Main frozen for Alpha 2

Two days out from the expected release of Maverick Alpha 2, the milestone freeze is now in effect. Please take care that any packages that you upload to main between now and the Alpha 2 release will help us in the goal of a high quality and timely alpha, and hold any disruptive or unnecessary uploads until after the alpha is out. Again, this means the primary focus should be on resolving these bugs:

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/maverick/+bugs?field.milestone=27560.

As always, there’s also plenty of other work to be done in getting the archive in a consistent state so that we don’t have uninstallable packages for the alpha-2 milestone:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuDevelopment/PackageArchive#Consistency.

Remember that this is a “soft” freeze, so you are each responsible for making sure your uploads are appropriate – Launchpad will not be your safety net.

Packages that are not seeded on the CDs (i.e., most packages in universe, with the exception of Ubuntu Studio, Xubuntu, and Mythbuntu packages) may be uploaded as usual.

[Discuss Main frozen for Alpha 2 on the Forums]

Originally sent to the Ubuntu Devel Announce Mailing List by Colin Watson on Tue Jun 29 11:23:48 BST 2010

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #199

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter. This is Issue #199 for the week June 20th – June 26th and is available here.

In this issue we cover:

  • Welcome New Ubuntu Members
  • Kubuntu Tutorials Day
  • Ubuntu Translations Interviews: Milo Casagrande (Italian Team)
  • Meet Steve Kowalik
  • Debian Import Freeze in effect
  • 100 Ubuntu Users Project announcement
  • Ubuntu Stats
  • LoCo Health Check
  • LoCo Teams Microblog Tag
  • Encouraging LoCo Teams to talk more
  • Country info in the LoCo Directory
  • You want to know why I am still amazed by the Ubuntu community? and how to improve your loco?
  • Ubuntu Hour in Lake Forest #3
  • Geeknic and SF Ubuntu Hour
  • openSUSE conference looking for Ubuntu participation
  • Launchpad News
  • Unity Love
  • Fix paper cuts, improve Ubuntu’s usability
  • Weekly Update from Operation Cleansweep
  • Debian Derivatives Front Desk
  • Application Menu Status for 25 June
  • Adopt an Upstream: Victor Vargas
  • Free Culture Showcase Gallery
  • FOSScon 2010 followup
  • In The Press
  • In The Blogosphere
  • Open Invention Network Announces Associate Member Program and Recruits Canonical As Its First Associate Member
  • Canonical Sponsoring Akademy
  • Ubuntu One on mobile for Maverick
  • N900 vs Nexus One: a comparison
  • Full Circle Magazine Issue 38
  • Featured Podcasts
  • Ubuntu Development Team Weekly Meeting Minutes Links
  • Upcoming Meetings and Events
  • Updates and Security
  • and much much more!
  • This issue of The Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter is brought to you by:

    • Amber Graner
    • Liraz Siri
    • Nigel Babu
    • Penelope Stowe
    • Daniel Caleb
    • Mike Holstein
    • Jonathan Carter
    • Mackenzie Morgan
    • And many others
    • If you have a story idea for the Weekly Newsletter, join the Ubuntu News Team mailing list and submit it. Ideas can also be added to the wiki!

      Except where otherwise noted, content in this issue is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License BY SA Creative Commons License

Ubuntu Translations Interviews: Milo Casagrande (Italian Team)


Ubuntu is brought to users in their own language by a large community of volunteer translators, who tirelessly work on localizing every part of the operating system on every release.

In this series of interviews we’ll get to know who they are, about their language and how they work.

This week we’re introducing you to Milo Casagrande, the Italian translation team coordinator.

Could you tell us a bit about you and the language you help translate Ubuntu into?

I’m a Java developer by day, but always with my Ubuntu/GNOME/Linux hat on. 🙂 I’m helping coordinating the Italian Ubuntu translation team, and also helping translating Ubuntu into the beautiful romance language that is Italian.

How and when did you become an Ubuntu translator?

I started contributing to Ubuntu translations just after the Warty release, at the time I was helping out with GNOME translations. When I started contributing there wasn’t a real Italian team, but soon after I was contacted by Matthew East, and we started to set up and structure a team for that purpose.

What other projects do you help with inside the community?

I’m much more involved in the Ubuntu Italian community rather than the international one. I did some documentation work in the past for the Ubuntu Doc team. Right now I’m focusing on translations for the Italian community and some “management” aspects always of the Italian community.

Do you belong to an Ubuntu LoCo team? If so, which one?

Yes, the wonderful Ubuntu Italian LoCo team! 🙂

How can people who want to help with translating Ubuntu and all the various pieces and parts into your language get started?

