu Distribution.

Your Distro is Insecure: Ubuntu. http://www.linux-mag.com/id/7297/1

 

Frustrated with the piece, I blogged this in return: Your Article is

Incorrect: Linux Magazine.

http://blog.dustinkirkland.com/2009/04/your-article-is-incorrect.html

 

Following that post, I had a very constructive, private email

conversation with Linux Magazine editor, Bryan Richard. We discussed a

number of different ways that Canonical/Ubuntu might be able to respond

to their previous article, which caused quite a stir on Ubuntu's public

 

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