Jump to content
Compatible Support Forums
Sign in to follow this  
news

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #121

Recommended Posts

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue #121 for the week

December 7th - December 13th, 2008. In this issue we cover: 4,000 people

attend Ubuntu-fr Release Party, Ubuntu Developer Summit: Jaunty, Hall of

Fame: Albero Milone, Interview with (huats), Leader of the Ubuntu-fr

Team, MOTU, New York team Asterisk demonstration, Software Freedom Day

Nicaragua, Launchpad Drupal modules, Launchpad in twitter and identi.ca,

Launchpad off-line Dec. 17th, OpenSolaris tackles Ubuntu dominance, 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 ==

 

* 4,000 people attend Ubuntu-fr Release Party

* Ubuntu Developer Summit Jaunty

* Hall of Fame: Alberto Milone

* Ubuntu Stats

* Interview with (huats), Leader of the Ubuntu-fr Team

* New York Team Asterisk Demonstration

* Software Freedom Day Nicaragua

* Launchpad Drupal modules

* Launchpad in Twitter & identi.ca

* Launchpad off-line Dec. 17th

* Launchpad News

* In the Press & Blogosphere

* OpenSolaris tackles Ubuntu dominance

* Upcoming Meetings & Events

* Updates & Security

 

== General Community News ==

 

=== Four Thousand People attend Ubuntu-fr Release Party ===

 

Organized by ubuntu-party and the French LoCo team, the event took place

in the "Cité des sciences et de l'industrie" in Paris, on November 29th

and 30th. Last year the event drew almost 3,000, and with 4,000

certified attendees, this years event was another recording breaking

event for the French LoCo team.

 

The event included 14 hours of conferences that covered various topics

such as "what is Ubuntu?", "how to contribute to Ubuntu?" and "what is

the French community Ubuntu-fr?". Other talks covered more general

issues such as accessibility, achieving freedom through computer

science, art and free culture, and open document formats. For new users,

there were 8 hours of initiation training. Also included were sessions

for beginners that taught them how to use Ubuntu on a day-to-day basis,

and a more advanced session that covered command line usage.

 

The event also included an installation fest where literally hundreds of

machines had Ubuntu installed by volunteers. Mozilla had a dedicated

room where they attracted lots of attention with their talks. There was

an Ubuntu discovery area where team members demonstrated the Ubuntu OS

to new users, and a bugjam where attendees could learn how to triage bugs.

 

Local radio station oxyradio, and the French national newspaper

Liberation covered the event by providing interviews, and a full page

write up about the happening.

 

Congratulations to the French team for surpassing last years attendance

mark and for hosting what could very well be the Ubuntu event of the

year for LoCo teams.

http://blog.didrocks.fr/index.php/post/Ubuntu-Party-Paris%3A-more-than-4-000-visitors!

 

Pictures here: http://www.ubuntu-party.org/retombees.php

 

=== Ubuntu Developer Summit Jaunty ===

 

UDS Jaunty has concluded, and many in the community are wondering just

what happened, and what can we expect from Jaunty Jackalope. By

following the links below, everyone can find out. Sessions were recorded

and are available for viewing. The videos provide insight to where

Ubuntu is headed in the future.

 

OGG downloads of recorded sessions: http://videos.ubuntu.com/uds/jaunty/

 

YouTube videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/ubuntudevelopers

 

OGG downloads of interviews: http://videos.ubuntu.com/uds/jaunty/Interviews/

 

Pictures from the event: http://www.flickr.com/search/?q=uds-jaunty&m=tags

 

=== Hall of Fame: Alberto Milone ===

 

Alberto Milone is best known for creating and maintaining envy, a tool

to help people install nvidia drivers. After its introduction, it gained

huge popularity in the community, and soon afterwards he started working

on screen-resolution-extra, which made it easy to set up dual-head displays.

 

A few releases ago, these tools found their way into Ubuntu itself, and

Alberto dove head-first into making the integration of graphic drivers

and display related features in Ubuntu rock. The first step was writing

x-kit, which contains code to parse, edit, and write xorg.conf. Nowadays

he is maintaining the nVidia driver within Ubuntu.

