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Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #183

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Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter, Issue #183 for the week

February 28 - March 6th, 2010. In this issue we cover: Mark

Shuttleworth: "Light" the new look of Ubuntu, Announcing the 10.10

Ubuntu Developer Summit, UI Freeze in place for Lucid, Developer

Membership Board meeting, International Women's Day Vote, Getting

Patches Upstream, The Grand App Writing Challenge Submissions, Server

Bug Zapping results, Ubuntu Classroom Team presents "ClassBot", February

2010 Team Reports, 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 ==

 

* Mark Shuttleworth: "Light" the new look of Ubuntu

* Announcing the 10.10 Ubuntu Developer Summit

* UI Freeze in place for Lucid

* Developer Membership Board meeting

* International Women's Day Vote

* Ubuntu Stats

* Getting Patches Upstream

* The Grand App Writing Challenge Submissions!

* Server Bug Zapping results

* Ubuntu Classroom Team presents "ClassBot"

* In the Press & Blogosphere

* February 2010 Team Reports

* Upcoming Meetings & Events

* Updates & Security

 

== General Community News ==

 

=== Mark Shuttleworth: "Light" the new look of Ubuntu ===

 

Jono Bacon, Alan Pope, and many others have written, yesterday we

published a new visual story and style for Ubuntu. The core design work

was lead by Marcus Haslam, Otto Greenslade and Dominic Edmunds, who are

the three visual artists leading our efforts in the Canonical Design

team. Once we had the base ideas in place we invited some anchor members

of the Ubuntu Art community to a design sprint, to test that the concept

had the legs to work with the full range of forums, websites,

derivatives and other pieces of this huge and wonderful project. And

apparently, it does! https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Brand

 

Embracing both Ubuntu and Canonical

 

One of the real challenges for us has been to find a branding and design

strategy which spans the spectrum of audiences, forums and dialogues

that we cover. With Ubuntu, it’s my specific dream to find a

constructive blend of commercial and community interests, not only for

Canonical but for other companies. That has made our design and branding

work difficult – the distinctive look of Ubuntu lent itself well to pure

community messaging, but it was hard to do a brochure for Canonical data

center services for Ubuntu on servers. We have not only Ubuntu, but also

Kubuntu and an important range of derivatives that all have a role in

our ecosystem.

 

So we spent a lot of time trying to distill the requirements down into a

set of three dimensions.

 

* Community Commercial

* Consumer Enterprise

* End-user Engineer

 

We found a set of ideas which each represent those spectrums, and which

work together.

 

For example, we identified a palette which includes both a fresh, lively

Orange, and a rich, mature Aubergine, which work together. The use of

Aubergine indicates Commercial involvement of one form or another, while

Orange is a signal of community engagement. The Forums will use the

Orange elements more strongly, and a formal product brochure, with

descriptions of supporting services, would use more of the Aubergine.

 

On the consumer/enterprise spectrum, we took inspiration from the

aerospace industry, and identified a texture of closely spaced dots.

When you see more of that, it means we’re signalling that the story is

more about the enterprise, less of that, and it’s more about the

consumer. Of course, there are cross-overs, for example when we are

talking about the corporate desktop, where we’ll use that closely space

dot texture as a boundary area, or separator. We also identified shades

of Aubergine that are more consumer, or more enterprise – the darker

shades mapping to a stronger emphasis on enterprise work.

 

And on the end-user / engineer spectrum, we took inspiration from graph

paper and engineering blue prints. When you see widely spaced patterns

of dots, or outline images and figures, that’s signalling that the

content is more engineering-oriented than end-user oriented.

 

And finally, we found a number of themes which enhanced and echoed those

ideas. We use a warm gray supporting colour to give shape to pages and

documents, and we built on the dots and circles to create a whole style

for figures, illustrations and pictograms.

 

The beauty of this is that we can now publish content that spans the

full range, and we generally know when we start the design process what

sorts of visual cues we want to be signalling. Instead of having these

different mental domains fight with one another, we can now convey quite

subtle collaboration between community and corporate, or work which is

aimed at engineers and developers from enterprises as opposed to

developers working with consumers. Time will tell how it shapes up, but

for now I’m celebrating the milestone and the efforts of the team that

pulled it together. There’s something there for everyone who wants to

participate in the great hubbub of Ubuntuness that is our shared

experience of free software.

