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Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #132

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Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue #132 for the week March

1st - March 7th, 2009. In this issue we cover: Karmic Koala release

schedule, QA Team: Next testing day, Hug Day: March 12th, Americas

Board: New Ubuntu Members, LoCo Directory Moves Forward, Ubuntu Tunisia:

Migration Project, Ubuntu in the Cloud, Community Interview: Michael

Godawski, Simplifying Forums Categories, Mark a thread as Solved, mail

Stack Improvements in Ubuntu 9.04, Ubuntu Encrypted home with 2 factor

authentication, Ubuntu Drupal: Planet Module, Introducing Tarmac,

TurnKey: 12 new Ubuntu-based server appliances released, Technical Board

Meeting, Server Team Meeting Minutes: March 3rd, 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 ==

 

* Karmic Koala release schedule

* QA Team: Next testing day

* Hug Day: March 12th

* Americas Board: New Ubuntu Members

* Ubuntu Stats

* LoCo Directory Moves Forward

* Ubuntu Tunisia: Migration Project

* Ubuntu in the Cloud

* Inside the Launchpad Foundations Sprint

* Ubuntu Forums News

* The Planet

* In the Press & Blogosphere

* TurnKey: 12 new Ubuntu-based service applications

* Technical Board Meeting

* Server Team Meeting Minutes: March 3rd

* Upcoming Meetings & Events

* Updates & Security

 

== General Community News ==

 

=== Karmic Koala release schedule ===

 

The release schedule for Karmic is now available:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/KarmicReleaseSchedule

 

* You can expect to see the first Karmic milestone in mid-May.

* A cease of automatic syncs from Debian towards the end of June.

* Feature freeze in late August.

 

For details of the Karmic Ubuntu Developer Summit, please go to

http://wiki.ubuntu.com/UDS.

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel-announce/2009-March/000543.html

 

=== QA Team: Next testing day ===

 

The QA Team is having a testing day on Monday, March 9, 2009, for the

*buntu desktop of your choice. Details can be found at

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Testing/UbuntuTestingDay/20090309. The goals on

the day will be to test the installer and applications on the CD as well

as those you download from repositories and use regularly. Go to

#ubuntu-testing on the freenode network to find out more and get involved.

 

http://blog.qa.ubuntu.com/node/35

 

=== Hug Day: March 12th ===

 

March 12, 2009 is the next Bugday.

* Target: samba

* Page: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuBugDay/20090312

* IRC: #ubuntu-bugs

* Infos: http://wiki.ubuntu.com/HelpingWithBugs/

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-news-team/2009-March/000433.html

 

=== Americas Board: New Ubuntu Members ===

 

The approval results from Friday's Americas Membership meeting are as

follows:

 

Charlie Kravetz(charlie-tca): Charlie is from Idaho, USA and has been

using Ubuntu since 5.04. He is the Quality Assurance lead for Xubuntu, a

role which involves a considerable amount of bug triage and testing. As

such, he is an active member of ubuntu-bugsquad and bug-control. He also

spends a considerable amount of time in the #xubuntu channel helping

users. Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~charlie-tca Wiki:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/CharlieKravetz

 

Martin Owens(doctormo): Martin operates the approved Ubuntu

Massachusetts LoCo team and lead the Ubuntu Case Badges initiative in

2007 and recently worked with ZaReason to launch another run of badges.

Currently he is involved in bringing local Community centers into a

Learn to Teach, Teach to learn project, where FOSS and Ubuntu are taught

to students who are then encouraged to teach others. Launchpad:

https://launchpad.net/~doctormo Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MartinOwens

 

Nick Fox(nickj-fox): Nick has been using Ubuntu since 6.04 and working

on the Mythbuntu project since the 7.04 development cycle. He is

currently a Mythbuntu core dev, and has helped to support, improve upon,

and generate new code in an effort to make the user experience better

and management of the MythTV and Ubuntu based systems easier. He also

makes a continuing effort to support the community in ways to help

promote bringing new users into the Ubuntu community. Launchpad:

https://launchpad.net/~nickj-fox Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/NickFox

 