 

Facts about Alberto that are probably not widely known yet: he studied

foreign language in college, and is passionate about food, especially

Italian! He not only directly helped Ubuntu to move X drivers out of

linux-restricted-modules into their own much simpler packages, but also

helped with moderation work in the Ubuntu Forums. In addition to these

items, Alberto is a big fan of T.S. Elliot.

 

Alberto Milone is definitely one of the work-horses in the Ubuntu

community, he is friendly and very approachable - we're not only very

happy, but very lucky he is part of our community.

 

http://hall-of-fame.ubuntu.com/?feature=alberto-milone

 

=== MOTU ===

 

David Futcher is a 15 year old living in Edinburgh, Scotland and has

used Ubuntu since the Dapper version. He is active in MOTU, Ubuland(a

project to provide free web hosting to members of the Ubuntu community),

the Ubuntu Forums, testing of Intrepid Ibex, and Launchpad BETA testing.

David has done great work in MOTU, and we're very happy to announce his

membership to the team. Launchpad: https://edge.launchpad.net/~bobbo

Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DavidFutcher

 

== Ubuntu Stats ==

 

=== Bug Stats ===

 

* Open (47948) -317 # over last week

* Critical (15) -1 # over last week

* Unconfirmed (18479) -321 # over last week

* Unassigned (39822) -327 # over last week

* All bugs ever reported (236667) +1211 # 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 Intrepid ===

 

* Spanish (17283) -357 # over last week

* French (61915) +/-0 # over last week

* Swedish (72541) -1863 # over last week

* Brazilian Portuguese (81309) -338 # over last week

* English (UK) (81460) +/-0 # over last week

 

Remaining strings to translate in Ubuntu 8.10 "Intrepid Ibex," see more

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

 

=== 5-a-day bug stats ===

 

Top 5 contributors for the past 7 days

 

* crimsun (712)

* jibel (289)

* charlie-tca (80)

* chrisccoulson (70)

* andres-mujica (48)

 

Top 5 teams for the past 7 days

 

* dcteam (712)

* ubuntu-co (48)

* ubuntu-berlin (45)

* ubuntu-de-locoteam (37)

* ubuntu-cl (34)

 

5-A-Day stats provided by Daniel Holbach. See

http://daniel.holba.ch/5-a-day-stats/

 

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

 

* Create icons for "open with" applications in the context menu

* kaffeine (and other video players) should remember last position

* Add Yo Frankie! Game to Ubuntu repositories

* Nautilus: Make it possible to change file permissions in FTP

* Implement support for OpenCL API

 

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/

 

== Interview with (huats), Leader of the Ubuntu-fr Team ==

 

- Who are you? Where do you live? What do you do for a living?

 

My name is Christophe Sauthier, and my nick is huats in IRC. I am 31, I

live in Toulouse (France), and I am in a relationship. I work for a

French service company (makina corpus) that only works in the open

source world. I am involved with Ubuntu related training, assistance,

and migration, but also some development in PHP (Drupal) and Python (Plone).

 

I am directly involved with Ubuntu as the leader of the French LoCo. My

other main community role is coordinating the MOTU mentoring reception,

which is geared at helping new comers in the Ubuntu development world. I

also try to be active on a development level by helping with the

packaging of some applications, mainly around the GNOME environment.

 

- How did you get involved with Linux and Ubuntu initially?

 

A long long time ago (something like 1996) I went to ask someone his

opinion on a perl script I was working on (a cgi for a website in fact).

He told me: "if you plan to develop a bit in Perl, you should use Linux.

Here are some ways to install it...". That was my first contact with

Linux. At that time, I mainly used Suse, and Debian. Then one day, I ran

across something which was based on Debian but not named yet, it later

became known as Ubuntu. That was in 2004, and since that day, Ubuntu has

been the only distribution I have used.

 

- How did you get involved with the French LoCo?

 

I had been doing some French translations for some software (mainly in

Gnome) for sometime, and one day I noticed a post on the French LoCo

teams wiki that mentioned a bunch of projects that were about to be

launched. One of them was the organization of interviews (and then

translations) of some key members of the community. This project evolved

later into various projects like BehindUbuntu.

 

- How did you come to lead the French LoCo?