 

We have commissioned a new font to be developed both for the logo’s of

Ubuntu and Canonical, and for use in the interface. The font will be

called Ubuntu, and will be a modern humanist font that is optimised for

screen legibility. It will be published under an open font license, and

considered part of the trade dress of Ubuntu, which will limit its

relevance for software interfaces outside of Ubuntu but leave it free

for use across the web and in printed documents.

 

It’s been an exciting process, but I have the sense that we are just

getting started. The language will get richer, we will find new things

that we want to communicate, and new treatments and visual themes that

resonate well with these starting points. We’ll find new ways to

integrate this on the web, and on the desktop (look out for the two new

themes, Radiance and Ambiance). I hope we’ll see the language being used

to good effect across everything we do, both commercial and community

oriented. There’s a range of expression here that should be useful to

artists across the spectrum. Let me know how it works for you.

 

Screenshots of possible Ubuntu branding for different uses can be found

at the link below. You can also check out Jono Bacon's blog on this

topic which covers different areas of the work product here:

http://www.jonobacon.org/2010/03/03/refreshing-the-ubuntu-brand/

 

http://www.markshuttleworth.com/archives/308

 

=== Announcing the 10.10 Ubuntu Developer Summit ===

 

Announcing the details of the next Ubuntu Developer Summit taking place

at Dolce La Hulpe Hotel and Resort in Brussels, Belgium from the 10 – 14

May 2010.

 

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

* Dolce La Hulpe Hotel & Resort:

http://www.dolce-la-hulpe-brussels-hotel.com/

 

The Ubuntu Developer Summit one of the most important events in the

Ubuntu calendar and at it we discuss, debate and design the next version

of Ubuntu. We bring together the entire Canonical development team and

sponsor a large number of community members across the wide range of

areas in which people contribute to Ubuntu. This includes packaging,

translations, documentation, testing, LoCo teams and more. UDS is an

incredible experience, filled with smart and enthusiastic people, fast

paced and exhausting, but incredibly gratifying to be part of the

process that builds the next Ubuntu.

 

It is important to note that UDS is not a conference. It is absolutely a

participatory discussion-based summit in which we work together as a

team to define what our next release will look like. If you are planning

on attending or planning on applying for sponsorship, you should be

prepared to participate in the sessions actively.

 

For every UDS, Canonical sponsors a number of community members to

attend the event. We are looking for those who want to bring some real

insight and expertise in their area of Ubuntu, be it development or

community governance. If you feel you could offer this but can’t afford

to cover your expenses of attending, you should apply for sponsorship.

 

Luckily, requesting your sponsorship is pretty simple, and we a simple

system to handle sponsorship requests. To apply for sponsorship, just

follow these simple steps:

 

* Go to http://summit.ubuntu.com/uds-m/ and log in with OpenID. When you

have logged in, click the Request Sponsorship link.

* On the first page, add your location and use the About yourself box to

tell us why you should be sponsored and tell us about your work on

Ubuntu – here you should tell us your vital stats – tell us your any

5-A-Day numbers, any work on the sponsorship queue, what you have

uploaded, which teams you are in, your LoCo involvement, documentation

you have written, any translation work and other work that you have been

involved in. When you have done this, click the Next button.

* On the final page, answer the questions and then click Finish to

finish your sponsorship request.

 

More details on requesting sponsorship are here:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UDS-M/Sponsorship

 

PLEASE NOTE: we have a re-direction bug at the end of this process that

affects some people. Don’t worry though, your application is still saved

to the system. We are currently in the process of fixing this bug.

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel-announce/2010-March/000684.html

 

=== UI Freeze in place for Lucid ===

 

Effective today, we are officially under the User Interface Freeze for

Lucid: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UserInterfaceFreeze

 

In order to help ensure our documentation is accurate for the release,

please notify the documentation team of any further changes to artwork,

text strings, or UI designs that will be made between now and the

release, and please make such changes only where necessary.

 

Also, as part of the ongoing process of

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ArchiveReorganisation, we're happy to report

that the ubuntu-release and motu-release teams have now been merged.

