Had to do some shuffling of the OpenWeek schedule. I apologize for any inconvenience this might have caused.
Please refer to the schedule.
People have been noticing that I am addicted to a certain beverage (no, not beer):
It's called an Arnold Palmer. Half iced tea, half lemonade. Most restaurants will make one for you. I've just started buying it by the case. I've lost a ton of weight just by drinking these instead of Dr. Pepper. YMMV. Apparently if I work out more I will lose even more weight, but that takes work ... pfft.
The participation in OpenWeek has been outstanding so far, thanks to the session presenters and everyone for showing up.
We have 3 more days of sessions, make sure you check out the schedule for more information.
Special thanks to Stéphane Graber, Nosrednaekim, James Westby, Dylan McCall, and J AustinBardo for ensuring that the wiki page is up to date with logs of the sessions and general maintenance. Also thanks to the IRC team for keeping things flowing so well.
Now that the parties are out of the way (pics later), we can relax right? Wrong! The Ubuntu train never stops, there will be no rest for the wicked. Just a quick reminder that OpenWeek starts this Monday at 1500UTC.
OpenWeek is a weeklong set of IRC sessions designed to grow the Ubuntu community.
The timing is particularly good this time, we're at the very beginning of the cycle for Ibex (not even a UDS yet!) - so now is a good opportunity for you to get involved if you want to learn about packaging, filing bugs, running upstream kernels, and the entire bunch of workshops we've got planned for you. See you there!
Whew, what a busy month it's been so far.
I spent last weekend at Lugradio Live USA where I got to meet a bunch of great people. I am convinced this show is going to expand a great deal. I think it's excellent to have community-driven shows, since ours are a great deal smaller than the ones in Europe and the rest of the world. Penguicon 6.0 is this weekend in Detroit. Check out the plethora of events.
Edit: Duh, of course, thanks to Aq, Matt, and Chris, whom I've never met before, for being real life versions of their radio selves.

The always popular Ubuntu Open Week returns this month and we welcome everyone from all walks of life, distros, skills, opinions and curiosities to come along and get involved. The aim of the week is to help grow the Ubuntu community, and we have an awesome set of topics ready for you to attend. If you've considered getting involved in Ubuntu and don't know where to start, then this is a great opportunity to jump in.
The Ubuntu Open Week will take place from Monday, 28 April to Saturday 3 May on #ubuntu-classroom on Freenode.
We have sessions on all kinds of subjects including Reporting and Triaging bugs, Building Upstream Kernels, Kubuntu Development (including KDE4!), Bazaar, Packaging 101, Ubuntu Mobile, Merging Packages, Launchpad Personal Packaging Archives, Ubuntu Server, Security, Xubuntu, Community Q+A, Packaging Firefox Extensions, Artwork, Producing Podcasts, Training, Preeseeding d-i/Ubiquity, the Future of Ubuntu Desktop, Community support with the Forums, Python Packaging, Ask Mark, Wubi, Unwinding Stacktraces, Documentation, and much more!
Remember, being part of Ubuntu does not have to be a technical, hardcore, programming or packaging job. You can be involved with artwork, marketing, advocacy, local community teams, documentation, translations and more. If you are interested in being a part of the Ubuntu project, there is sure to be a session for you, take this time to join the Ubuntu Community and become part of the world-class team that puts Ubuntu together. We are keen that everyone with every discipline can be a part of our growing community.
See you in the sessions!
Digg hereI mentioned to someone at our LUG meeting tonight that I was attending Lugradio Live USA 2008 this weekend. He mentioned something about a English invasion ... which inevitably led my brain to think about this video. Tally ho.
The list of attendees for FOSSCamp continues to grow. Recently added are people from Tango, Netbeans, Inkscape, openSUSE, Fedora, Ubuntu, glom, gtkmm, Campware.org, Media Development Loan Fund, and of course, more GNOME and KDE folks.
FOSSCamp will be taking place 16 and 17 May in Prague, Czech Republic and is open to all at no cost, so if you're project is not represented, then please consider coming!
David Zeuthen, from DavidKit, will also be attending. :)
Aaron Bockover announced the second Alpha of Banshee last week, which garnered a bunch of attention; unfortunately for Ubuntu users there was no easy way to get it running other than compiling it, which led to this thread in the forums.
