Bit By Bit

Bit By Bit

Adam is [not wrong](https://blog.adamsweet.org/?p=216). The [post](https://blogs.gnome.org/dcbw/2007/10/15/networkmanager-07-is-the-new-chuck-norris/) is not just a good title though, but a great update on the things that are going on with NetworkManager. Congratulations to team hacking on it – keep up the great work. ๐Ÿ™‚

This takes me back to 2000 or 2001 time when I remember there being significant blockers between what the kernel and other low-level bits and pieces were exposing, and how graphical interfaces could talk to them. Back then it seemed that the hooks were not there for GUIs to plug into to make things easy to configure and use.

With the great work that has gone into the kernel, udev, sysfs, hal, dbus, and various other chunks, its great to see each of these barriers being broken down. Bit by bit, the free software community is nailing these different problems, and I love the fact that the desktop is becoming more and more mature and functional by the day. NetworkManager, while not perfect, has made incredible progress on this front of nailing *yet another* thing where the Linux desktop fell down.

Brick by brick, everyone is filling in the wall, and the diversity behind the Open Source community never ceases to impress me. ๐Ÿ™‚

Travel

Travel

This weekend I fly to Portugal for the [Open aLANtejo\07](https://alantejo.uevora.pt/2007/index.php?lang=en) event. Fellow Ubuntu and Canonical bod Mirco Mรƒยผller will be there, and I am going to hassle him to teach me how to spin upside down.

Then, on the 26th October I fly to Cambridge, Massachusetts for [FOSSCamp](https://www.fosscamp.org/) and the [Ubuntu Developer Summit](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UDS-Boston). Both events are shaping up really nicely. If anyone over in that neck of the woods wants to meet up for a few drinks, do [give me a shout](mailto:jonoATubuntuDOTcom). The week following UDS I will be attending a Canonical company summit, and then I fly home.

I am also beginning to think about travel for 2008, and I currently fleshing out ideas for my next big talk which I will take around the place, replacing my *How To Herd Cats And Influence Talk*. If you are a conference organiser and want me to speak, [get in touch](mailto:jonoATubuntuDOTcom). ๐Ÿ™‚

Travel

PiTiVi

Ever so quick shout out to my French friend and cheese lover, [Edward Hervey](https://blogs.gnome.org/edwardrv/), for releasing 0.11.0 of [PiTiVi](https://www.pitivi.org/wiki/Main_Page). I know this release has been a long time coming, and we are starting to see video editing functionality being rolled into it – with this release you can import video, cut, move clips around, transcode to different formats, and other bits and pieces. Lets not forget too, that PiTiVi uses the magic formula of Python/GStreamer/GTK, so you should go and worship at its feet. I know the team are looking for some solid testing, so [grab it](https://www.pitivi.org/wiki/Downloads), test it and [report bugs](https://bugzilla.gnome.org/).

The PiTiVi team are screaming out for help, so if you want to see video editing kick the proverbial derriere, and have some Python skills, get along and [help out](https://www.pitivi.org/wiki/Welcome_Developers). You can pester the team on #pitivi on Freenode.

Bit By Bit

Guitars

A little later than I would have liked due to busyness, but following on from [Matthew](https://matthewhelmke.net/index.php/2007/10/11/7-i-love-my-guitars), [Jorge](https://stompbox.typepad.com/blog/2007/10/here-are-mine.html), [Brandon](https://www.imbrandon.com/2007.10.12/my-instrument-meme.html) and [Steve](https://vorian.org/?p=161), here are my guitars:


(*[large image](https://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=1585603109&size=l)*)

Yep, the Jackson Kelly on the right has a chunk missing. I was warned against putting it on top of my rack while at university, and a poo-pooed the advice. Then, one dark day, it got knocked off the rack, *bounced*, and a big chunk ‘o Kelly came off. A musician should never *ever* see his guitar bounce.

UDS Draft Schedule Up

UDS Draft Schedule Up

Well, UDS is growing nearer, and I am more excited about this UDS than any other. In fact, I often have to ask close friends to slap me in the face to calm me down. I am looking forward to meeting each and every one of you.

In the same tradition as Ubuntu’s open development process, we are making available the program of events for the upcoming Ubuntu Developer Summit as it is prepared.