 

After that first experience in the French Community, I decided to stay

around, hanging out in the IRC of various French channels, or looking

from time to time at the forums. That was where I saw the campaign to

sell t-shirts for the LoCo. My first thought was 'I want one', and my

second thought was 'I am sure I can help them to organize it'... After

ordering mine, I contacted the guy who was leading the project, and

there was so much work that my help was welcomed... it turned out that

Yann (the guy I contacted), was the leader of the LoCo, and after lots

of talks he told me that some help was also needed on the website

development area. He asked me to show some proof that I able to help by

developing a module for the punbb (the forum we are using for the French

LoCo). I took on more and more work for the French LoCo, and when the

leader decided to step down, they asked me if I was willing to face the

challenge of trying to build a new team, with new organization. This is

how I became the leader of the French LoCo, and I have tried to build

the team using the "Team Work" concept.

 

- What are the challenges of running a large LoCo? How does your LoCo

communicate, and reach such a large area?

 

There are many challenges, but it is also thrilling. The first challenge

is of course trying to work everything into one day. There are some many

solicitations that it is impossible to please everyone even though we

want to try. So it ends up, that some people feel that we are just

centered in one area, and that we don't care about the others. The fact

is that it is usually a lack of manpower and/or time, and to show that,

we are communicating more and more using a report blog. The blog is part

of the French planet so it can be reached by everyone. We don't want to

only limit ourself to the blog though, since we are also trying to be as

transparent as we can on every decisions. Every month or so, we have a

public IRC meeting. We try to deal with every aspect of our community:

talking about the past actions (since the last meeting), the current

ongoing actions, and the short/medium term ones. There is also an amount

of time dedicated to questions where anyone can initiate a new topic for

discussion. I think that this transparency interests people, for

instance at the last meeting, something like 60 people attended.

 

- How is the French LoCo organized? Is it centralized or decentralized?

 

It is a mix. Of course there are a bunch of guys at the core of the

LoCo, but with the new team organization, the core has grown a bit. The

aim of each one of the cores is to have the big picture of everything

that is happening in the LoCo, or at least to maximize its knowledge. By

doing it that way, if we have someone who steps down, it makes it easier

to replaced them. Around the core, is a bigger circle of people, who are

more involved in one, or two areas. This second circle can be seen as

dedicated teams for one area. So to sum up: a core of less than 10

people, that leads some team activities that are quite independent of

the others. Each team has a wide perimeter of action, even though we

like to be aware of big decisions.

 

- Sometimes LoCos go through a slow period, where member participation

or motivation may have decreased? How does the French LoCo battle that?

 

I think there has been a slow period like that in the French LoCo too.

But I think its effect has been lowered by the change in the team

organization that I mentioned earlier. It was noticeable during the

period when the 'leaders' of the community were slowing down a bit, but

there was not a big slowing down in our activities. This is indicative

of a bigger community, that can sustain themselves for sometime without

major damage... As long as it doesn't last too much of course... Since

then, the LoCo is again on a good track, and is very active. Good

examples are the parties we had all over the country for Intrepid, and

of course the Paris event with more than 4000 attendants over the

weekend. Since we don't want to slow down again, we are launching some

small projects that should help us to tackle some areas that we are

interested in. That should help to keep our LoCo and the community

growing. They are kind of the projects that made me want to get involved

in the community, so you can clearly imagine that I am really attached

to them. We feel that in this way we can offset a decrease, or slowdown

in membership by adding some new areas of interest to get involved with.

 

- What are your short term and longer term plans for the LoCo?

 

I'd say to keep the current work we have just initiated: to complete the

various teams (some are still a bit blurred, or are just taking shape).

For instance, there was not really a web development team, since we were

just gathering some resources when needed. Right now a group of very

talented people are working to tackle the various aspects for long term

use, not just on demand. This is necessary if we want to be able to

always be innovative. So for the short term, it's finding a new skin for

the whole pack of ubuntu-fr sites (www, documentation, forums and

planet), to take advantages of our new www website (drupal), and give

our editors the rights to many teams (the kubuntu or the edubuntu one).