Random .debs on the internet are troublesome because they tend to be transient and linked to from digg and there's no real control on the quality. You're basically trusting that the .deb is done right and won't hose your machine. So ... over the weekend I mailed the people making these debs and linked them up with Sebastian Dröge, who maintains the stable branch in Ubuntu and already had packages for the preview in Debian Experimental. The result is this:
https://launchpad.net/~banshee-team/+archive
Since we've formed a team in launchpad, there is now a group of people who care about Banshee working together in one place - as a bonus, since Sebastian is upstream in both Debian and the Banshee project itself, there is now group collaboration between all interested parties.
Users win because they get to play with Banshee. Since the team is using Launchpad's PPA feature, binaries for AMD64/i386 for both Hardy and Gutsy are generated. Banshee upstream wins because they now have more people being able to use the Alpha and report bugs (and hopefully send patches), and the new packagers win because they can learn how Ubuntu works and get more involved in Ubuntu development. So overall, a good weekend!
Remember that all these features are available to anyone working on an open source project; so if you stumble across "random .deb on the internet" for a cool upstream; don't hesitate to find the people involved, talk to the upstream and Debian developers, and make cool things happen!
There is a thread on the Ubuntu Forums discussing laptop bags. I just got a new bag and decided to write about it, since I am starting to become a Tom Bihn collector it seems.
I have been toting around a Buzz (the sling bag on the left) for a few years now since it was recommended to me by Scott Collins. Like many other Bihn fans, Scott is very committed to the brand and evangelizes it to anyone he talks to. Since then many of my friends have been infected by the Bihn bug. (And yes, some of us are starting to become pretty zealous in recommending them to other people).
For some events I have been outgrowing my Buzz, specifically shows where I would buy shirts and carry around a coat (like FOSDEM), so I picked up the Id. (The one in the middle of the picture). I can't say anything bad about the Id, it's a great messenger bag. But even then I was running out of room at FOSDEM.
Yesterday I was hanging out with a friend who has an Empire Builder, and preferred it to his Super Ego, which was sitting in a closet doing nothing; so I bought it from him. (The one on the right, all black). This bag is pretty large, it can easily hold a 17" notebook and a few day's worth of clothes.
So now I have a new plan, for local events I'll continue to use the Buzz, then for larger events I will use the Id, and for really large events when I am abroad I will use the Super Ego. I can also mix and match, for example when flying to San Francisco for 2 nights I can put the laptop in the Buzz and clothes in the Super Ego without having to bust out the carry-on luggage. This seems like a super expensive way to solve a traveling problem doesn't it? Heh.
At our last mug.org meeting I noted that Jim McQuillan had picked up the Zephyr as his new briefcase. It looked very nice but I'm not a briefcase-using person, so I am still unfamiliar with it. I look forward to hearing what he has to say about it.
Note that they are expensive when compared to other bags. I think it's worth the price considering they have a lifetime guarantee and you really don't need to ever buy another laptop bag again; unless of course you buy multiple bags .... ;)
Discuss.
David Siegel has just blogged about the new release of GNOME Do.
The GNOME Do team has done a great job so far, they've packaged the right stuff for feature freeze getting it into hardy; on top of that they've been fixing tons of bugs. Chris Halse Rogers has done a fantastic job as a MOTU leading the effort to get it into hardy (8.04). He's filed a feature freeze exception to get the latest version into 8.04.
For my part I am proud that I had a a small part in getting things done. In many ways I hope that David's conclusion/thesis to the project involves mentioning the community aspect to the project. I really look forward to reading his findings.
I think it was really gutsy of David to do his senior design project in open source. He could have taken the easy way out and just done some other stupid thing that everyone else is doing. Instead, he put his cards down and did GNOME Do in an open manner.
His code is being shipped in universe for 8.04; he's got a lively mailing list full of contributors submitting code all the time, there are a bunch of branches in launchpad full of even more code ... GNOME Do is all over lifehacker, and a bunch of of other enthusiast sites; so what am I trying to say?
There are more factors, but I consider these the big ones. GNOME Do is awesome. If you're having problems ... post below ...
Edit: No, I'm not a total fanboy, I just think that David has done a pretty awesome job so far, if you think he hasn't, then post in the comments.
Birthday DVDs I enjoyed today:
I am laughing at the early Queensrÿche videos, particularly "Queen of the Reich".