Thomas G. Mashos(tgm4883): Thomas is a Mythbuntu developer and been

using Ubuntu since Edgy. He actively supports users in the

#ubuntu-mythtv support channel. Currently much of his effort is focused

on working with Mythbuntu on getting MythTV related things packaged and

into the repos, or at least a PPA. He also runs development version of

Mythbuntu and spends time fixing bugs as he encounters them. Launchpad:

https://launchpad.net/~tgm4883 Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ThomasMashos

 

Matthew Lye(lyematt): Matthew has been using Ubuntu since mid 2007, and

works on developing Ubuntu images for large scale education

environments. He is an active member of the Ubuntu Forums Beginners Team

Education and IRC help groups, preparing tutorials and teaching

materials for the Beginners Team to use to help new users understand

Ubuntu and preform complex tasks. Currently he is focused on helping new

users and Ubuntu for education environments, and eventually hopes to

contribute in improving the user experience of Ubuntu starting with bug

work. Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~lyematt Wiki:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Vantrax

 

John Baab(rhpot1991): John hails from Pennsylvania, USA and has been

using Ubuntu as his primary OS since 2004. He has spent the past two

years as an active member of the Mythbuntu development team, he works

upstream and is the maintainer of MythExport in the Ubuntu repos. He

intends to continue his work with Mythbuntu and MythExport and has

recently joined the Pennsylvania LoCo team. Launchpad:

https://launchpad.net/~rhpot1991 Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/rhpot1991

 

Andrew Rufkahr(st33med): Andrew has been an active contributor to the

Ubuntu Forums Beginners Team for about two and a half years. He

regularly helps users both on the forums and in IRC, and has developed

and hosted several Python courses through the Beginners Team Education

Focus group. His future plans involve hosting more courses and getting

involved more heavily in Python-related development within Ubuntu.

Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~ajr1991 Wiki:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/st33med

 

The Americas Board is very happy to welcome all these fantastic new

Ubuntu Members to the project!

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-news-team/2009-March/000435.html

 

== Ubuntu Stats ==

 

=== Bug Stats ===

 

* Open (47855) +297 over last week

* Critical (21) +1 over last week

* Unconfirmed (19270) +76 over last week

* Unassigned (40220) +228 over last week

* All bugs ever reported (256359) +2032 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 (19265) -717 over last week

* French (56320) +13 over last week

* Brazilian Portuguese (64590) +8 over last week

* Swedish (68153) -3832 over last week

* English (Uk) (82415) -1393 over last week

 

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

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

 

=== Translation Stats Intrepid ===

 

* Spanish (15881) +/-0 over last week

* French (61243) +/-0 over last week

* Swedish (72647) -9 over last week

* Brazilian Portuguese (73976) +/-0 over last week

* English (UK) (81134) +/-0 over last week

 

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

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

 

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

 

* Not enough feedback to brainstorm

* init.d showing it's age. Complex layers of shell script, with no

standards.

* Automatic backup before upgrading to new release

* Not all problems are valid

* There is no list of new packages that are waiting for acceptance

 

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 ==

 

=== LoCo Directory Moves Forward ===

 

In a brief posting, Jono Bacon shows off screen shots of the new LoCo

directory. The idea was to take the information from the LoCo Team List,

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LoCoTeamList, and gather it in a database that

was easier to read and access. This is still a work in progress, but the

design is coming along well. Thanks to Rich Johnson for doing the

developing work, and efrain for importing the data shown in the screen

shots.

 

http://www.jonobacon.org/2009/03/02/loco-directory-moves-forward/

 

=== Ubuntu Tunisia: Migration Project - National Engineering School of

Sfax (ENIS) ===

 

The project was launched under the initiative taken by the ENIS to

migrate its computing equipment to a free solutions. Our LoCo was

contacted by the ENIS administration to contribute to this project by

providing presentations on Ubuntu and free software and support them for

migration. This migration was carried out in two phases. A first phase

in December 2008, code name ENIS Event 8.12, and a second phase in

January 2009, code name ENIS Event 9.01. The initial planning of the

first phase was scheduled over two days (December 20th and 21th, 2008):

a conferences day and another for assistance to the migration.