As with the previous UDS, the program will be a combination of two parts:

* The core program, organised into tracks by topic, assembled by the event organisers. This is a work in progress, but a draft is available at [https://people.ubuntu.com/~scott/uds-boston-2007](https://people.ubuntu.com/~scott/uds-boston-2007).
* Discussion slots submitted to Launchpad by attendees leading up to (and even during) the event. Instructions for proposing a topic can be found on the lovingly prepared [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UDS-Boston/ProposingSessions](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UDS-Boston/ProposingSessions) page. ๐Ÿ™‚

I look forward to seeing you all in Cambridge. ๐Ÿ™‚

History Lesson

History Lesson

A few days ago I got an interesting email from a young chap:

> hi jono,

> my name is David and I am a fan of your website and your work in ubuntu and lugradio (my chin!!!!). i know you are a well known open source guy and community hero, and one day I want to do the same. i am 14 and want to leave school and do the same thing. i just wanted to ask how you got into free software and how you got to where you are today.

> i know are a busy guy so don’t worry if you are too busy to reply to me. thanks a lot.

> davis

It is an interesting question, and something I often wonder about people who I follow too; possibly explaining why I like reading biographies. Well, I figured I would provide a quick history, and I would like to encourage other bloggers to do the same. Erk, it seems I might be starting one of those rather annoying Internet memes. At least it is not a *What are your top 5 science fiction films involving tentacles?* meme. ๐Ÿ˜›

I will warn you now though, this is a long post, and one I started writing on a train and then finished off on the train back. If it bores you, please move along. ๐Ÿ™‚

## In the beginning, there was hair

OK, I am going to spin back to when I was about 17 years old. I was young, had long straggly hair, and was doing my A-Levels at school. I had worked hard in my GCSE exams and done pretty well, but in-between my GCSEs and A-Levels, I joined my first band, Conspiracy, and was launched into an exciting world of band practises and gigging. Conspiracy were a band with an already established reputation in my area and much older members than me, so to get the job in the band felt like a huge opportunity. Consequently, despite my best efforts, more guitar playing than revision happened, and I completely screwed up my A-Levels and failed to get enough requisite points for my chosen university. Despite the dismal situation, the university (of Wolverhampton) offered me a place anyway (they cited an impressive interview as the reason for letting me in; I suspect they were just lowering the bar for numpties like me, mind). Despite my acceptance, I was not quite ready to give up my cushdie home-life and deferred University for a year, planning a year of working in the day and playing music in the evenings.

Being the supportive types my parents are, they rather bizarrely asked if I would like to run my own business in my year out, and offered to help fund it; it would be a means of me learning business skills, and doing my own thing. They are odd like that, they think of particular opportunities and dangle them in the face of their youngest born, when back then there was a likelyhood of it being wasted. It reminds me of when I was in hospital once having my wisdom teeth removed and they visited me, informing me that an insurance policy that they took out when I was born had matured, and I was the proud owner of ร‚ยฃ1050. As soon as I got out of hospital, I immediately ran out and bought a full Laney stack (a *massive* guitar amp) – it had 12 speakers, was bloody loud, and towered above me. I remember cranking that baby up, positioning it to my window and going outside in the back garden with my wireless system and the amp switched up to 8 – it was so loud everything would fall off my shelves in my room (we had very patient neighbours, as you can probably imagine). My parents should have known better. Anyway, I digress. I started my little business doing technical support (called The Mouse Man, my mums idea), and it lasted about three months. A combination of me being rubbish at technical support and not really business minded blew it, so I offered myself up for full-time work in the bookshop I worked at in Milton Keynes.

Around this time, my eldest brother, Simon, returned from the US and came to stay with us. Simon and I had a love/hate relationship back then – I hated him and he loved to taunt me. Despite our differences, we had some fun, and one day, while I was bemoaning Windows again, he mentioned something called ‘Linux’ to me, referring to Windows as a ‘Mickey Mouse Operating System’. He filled me in on how Linux was free, and you could get a free copy of it on the back of a book. Using my mighty staff discount, I nipped over to the bookshop I worked at in my rusty old Fiat Uno van and picked up *Slackware Unleashed*, complete with my 30% discount. We rushed back, and Simon began to install the included copy of Slackware 96 on my computer. It took him literally a week to set it up, and he was there with the case open, bits strewn everywhere, using pliers to poke around with the hard disk – I was not entirely enthused by such a sight, and slightly scared at this big ‘ol chunk of hardcore that he was installing. The only amusement I took was watching him get more and more infuriated. That made me happy.

