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Fedora Weekly News #166

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Fedora Weekly News Issue 166

 

Welcome to Fedora Weekly News Issue 166 for the week ending March 8th,

2009.

 

http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FWN/Issue166

 

A small sample of this issue's stories reflects the imminent release of

Fedora 11! Announcements lists the freeze dates and upcoming Fedora

events. PlanetFedora rounds up essential blog reading including a piece

by Thomas Vander Stichele on "meltdown analysis". Marketing cheers for

"One Million New Fedora 10 Installations". In QualityAssurance a

reminder that the next of the "Test Days" is of interest to Intel video

users is just one of the items reflecting a massive amount of QA

activity. Ambassadors relates some OLPC news from Rochester Institute of

Technology. Developments explains why "Orphans are Purged" and asks are

we "Ready for a New RPM Version?". Translation highlights a "Study about

FLP". Artwork stares at the wallpaper while "Preparing for the Beta

Release". SecurityAdvisories lists stuff to help you avoid a rooting.

Virtualization pops some salient items out of the development maelstrom

including a "New Release of libvirt-0.6.1" and SELinux "sVirt Support

Committed". There's a lot more, so keep reading!

 

If you are interested in contributing to Fedora Weekly News, please see

our 'join' page[1]. We welcome reader feedback:

fedora-news-list ( -at -) redhat.com

 

FWN Editorial Team: Pascal Calarco, Oisin Feeley, Huzaifa Sidhpurwala

 

Table of Contents

1 Fedora Weekly News Issue 166

1.1 Announcements

1.1.1 Fedora 11

1.1.2 Upcoming Events

1.1.2.1 FUDCon Berlin 2009

1.2 Planet Fedora

1.2.1 General

1.2.2 Education

1.3 Marketing

1.4 Marketing Meeting Log for 2009-02-26

1.5 One Million New Fedora 10 Installations!

1.6 Marketing Meeting Log for 2009-03-03

1.7 Ambassadors

1.7.1 RIT Pitches in on OLPC Project

1.7.2 Fedora at CUE

1.7.3 Got Ambassador News?

1.8 QualityAssurance

1.8.1 Test Days

1.8.2 Weekly Meetings

1.8.3 Bugzappers Wiki Re-organization

1.8.4 20 Second Boot Test Day Follow-up

1.8.5 Bugzappers Meeting Schedule

1.8.6 Ubuntu Triage Discussion

1.8.7 Introduction Emails

1.9 Developments

1.9.1 Orphans are Purged

1.9.2 Fedora 11 to Ship Tiger VNC

1.9.3 Ready for a New RPM Version ?

1.9.4 Windows Cross-compiler Added to comps.xml

1.9.5 Anaconda Default of Separate / and /home Partitions

1.9.6 Beta Freeze and String Freeze this Tuesday

2009-03-10

1.9.7 Fedora 11 Default Mediaplayer Not Banshee. Mono to

Blame ?

1.10 Translation

1.10.1 FLP Infrastructure Team Meeting

1.10.2 Statistics Page and Submission Outage

1.10.3 Publican Documents Now on tfp.org

1.10.4 F11 String Freeze Reminder

1.10.5 Study about FLP

1.10.6 New Members in FLP

1.11 Artwork

1.11.1 Echo Weekly News

1.11.2 Preparing for the Beta Release

1.11.3 Working on the Picture Book

1.12 Security Advisories

1.12.1 Fedora 10 Security Advisories

1.12.2 Fedora 9 Security Advisories

1.13 Virtualization

1.13.1 Enterprise Management Tools List

1.13.1.1 Managing Guest OS Types

1.13.1.2 virt-manager Storage Removal

1.13.1.3 virt-install Host Device Assignment Support

1.13.2 Fedora Virtualization List

1.13.2.1 User Interface Makeover for virt-manager

1.13.2.2 New Release virtinst 0.4.2

1.13.3 Fedora Xen List

1.13.3.1 dom0 Kernel Inches Closer

1.13.4 Libvirt List

1.13.4.1 New Release libvirt 0.6.1

1.13.4.2 sVirt Support Committed

1.13.4.3 Secure Guest Migration Between Hosts

1.13.4.4 Hynesim Project Interest in Libvirt

 

== Announcements ==

 

In this section, we cover announcements from the Fedora Project.

 

http://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-announce-list/

 

http://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-devel-announce/

 

https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FedoraEvents

 

Contributing Writer: Max Spevack

 

=== Fedora 11 ===

 

Jesse Keating reminded[1] the community that the Fedora 11 Beta

freeze[2] is coming this week. "It is scheduled for Tuesday, March 10th.