 

Members of the ubuntu-tn LoCo provided various presentations to

students, teachers and ENIS technical staff (around 80 people). These

presentations focused on the presentation of Ubuntu, the switching to

OpenOffice.org, the Ubuntu administration, programming, virtualization,

security and Ubuntu server for TPE/PME. Each presentation was followed

by a discussion between ubuntu-tn LoCo members and the audience in the

amphitheater. Pictures of the event at the links.

 

* French Summary:

http://nizaurs.blogspot.com/2009/03/projet-de-migration-ecole-nationale.html

* English Summery:

http://nizaurs.blogspot.com/2009/03/migration-project-national-engineering.html

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-news-team/2009-March/000434.html

 

== New in Jaunty Jackalope ==

 

=== Ubuntu in the Cloud ===

 

Eucalyptus (Elastic Utility Computing Architecture for Linking Your

Programs To Useful Systems) was placed in Jaunty before the feature

freeze. This means that a cloud infrastructure will be able to be built

upon Ubuntu Server. In addition, some Java related components have been

added:

1. Apache Axis2 is a Web services engine. Both SOAP and REST style

web-service are supported with binary data being exchanged via MTOM.

1. The WS-Security specification is provided by the rampart package,

the Apache web services security engine.

 

In addition, some virtualization related components were also updated,

such as kvm, libvirt 0.6.0, cirt-manager 0.6.1, and opennebula.

 

http://ubuntuserver.wordpress.com/2009/02/27/february-in-the-archive-a-view-from-the-ubuntu-server-team/

 

== Launchpad News ==

 

=== Inside the Launchpad Foundations Sprint ===

 

The Launchpad Foundations team, and some Canonical engineers have been

meeting in Montreal to prepare for the release of the Launchpad code.

Part of this process is to separate out the parts that are not specific

to Launchpad, and place them in a new framework called LAZR. These will

be libraries that can be reused in other projects. The down side is that

a lot of these libraries have dependencies to Launchpad that need to be

removed. The up side is that when they get done, these libraries will

be able to be used in any project that uses Zope interfaces to describe

its data objects.

 

http://blog.launchpad.net/api/inside-the-launchpad-foundations-sprint

 

== Ubuntu Forums News ==

 

=== Community Interview: Michael Godawski ===

 

Please meet Michael Godawski,

http://matthewhelmke.net/2009/02/26/an-interview-with-michaelgodawski/

from Germany. He was born in Poland and studies History of Art and

Sociology. Michael is the perfect example of a non-geeky member,

consistently helpful with new users, always patient and kind. Like many

others, his first computer encounter was with an Atari 2600. He is now a

member of the Beginners Team and Unanswered Posts Team and writes

tutorials you can find on his website:

http://ubunturesources.ub.ohost.de Enjoy!

 

=== Simplifying Forums Categories ===

 

Over the last month, several changes have been made to rearrange the

forums categories. In particular, the Other OS Talk section was merged

back with the general support sub-forums, and links to the major Linux

distributions or other OS support forums provided. Hopefully, we will be

able to send back traffic to the other Linux projects, as Ubuntu Forums

has a fast growth (current on-line user record is 35,611) and are

pushing our hosting servers walls. A new [other_os] prefix has been

added to help identify and search specific thread topics.

 

=== Mark a thread as Solved ===

 

We used to have a specific plug-in to add "Solved" in the thread title

when needed. This plug-in (along with the "Thanks" feature) gave

troubles with the database and had to be disabled. Tags can be used

instead, as they are shown next to the thread title, in a different color.

 

== The Planet ==

 

=== Mail Stack Improvements in Ubuntu 9.04 ===

 

Up until the Ubuntu-server 9.04 (Jaunty Jackalope) release, sysadmins

needed to manually set up all parts of a mail server; IMAP, POP, SMTP,

SASL authentication, and TLS/SSL support for all of the services before

any other custom configuration could begin. Working toward a more

perfect installation process, the Ubuntu Server team has come to the

conclusion that there needed to be an integrated mail stack with a safe

default set up. The new Dovecot-Postfix install will enable the default

install of a working e-mail server out of the box. Not all mail

configuration problems are solved with the default install, as set up

for antispam and antivirus countermeasures must be setup separately.