We hope to be able to do that in the next couple of months. For the

longer term, we really want to continue our effort on spreading Ubuntu

in France, which results in the organization of more parties all across

the country (building on the success of the whole intrepid campaign). We

want to have some regular events, where people can gather in real life

instead of just in IRC. That should help the new user to feel that they

are part of the community. It might be some bug jams, some documentation

jams (like a bug jam but to verify the current available documentation),

or even some translation jams. Finally we will try to set up a real

policy for the attendance of events by offering people the chance to

meet with the team personally to ask question and get answers.

 

- One of the ideas that you have talked about with the LoCo Council is

twinning. What is that? And have you put it into practice yet?

 

Many meanings can be given to the twinning of LoCos. The one I really

care about is the help that a big LoCo, like the French one, can provide

to a smaller one. That help could be experience, helping to plan some

large scale campaign, or even donating some money to help them to get

their event started. This is something that we faced at the beginning

with our team, and without the financial involvement of some French

members we couldn't have done many of the things we have. Since the

French LoCo has more power now, it might be a great thing to help other

teams to get a start. In fact it is quite close to some of the key

concepts that lead to the creation of ubuntu-eu some years ago.

Ubuntu-eu is a joint German effort to share hosting of their website.

Since its inception, many LoCos have found hosting there, which is

clearly helpful for the newer teams. Back to the twinning process, we

have started to work a bit on it, with the Tunesian LoCo, but we are not

very far along in the process because of a lack of time lately. I am

very confident that we will work on that soon again.

 

- The Ubuntu French Team had a release party attended by 4,000 people.

Can you describe the event? How did you plan the event? How long did it

take?

 

This event, that took place in Paris, was a mixture of all the various

kind of parties that we could have: install, release, conference... That

is why we simply call it an "Ubuntu Party." We are hosting this event

every 6 months, on a weekend, about a month after each release. During

the event, many people came to get an installation of Intrepid, or

because they were facing a problem with their current ubuntu

installation. We also offered more than 14 hours of conferences, and a

bug jam... and even live radio during the whole weekend that was

broadcasting from the event. The team has been planning the event since

the end of the previous one(which was in early June), so it is the

result of 6 months of work by the whole team. Some of us were working on

the communication (with media, with the desired audience), some others

on the materials needed for the event, or even planning the overall look

and feel of the conference. We are currently doing the analysis of this

event, which should help us to prepare the next one, in May 2009.

 

- What do you do for fun?

 

Besides my LoCo activities, I do some Ubuntu development. While I know

it is still related to our community, this is clearly a separated

activity from my point of view. But I also do quite a lot of sports:

mainly basketball, but I also go hiking in the Pyrenees (some mountains

which are very close to my home) sometimes. Beside that, I really enjoy

cooking for my friends. In fact I clearly see a common link in cooking

for others, and doing some of the activities associated with free

software...

 

== LoCo News ==

 

=== New York Team Asterisk Demonstration ===

 

The New York Team will be holding a demonstration of Asterisk PBXi

(Private Branch Exchange, internet), at the Rochester Institute of

Technology, in Rochester, New York.

 

* Address:

* BARNES & NOBLE ( -at -) RIT Bookstore

 

* 100 Park Point Drive

 

* Rochester, NY 14623

 

* (at the corner of John Street and Jefferson Road in Henrietta)

 

* Date: January 8th, 2009

 

* Time: 7pm until 9pm

 

* Room: Upstairs group meeting room -- this room is a semi-private

glass window room upstairs

 

* Amenities: free wireless, cafe (food is allowed in the meeting

room), a very nice computer book section and IT text books.

 

More information and a list of books on the subject can be seen at:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/NewYorkTeam/Events/20090108

 

== Software Freedom Day Nicaragua ==

 

The making of SFD 2008 Nicaragua, The best event worldwide. See the

excitement, the preparation, the event, and the head-banging concert at

(spoken dialog is in Spanish):

 

* Youtube:

 

Or download the Og Vorbis file, at:

 

* Ogv format: http://www.linuxtour.org/sfd/sfdni2008.ogv

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/loco-contacts/2008-December/002595.html

 

== Launchpad News ==

 

=== Launchpad Drupal modules ===

 

There are 2 new Drupal modules for Drupal 5.x:

 

* openid-launchpad: delegate your Drupal site's user authentication

to Launchpad

* openid-teams: assign Drupal roles to logged-in users based on

their membership of specific Launchpad teams.