Welcome to all our new release team members! When submitting freeze

exception requests (either for the UI Freeze or for the Feature Freeze),

please subscribe the ubuntu-release team only, regardless of whether the

package is in universe or in main. Otherwise, the requirements for

submitting freeze exceptions remain the same, and as always are

documented at: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/FreezeExceptionProcess

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel-announce/2010-March/000685.html

 

=== Developer Membership Board meeting ===

 

New Contributing Developer: Scott Howard

 

Scott has been active in g-p-m, Science packages, and many miscellaneous

fixes. He was approved unanimously for Contributing Developer.

 

* Developer Application:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ScottHoward/ContributingDeveloperApplication

* Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ScottHoward/

* Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~showard314

 

New Core Developer: Didier Roche

 

Didier has extended his work on Desktop packages into several flavors

and deep build dependencies, and was approved was approved unanimously

for Core Developer.

 

* Core Developer Application:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DidierRoche/CoreDevApplication

* Wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DidierRoche

* Launchpad: https://launchpad.net/~didrocks

 

The Ubuntu Developers Team and the Ubuntu Community extends a warm

welcome to these two new member developers!

 

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel-announce/2010-March/000683.html

 

=== International Women's Day Vote ===

 

In January some of the Ubuntu Women members launched a competition to

gather stories about women and girls discovering Ubuntu. The aim of the

competition was to counteract the invisibility of women and girls in the

community and demonstrate that their path is really no different than

any other.

https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-women/2010-January/002406.html

 

Entries for this competition closed last week, and the voting has now

opened on the 15 wonderful entries received. Everyone can have their say

in which are their favourite stories; so please take a moment to read

these tales of discovery and cast your votes.

http://elkbuntu.net/ubuntuwomen/

 

The Community Manager, Jono Bacon, will announce the most popular story

winner and draw a random winner on March 8th, 2010 to celebrate

International Women’s Day, 2010. http://internationalwomensday.org/

 

http://fridge.ubuntu.com/node/1990

 

== Ubuntu Stats ==

 

=== Bug Stats ===

 

* Open (77454) +428 # over last week

* Critical (27) +1 # over last week

* Unconfirmed (38755) −209 # 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 Karmic ===

 

1. English (United Kingdom) (7874) −8360 # over last week

2. Spanish (10400) −4 # over last week

3. French (40178) −23 # over last week

4. Brazilian Portuguese (40304) −264 # over last week

5. Swedish (65063) Not listed 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 ===

 

* Move the min, max, close buttons back to the right in 10.04 -

http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/23899/

* Save network settings during install -

http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/23876/

* Ship the vastly improved AoTuv Vorbis encoder in Ubuntu -

http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/23838/

* add more RTL (Hebrew, Arabic) fonts to the Ubuntu fonts collection -

http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/23844/

* Integrate Cheese Application in F-Spot -

http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/idea/23849/

 

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/

 

== Launchpad News ==

 

=== Getting Patches Upstream ===

 

We heard from Ubuntu maintainers and upstream developers that it was too

easy to lose track of patches in bugs filed on Launchpad — or, put

another way, that Launchpad wasn’t doing enough to bring patches to

developers’ attention.

 

According to the Launchpad Upstream Improvements Spec that came out of a

recent UDS: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Specs/LaunchpadUpstreamImprovements

 

* Upstreams frequently complain that it is difficult for them to find

Ubuntu patches. patches.ubuntu.com is a diff between Ubuntu and Debian,

so it’s not really useful to some upstreams. We want an upstream patch

report that shows patches in packages and their age, so we can act on

them. …

 

To help solve this problem, we’ve added two new features to Launchpad.

 

1. The upstream report now shows bugs carrying patches.

2. A new “patch report†is available wherever bugs are available.

 

We’re hoping that these features, combined with the recently-landed

patch notification improvements and bug heat, will make it easier to

find the patches worth immediate attention.

 

These patch reports are new in Launchpad 10.02. About a month after they

go live, we’re going to look at the stats on how people have been using

them, and we’re going to survey some upstreams and Ubuntu maintainers to

see what they feel can be improved. Please also file bug reports as you

use these new features, of course (if you feel like going the extra

mile, tag your bug report with the patch-tracking tag — it’ll save us

some time).

 

Finally, please feel free to help improve the features yourself! The bug

links below will lead you to the branches on which these changes were

made, so you can see what the code looks like. The Launchpad development

wiki is the place to start for hacking on Launchpad.