 

http://blog.init.hr/?p=3

 

=== Ubuntu Encrypted home with 2 factor authentication ===

 

There are ways to keep your encrypted home folder safe, defeating the

casual hack of using a LiveCD to access the average setup. The methods

of securing this data are discussed as to limiting physical access to

the pass-phrase file through removable media, by using two-factor

authentication. Then you just need to ensure that you protect that

device! Pop it out, if you're leaving your system alone, and keep that

device on your person. You can read Dustin's advice on encrypted

directories by using the links below.

 

* Jaunty encrypted home directories:

http://blog.dustinkirkland.com/2009/02/jaunty-encrypted-home-directories.html

* How eCryptfs Works:

http://blog.dustinkirkland.com/2009/02/how-encrypted-home-ecryptfs-works.html

* Mounting Encrypted Home using a LiveCD:

http://blog.dustinkirkland.com/2009/03/mounting-your-encrypted-home-from.html

 

 

http://blog.dustinkirkland.com/2009/03/ubuntu-encrypted-home-with-2-factor.html

 

=== Ubuntu Drupal Team: Planet module ===

 

Introducing the Drupal Planet module, which allows Drupal users to add

specific feeds instead creating a whole new site, the Drupal Planet

module places feeds under the /planet directory. Users have the ability

to add as many feeds as desired, where the feeds are updated

automatically using cron. This makes feed aggregation possible now by

using a single module.

 

http://profarius.com/content/planet-module-drupal

 

=== Introducing Tarmac ===

 

Announcing the release of Tarmac, the robotic landing bot for Launchpad.

The idea is simple. You have a development focus branch that constantly

needs to have branches landed on it, but you're too busy writing your

own code to manually land them in trunk. Tarmac takes the difficulty out

of this by checking your development focus branch for approved merge

proposals, and merging them automatically. This first release is just a

little more than "the simplest thing that could possibly work." Feature

requests and patches are most certainly welcome.

 

http://theironlion.net/blog/2009/03/04/introducing-tarmac-launchpad-branch-lander/

 

== In The Press ==

 

=== Has Ubuntu hit a plateau? ===

 

Adrian Kingsley-Hughes of ZDNet wonders, has Ubuntu hit a plateau? After

he downloaded the alpha 5 release of the upcoming Ubuntu 9.04, what

surprised him was he felt that there was very little for him to get

excited about. In fact, even the just announced 9.10 release which is

over six months away, has nothing that really gets his blood moving.

Adrian states, "Don’t get me wrong, I like Ubuntu. Of all the Linux

distros that I’ve tried, it’s the one that seems to show the most

promise of being able to go mainstream. It’s fast, reliable and secure."

He goes on to question the need for the six month release schedule

because in his opinion, these releases are feeling more and more like

service packs than evolutionary steps forward.

http://blogs.zdnet.com/hardware/?p=3669&tag=nl.e589

 

=== Ubuntu's "plateau" = Good news for education ===

 

Christopher Dawson of ZDNet responds to Adrian Kingsley-Hughes' article

summarized above. Dawson wants to know why it's such a bad thing that

the six month release schedule has turned into more of a service pack.

"What this means is that Ubuntu has reached an incredible state of

maturity and schools can now use it without fear of obsolescence in 6

months. It also means that incremental updates are easily applied

without significant disruption to labs or servers, while allowing users

to take advantage of new features." While the geek in him is always

looking for something new, improved, and uber-cool, the IT admin. in him

just wants something that works well and consistently.

http://education.zdnet.com/?p=2207

 

=== Linux Desktop heads for the clouds ===

 

Matt Asay of Cnet News thinks that while evangelists of Linux

distributions built for personal computers point to Netbooks as an

indication of renewed life in their chances to compete for consumers,

new data suggests that this may be a fool's hope. Instead, such

advocates would do well to follow the leads of Canonical and Red Hat, as

they respectively extend the desktop with cloud services, and deliver

desktop functionality from the cloud. Canonical's Mark Shuttleworth told

Asay last year that his Ubuntu desktop strategy would increasingly

include cloud services. Recently, Canonical started to deliver on this

vision. The point isn't to replicate the Windows desktop. The point is

to completely change the way desktops are delivered, and their services

used. Anyone still worried about Linux on Netbooks is fighting the wrong

battle. http://news.cnet.com/8301-13505_3-10189098-16.html

 