Eventually, the “piece of hippy s**t” (his words) was installed and ready for me. Pretty much the day he finished the installation, he moved out, and I was left with a huge hardback book and this on my screen:

darkstar login: _

I sat down, stuck a Testament album on and started reading Chapter 1 of the mighty tome, and read about the community, and how every day people around the world worked together to make Linux better, using the Internet to share their work. I was utterly, utterly captivated, and the sheer potential of it all inspired me. Without actually using Linux, I read up on it, joined IRC channels, read newsgroups and mailing lists and got to know some of its rather fanatical users. Despite such excitement, the damn thing was inanely complicated, and after three weeks or so, I gave up. I was excited and enthused, but I just could not hack the pace, and I had grown bored of configuration files, compilers, and grep. I was out.

Well, it didn’t last long. Despite my best efforts, I was still captivated at the sheer prospect of this worldwide group of people making this Linux thing better every day. Surely, it was just heinously complicated right now, and it would get better? Also, despite its complexity, I had met some interesting Linux people in the dark annals of the Internet, and I found them strangely intriguing – just regular people who contributed to a system that hundreds and hundreds of people were using. These people inspired me, and I wanted to have the same kind of impact, despite having the technical ability of a rubber hammer.

One of the benefits of the bookshop that I worked in was that it had been bought by Waterstones (a large book retailer in the UK), and we basically sold off all the old stock from our other branches for ร‚ยฃ1 and ร‚ยฃ2 per book before we were re-branded as Waterstones. As such, once a month when we got a delivery, there was a mad rush as customers snapped up the new stock, and the rest of the month was pretty quiet. To fill the time I would read the computer books that came into the shop that were relevant to Linux, and when I had finished them, I would print out HOWTOs from the Linux Documentation Project and read them. The bookshop was scattered with random bits of paper with various Linux bits and pieces scrawled on them, as I scrambled to figure the Linux beast out. In addition to this, I also started writing my own little guides on the shop computer. For some time I had written a number of guitar lessons for my website, and I enjoyed writing, so I turned my sights to helping with documentation where I could.

Almost immediately I became indoctrinated with free software, and the ethos behind it. I have always been the kind of person that will try to sell a concept of something I like to others (as my friends will painfully testify about metal), and I wanted to tell the world about Linux. I realised I had a captive audience every day at work, so I found some Linux logos on the Internet, printed them out and ironed them onto some t-shirts. When someone would come in and ask about the t-shirt, they would get a pitch from me about Linux. It was amazing just how many people would ask about the t-shirt.

## Linux UK

Around the time I realised just how few resources there were in the UK for Linux, but I saw various names from the UK on comp.os.linux.announce newsgroup and was aware of a limited handful of Linux User Groups across the country, the nearest to me being in Northampton (I was living in Bedfordshire at the time). Back then I had built my own website and an advocacy site called The Triaxis Zone about the Mesa/Boogie Triaxis guitar amp (which I didn’t actually own at the time, but hankered after…odd, I know). I built these sites using Microsoft Frontpage which my dad had bought for me, so I fired it up and produced a new site called Linux UK. Yep, Linux UK started out life being created in Microsoft Frontpage.

The page went online on some free Xoom hosting, and people started using it. It had news, opinion, links, tuition guides and other bits of interest for UK Linux users. One such section was a listing of Linux users in the UK, and as the site grew, I would get between 5 and 10 emails a day from people with their details, and I would manually update the website. Yep, it got boring quickly, very, very, boring, but I kept it up, and the site continued to grow.

A few months in, I received an email from John Dorman, a random guy who offered to purchase a linuxuk.co.uk domain name for me. He did so and the site started to feel a little more real. John worked for an ISP and had recently become a Red Hat reseller. In those days, some members of the Linux community were getting a little frustrated that Linux box sets (which had a CD, instruction book and notes) were selling for quite a lot of money and it was blocking people getting into Linux, and with such a small community back then, every user was critical to get on board. John and I devised a devious scheme to buy Red Hat sets in and sell them at virtually no profit, undercutting anyone who sold the sets – we were not in it for profit-making purposes, we just wanted to get the sets out to the users and to allow more people to get started with Linux. He dealt with the sets, and I promoted and publicised it on Linux UK. Consequently, a fair few sets were shifted.

After a little while of running Linux UK, I got an email from a chap called Rafiu Fakunle from XInit Systems. He liked the site and was keen to support it. He offered me a web server, laptop, printed t-shirts and any other support I needed. To an 18 year old kid, this was a big deal – my website was receiving some commercial attention. Rafiu drove up from London to Luton and we had a meeting. I will never forget driving over there, psyched about this important meeting I had, flying down the M1 listening to Powerslave by Iron Maiden in my rubbish van. It felt good. It felt like there was potential. Despite my inexperience making me feeling worried and anxious that this random business dude was going to screw me in some way (which incidentally, he never did) I accepted his offer of help. Linux UK started to grow bigger than ever.

