Posts Tagged ‘UDS’

Ubuntu Developer Summit for 13.04 (Raring)

// January 29th, 2013 // No Comments » // Education, Free Software, Jonathan

The War on Time

Whoosh! I’ve been incredibly quiet on my blog for the last 2-3 months. It’s been a crazy time but I’ll catch up and explain everything over the next few entries.

Firstly, I’d like to get out a few details about the last Ubuntu Developer Summit that took place in Copenhagen, Denmark in October. I’m usually really good at getting my blog post out by the end of UDS or a day or two after, but this time it just flew by so incredibly fast for me that I couldn’t keep up. It was a bit shorter than usual at 4 days, as apposed to the usual 5. The reason I heard for that was that people commented in previous post-UDS surveys that 5 days were too long, which is especially understandable for Canonical staff who are often in sprints (away from home) for the week before the UDS as well. I think the shorter period works well, it might need a bit more fine-tuning, I think the summary session at the end wasn’t that useful because, like me, there wasn’t enough time for people to process the vast amount of data generated during UDS and give nice summaries on it. Overall, it was a great get-together of people who care about Ubuntu and also many areas of interest outside of Ubuntu.

Copenhagen, Denmark

I didn’t take many photos this UDS, my camera is broken and only takes blurry pics (not my fault I swear!). So I just ended up taking a few pictures with my phone. Go tag yourself on Google+ if you were there. One of the first interesting things I saw when arriving in Copenhagen was the hotel we stayed in. The origami-like design reminded me of the design of the Quantal Quetzel logo that is used for the current stable Ubuntu release.

2012-10-28_05-50-14_21

quantal

The Road ahead for Edubuntu to 14.04 and beyond

Stéphane previously posted about the vision we share for Edubuntu 14.04 and beyond, this was what was mostly discussed during UDS and how we’ll approach those goals for the 13.04 release.

This release will mostly focus on the Edubuntu Server aspect. If everything works out, you will be able to use the standard Edubuntu DVD to also install an Edubuntu Server system that will act as a Linux container host as well as an Active Directory compatible directory server using Samba 4. The catch with Samba 4 is that it doesn’t have many administration tools for Linux yet. Stéphane has started work on a web interface for Edubuntu server that looks quite nice already. I’m supposed to do some CSS work on it, but I have to say it looks really nice already, it’s based on the MAAS service theme and Stéphane did some colour changes and fixes on it already.

edu-server-account

edu-server-password

From the Edubuntu installer, you’ll be able to choose whether this machine should act as a domain server, or whether you would like to join an existing domain. Since Edubuntu Server is highly compatible with Microsoft Active Directory, the installer will connect to it regardless of whether it’s a Windows Domain or Edubuntu Domain. This should make it really easy for administrators in schools with mixed environments and where complete infrastructure migrations are planned.

Authentication Options

Choosing machine role

You will be able to connect to the same domain whether you’re using Edubuntu on thin clients, desktops or tablets and everything is controllable using the Epoptes administration tool.

Many people are asking whether this is planned for Ubuntu / Ubuntu Server as well, since this could be incredibly useful in other organisations who have a domain infrastructure. It’s currently meant to be easily rebrandable and the aim is to have it available as a general solution for Ubuntu once all the pieces work together.

Empowering Ubuntu Flavours

This cycle, Ubuntu is making some changes to the release schedule. One of the biggest changes made  this cycle is that the alpha and beta releases are being dropped for the main Ubunut product. This session was about establishing how much divergence and changes the Ubuntu Flavours (Ubuntu Studio, Mythbuntu, Kubuntu, Lubuntu and Edubuntu) could have from the main release cycle. Edubuntu and Kubuntu decided to be a bit more conservative and maintain the snapshot releases. For Edubuntu it has certainly helped so far in identifying and finding some early bugs and I’m already glad that we did that. Mythbuntu is also a notable exception since it will now only do LTS releases. We’re tempted to change Edubuntu’s official policy that the LTS releases are the main releases and treat the releases in between more like technology previews for the next LTS. It’s already not such a far stretch from the truth, but we’ll need to properly review and communicate that at some point.