=== Ubuntu vs Windows: Memory and a backup solution ===

 

Martin compares Windows 7, Windows Vista, and Ubuntu RAM usage; backs up

the whole machine with Acronis; and finds some things Ubuntu does well,

and others that he can't seem to get working. At startup, Windows 7 for

x64 had a memory footprint of 1.24GB, with the Windows Vista for x64

memory having a memory footprint of 1.34GB. On the same machine, Ubuntu

8.10 had a memory footprint of 349 MB of RAM. In other words, a whole

gigabyte less than Vista. Heller goes on to discuss using Acronis to

back it up, and what features work well for him in Ubuntu.

http://weblog.infoworld.com/stratdev/archives/2009/03/ubuntu_vs_windo.html

 

=== Acer Aspire One with Moblin 2, Ubuntu 8.10 ===

 

Jordan Spencer Cunningham of OSnews reviews Ubuntu 8.10 (Intrepid Ibex)

on his Acer Aspire One. Jordan found that startup is basically as fast

as Windows XP, and Windows 7. Everything seems to work out of the box

except for the wireless, camera, and microphone. The overall system

works flawlessly, and seemingly as fast as Windows 7, even in

full-graphics mode. He did have some problems with unplugging or

plugging the AC power causing the system’s power manager to halt.

Overall, he gives the Ubuntu 8.10 system on the Acer Aspire One a 7/10.

Aside from some very minor bugs, it is a very netbooker-friendly system.

If the wireless was included naturally in the distribution without

having to do any serious tweaking, Ubuntu would be as ready, if not more

so than Windows 7 to be a netbook system.

http://www.osnews.com/story/21070/Review_Acer_Aspire_One_with_Moblin_2_Ubuntu_8_10_Windows/page4/

 

== In The Blogosphere ==

 

=== Taking Ubuntu 9.04 Out For A Spin ===

 

Wanting to get a taste of what to expect come April, Jeremy LaCroix of

IT News Today takes a look at the upcoming version of Ubuntu, code named

“Jaunty Jackalope.” After running into a few bugs on a daily build of

Jaunty, LaCroix switched to Jaunty Alpha 5 for the install. Once the

installation was complete, he was presented with the GDM log in screen,

which was sporting a brand new theme, that he thinks looks awesome.

LaCroix notes the new notification system, but the best thing he noticed

about Ubuntu 9.04 so far, is how fast it is. "The developers weren’t

lying when they talked about speed, this thing is FAST." Even though he

installed it on an older machine, he says you wouldn’t notice it because

even with an older processor, Jaunty is probably the most responsive

version he has ever used. http://www.itnewstoday.com/?p=215

 

=== My Experiences With Ubuntu 9.04 So Far ===

 

Blogger Jerremy LaCroix from IT News Today gives us a preview of

Kubunutu 9.04 Jaunty Jackalope. He makes sure that everyone knows before

hand that this it is still in development, so a full review would not be

fair or accurate. He will write a full review of the release once it

comes out in April. He didn't say anything about the installation

process, because he didn't see much change in it. He did comment on how

stable and fast jaunty is, even though it's still in development. He

continues by saying that "it's very abnormal to have this much stability

in the operating system at this point in its development." He was happy

that there was a new network manager, so that there was one less legacy

KDE3 application being used. He is having difficulty connecting to a

network, but contributes this to the release still being in development.

We are also informed of KPackageKit which is the new package manager

that KDE4 is using. Adept is also installed by default, so you can pick

which one you want to use. He describes the KDE4 install as "yet another

vanilla KDE 4 installation." This is because the theme is still the

same, and even the desktop is still the same as previous releases. In

conclusion he says that the speed increase alone is enough to warrant

upgrading to 9.04. http://www.itnewstoday.com/?p=198

 

=== Hive Five: Best Home Server Software ===

 

Blogger Jason Fitzpatrick from Life Hacker goes over what people voted

as the top 5 pieces of software that people use to power their home

servers. In the top 5 were: FreeNas, Ubuntu Server Edition, Apache,

Debian, and Windows Home Server. He talks about the capabilities of all

5 of these pieces of software, and what benefits that they give to the

user. For Ubuntu Server Edition, he covered the ease of use of it. He

liked the automated LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, and PHP) installation.