September was approaching, and I left for University, with Linux UK in full flow, and in my first few weeks there I met a chap called Steve ‘sparkes’ Parkes (LugRadio fans will know him from Season 1). I showed Steve Linux UK, who was far more technical than me, and he was stunned that I had maintained the site for so long manually. He started work on a full dynamic website written in PHP with some other people in the community (one of which being my brother, Simon). With Wolverhampton as my new home, and having been to two Northampton LUG meetings, I decided to set up Wolverhampton LUG, and started encouraging more of a Linux community in the city. This is where I eventually met Matt Revell (popped along to see what a LUG was like), Aq (moved to the Midlands, wanted to join a new LUG), Adam Sweet (had never owned a PC, got Linux on cover-disc and came to the LUG), Ade Bradshaw (came over from South Birmingham LUG), Chris Proctor (also from South Birmingham LUG), the Spline (came to Wolves LUG to demo his 3D scanner), Barbie (came over for our first Xmas party) and other people who LugRadio fans might know.

When I started the LUG, I was very keen for it to be different; I wanted it to be a really social group, with lots of eating, drinking, and being merry, just with a lot of talk about Linux – I was really eager for it to not be the socially awkward, forced, monotonal, formal culture of many LUGs and technical groups. Luckily the group developed its own identity and a reputation among other groups for its more irreverent nature, and we had a great time (I passed the reigns to the current LUGMaster, Dave Moreley in late 2006 – who continues to run the group). LugRadio was in-fact conceived in the corner of The Moon Under Water pub in Wolverhampton as an idea to take our spirit in the LUG and put it in an audio show.

## KDE

Despite the excellent work going into the new, dynamic Linux UK, I was growing bored of it, and wanted a new challenge. Around the time I was fascinated with the KDE desktop, and was regularly compiling the latest CVS copy of KDE and poking around with it, reporting bugs when I found them. Slowly KDE was taking over Linux UK in my life. I remember sitting in the back row of the IT lab in lectures, doing my work while compiling KDE 2 on my laptop and reading kde-devel to see what was going on. Back then there were no planets or blogs, so mailing lists is where you got your information.

At university, most of my lectures were at Wolverhampton Science Park; a rather nice business park on the outskirts of the town, which was considerably more pleasant than the cold, grey, formal computing center in the middle of town. I did have a few lectures in the computing center, and while there I met a particular professor who saw me using Debian on my laptop at the time. He came over and said “are you a Linux user?”, I said “yep, I use Debian”, and he said “have I got something to show you, come with me”. At this point I should have worried, but alas he took me to a quiet part of the computing center and showed me a locked room full of Linux computers. He offered me as much computing power as I wanted, as much disk space as I needed and anything I wanted installing, he would provide. I filled-in sparkes about this new discovery and we spent hours in that room, working there, getting pizza delivered and learning more about Linux.

At that time I kept a pretty interesting schedule, and sleep was rare. I would wake up 10am, go to the science park for 11am, have lunch in the rather nice cafeteria there at 1pm, finish Uni at 6pm, come home, go out at 7pm with friends to pubs/clubs/gigs, in at 1am, work on KDE until 4am and then go to sleep. Back then, I would go to sleep when Paramount Comedy finished at 4am – I was quite the night-owl, and in the meantime developed a real love for comedy with three hours of nightly comedy augmenting my KDE work.

With all this KDE excitement, I formally announced I was leaving Linux UK (which later changed name and then later shut down) and spent my time on KDE. Around the time I was getting interested in usability, and started the KDE Usability Study. I also started developing a few other sites such as enterprise.kde.org (a site to list businesses and case studies using KDE) and attempted to write some KDE applications (KWebStat, DevCenter, maintained Kafka for a while and wrote a few patches here and there). My attempt at learning KDE development, rather predictably, fell flat on its face – I suck at programming, so I decided to stick to what I seemingly did best, talk to people about Linux and free software.

## The Linux Format Break

Around the time I had heard about a conference in London called The Linux Expo. While at university one day, I ducked out of a rather dull lecture to call the organisers to try and bag a space for KDE at the expo. Rather surprisingly, I got a free space, and work started to prepare for the show. Rafiu rather generously paid for me to stay in a hotel room with my friend and co-hort, Lee Jordan. We produced fliers, name-tags, sourced box sets, organised talks at the booth and more. Looking back, I think it was a pretty good show, and I am still proud of what we managed to achieve at that first show, considering we had no money and no experience.