 

These modules require the Launchpad modified version of the Drupal

OpenID module. There is a help file for setting up these modulesf[1],

and more information available here:[2] These modules allow you to set

up the amount of participation a team member has as reflected in Launchpad.

 

[1] https://help.launchpad.net/DrupalPlugins

 

 

[2]http://news.launchpad.net/cool-new-stuff/new-launchpad-plugins-for-drupal

 

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/launchpad-users/2008-December/004572.html

 

=== Launchpad in Twitter and identi.ca ===

 

Matthew Revell is experimenting with posting Launchpad news and status

updates to Twitter[1] and identi.ca[2], and is interested in feedback

from readers. Of course, these are not meant to be official

information. For terms of use changes[3] or notifications[4].

 

[1] http://twitter.com/launchpad_net

 

[2] http://identi.ca/launchpad

 

[3] http://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/Launchpad-announce

 

[4] http://news.launchpad.net/category/notifications

 

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/launchpad-users/2008-December/004573.html

 

=== Launchpad off-line Dec. 17th ===

 

Launchpad will be offline Wednesday, December 17.

* From 22:00 UTC.

* Expect to be back up 23:00 UTC.

 

This is a scheduled outage to allow them to roll out the 2.1.12 release

code.

http://news.launchpad.net/notifications/offline-2200-2300-utc-17th-december-2008

 

== In The Press ==

 

* CDC takes its epidemiological software open source - The Centers

for Disease Control and Prevention have released an open-source version

of its software for epidemiological analysis. According to Enrique

Nieves Jr., acting division director of the National Center for Public

Health Informatics’ Division of Integrated Surveillance Systems and

Services, this move should open the door for the whole world to be our

lab, which would bring in ideas from different places and maybe some

contributions for features that we hadn’t thought of. CDC has tested Epi

Info Community Edition on Ubuntu, a Linux-based operating system. He

said the software has not been tested on any other Linux distribution.

The reason they used Ubuntu, is it’s one of the most popular Linux

distributions and one of the most user friendly.

http://www.govhealthit.com/online/news/350715-1.html

 

* Netflix coming to Linux desktops? - Boxee is a new linux distro, a

social media center that gives access to Netflix video downloads to

Linux for the first time. Netflix users have been able to stream the

subscription service's videos onto Windows for some time, while

Macintosh desktops gained support within the last few weeks. However,

the capability has never before been available for Linux desktops. A Mac

OS X version of the Netflix release is available now, and an Ubuntu

Linux version will be ready early next year. Boxee is available in alpha

stage for Ubuntu Linux, but new users may have to wait several weeks.

http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS8284021470.html

 

* Ubuntu Mobile Broadband Disappointment - Some time ago this author

wrote about using mobile broadband with Ubuntu, and he was very hopeful

at that time it would soon be "plug in and click to connect".

Unfortunately it hasn't turned out that way, at least not yet.

Considered in the light of his original goal, which was simply to get

his Sierra Wireless Air Card 880 working with Ubuntu, it is still a

major win, because now, he can do that.

http://community.zdnet.co.uk/blog/0,1000000567,10009946o-2000498448b,00.htm

 

== In The Blogosphere ==

 

* Is Linux ready for the average user? My wife thinks so - The

author's wife has always used Windows machines, so it was with some fear

and trembling that he purchased a Dell Mini 9 loaded with Ubuntu for

her. After some setup, such as Japanese character input, and other minor

things, he turned her loose with it. In the 3 weeks she's been on it

he's not heard a single complaint. His conclusion: if he can get his

wife to use Linux without complaint, then it's ready for anybody.

http://okiiliving.blogspot.com/2008/12/is-linux-ready-for-average-user-my-wife.html

 

* System76 Launches Biometric Ubuntu Linux Laptop - Joe Panettieri, of

WorksWithU, introduces the System76 Gazelle Ultra (starting at $899).

This laptop not only is strongly branded around Ubuntu, but sports a

bio-metric fingerprint reader for security. The specs include:

 

* 13.3” LED Backlit Display (1280×800)

* Brushed Aluminum Palm Rest

* Latest Intel CPU’s

* Intel X4500HD Graphics

* Webcam

* Fingerprint Reader

* 4.4 lbs.