References:

 

* Launchpad Upstream Improvements Spec:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Specs/LaunchpadUpstreamImprovements

* The Bugs/PatchTracking page in the Launchpad Development Wiki:

https://dev.launchpad.net/Bugs/PatchTracking

* Bug #283097 is about adding a ‘has patch’ column to the +packagebugs

page: https://bugs.edge.launchpad.net/malone/+bug/283097

* Bug #283941 is about showing patches in the upstream report (see

linked branch for code change):

https://bugs.edge.launchpad.net/malone/+bug/283941

* Bugs tagged with story-patch-report are about the patch report (again,

see linked branches for code changes): http://tinyurl.com/yzzj2kl

 

More information and screenshots at the link below.

 

http://blog.launchpad.net/bug-tracking/getting-patches-upstream

 

== The Planet ==

 

=== Jono Bacon: The Grand App Writing Challenge Submissions! ===

 

As many of you will be aware, this week Ubuntu Opportunistic Developer

Week took part, and the week has been wonderful so far. There has been

so much excitement and interest, and I have been tickled pink at just

how many people have been telling me that the week has re-invigorated

their interest or given them a new passion for writing fun and useful

apps. Ubuntu is an awesome platform for making these apps, and it has

been a real pleasure to see people getting so fired up about using it.

 

Before the week kicked off, I offered a fun little challenge called The

Grand App Writing Challenge. With a week of rocking content ahead

designed to help build a fun and thriving community who like to write

apps that scratch their itches, I put forward the challenge for you good

people to write some apps and see how far you get this week, and I will

blog your progress at the end of the week. Well, while we still have a

few sessions yet to go, it is Friday and I was keen to show off some

progress!

 

* Chris Couzens: HardwareMap

* Andy Breiner: Blogite

* Owais Lone: Rename it All

* Martin Eve: sshsplit

* Bernard Opic: Uninstaller for Adobe® AIR® 1.0.0

* Anirudh: Splatter

* Andrew Sellers: Ain't Easy

 

The Results: In my original blog post I offered to send three of the

projects an Ubuntu t-shirt. I was going to pick three fave projects, but

I think all the submissions are great, so I going to send you all a

t-shirt. Thanks all for taking part! For links to each project and

screenshots, visit the link below.

 

http://www.jonobacon.org/2010/03/06/the-grand-app-writing-challenge-submissions/

 

=== Dustin Kirkland: Server Bug Zapping results ===

 

Big thanks to those who participated in this week's Ubuntu Server Bug

Zapping effort on Ubuntu's KVM! During the course of this week, we

reduce the total number of open bugs against the qemu-kvm package in

Ubuntu from 48 on Monday to 24 today. That's 24 bugs closed, slicing our

open bug list in half!

 

Torsten Spindler was an all-star, helping triage, reproduce, and confirm

fixes for quite a number of bugs, and thanks to Brian Thomason for the

documentation patch. Also, thanks to Anthony Liguori (QEMU's maintainer)

for meeting me at Opal Divine's and helping triage a bunch of the

remaining open bugs.

 

I didn't get to spend quite as much time on this effort this week as I

hoped, so I libvirt didn't get the love it deserves yet. I'll plan on

working on libvirt in one of the next few weeks.

 

As for next week, stay tuned to Thierry Carrez' blog, as he's going to

announce the next Bug Zapping target. http://fnords.wordpress.com/

 

http://blog.dustinkirkland.com/2010/03/server-bug-zapping-kvm-in-retrospective.html

 

=== Chris Johnston: Ubuntu Classroom Team presents "ClassBot" ===

 

It is with pleasure that I am introducing you to a wonderful new tool

for the Ubuntu Classroom. ClassBot, written by Nathan Handler which will

automate many of the tasks that need to happen in #ubuntu-classroom and

#ubuntu-classroom-chat on irc.freenode.net. Many hours were spent by

Nathan writing the code and testing ClassBot. He also wants me to

mention that I wrote the specs for ClassBot and did most of the bug

testing. ClassBot has already handled the 48 Hours of Ubuntu Manual

Learning event and is currently taking care of Ubuntu Opportunistic

Developer Week.

 

If you are an instructor, or would like to be, and want to test out

ClassBot, you can contact Nathan or myself and we can set you up with a

demonstration session. Also, don’t forget to check out the Using

ClassBot wiki page.