Valve at UDS and Steam for Linux

One of the first plenaries was from Valve where Drew Bliss talked about Steam on Linux. Steam is one of the most popular publishing and distribution systems for games and up until recently it has only been available on Windows and Mac. Valve (the company behind Steam and many popular games such as Half Life and Portal) are actively working on porting games to run natively on Linux as well.

Some people have asked me what I think about it, since the system is essentially using a free software platform to promote a lot of non-free software. My views on this is pretty simple, I think it’s an overwhelmingly good thing for Linux desktop adoption and it’s been proven to be a good thing for people who don’t even play games. Since the announcement from Valve, Nvidia has already doubled perfomance in many cases for its Linux drivers. AMD, who have been slacking on Linux support the last few years have beefed up their support drastically with the announcement of new drivers that were released earlier this month. This new collection of AMD drivers also adds support for a range of cards where the drivers were completely discontinued, giving new life to many older laptops and machines which would be destined for the dumpster otherwise. This benefits not only gamers, but everyone from an average office worker who wants snappy office suite performance and fast web browsing to designers who work with graphics, videos and computer aided design.

Also, it means that many home users who prefer Linux-based systems would no longer need to dual-boot to Windows or OS X for their games. While Steam will actively be promoting non-free software, it more than makes up for that by the enablement it does for the free software eco-system. I think anyone who disagrees with that is somewhat of a purist and should be more willing to make compromises in order to make progress.

Ubuntu Release Changes

Last week, there was a lot of media noise stating that Ubuntu will no longer do releases and will become a rolling release except for the LTS releases. This is certainly not the case, at least not any time soon. One meme that I’ve noticed increasingly over the last UDSs was that there’s an increasing desire to improve the LTS releases and using the usual Ubuntu releases more and more for experimentation purposes.

I think there’s more and more consensus that the current 6 month cycle isn’t really optimal and that there must be a better way to get Ubuntu to the masses, it’s just the details of what the better way is that leaves a lot to be figured out. There’s a desire between developers to provide better support (better SRUs and backports) for the LTS releases to make it easier for people to stick with it and still have access to new features and hardware support. Having less versions between LTS releases will certainly make that easier. In my opinion it will probably take at least another 2 cycles worth of looking at all the factors from different angles and getting feedback from all the stakeholders before a good plan will have formed for the future of Ubuntu releases. I’m glad to see that there is so much enthusiastic discussion around this and I’m eager to see how Ubuntu’s releases will continue to evolve.

Lightning Talks

Lightning talks are a lot like punk-rock songs. When it’s good, it’s really, really amazingly good and fun. When it’s bad, at least it will be over soon :)

Unfortunately, since it’s been a few months since the UDS, I can’t remember all the details of the lightning talks, but one thing that I find worth mentioning is that they’re not just awesome for the topic they aim to produce (for example, the one lightning talks session I attended was on the topic of “Tests in your software”), but since they are more demo-like than presentation-like, you get to learn a lot of neat tricks and cool things that you didn’t know before. Every few minutes someone would do something and I’d hear someone say something like “Awesome! I didn’t know you could do that with apt-daemon!”. It’s fun and educational and I hope lightning talks will continue to be a tradition at future UDSs.

Social

Stefano Rivera (fellow MOTU, Debianista, Capetonian, Clugger) wins the prize for person I’ve seen in the most countries in one year. In 2012, I saw him in Cape Town for Scaleconf,  Managua during Debconf, Oakland for a previous UDS and Copenhagen for this UDS. Sometimes when I look at silly little statistics like that I realise what a great adventure the year was!

Between the meet ‘n’ greet, an evening of lightning talks and the closing party (which was viking themed and pretty awesome) there was just one free evening left. I used it to gather with the Debian folk who were at UDS. It was great to see how many Debian people were attending, I think we had around a dozen or so people at the dinner and there were even more who couldn’t make it since they work for Canonical or Linaro and had to attend team dinners the same evening. It was as usual, great to put some more faces to names and get to know some people better.