 

 

http://www.workswithu.com/2008/12/12/system76-launches-biometric-ubuntu-linux-laptops/

 

* Review: ZaReason Makes Desktop Linux A Breeze - Joe Panettieri, of

WorksWithU, shows people with aging computers alternatives to new,

expensive, high-end equipment. The ZaReason Breeze is a low-end machine

running Ubuntu that has been designed for who just want basic desktop

productivity applications, Web 2.0 applications, email and instant

messaging. Based on an Intel Atom processor, and costing only about

$300, it fills that niche quite adequately. It should be noted that this

computer will slow down with multiple multi-media applications running.

http://www.workswithu.com/2008/12/12/review-zareason-makes-desktop-linux-a-breeze/

 

* New Notifications for Jaunty - awalton introduces us to the new

notifications work that has been going on for the Jaunty Jack release.

Based on information released at UDS (Ubuntu Developer Summit), the

upstream development of notifications has stalled, however, Ubuntu and

Canonical are doing some work to improve the situation. The direction

that they are going in is to have the notifications just show what's

happening on your machine, rather than having any actions button

associated with them. Actions would, therefore, be moved to a panel

applet. In a follow-up article called "Some notifications updates"[1],

awalton goes on to explain some things that he got wrong in the original

article, such as the legal conflict (just licensing issues) and the

state of the code (bad, and just for demo).

 

[1] http://blogs.gnome.org/awalton/2008/12/10/some-notifications-updates/

 

http://blogs.gnome.org/awalton/2008/12/10/new-notifications-for-jaunty/

 

== In Other News ==

 

=== OpenSolaris tackles Ubuntu dominance ===

 

Sun has crafted the second release of OpenSolaris with a number of

improvements in an attempt to make it more competitive with desktop

orientated Linux distributions such as Canonical's Ubuntu. OpenSolaris

is Sun's open source version of the Solaris flavor of Unix, and is

primarily aimed at workstations. As a relative newcomer to the open

source world, however, the platform has lacked a broad selection of

applications, and hardware support has been narrower than in competing

Linux distributions such as Ubuntu.

http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/software/soa/OpenSolaris-tackles-Ubuntu-dominance/0,130061733,339293697,00.htm

 

== Upcoming Meetings and Events ==

 

=== Monday, December 15, 2008 ===

 

==== LoCo Council Meeting ====

 

* Start: 19:00 UTC

* End: 20:00 UTC

* Location: #ubuntu-meeting

* Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LoCoCouncilAgenda

 

=== Tuesday, December 16, 2008 ===

 

==== Forum Council Meeting ====

 

* Start: 01:00 UTC

* End: 02:00 UTC

* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting

* Agenda: None listed as of publication

 

==== Community Council Meeting ====

 

* Start: 11:00 UTC

* End: 13:00 UTC

* Location: #ubuntu-meeting

* Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/CommunityCouncilAgenda

 

==== Server Team Meeting ====

 

* Start: 16:00 UTC

* End: 17:00 UTC

* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting

* Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ServerTeam/Meeting

 

==== Kernel Team Meeting ====

 

* Start: 17:00 UTC

* End: 18:00 UTC

* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting

* Agenda: Not listed as of publication

 

=== Wednesday, December 17, 2008 ===

 

==== Ubuntu-us-pa LoCo Team Meeting ====

 

* Start: 12:30 UTC

* End: 13:30 UTC

* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-us-pa

* Agenda: None as of publication

 

==== Foundation Team Meeting ====

 

* Start: 16:00 UTC

* End: 17:00 UTC

* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting

* Agenda: None listed as of publication

 

==== QA Team Meeting ====

 

* Start: 17:00 UTC

* End: 18:00 UTC

* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting

* Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/QATeam/Meetings/

 

=== Thursday, December 18, 2008 ===

 

==== Ubuntu Mobile Team Meeting ====

 

* Start: 12:00 UTC

* End: 13:00 UTC

* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting

* Agenda: None listed as of publication

 

==== Desktop Team Meeting ====

 

* Start: 13:00 UTC

* End: 14:00 UTC

* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting

* Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DesktopTeam/Meeting

 