At the time, Linux Format magazine had just been launched in UK, and I heard about a party going on in a pub near Olympia in London. I popped along with Lee, managed to blag our way in, and started schmoozing with the attendees, much of which involved a certain amount of ribbing of the Debian crew who didn’t look particularly amused, sipping on their half-pints of coke. That night I got fairly drunk and gathered the courage to wander over and have a chat with Nick Veitch (editor) and Richard Drummond (senior staff writer) to ask if I could write an article for them. To my surprise they said “*yes, but if it is rubbish, we won’t print it*”. Fair enough, I thought, and got home, agreed on a topic, and amazingly, they published it. It was one heck of a buzz to see my name in a magazine, I was hooked.

So, I wrote more. In fact, I wrote regularly for Linux Format, and as new magazines came out, I approached them too. I ended up writing for the three main magazines at the time, and all of this produced a nice addition to my student loan, which I promptly squandered on CDs, pizza, guitars and drink. Consequently, my CD collection grew larger by the day, which made me happy. University continued, I did my placement year in the third year, spending a year as a web developer, and then finished my final year. Throughout this time I had written around a hundred articles for magazines and had gained a book agent, and was looking into writing my first book.

It was a tough time finishing university, and many of my close friends were leaving and going back to their native countries or back home, and *everyone* was scrabbling around for work. I was deeply, deeply uninterested in finding work, so I figured *why not just be a lazy sod and write more articles?*. So I did. I tidied my little home studio to make an office, fixed up my website, informed the magazines that I wrote for that I was turning full-time and started writing more and more. Before long I was writing for 12 publications and was working on a few books (which is a whole story in itself, that was a *wacky* time). In addition to this I also developed some training courses, and started learning how to do public speaking.

## LugRadio

Around the time, I was regularly going down to LUG meetings, every two weeks. This would basically involve us meeting in a pub, having a good time, talking about the latest goings-on and politics in the Linux world, and getting drunk. Wolves LUG meetings were great fun, and particularly entertaining, with a central hardcore of attendees who were fun, engaging and amusing. For a while I had been thinking about how it would be interesting to take some people from the group and produce an audio show. Interestingly, at the time, Matt Revell, a newcomer to the LUG, was also thinking how the central hard-core of the group could take well to an audio show. One night we discovered we had had the same idea independently and started making plans to take the pair of us, Aq and Steve ‘sparkes’ Parkes and produce a show. As usual, time passed and lethargy set-in, but around Christmas time while I was in Bedford with family, I started the ball rolling and invited everyone to a recording in my little home studio in February to recorded episode 1 of what we were nicknaming ‘lugradio’.

We recorded the first show, and we were very keen for it to retain the atmosphere and irreverence of the LUG. The only thing I did at the time when mixing the show was to cover up the swearing with animal noises, which was amusing in itself for a while (we eventually dropped the censoring later in the first season). We would record the show on a Wednesday evening (every other Wednesday when the LUG was not on), and would finish the recording at about midnight, and then I would spend three hours mixing the show and we would release it the following day. This pretty intense evening of mixing didn’t last long, as I started working more daytime hours due to increasing business relationships with my work. As such, we started to release the show the Monday following a recording.

Retrospectively, the first show was a bit rubbish, but at the time it was new and different, and went down fairly well. We worked to grow a community by producing a mirror network in which our listeners helped chip-in and host the shows, and developing forums, a planet and other community features. Although the show was doing well, it also garnered some controversy, with some people not overly amused at the swearing, anarchic recipe and grilling we gave some interviewees. But, we plodded on, confident in our formula; I am so proud we are still kicking, five seasons in, and hugely proud of the incredible LugRadio community.

## OpenAdvantage

After a year and a half or so of working as a journalist, I heard about a new place called OpenAdvantage opening in near-by Birmingham. It was a vendor-neutral, government funded organisation to spread Open Source to hundreds of businesses and individuals in the West Midlands (the region of the UK that I live in). I found this fascinating, so I called them up and asked if they would be interested in an interview. I was invited to their open day, and I shopped the article to Linux User & Developer. I went over and realised that one of the founders, Paul Cooper, was someone who had previously heckled me at a KDE talk that I delivered at South Birmingham LUG, but despite this appalling indiscretion on the part of my future boss-to-be, they were doing a good job. I wrote my article and got it published.