 

* Ubuntu Classroom ClassBot wiki: http://wiki.ubuntu.com/Classroom/ClassBot

 

http://chrisjohnston.org/2010/ubuntu-classroom-presents-classbot

 

== In The Press ==

 

=== Canonical CEO Elucidates on Lucid Lynx Linux Server ===

 

Server Watch's Sean Michael Kerner notes that Canonical, the lead

commercial sponsor behind the Ubuntu Linux project, has a new CEO this

week. Jane Silber, the former chief operating officer of the company,

has now officially taken the reins from Canonical founder Mark

Shuttleworth and is already talking up what's ahead for the popular

Linux distribution. While a lot is happening at Canonical, Silber does

not see the change in CEO as marking a dramatic shift in Ubuntu's

direction. "So far, it has been a pretty smooth transition," Silber told

InternetNews.com. "Over the last three months, Mark Shuttleworth and I

have continued to do many of the things that we've done together, and

I've additionally started to pick up more of his responsibilities as he

has transitioned to focus more on some of the product design and

strategy areas." Follow the link to read more of Kerner's talk with Jane

Silber.

 

http://www.serverwatch.com/news/article.php/3868581/Canonical-CEO-Elucidates-on-Lucid-Lynx--Linux-Server.htm

 

=== Hands-on: Ubuntu goes social, gains Me Menu in 10.04 alpha 3 ===

 

Ryan Paul of ARS Technica tells us that Canonical is planning to

overhaul the desktop panel and integrate social networking features in

Ubuntu 10.04, codenamed Lucid Lynx. One of the key components of this

effort is the Me Menu, which shipped in the Lucid alpha 3 last week. The

Me Menu, which Canonical unveiled in December, provides a unified

interface for managing your presence on instant messaging and social

networking services. A text box that is embedded in the menu allows

users to publish status messages to all of their accounts. The Me Menu

expands on the concept of Ubuntu's existing presence menu, which was

included in the panel session applet in Ubuntu 9.04. Like the original

presence menu, the new Me Menu is designed to work with GNOME's Empathy

instant messaging client. When you post a status message in the menu, it

will be propagated to all of your Empathy accounts. The social

networking functionality in the new Me Menu is powered by Gwibber, an

open source microblogging client.

http://arstechnica.com/open-source/reviews/2010/03/hands-on-ubuntu-goes-social-gains-me-menu-in-1004-alpha-3.ars

 

=== Ubuntu 10.10 To Be Released on 28th of October ===

 

Phoronix's Michael Larabel states that while Ubuntu 10.04 LTS will not

even be released until the end of April, Ubuntu 10.10 (with a codename

yet to be announced) already has its release schedule available. Ubuntu

10.10 is scheduled to be released to the world officially on the 28th of

October. Prior to this year's release of Ubuntu 10.10 that is six months

after the release of Ubuntu 10.04 LTS (the "Lucid Lynx") will be four

alpha releases, a beta, and then a release candidate. The details for

the Ubuntu 10.10 release schedule can be found on the Ubuntu Wiki. [1]

 

[1] https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MReleaseSchedule

 

http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=ODAzMg

 

=== Interviews: Matt Asay Answers Your Questions About Ubuntu and

Canonical ===

 

Slashdot solicited questions from their readers for new Canonical COO

Matt Asay. Asay has responded back to the questions posted, such as

Enderandrew's question "You often praise proprietary, closed-source

products on your blog (especially products from Apple and IBM). What is

your stance on mixing proprietary and open products?" Asay had this to

say in response, "Ubuntu is about choice. While we believe that an

operating system is best developed with the source code openly

available, that does not mean that the applications running on it need

to be restricted to only those using the same development method. Our

own users tell us, in large numbers, that they would like to see apps

become available from the likes of Adobe and the games developers. On

server the case is even more apparent where there are excellent

proprietary applications that we would love to make available to Ubuntu

users and we work to do that." Click the link to see all the questions

posed to Asay and his responses.

 

http://interviews.slashdot.org/story/10/03/02/186206/Matt-Asay-Answers-Your-Questions-About-Ubuntu-and-Canonical

 

=== Ubuntu 10.04 To Support iPhone/iPod Touch? ===

 

Thom Holwerda of OS News thinks that it is a welcome surprise for those

of us waiting for Ubuntu 10.04, the Lucid Lynx. Several users are

reporting that their iPod Touches and iPhones (including the 3GS) work

in alpha 3 - without tweaking, without jailbreaking, without patching -

with Nautilus and Rythmbox. Several users have reported that upon

installing the third alpha release of Ubuntu 10.04 Lucid Lynx, their

iPod Touches and iPhones are recognised by the operating system. You can

browse your iPhone/iPod with the file manager, and Rythmbox can work

with them as well. Hopefully, everything will work by the time the new

Ubuntu release is out, and hopefully, other distributions adopt this

functionality as well.