They way we've historically enacted the beta freeze is to tag the

content in that day's rawhide into the freeze tag. That is, what gets

reported as rawhide-20090310 is the frozen content. As such, your builds

need to be complete by 0600 UTC March 10 2009 in order to be in the

Beta, without a special request."

 

The string freeze is also on March 10th.

 

1.

http://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-devel-announce/2009-March/msg00006.html

2. https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Beta_Freeze_Policy

 

=== Upcoming Events ===

 

March 10-12: FOSE[1] in Washington, DC.

 

March 13-15: Chemnitzer Linux Tage[2] in Chemnitz, Germany.

 

1. http://fose.com/

2. https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FedoraEvents/CLT

 

=== FUDCon Berlin 2009 ===

 

FUDCon Berlin[1] will be held from June 26 - 28 in Berlin, Germany.

 

1. https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FUDConBerlin2009

 

== Planet Fedora ==

 

In this section, we cover the highlights of Planet Fedora - an

aggregation of blogs from Fedora contributors worldwide.

 

http://planet.fedoraproject.org

 

Contributing Writer: Adam Batkin

 

=== General ===

 

Michael DeHaan responded[1] to a post[2] by Karsten Wade from a few

weeks ago titled "Failure as the secret of success". Michael agreed and

argued that it is usually impossible to build a piece of software that

is 100% perfect for 100% of its users. "Failure is good. Chasing perfect

is bad. Making any one aspect perfect or spending too much time on it

tends to make other aspects of things bad. We need to get close enough

and find some new challenge to work on, so we have more time to iterate

and fail a few more times. We all need more time to fail."

 

Thomas Vander Stichele described[3] "an approach to doing meltdown

analysis". Also known as a post-mortem analysis, this is a useful

process for "when we've gotten into a bad situation involving multiple

people that we want to learn from and avoid next time".

 

Harald Hoyer summarized[4] the results from the 20 Seconds Boot Feature

Test Day and offered some suggestions for users and developers alike.

 

Matthew Daniels offered[5] some ideas to improve the Fedora

documentation by splitting the User Guide into three parts, Practicum,

Theory and Appendices & Glossary.

 

Mark J Cox published[6] a set of metrics that tracks security

vulnerabilities and the time-to-fix versus their time of disclosure

within RHEL.

 

John J. McDonough wrote[7] an article about Fedora, the four Foundations

of the project/community and how and why you should join.

 

Richard Hughes explained[8] some of the issues currently associated with

installing Applications as opposed to Packages (first by explaining the

difference between the terms Application and Package). Along with some

other folks, they published a proposed specification[9] that is

distribution-agnostic and should allow relevant metadata (including

localized content) as well as icons to be efficiently and easily

integrated into the local/distribution-specific software installation

utility.

 

Scott Williams made[10] The Case for Open Source.

 

Paul W. Frields announced[11] that after working with the Red Hat legal

department to revise the Fedora Trademark guidelines, a new version has

been released. Among other changes the changes should make building

remixes and unofficial spins easier.

 

Chitlesh Goorah posted[12] about the goals of Fedora Electronic Lab[13]

(FEL) and also how the project bridges the Open Source software and

hardware communities.

 

1. http://www.michaeldehaan.net/?p=879

2. http://iquaid.org/2009/02/28/failure-as-the-secret-of-success/

3. http://thomas.apestaart.org/log/?p=783

4.

http://www.harald-hoyer.de/personal/blog/20_Seconds_Boot_Feature_Test_Day

5.

http://danielsmw.wordpress.com/2009/03/03/user-guide-practicum-theory/

6. http://www.awe.com/mark/blog/2009030319.html

7. http://wb8rcr.multiply.com/journal/item/98/Join_Fedora

8. http://blogs.gnome.org/hughsie/2009/03/05/application-installing/

9.

http://cgit.freedesktop.org/packagekit/plain/docs/app-install-v1.draft

10.

http://vwbusguy.wordpress.com/2009/03/05/the-case-for-open-source/

11. http://marilyn.frields.org:8080/~paul/wordpress/?p=1507

12.

http://clunixchit.blogspot.com/2009/03/fels-solutions-for-design-centre.html

13. http://chitlesh.fedorapeople.org/FEL/

 

=== Education ===

 

Greg DeKoenigsberg started[1] working on a Sugar activity for 4th Grade

Maths[2] called "Dungeons of Mongo". Remember, you too can potentially

get a free XO as part of the Fedora Developers XO Program[3].

 

Chris Tyler announced[4] that the TeachingOpenSource.org[5] is open for

business, "a neutral collaboration point for everyone and everything

involved in Teaching Open Source".

 

Greg DeKoenigsberg congratulated[6] Chris on the new Teaching Open

Source community and provided some points that came up while visiting

with people who are in the trenches trying to teach Open Source. Chris

responded[7] and suggested that anyone interested should join[8] the

 

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