This is because it's much easier to install the core components of a

server this way, than to have to configure each component on your own.

He then tells us about the abundance of applications that make

integration with the rest of your home network easier. He says that

"Ubuntu is more than powerful and capable enough to handle all your

media streaming, remote back up, and file serving needs."

http://lifehacker.com/5162026/best-home-server-software

 

=== Memo to Mark Shuttleworth: Don’t Settle for Ubuntu Linux Desktops ===

 

Joe Panettieri of Works With U wants to let Mark Shuttleworth know where

he believes Ubuntu should be concentrating its efforts. He strongly

agrees with continuing to push Ubuntu Server Edition, and not relying on

just Ubuntu Desktop Edition. This is because he believes that companies

that only have one "cash cow" die. He doesn't like the logic behind

pulling back from the server market, and pushing harder in the Desktop

market. He points out that a lesson is to be learned from Windows NT,

and when it first came out for the server market. In conclusion he says

that the server efforts shouldn't slow down, they should be accelerated,

while holding ground in the Desktop market.

http://www.workswithu.com/2009/03/03/memo-to-mark-shuttleworth-dont-settle-for-ubuntu-linux-desktops/

 

=== Ubuntu Directory Service: Canonical Calls for Help ===

 

Joe Panettieri of WorksWithU reports that Canonical is developing a

Directory Services strategy that could help Ubuntu Server Edition

compete, and integrate more effectively with Microsoft, Windows Server

and Active Directory. In addition to a relationship with Likewise

Software, Canonical is seeking external experts to help accelerate some

Directory Services efforts. According to Nick Barcet, Canonical’s Ubuntu

Server product manager, “OpenLDAP is our LDAP implementation of choice

in Ubuntu Server Edition. Around it we are putting together the base

configuration and tools that we need to offer a better “out of the box”

experience. In 8.10 we implemented a method for schema update to be

automatically replicated to multiple OpenLDAP instances in the network.

9.04 should implement the basis of certificate management as well as a

saner default DIT.” Barcet concedes Canonical is juggling multiple

priorities at the moment — which means a full-blown directory service

isn’t a top priority at the company. However, while this is not the top

priority, it is something they are very conscious about, and progress is

only limited by the resources they have. If some readers would have some

spare time to help in that direction, they would be more than welcome.

http://www.workswithu.com/2009/03/05/ubuntu-directory-service-canonical-calls-for-help/

 

== In Other News ==

 

=== TurnKey: 12 new Ubuntu-based server appliances released ===

 

To those unfamiliar with TurnKey Linux, it's an easy way to get a

pre-integrated Ubuntu system up and running on your server or VM

(VMware, VirtualBox, Xen, KVM) of choice, and in just a couple of

minutes. The project recently announced its most exciting and ambitious

batch of releases yet. The 2009.02 release, based on Ubuntu 8.04.2 LTS,

features extensive improvements to usability, security and stability:

http://www.turnkeylinux.org/news

 

Since its last appearance in the UWN, the project has added 9 new

appliances to its family, which now includes LAMP stack, Ruby on Rails,

MediaWiki, Joomla, Drupal, LAPP stack, Django stack, MySQL, PostgreSQL,

TurnKey Core (102MB) and Bootstrap (67MB):

http://www.turnkeylinux.org/appliances

 

According to the project's developers "next up are appliances for Apache

Tomcat, Wordpress, Moodle, Movable Type and phpBB." The project has only

gotten this far thanks to the warm reception it received from the Ubuntu

community when they were just starting out. Thanks to everyone who tried

the appliances, gave them feedback, and got involved!"

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-news-team/2009-March/000428.html

 

== Meeting Summaries ==

 

=== Technical Board Meeting ===

 

Attendees: Matt Zimmerman (chair), Mark Shuttleworth, Colin Watson, and

Scott James Remnant

 

* Should technical-board ( -at -) lists.ubuntu.com be public?

 

* Technical-board ( -at -) serves two purposes:

1. a contact address to reach the TB (and only the TB)

 

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