==== Ubuntu Java Meeting ====

 

* Start: 14:00 UTC

* End: 15:00 UTC

* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-meeting

* Agenda: None listed as of publication

 

=== Saturday, December 20, 2008 ===

 

==== South Dakota LoCo Team Meeting ====

 

* Start: 01:00 UTC

* End: 03:00 UTC

* Location: IRC channel #ubuntu-us-sd

* Agenda: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SouthDakotaTeam/MeetingAgendas/002

 

== Updates and Security for 6.06, 7.10, 8.04, and 8.10 ==

 

=== Security Updates ===

 

* USN-688-1: Compiz vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-688-1

* USN-689-1: Vinagre vulnerability - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-689-1

* USN-678-2: GnuTLS regression - http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-678-2

 

=== Ubuntu 6.06 Updates ===

 

* None Reported

 

=== Ubuntu 7.10 Updates ===

 

* None Reported

 

=== Ubuntu 8.04 Updates ===

 

* linux-meta 2.6.24.23.25 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-December/012137.html

* virtualbox-ose-modules 24.0.8 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-December/012138.html

* wordpress 2.3.3-1ubuntu1.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-December/012139.html

* tomcat5.5 5.5.25-5ubuntu1.2 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/hardy-changes/2008-December/012140.html

 

=== Ubuntu 8.10 Updates ===

 

* wordpress 2.5.1-8ubuntu1.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009538.html

* jockey 0.5~beta3-0ubuntu6.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009537.html

* libx11 2:1.1.5-2ubuntu1.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009541.html

* xkeyboard-config 1.3-2ubuntu4.4 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009539.html

* x11proto-core 7.0.12-1ubuntu0.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009540.html

* lsscsi 0.19-1ubuntu1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009542.html

* nvidia-graphics-drivers-96 96.43.09-0ubuntu1.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009543.html

* nvidia-graphics-drivers-173 173.14.12-1-0ubuntu5.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009544.html

* nvidia-graphics-drivers-177 177.82-0ubuntu0.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009545.html

* module-init-tools 3.3-pre11-4ubuntu17 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009546.html

* xmms2 0.5DrLecter-2ubuntu1.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009554.html

* ushare 1.1a-0ubuntu2.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009552.html

* smilutils 0.3.2+cvs20070731-4build1.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009551.html

* moc 1:2.5.0~alpha3-3ubuntu1.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009549.html

* libdlna 0.2.3-0ubuntu2.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009548.html

* idjc 0.7.7-1build0.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009547.html

* gpac 0.4.4-0.3ubuntu2.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009553.html

* ffmpeg-php 0.5.1-2build1.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009555.html

* cmus 2.2.0-1build1.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009550.html

* paraview 3.2.2-1build0.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009556.html

* osmo 0.2.0-1ubuntu0.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009557.html

* bind9 1:9.5.0.dfsg.P2-1ubuntu3 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009558.html

* libshout 2.2.2-4ubuntu1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009559.html

* gnome-power-manager 2.24.0-0ubuntu8.1 -

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/intrepid-changes/2008-December/009560.html

 

== Archives and RSS Feed ==

 

You can always find older Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter issues at:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuWeeklyNewsletter

 

You can subscribe to the Ubuntu Weekly News via RSS at:

http://fridge.ubuntu.com/uwn/feed

 

== Additional Ubuntu News ==

 

As always you can find more news and announcements at:

 

http://www.ubuntu.com/news

 

and

 

http://fridge.ubuntu.com/

 

== Conclusion ==

 

Thank you for reading the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter.

 

See you next week!

 

== Credits ==

 

The Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter is brought to you by:

 

* Nick Ali

* John Crawford

* Craig A. Eddy

* Kenny McHenry

* Liraz Siri

* And many others

 

== Glossary of Terms ==

 

1. MOTU - Master Of The Universe, developers with the responsibility

of maintaining the Universe and Multiverse repositories.

1. UDS - Ubuntu Developer's Summit

1. SFD - Software Freedom Day

 

== Feedback ==

 

This document is maintained by the Ubuntu Weekly News Team. If you have

a story idea or suggestions for the Weekly Newsletter, join the Ubuntu

 

Share this post


Link to post

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  

×