 

http://www.osnews.com/story/22942/Ubuntu_10_04_To_Support_iPhone_iPod_Touch_

 

=== Ubuntu dumps the brown, introduces new theme and branding ===

 

ARS Technica's Ryan Paul reports that Canonical has revealed the style

of the new default theme that will be used in Ubuntu 10.04, the next

major version of the popular Linux distribution. In a significant

departure from tradition, Ubuntu is shedding its signature brown color

scheme and is adopting a new look with a palette that includes orange

and an aubergine shade of purple. Ubuntu's distinctive brown look dates

back to the very first version of the distribution, which was released

in 2004. Although the style has evolved considerably since then and new

colors like orange gradually gained a foothold in the desktop palette,

brown has been the dominant color of Ubuntu's default themes for the

past five years. Although Ubuntu has made great strides in the area of

usability, it has still lagged behind other distros like openSUSE in the

quality of its theming and visual style. The new theme is a nice

improvement that will move Ubuntu forward and make the desktop more

visually appealing.

 

http://arstechnica.com/open-source/news/2010/03/ubuntu-dumps-the-brown-introduces-new-theme.ars

 

=== Ubuntu Lucid Makes Scanning Simple ===

 

Starry Hope's Jim tells us that Canonical is aiming to make the task of

scanning documents super simple with version 10.04 Lucid Lynx. Canonical

developer Robert Ancell is working on Simple Scan, a great little

program that does exactly what it claims – it makes scanning documents

simple! Simple Scan is now the default scanning software in Lucid.

Simple Scan offers only the most basic of controls. It lets you choose

the type of document you are scanning (photo or text), lets you do basic

cropping, then lets you save the scan as a file, email your scans via

Evolution or just print. It also handles multi-page documents, allowing

you to save them as a PDF file or as a series of JPG images. That’s

about all there is to it – it’s simple!

 

http://www.starryhope.com/linux/ubuntu/2010/ubuntu-lucid-makes-scanning-simple/

 

== In The Blogosphere ==

 

=== 17 Featured Applications in Ubuntu 10.04 Software Center - But are

they wise Choices? ===

 

The OMG!Ubuntu folks ask folks which applications readers wanted to be

"featured applications in the Ubuntu 10.04 Software Center. Here are 17

the selections they had listed on March 03, 2010.

 

* Arista Transcoder

* Audacity

* Blender

* Cheese

* Chromium B.S.U.

* Deja Dup

* Firewall Config

* Frozen-Bubble

* GTG!

* GIMP

* GNOME Do

* HomeBank

* Liferea

* Moovida

* Pingus

* Stellarium

 

While they admit, "nothing is set in stone yet so this list is subject

to change, but for now it shows a great and varied selection of the best

applications available in the Ubuntu repos."

 

http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2010/03/17-featured-applications-in-ubuntu-1004.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+d0od+%28Omg!+Ubuntu!%29

 

=== Ubuntu has new themes – but what is up with those window buttons? ===

 

The folks on the Element Developers Blog had a few observations about

the new theme. They were excited of the new makeup and even noted that

your desktop won't favor a "muddy beach" now and expressed that "Ubuntu

is slick". Included in the article screens shots of the new theme as

well. However, the author does have one complaint - the window button

arrangement. The author does go on to say that, "I am going to play an

advocate of the pros of this design of Ubuntu’s window button placement

through a short real world office usability scenario." Then lists those

5 scenarios. In the conclusion it is noted that, "Sometimes something

untraditional, especially in regard to interfaces can increase usability

and make things generally easier." The article was updated on 3/04 with,

"Canonical/Ubuntu say the button placement will now be on the right hand

side as it traditionally was, thus sort of negating this blog post.

However I still find this left hand side arrangement very interesting

and beneficial to netbook or laptop users."