It was also great to have a UDS with many strong technical community folk present who is willing to engage in discussion. There were still a few people who felt missing but it was less than at some previous UDSs.

I also discovered my face on a few puzzles! They were a *great* idea, I saw a few people come and go to work on them during the week, they seem to have acted as good menial activities for people to fix their brains when they got fried during sessions :)

2012-10-31_14-32-28_374

Overall, this was a good and punchy UDS. I’ll probably not make the next one in Oakland due to many changes in my life currently taking place (although I will remotely participate), but will probably make the one later this year, especially if it’s in Europe. I’ll also make a point of live-blogging a bit more, it’s just so hard remembering all the details a few months after the fact. Thanks to everyone who contributed their piece in making it a great week!

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Ubuntu Trending on Google+

// April 26th, 2012 // 1 Comment » // Free Software

Happy Ubuntu 12.04, release day!

I just noticed that Ubuntu (and Precise) is trending on Google+! As far as I can tell this is the first time that Ubuntu is trending there. That’s just awesome.

Following the stream is pretty nice, there’s currently a new post with every automatic refresh (about once a second).

Congratulations to everyone who worked on this and also the release team who did an outstanding job delivering Ubuntu 12.04 (Precise Pangolin) to the masses!

Well, I guess it’s time to prepare for UDS for 12.10 and I’m looking forward to seeing many of you at UDS in California in a bit more than a week! I’ll be posting some updates on Google+ as well, please follow me!

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Ubuntu Developer Summit 12.04

// November 5th, 2011 // 3 Comments » // Free Software

Great UDS

Photo Photo

This week I attended the Ubuntu Developer Summit for Ubuntu 12.04 in Orlando, Florida in the USA. I have so much to say about it that I don’t know where to begi n.

This was only the 5th UDS I’ve attended so far, it’s also hands down the best. UDS has become a well-oiled machine. Things just worked and everything was in place to ensure highly productive sessions. Kudos to the organisers, you rock!

Thanks to the sponsors: Cloud Foundry,  Rackspace and Google. VMware sponsored the food for this UDS, it was awesome, I hope I haven’t gained too much weight. Also thanks to Canonical for providing me and a whole bunch of other community members full sponsorship.

Ubuntu 12.04 – A high precision release

Photo Photo

This UDS I spent most of my time on technical sessions rather than on the community side. I find the community sessions emotionally draining, probably because I’m such a strong introvert. The technical sessions on the other hand I find engaging, exciting and inspiring. Most sessions I attended were calm, highly focussed and very productive.

Ubuntu 12.04 is going to be a very special release. So much effort has been put in from the very start to ensure an exceptional high quality release. Some have said that ‘precise’ sounds like a bit of a silly name to type in your sources.list file, but there’s never been an Ubuntu release where precision has been more relevant. There were plenty of sessions covering really important issues like LTS upgrades, the state of MOTU, keeping daily builds usable, the role of the ARB, the relationship with Debian and many more discussions that will lead to having higher quality packages in Ubuntu. I can’t even start to cover it in this blog entry but over the next release I’m going to write a *lot* about it. There’s such amazing focus going into quality and people should know about it!

Venue

Photo Photo

The Caribe Royale is a great venue for UDS. I think if Nintendo would have ever released a game called “UDS Resort” it would look pretty much like this place. I hope it’s host to a UDS again in the future! It was great seeing so many Ubuntu contributors, especially all the people who attended UDS for the first time. I hope to do so again in 6 months!

