Tag Archives: Scott Lavender

Howard Chan: Gah too many April Fools Day joke from Ubuntu community

Yes that’s the title. Ubuntu gave me too many jokes yesterday.

1. Scott Lavender’s annoucement of resigning as Ubuntu Studio’s Project Lead

This is the first joke which turned out to be a non-joke. I was heartbroken.

I joined the Ubuntu Studio Team in August 2012, as an interested QA tester. At that time, it was Scott who contacted and welcomed me first. He was indeed a marvellous leader, pushing Ubuntu Studio on the conversion of the default desktop environment to Xfce and developing the initial idea of workflows.

Scott has been rather inactive in the 13.04 cycle due to his work, and he announced his resignation yesterday.

I was surprised since I was expecting the discussion of this matter in the 13.10 cycle, not the real thing on April Fools Day.X-(

Anyway, I would like to thank Scott and wish him every success in future development.

And now, the Ubuntu Studio Team enters “the zequence Era”!!!! (LOL). Scott has appointed Kaj Ailomaa (zequence) as the Ubuntu Studio Team’s new Project Lead. He has been working very extensively in the 12.10 & 13.04 cycle, writing documentation, doing SRUs, finding contributors, and much more. I do hope that every Ubuntu Studio Team member and user would support him as much as I do.

2. Oliver Grawart’s announcement about developers needing to pay money to upload packages and draft blueprints

This is so ridiculous that I really think this IS an April Fools Day joke. I mean, I need to PAY to upload packages and draft blueprints? Why? This clearly violates freedom of software packaging and makes people more unwilling to contribute to Ubuntu.

If this is the real thing, I either need somebody to sponsor me for this, or I just simply can’t contribute.

Please, Canonical and Ubuntu, stop going making Ubuntu a full commercial product.

So these jokes hit me yesterday and I don’t want anymore.

smartboyhw away from home in Hangzhou, China

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Planet Ubuntu

Kaj Ailomaa: Future Ubuntu Studio changes

The first UDS (Ubuntu Developer Summit) of the year has just started. It’s now an online event, held every three months, where Ubuntu developers and contributors meet and discuss future development goals.

UDS used to be a physical event, held every 6 months, just after a new release of Ubuntu. Traditionally participants is a mix of Canonical employees, sponsored participants, and volunteers. It’s free and open for anyone to attend. Usually at least the project lead of each of the official Ubuntu flavors would attend. In October I attended when it was held in Copenhagen, and the year before, in US, Scott Lavender, the project lead of Ubuntu Studio attended.

Many things are being discussed during UDS that might radically change how Ubuntu Studio, and other community Ubuntu flavors will be developed and supported in the future.

Moving Towards Rolling Release?

One of the major topics for this UDS is the discussion on whether or not Ubuntu should start using the rolling release model. The LTS(Long Term Release) will still continue, as Canonicals clients value that,  while the interim release is proposed to be dropped.

Many ideas are floating around how to make this work. So far, northing’s conclusive, but it seem sto me, reading mail lists and such, that many people want it to happen, even if this does cause quite a bit of disturbance among flavor developers, who have been planning for a release in April for the last six months.

X Window to be replaced by MIR

Many things were announced at the same time, and while the rolling release is still up for discussion, it seems that the move towards replacing the X window system with MIR is already decided. Of course, at this point nothing is for sure, since MIR still needs to be developed, and the change will not come instantly. The goal is for a full change by the release of 14.04 LTS.

This will be a huge change for the community, as it means either all of the desktop systems on Ubuntu will need to support MIR, or the current X window system will need to be fully supported by the community developerst, since Unity – the Ubuntu desktop system will not be using X, and thus, they will not be supporting it.

What will this mean for Ubuntu Studio?

Right now, we don’t really know. In many ways, Ubuntu Studio itself is quite flexible, as we do not actually depend on any specific windowing or desktop system (as long as our applications are able to run on it, though we prefer to stay with XFCE), and our main concern about the rolling release is really just will it be stable enough for users? Some of our users don’t need anything but a LTS, but that is a minority of our users. A potential rolling release will be our main release, and it needs to be good and usable.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Planet Ubuntu