Aaron Bockover has just announced the alpha pre-release of Banshee 1.0. This is a result of the heavy refactoring that has been taking place in Banshee trunk since October.
Obviously there is still a bunch of stuff missing, notably hardware player support, and a bunch of plugins still need to be ported - but it's good to get this out there as a baseline for people to get started playing with Banshee and help out.
I'm heading to Chicago for the weekend where I'll link up with Gabriel Burt, who has implemented the last.fm plugin. I will be buying him a bunch of beer:

Gabriel has made it trivially easy to add custom stations based on any of the last.fm criteria. So I can follow my friend's individual stations, group stations (like the Banshee and Ubuntu stations), and songs based on tags. Gabriel talks about this release here.
Thanks to Jonathan McDowell for mentioning that you can listen to songs tagged as "cover" to get a station of nothing but cover songs. Awesome.
Other improvements include dramatically reduced memory consumption and real FAST searching. Read more about the release in the release notes. The Banshee folks have been putting in tons of overtime on this new release, so kudos to them.

I will be organizing the GNOME Booth at LRL Live USA 2008. I am looking for volunteers to help run the booth, answer questions, and provide a friendly face for the GNOME project. The ideal candidate will love GNOME and be ready to work hard. :) Send me a mail or post in the comments if you want to help be part of the cult of awesome.
Also, if you register for LRL and want to be nice to me, please fill in my name for your reference. If you do so I will personally buy you a beer. (proof needed) I am willing to lie, cheat, bribe, and steal to win that Eee.
Pulse is not only an excellent live set by Pink Floyd, it's also a good name for the idea that the guys behind pulse of open source came up with. Actually I don't know if it's their idea, but it's pretty cool. Twitter is to blogs what IM is to email, or so they say (I guess).
Pulse of Open Source is sort of like Planet, but for twitter. One random day Christer Edwards said something along the lines of "we should organize all Ubuntu people on twitter and put that to good use." Poor Christer made the mistake of having a great open ended idea, so I convinced him to implement it. :)
Pulse of Ubuntu is a twitter account that follows people around from the Ubuntu community. As you can see, there's already a good list of people being followed. So if you use twitter and want to check out what people are doing, then follow @pulseofubuntu. If you use twitter and want to microblog about Ubuntu-stuff, then let us know and you can pulse with us. Send spam to jorge (at) ubuntu dot com and christer.edwards (at) ubuntu dot com. EDIT: Don't forget to tell us your twitterID.
Sign up and follow along, we want to see what 5 bugs you're touching every day!
I am proud to announce FOSSCamp 2008, to take place Friday 16 May and Saturday 17 May 2008 in Prague, Czech Republic. You can sign up here.
The aim of FOSSCamp is to provide a means for Open Source projects to get together to discuss and debate how to work together and how to improve the Open Source desktop, server and embedded space. This is about opening up the channels of communication between different projects to see how we can work together. Whats more, you don’t have to be a huge project like Mozilla, X.org, GNOME or KDE to attend - smaller projects are more than welcome!
Although Canonical are providing the venue for this event, this is a vendor neutral show and all distributions, projects, vendors, and contributors are welcome to attend. The event is at no-cost to participants.
This event is an "unconference", meaning that it is run in a FooCamp/BarCamp-style. This means that there is no set schedule, just an empty piece of paper with rooms and time slots. At the beginning of the event attendees start filling in the empty slots with topics they want to discuss, leading to a wide variety of sessions:
You can sign up by letting us know you're coming. Hope to see you all there!
Images courtesy of Ryan Paul
I love NIN so I was happy to see the announcement about their new album. Their website has been slammed so I wasn't able to purchase it directly from them, so I just bought it from Amazon using their new downloader for Linux.
I hope Trent follows up in the future and blogs about how the album did sales-wise. It will be interesting to see how many people supported the band and how many just downloaded the free album.
I was at lunch the other day and Ken Simon, a sysadmin at Oakland University. He was mentioning how the students were on spring break and he needed a quick and dirty project to work on.
So I told him that he could probably implement the blueprint I had written a month or so ago for a Launchpad plugin for GNOME Do. I wrote the spec because as I use Do more and more I tend to want everything I work in to just be in Do because it's a fast way to work.