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On the road again

// October 28th, 2011 // No Comments » // Free Software, Jonathan

Some updates form the world of Jonathan…

  • LTSP BTS2011: Yesterday Marc, Stéphane and myself drove down to Southwest Harbour in Maine for the LTSP By The Sea 2011 hackfest. It wasn’t a long road trip, but it’s been fun, we picked up 4 other people at Bangor airport and the minivan we’re hiring was like a party bus from the airport to the harbour. The hackfest itself has also been really fun so far and productive, I’ll blog about that some time.
  • UDS Precice: On Sunday I’m off to Orlando, Florida for the Ubuntu Developer Summit for Ubuntu 12.04. It will be my first time in Orlando, and the first time I get to attend a UDS in the US. Previously my visa got approved too late so I couldn’t attend, this time I received a 10 year visa so I should be fine for a long time, I’m really happy and relieved about that.
  • Holidays and stuff: The week after UDS I’m back in Canada for a week to organise some things and report back at the office about what happened at BTS/UDS and then I’m off to South Africa for 3 months. I’ll be working from there for the period and also taking most of my year’s holidays during the end of December and early January. I’m the best man for a wedding and will be organising a road trip for the bachelors party, my friend in South Africa also got my motorbike fixed so we might end up going there by bike, the weather should be really good around then.
  • Back in Sherbs: On 15 February, just after my 30th birthday, I’ll be back in Sherbrooke. I’ll probably end up having some form of birthday party in both countries. After that… the adventure continues!
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It’s okay

// May 13th, 2011 // 6 Comments » // Free Software

Something I’ve heard way too much this week at UDS is something like “Sorry for not being able to contribute to [insert some subproject of Ubuntu here] over the past development cycle! I feel horrible and I hope there’s no resentment!”

Everyone goes through stuff sometimes, and no one will hold it against you if you need to take some time to sort out stuff. Just be careful not to block anything and if someone steps up to run with something, let them! Have fun kids!

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What’s happening in Edubuntu for Oneiric?

// May 10th, 2011 // 3 Comments » // Education, Free Software

Edubuntu at UDS

Today we had a session at the Ubuntu Developer Summit at Budapest covering the work in Edubuntu for the next release cycle. Not all of the items are assigned to someone yet (especially with the documentation), so if you’d like to get involved, please give us a ping on IRC or mailing list.

Fixes, improvements and some low hanging fruit

Translations:

  • Make LTSP Live translatable
  • Add ability  to set LTSP language from installer
  • Add Ubiquity page to add additional languages at install time
  • Edubuntu installer options itself should be translatable, main inclusion will probably be the easiest fix
  • Fix a translation bug in LDM
  • Investigate translation of Edubuntu.org, and whether we can migrate to Drupal 7 first before that to prevent future migration headaches

Installer /Upgrades specific:

  • Offer to create a new LTSP chroot on upgrades
  • Use the right wallpaper with the install-only environments (currently uses the Ubuntu default)
  • Add wubi support to DVD

Documentation:

  • Troubleshooting guide for common problems and questions found in schools and similar environments
    • Why can’t I access certain websites (who to install non-free flash, sun-java, etc)
  • Howtos:
    • How to configure smart boards and similar devices
    • How to install and maintain Moodle (yes, we’re giving up on packaging web stuff)
    • How to install and maintain Koha
    • How to install and maintain open-school.org
    • How to install common wine apps used in schools that work, list those that we know don’t and link to wineappdb

Ongoing work through this cycle:

  • Monitor the Gnome 3 transition, look at what’s broken in tools such as Pessulus, Sabayon and Nanny and get involved where possible
  • Improve Edubuntu Live Welcome slides for the Live USB and WebLive environments, make it more generic so that other derivatives could use the underlying scripts as well

Big Hairy Audacious Goals

If our goal is to bring the best of educational free software available together in one easy to install system then I think this release will get us there, but where to next? We want to grow the Edubuntu community but we can’t do that unless we add some new and exciting things to our to do list. One thing that has come up over and over again and that I bought up in the UDS session but we got no answer for is in which direction we should start going next. Should Edubuntu focus more on making system administration and management of computer labs in schools easier and simpler? Or should we focus on education and pedagogy and make the system better geared towards being a great teaching tool? We could even alternate between a focus on each of those for each release cycle, but it would be nice to get some big dream ideal world goals down that we could chase in Edubuntu. I think that we’re past the point where we should ‘take it safe’ when planning new Edubuntu  features, I think we’re in the position now to take some big decisions and grow our community to make it happen.

Any thoughts or ideas?

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UDS for Ubuntu 11.10 (Oneiric Ocelot) in Budapest

// May 7th, 2011 // 1 Comment » // Free Software

Last month was the first month in 6 years that I haven’t blogged. It’s been a busy period but I’m taking a few days to relax with family in Switzerland and get psyched for the Ubuntu Developer Summit taking place in Budapest next week.