 

http://elementmypc.com/blog/?p=15

 

=== Lubuntu Gets a New Look ===

 

Christopher Tozzi, workswithU has been looking at Lubuntu, a lightweight

Linux distribution based on Ubuntu. Tozzi noted that since February 16,

2010, "the operating system has undergone major changes that merit a

revisit of its features." He speculates that Lubuntu may replace

Xubuntu. Tozzi approves of the new aesthetics and provides screen shots

to highlight the new look and content of Lubuntu. Tozzi also points out

the Lubuntu now uses NetworkManager instead of wicd, Chrome instead of

Firefox, as well as a special interface for netbooks. Tozzi states, "I

really like what I see, and am starting to regret not having a computer

old enough to justify switching to this still-unofficial Ubuntu variant."

 

http://www.workswithu.com/2010/03/04/lubuntu-gets-a-new-look/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+WorksWithU+%28Works+With+U%29

 

=== Ubuntu Gets New Themes, Logo, Boot Screen, Identity and So Much

More! ===

 

A little over a week ago the OMG!Ubuntu folks let readers know to be on

the lookout for an announcement concerning the re-branding of Ubuntu and

on Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010 the announcement was indeed made public.

OMG!Ubuntu noted that "even we didn't expect it to be quite as big as this!"

In this article they discuss the team that brought you this new look.

There are view of the new typeface and logo as well as screen shots of

the two new themes as well as the boot screen. OMG!Ubuntu also shows the

new look of the official website. At the end of this article it ends

with a poll asking readers they like or loathe the new look.

 

http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2010/03/ubuntu-gets-new-themes-logo-more.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+d0od+%28Omg!+Ubuntu!%29

 

== Meeting Summaries: February 2010 ==

 

=== Ubuntu Governance ===

 

==== Developer Membership Board ====

 

* Developer Membership Board meeting, 2010-02-02

 

* Chair: Colin Watson

 

* Present: Emmet Hikory, Michael Bienia, Soren Hansen, Stéphane Graber

 

* Absent: Cody Somerville, Richard Johnson

 

* First meeting of new board following election

 

* Action review

 

* [ACTION] persia to ask CC to make DMB an admin of

~universe-contributors, as part of the DMB/MC merge (carried over; but

in the meantime TB members can act on changes)

 

* motu-release team currently does not have any administrators (Scott

Kitterman)

 

* Dealt with by setting ubuntu-release as administrator, pending a full

team merge

 

* MOTU direction (ScottK, cjwatson)

 

* initial drafting complete, subject to approval by DMB and TB

 

* [ACTION] ScottK to start discussion on future of MOTU Council among

its constituency (MOTU)

 

* DMB is presently hearing MOTU applications, although there seems to be

some confusion about this

 

* [ACTION] cjwatson to confirm MOTU process with TB

 

* current draft approved unanimously, aside from pending motu-council

sections

 

* will continue with TB

 

* Approval of the application process for new applications

(https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DeveloperMembershipBoard/ApplicationProcess)

 

* approved unanimously

 

* Per-package uploader: Martin-Éric Racine

(https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MartinEricRacine) for xserver-xorg-video-geode

 

* Martin-Éric has done fine work on this in the past, and is already a

member of MOTU; approved unanimously. Welcome!

 

* Ubuntu Contributing Developer: Dmitrijs Ledkovs

(https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DmitrijsLedkovs)

 

* Dmitrijs has been working on xiphos and sword, and was approved

unanimously for universe-contributors. Welcome!

 

* MOTU and per-package-uploader: Elliot Murphy

(https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ElliotMurphy/DeveloperApplication)

 

* See previous thread on motu-council

(https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/motu-council/2010-January/002370.html)

 

* We separated Elliot's application into a few parts:

 

* MOTU

 

* Of five members present, two voted in favour, with three abstentions

(citing a desire for more sponsored uploads)

 

* [ACTION] cjwatson to gather votes from absent members by e-mail

 

* ubuntuone-client, ubuntuone-storage-protocol, erlang, couchdb,

desktopcouch, python-configglue, rabbitmq-server: approved unanimously

 

* evolution-couchdb, couchdb-glib: denied on the basis that the person

directly maintaining these should apply instead; Elliot intends to do

packaging work on these and will reapply

 

* libubuntuone: not yet in the archive; deferred

 

==== IRC Council ====

 

* IRC Council Meeting 2010-02-13

 

* The official policy on #ubuntuforums

 

* The IRCC has access, access list has been cleaned up.

 

* Revisit #ubuntu-ops policies including 'no idling' & +v

 

 

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