As Ken explains, a few hours later he had something working. Behold:
Do is one of those applications that you need to see to really "get it". So I've put together a screencast of Ken's Launchpad Plugin for GNOME Do (Ogg Video) so you can check out how it works.
We will be merging this plugin into the official plugins branch, but in the meantime you can grab the code here. If you don't want to build from source, snag the .dll from here and copy it into ~/.local/share/gnome-do/plugins then restart GNOME Do. You need the version of GNOME Do from the official Personal Package Archive.
Also, GNOME Do now has learning enabled in trunk. This means that as you use Do, over time it learns what things you tend to use the most. So if you keep using "Launchpad -> 123456 -> Bug Number" then the Bug Number item will start to drift to the top of the list. If your friend is a translator and keeps doing "Launchpad -> Russian -> Release Translations" then the translation item will start to move to the top of his list. As you can imagine, after Do learns the way you work, you become real fast at getting to where you want to be.
Thanks to Ken Simon for implementing this, and David Siegel for answering his questions on the list. I am finding myself more efficient with this plugin and the learning feature. Enjoy!
The dynamic duo of Calvin Gaisford and Boyd Timothy have unleashed Tasky onto the world, which they worked on during Novell's Hack Week.
Tasky is a simple TODO app for the Linux desktop, though I think the real awesome bit is the integration with Remember The Milk, an online task list. I really like RTM's features, especially the Firefox plugin for Gmail, which is really fantastic. The reason I like tasky is that I can have a desktop application that talks to RTM which I can "Always on Top" on my second monitor and have it in my face all the time.
Like any new project, it is very young and missing features, but if you use RTM and check out Tasky, you will quickly realize the potential here for a great tool. For example, someone has already written a backend for Evolution tasks. I threw up some ideas for future work here.
Join the tasky google group for discussion; get the code here, and feel free to jump in.
Edit: Misspelled Calvin's name, fixed. I guess I owe him a beer for that one.
Spent some time checking out the Ubuntu booth at FOSDEM, run by the folks from the Ubuntu Belgian Team:
Thanks to the many folks (some not in the picture) who helped man the booth and answer user questions. Having run many booths myself I know it can be tiring even after a few hours, let alone two whole days. They also put together an awesome little poster for their upcoming release party:
Of course they will make the source available so that other locos can reuse the layout for making their own release party invitations. I will blog as soon as someone sends it to me.
Jonathan Riddell put on a packaging talk for FOSDEM 2008:
The talk was well attended and there were some questions. Unfortunately the session was only 45 minutes, so he couldn't delve into too much detail.
Jonathan has made his slides available. As always, feel free to refer to the Packaging Guide for more detailed information and run your own Packaging Jam.
I'd like to extend thanks to the many people out there who maintain the Ubuntu wiki and forum threads; all of you excellent documentation folks. I was easily able to look at a grid of compatible webcams and make a purchasing decision. Of course a thanks also go out to the folks who actually wrote the driver. :)
I bought a Logitech Quickcam STX and it worked right out of the box. Ekiga worked (once I set it to VL2). Cheese worked with zero configuration , what an excellent application by the way; green hulk angry!
... and Skype (an unfortunate non-free necessity) just worked; spent some time hanging out with Ubuntu Studio's _MMA_:
The nice thing I liked about this camera is that it Just Worked. It came with a CD, but I didn't need it, i just plugged it in. Awesome.
On the other side of the coin, I went to micro center yesterday and got a cheap USB stick. The box said nothing about the bundled U3 software that was installed on the key, otherwise I would have known better. The only way to remove it is with a windows-only tool. The weird part is that the the software actually makes the usb stick harder to use, even in Windows. It's like someone somewhere said "Let's not only invest money in this software, but let's make it harder for people to use as well, that way we all win!". I would have paid money to be at that meeting.
It's either ironic (or sad) that these days the simplest devices are restricted with worthless crap, while the seemingly more complicated devices are Just Working(tm) these days. Well, except for home NAS stuff, heh.
So, the Logitech Quickcam STX gets a thumbs up, most USB sticks these days get a thumbs down.
Finally got my puppet book. Got through the intro (I'll be reading it during my flight to FOSDEM), but I was surprised at how thin the book is. A sysadmin book less than 800 pages? Ridiculous. Puppet has been brought up on the Ars Technica forums over the last few months, so I started a thread.
Note: I think the book being so thin is a feature - a testament to a well-designed tool. :)