A little while later I got a call inviting me to interview as a consultant for OpenAdvantage. With journalism giving me lots of good times, I was initially not that interested, but the job did intrigue me, so I went along to interview, and got offered it. After some consideration of the offer, I decided it was the right step forward for my career, so I took it. My job there was tasked with helping organisations to move to Open Source – full-time Open Source advocacy, which was a blast. In my two years there I dealt with an incredible array of different businesses and individuals, explored many different subjects, and got to travel all over the world to talk about OpenAdvantage and Open Source. OpenAdvantage, and everyone involved really did make an impact on the West Midlands.

## Ubuntu and Canonical

A few years into OpenAdvantage, I knew the project was coming to an end; as a funded project, it had a limited running time, and although there would be an effort to find further funding, I wanted to make sure I was prepared for the worst. Around the time, I read a blog entry on Mark Shuttleworth’s website saying that Canonical were looking for people, and despite being six months away from OpenAdvantage ending, I knew that one of the few companies I would want to work at was Canonical.

One of the problems with being an advocate, is that you can only really work at places that produce software or systems that you truly believe in; it is not like marketing in which the core art of marketing is being able to understand a diverse audience and sell it – advocacy is largely based on people having faith in your belief and the merit of your belief. This limits the field of potential, and the number one company I was going to target when OpenAdvantage came to an end was Canonical. So, I mailed Mark to let him know that I was available, and he mentioned a new role that was coming up called *Ubuntu Community Manager*. I waited for the job description to go online, and due to an insanely busy schedule, I actually wrote my CV while being driven home after work one day as we had a LugRadio recording that night and I was busy through the week. I then went through four interviews. No-one knew anything about my interviews; I am a little superstitious about jobs, so I kept it all to myself. In fact, at the second LugRadio Live in 2006, I had my final interview scheduled the Monday immediately following. I was utterly shattered after LugRadio Live, having had around 5 hours sleep all weekend, and went down to interview with Matt Zimmerman and Mark Shuttleworth. A few weeks later I got an email offering me the job.

When I received the email I calmly left my desk at OpenAdvantage, walked into the empty meeting room and (very silently) started jumping around with joy. I was a happy bunny, and have been since, and love working at Canonical and with all my friends in the incredible Ubuntu community.

## …and…

…thats the story so far. So there you have it, Davis, that is a brief (well, rather long, it turns out, despite leaving out big chunks) history of how I got started. I feel incredibly lucky to have been surrounded by such an eclectic and supportive bunch of people, and there is plenty of story to be written yet. I would love to hear how other people got started too, so get writing folks. ๐Ÿ™‚

History Lesson

Stunned. Peturbed. But Still Stunned.

The web is a wonderful invention. A word-wide network of computers that brings knowledge, education, news, new perspectives, experiences, culture and diversity on a global scale, helping to break down the education divide, helping to free people of restrictive governments, helping people around the world over to learn the knowledge that can help them improve their lives.

Back when Tim Berners-Lee was working on the web, he probably never imagined or foresaw what this wondrous invention would bring to people, and I am pretty sure he never foresaw that the web would bring me this morning while drinking my coffee:

(*can’t see it? click [here](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S1WKYmx4i1Q)*)

Oh. My. God. He does the solo and everything. I am stunned.

Ubuntu Open Week is a-coming

Ubuntu Open Week is a-coming

**Mon 22nd Oct – Sat 27th Oct @ #ubuntu-classroom on Freenode**

[Digg it!](https://digg.com/linux_unix/Ubuntu_Open_Week_Announced)

With the up-and-coming release of Ubuntu 7.10 Gutsy Gibbon coming, I am pleased to announce another [Ubuntu Open Week](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuOpenWeek), this time taking place the week following the Ubuntu 7.10 Gutsy Gibbon launch – Mon 22nd Oct – Sat 27th Oct on #ubuntu-classroom on Freedode. The sessions take place from 15.00 UTC to 21.00UTC

Ubuntu Open Week is a week full of 42 IRC tutorial sessions on a range of subjects, designed to help people get involved in the Ubuntu community. It is given by many of the brightest, most capable members of the Ubuntu community, and covers a range of subjects including packaging, bug triage, translations, accessibility, automated testing, loco teams, mentoring, Launchpad, kernel team, desktop team, training team and much more. In addition to this there will be sessions for Kubuntu, Xubuntu, Ubuntu Studio, and the newest member of the Ubuntu family, Gobuntu.

