Community Events

FOSScamp wraps up

FOSSCamp, an unconference designed to help upstream and distro developers together to communicate, wrapped up Sunday afternoon in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Hosted by Canonical at the Hotel@MIT, FOSScamp had two days of Birds of a Feather (BoFs) and hallway conversations about many topics, including KDE 4, PackageKit, OpenLDAP, Chandler, and much much more.

Like any unconference, FOSSCamp was self organizing, with the schedule laid out empty on a board for the attendees to fill as they see fit. By the end of the day, the schedule board is usually a riot of colour and styles, including stuff hastily scribbled out and written over.

Co-hosts for the event, Canonical’s Jorge Castro and Jono Bacon ( External Developer Relations and Community Manager respectively) both expressed pleasure at the large turnout, noting they “were very happy that many important connections between Free and Open Source developers were being made” and further noted that FOSScamp also helped inter-distro relations, with representatives from Red Hat (like Colin Walters), Novell, Foresight and other distros in attendance. Matt Zimmerman, CTO of Ubuntu, loved how “upstream developers were keen to work closer with Ubuntu and other distributions”.

Many upstream projects, such as Chandler, also took the opportunity to meet distro people, including packagers and developers. Describing the discussions he had had as “very informative”, Bear, a developer with Chandler went on to say that he had “come look for ways to get Chandler into distributions and enjoyed the warm reception he had received in that goal.”

Jerry Carter of SAMBA said “The interesting thing about types of events like FOSSCamp is that you show up with the natural selfish ambition to get everyone involved in what you are doing and end up not only finding out what they are doing but that you start thinking, ‘I want to work on their stuff’”

Ryan Paul of Ars Technica was on hand to cover the event (he is also staying for the Ubuntu Development Summit, as he mentions in his story. He has filed two addition stories, first covering Mark Shuttleworth’s comments about Free Software producing “brilliant flashes of innovation and Mirco Müller’s GTK with OpenGL.

Overall, FOSSCamp was a great success. Look here for an announcement of the next FOSSCamp and the next great opportunity for the friendships and relationships made at this conference to come about.

Participate in UDS without being there

The next Ubuntu Developers Summit to plan Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy Heron) is currently being held at the Hotel@MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts and you can participate. Check out the many ways:

VOIP
All the sessions are being broadcast over a VOIP connection, so fire up Ekiga or your favourite SIP client, get a login and join the discussion.

Collaborative editing with Gobby
All the specs while they are being talked about are being edited in Gobby, a collaborative editor. If you want to join in, grab the gobby package via your favourite package manager and join gobby.ubuntu.com.

IRC
As per usual, those who are at UDS tend to be on IRC, in the #uds-boston channel on the Freenode network.

Show up
Of course, if you can make it to Cambridge (the US one, not the UK one) , come by. Registration is free and the sessions are open to all. Just remember, we need your contribution, as this isn’t an event for spectators.

Update: Icecast streams
The IceCast streams have now been fixed and can be found under the room listing on the schedule pages.

If you want more information and a rehashing of all this information, check out the UDS-Boston Participate wiki page.

Community Development Team Meeting

Location: #ubuntu-meeting

Community Development Team Meeting

Location: #ubuntu-meeting

Hug Day on September 12th

September 12th is a Hug Day! Hug Days are days set aside specifically for working on Ubuntu bugs. This involves tasks for all skill levels so feel free to join in on the fun! This Hug Day is dedicated to looking at bugs regarding the 2.6.22 kernel used by Gutsy Gibbon those reported while testing ISO images.

The event will be held in #ubuntu-bugs all day to allow all timezones to get involved. The list of targeted bugs will be posted at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuBugDay/20070912

You are welcome to apply for the Ubuntu Quality Assurance team anytime, and Hug Day is a great day to join! This is a chance to give back to the OS you love.

If you’re interested in helping, please stop by. Feel free to ask bdmurray, pedro, heno and the rest of the team for ways to help out. The Ubuntu QA team is looking forward to seeing you there!

Month Of Screencasts 2007

Ubuntu Month of Screencasts is a mad plan concocted by the Screencast Team to produce one full length screencast per day for the whole of one month. That month is September 2007.

The goal is that each video will go into one subject in some depth, to help educate new users about Ubuntu. A wide range of topics will be covered which should answer some questions that new users to Ubuntu often ask. The aim is to go into enough detail to be interesting without being baffling or boring.

Of course the screencasts can not go into infinite detail on every topic, as there are limits to our time and resources. So don’t expect to learn kernel hacking or C programming. However, there should be enough information to get a new user from “zero to hero” in one month. That’s the goal.

Each screencast will be made available through the Ubuntu Screencast site in three sizes and two formats (OGG and Flash). The screencasts are licensed under the permissive Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License, so you’re free to modify, pass on, sell or otherwise distribute them so long as the attribution to us stays intact.

Ubucon Germany

Location: Germany
Info: http://ubucon.de/

Ubuntu Community Marketing meeting

Come join us to talk about:

1. Creating the Tribe pages
2. Introduction of Katharine Kinnie, Canonical’s new marketing manager
3. Questions the community has of her
4. Questions she has of us
5. Anything else