I’m checking the schedule to see what’s interesting and started writing it down, but thought that I might as well post it publicly, since I’ll be writing some summaries from my perspective and posting them to Planet Ubuntu.

Sessions marked in bold are sessions I 100% want or have to be at, either because they affect things we work with at Révolution Linux, Edubuntu, Debian collaboration or otherwise packaging things and membership. I’m flexible on other sessions and might change my mind, especially if someone would like me to attend anothe session for whatever reason.

Monday

Monday’s Schedule: http://summit.ubuntu.com/uds-o/2011-05-09/


09:00 - Plenary - Introduction and Keynote
10:00 - Kazincy - Community Roundtable
11:00 - Petofi - Feedback on Natty cycle
12:00 - Krudy - Improvements and ideas for WebLive
14:00 - Plenary - Qt
14:15 - Plenary - Ubuntu Server motivations
14:30 - Plenary - Linaro Topic (TBD)
14:45 - Plenary - The future of the universe, continued
15:00 - Undecided
16:15 - Mikszath - NGO Team Oneiric plans
17:05 - Jokai - Network boot prototype for Linaro

Tuesday

Tuesday’s schedule  - http://summit.ubuntu.com/uds-o/2011-05-10/


09:00 - Kazincy - Community Roundtable
10:00 - TAS - Server Install Experience
11:00 - Kond - Edubuntu Plans for Oneiric
12:00 - Dery - Debian Health Check
14:00 - Plenary - Linaro Platform Challenges
14:15 - Plenary - Linaro Validation - LAVA
14:30 - Plenary - Linaro and Android
15:00 - Dery - DEX - Improving cross-distribution collaboration with Debian
16:15 - Dery - GTK 3 / Gnome 3 in Oneiric

17:05 - Undecided

Wednesday

Wednesday’s schedule - http://summit.ubuntu.com/uds-o/2011-05-11/


09:00 - Dery - Maintenance of the Mozilla packages in the new world
10:00 - Dery - Natty Tech Board, DX, Desktop, and Release Team retrospective
11:00 - Kazincy - Possible use for application sandboxing with containers
12:00 - Kond - LibreOffice Packaging for Oneiric
14:00 - Plenary - The Magic Behind WebLive
14:15 - Plenary - Delicious Recipes
14:30 - Plenary - Wine as a Performance Metric
14:45 - Plenary - Building Applications with Ubuntu One
15:00 - Undecided
16:15 - Mikszath - Ubuntu Development Bottlenecks
17:05 - TAS - Ask Mark (Q+A with sabdfl)

Thursday

Thursday’s schedule - http://summit.ubuntu.com/uds-o/2011-05-12/

09:00 - Kazincy - Community Thursday Roundtable
10:00 - Kond - Ubuntu Membership behavior and Code of Conduct outside Ubuntu.com community
11:00 - Arany - Main inclusion requests from Canonical's corporate partners
12:00 - Dery - LightDM for Display Management
14:00 - Plenary - Linaro showcase and prizes
14:15 - Plenary - Intro to Openstack, LXC
14:30 - Plenary - What's wrong with UDS and how we can fix it
14:45 - Plenary - Group Photo
15:00 - Huba - Summit development plans from UDS-O
16:15 - Petofi - Ubuntu Server Puppet Integration
17:05 - Kond - Collaboration between Debian-Edu and Edubuntu

Friday

Friday’s Schedule - http://summit.ubuntu.com/uds-o/2011-05-13/

09:00 - Kazincy - Community Friday Roundtable
10:00 - Krudy - App Review Board Review and Assessment
11:00 - Jozsef - debdelta support
12:00 - Jozsef - Redefine membership policy for Ubuntu Bug Control
14:00 - Plenary - Lightning talks
15:00 - Krudy - LXC improvements
16:15 - Kazincy - Governance Roundtable

17:05 - Plenary - UDS Wrapup

It’s going to be a big week! I’m excited to see everyone who will be attending!

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