There will also be a special Ask Mark session (*Wed 24th Oct @ 16.00UTC*) in which you have two hours to ask Mark Shuttleworth, the founder of Ubuntu, your burning questions. I will also be providing a Community Q+A session (*Wed 24th Oct @ 15.00UTC*) in which you can ask your questions about the community, Ubuntu, Canonical and anything else.

I am particularly excited to see Daniel Holbach, packaging king, provide two two-hour tutorial sessions on packaging – if you want to get involved in Ubuntu packaging and join the incredible [MOTU](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/MOTU) project, be sure to get along on *Tue 23rd Oct @ 15.00UTC* and *Wed 24th Oct @ 19.00UTC*. Speaking of MOTU, there will also be a MOTU Q+A session on *Fri 26th Oct @ 21.00UTC* – so you could learn to package and then ask your MOTU questions at that session.

So, what are you waiting for? Go and see [the timetable](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuOpenWeek) and then see [how to attend](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuOpenWeek/JoiningIn). I look forward to seeing you all there at Ubuntu Open Week. Oh, and lets spread the word!

## The Sessions

These are the sessions on offer in Ubuntu Open Week:

* **Welcome! How to Join our Community** – in this introductory session, Jono Bacon, the Ubuntu Community Manager welcomes everyone to Ubuntu Open Week and explains how to get involved in the Ubuntu community.
* **Ubuntu Server** – this session explores how to get involved in growing Ubuntu Server team.
* **Introduction to Launchpad** – want to get started with Launchpad and its wide arraay of features? This is the session for you.
* **Accessibility** – Ubuntu has always been an accessible platform, and this session explores how you can help to make it even more accessible.
* **Bug Triage** – all software has bugs, and Ubuntu is no different, and we rely on a team of people to help maintain the bug list and ensure it is properly managed (known as triaging). This is an excellent way to get involved in the Ubuntu project!
* **Kernel Team** – in this session we explore how to get involved in the kernel team that maintains the Linux kernel in Ubuntu.
* **LoCo Teams** – the LoCo project has grown to epic proportions in the last year, and these sessions cover how to get involved spreading the word of Ubuntu and building a local Ubuntu community in your area.
* **Packaging 101** – packaging is the meat and potatoes of Ubuntu, and Daniel Holbach, packager extraordinaire provides some double-size packaging tuition sessions to get you started.
* **Automated testing** – with a system as large and expansive as Ubuntu, automated testing is essential, and more and more automated testing is being rolled out. Join in with this session to find out more and get involved.
* **Launchpad Q&A** – want to know more about Launchpad? Have some burning questions? These are the sessions for you.
* **Edubuntu** – Ubuntu’s education orientated brother, Edubuntu, has proven very popular in recent years. Come along to this session to learn how to get involved and make it rock that little bit harder.
* **Kubuntu** – come along to this session to learn how to join in the Kubuntu effort and build *the* KDE based distribution.
* **Community Q+A** – ask Jono Bacon, the Ubuntu Community Manager, about anything you like, including his beard and musical tastes, or more likely, the Ubuntu community.
* **Ask Mark** – in this session, the floor is opened up for questions to Mark Shuttleworth, the founder of Ubuntu.
* **Gobuntu** – the new Ubuntu family member with the strongest commitment to freedom is discussed here and how to get involved.
* **Ubuntu Training Team** – as part of Ubuntu Certified Training programmes, training materials are developed online in the community. Come along to this session to find out more and how to help create world-class training materials.
* **Managing Ubuntu bugs in Launchpad** – in this session, we discuss how to use Malone, the bug-tracker component in Launchpad.
* **Translating with Launchpad** – Ubuntu is a hugely translated project, and much of this is thanks to the ease of use of Rosette, the translation tool in Launchpad. Come along to this session to find out how to get started with Rosetta.
* **Screencasting Team** – a large and growing collection of Ubuntu screencasts has built up over the last year, and everyone is welcome to contribute more – come to this session to find out how.
* **Launchpad Personal Package Archives** – the addition of Personal Package Archives (PPA) to Launchpad brings a huge amount of flexibility to packagers. Come to this session to find out more and get started with PPA.
* **Hosting code with Launchpad** – want to know more about hosting your code on Launchpad? This is the place for you.
* **Planning features and sprints in Launchpad** – this session is ideal for projects who want to organise feature goals and sprints using Launchpad. Come along to learn how to get started.
* **Launchpad Answers: troubleshooting problems** – the Launchpad Answers component has proved popular for Ubuntu, and this session explores how to make the most of it.
* **Xubuntu** – the popular XFCE based Ubuntu derivative is always looking for help, and this session shows you how to get involved.
* **Ubuntu Women** – this session covers the aims, intentions and plans of the Ubuntu Women project and how to help.
* **Patching Packages** – this session provides a tutorial on how to patch packages, ideal for new packagers and MOTU enthusiasts.
* **Mentoring LoCo Teams** – using the experience of the excellent USTeams project, this session covers how mentoring can help new LoCo teams and user groups get up and running quickly.
* **Getting Started With Bazaar** – this session gets you started with the Bazaar distribution revision control system.
* **Desktop Team** – a session to discuss the aims and direction of the Ubuntu desktop team, and how to get involved.
* **Documentation Team** – this session helps documentation fans to get started with this important team.
* **Mythbuntu** – if you want to see MythTV run perfectly on Ubuntu, complete with the ease of use that you expect from Ubuntu, come along to this session to find out more about this impressive project.
* **MOTU Q+A** – for current and future Ubuntu packaging fans, come along to this session to get your questions answered about joining the MOTU project.

[Find out more about Ubuntu Open Week](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuOpenWeek).

[Digg it!](https://digg.com/linux_unix/Ubuntu_Open_Week_Announced)

Bit By Bit

Wiki wiki wild wild west…

I love wikipedia. I have always been a pretty curious person, and I have wasted hours learning about all manner of things on there. It never ceases to amaze me how quickly things can get updated there, such as when Chris joined LugRadio – the page was updated pretty shortly after it was announced. Stunning.

I was also stunned when I discovered a while back that I have [my own wikipedia page](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jono_Bacon), and despite Aq joking that I wrote it myself (which I didn’t), I was amazed at what is on there (although its a little out of date now). Interestingly, Aq *did* actually write his, the cheeky bugger. It also amuses me that on Aq’s page he is apparently *”known for his advocacy of Gedit”*. I know that sentence makes him proud. ๐Ÿ˜›

Now, I don’t know if I am breaking wikipedia’s policy by posting this, but the [LugRadio wikipedia page](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LugRadio) is pretty limited, and could do with expanding. I know that people cannot write their own pages (this means you Aq ๐Ÿ˜‰ ), and I am loathed to edit the LugRadio page for fear of attributing bias to it. So, LugRadio community, go and do your thang – there is a long history behind the show, plenty of trivia, various community resources, in-jokes and stories, and other juicy nuggets that could pack the page out nicely. Also, Adam and Chris could do with wikipedia pages.

UDS Draft Schedule Up

You gotta fight, for your right, to partaaaaay

*(unashamed Beastie Boys reference for the title of this post)*

Well, we are steaming ahead to the Ubuntu 7.10 Gutsy Gibbon release, and I am hoping that each of you, my special Internet friends, are testing the beta and submitting your bugs. If not, [read this](https://archivedblog.jonobacon.com/?p=1042).

In the meantime, it is also full-steam ahead in terms of organising release parties around the world. So far we have **34 parties** organised, which is awesome, but we need *more, more, more*! Organising a party is simple – find a place to hold it (a university room, pub, house, restaurant etc), promote it and have a great time. You can find a simple guide to how to get started [here](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BuildingCommunity/RunningReleaseParty) and when you make the big-party-love happen, add it to [this page](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/GutsyReleaseParties).

So, lets have a look at the current party list (details of venues and dates [here](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/GutsyReleaseParties)):

## USA

* New Mexico
* Ohio
* Louisiana
* Maryland
* Massachusetts
* Missouri
* Indiana
* South Dakota
* Georgia
* Colorado
* Michigan
* Oregon

## Canada

* Quebec

## Europe

* Belgium (Flanders)
* Catalan Countries
* Croatia (Zagreb)
* Denmark (Kรƒยธbenhavn)
* Netherlands {nl}
* Germany (Berlin)
* Germany (Kรƒยถln)
* Serbia (Belgrade)
* France (Paris)
* France (Lille)
* Ukraine (Kiev)

## Australia

* Adelaide
* Sydney

## Asia

* Iran (Tehran)
* Vietnam (Hanoi)
* Thailand (Bangkok)

## South America

* Nicaragua
* Venezuela
* Costa Rica
* Brazil (Recife)

## Africa

* Egypt (Cairo)

Lets make it happen folks – go and organise a party in your area and celebrate yet another Ubuntu release. ๐Ÿ™‚