The most important aspect, if somebody wants to start helping translating Ubuntu in Italian, is subscribing to our mailing list. All the communications happen there, and communication is a key aspect of our work. Please, do not wander through Launchpad leaving a translation here and there: if you don’t tell us, it’s very difficult for us to always know what is going on.

We have a wiki page here: http://wiki.ubuntu-it.org/GruppoTraduzione that lists all the various bureaucratic steps (create a Launchpad account, a wiki page…), the various guidelines that people needs to follow, our contacts, and how the workflow is organized.

I always say that if something is not clear on that page to let us know, so please, let us know!

What’s the desktop experience for Ubuntu users in your language? Is Ubuntu in your language popular among native speakers?

I think the Ubuntu Italian desktop experience is awesome, really. If there is a piece of software that is under our direct control, and is going to be shipped by default in Ubuntu, we assure that that very piece of software is up to our standards concerning translations: if there is no translation, we provide one, and review the existing one.

I think the Italian translation of Ubuntu is popular among native speakers, albeit some coworkers of mine use Ubuntu in English. 🙂 But most of the Italian users I know are using Ubuntu in Italian.

Where does your team need help?

Upstream! We need help upstream (so that we can spend the weekends at the beach)! 🙂

I think that right now the team is working at its best. There are small parts of the system that are not completely translated, but usually those are the not-so-user-visible parts. We would really like for people to get involved with the various upstream translation teams (GNOME, Translation Project, KDE), and help there, so that the very same translations flow into Ubuntu without any work from our side. If people wants to be part of the Ubuntu Italian translators team, but help out with upstream translations, we can handle that too: we have done that, and we still do it.

Do you know of any projects or organizations where Ubuntu is used in your language?

Unfortunately not. I know that some universities in Italy use Ubuntu in their labs, but don’t know if in English or Italian. That would be some great information to know, also to understand where we should focus our strengths and to have a direct contact with someone that really deploys Ubuntu in our native language.

What do you feel is the most rewarding part of translating Ubuntu?

To me, is watching the results of our work being used by other people.

Is there anything else about your team or translation efforts that I haven’t asked you about that you would like to talk about?

Not at this time.

Become an Ubuntu Translator

Do you speak languages? Join the our translation community and make Ubuntu accessible to everyone in their own language. You can:

[Discuss Ubuntu Translations Interviews: Milo Casagrande (Italian Team)]

Announcing this week's Bug Day target – fontconfig – Thursday, June 24th, 2010!

This week’s Bug Day target is *drum roll please* fontconfig!

  • 49 New bugs need a hug
  • 4 Incomplete bugs need a status check
  • 27 Confirmed bugs need a review

Bookmark it, add it to your calendars, turn over those egg-timers!

Are you looking for a way to start giving some love back to your adorable Ubuntu Project?

Did you ever wonder what Triage is? Want to learn about that?

This is a perfect time!, Everybody can help in a Bug Day! Open your IRC Client and go to #ubuntu-bugs (freenode) the BugSquad will be happy to help you to start contributing!

Wanna be famous? Is easy! remember to use 5-A-day so if you do a good work your name could be listed at the top 5-A-Day Contributors in the Ubuntu Hall of Fame page!

We are always looking for new tasks or ideas for the Bug Days, if you have one add it to the Planning page https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuBugDay/Planning

If you’re new to all this, head to https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Bugs

[Discuss Announcing this week’s Bug Day target – fontconfig- Thursday, June 24, 2010 on the Forums]

Originally sent to the Ubuntu Devel Announce Mailing List by Kamus on Tue Jun 22 16:23:40 BST 2010

Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #198

Welcome to the Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter. This is Issue #198 for the week June 13th – June 19th and is available here.

In this issue we cover:

  • Welcome New Ubuntu Members
  • Field experiment: fix an Ubuntu bug
  • Call For Testing: Karmic Firefox Users (or willing to install Karmic in a VM)
  • Community Leadership Summit 2010
  • Ubuntu Stats
  • LoCos, Leaders, and Lessons Learned: Pennsylvania Team
  • Upcoming M Cycle Re Approvals
  • LoCo Team Reapproval Change
  • The Official Ubuntu Book, fifth edition released today
  • TestDrive GTK Frontend Underway
  • 2010 Eclipse survey released: Linux and Ubuntu still growing
  • Open Cloud track at the Open World Forum
  • Operation Cleansweep making progress… (updated)
  • Cloud in your Pocket — UEC LiveISO!
  • In The Press
  • In The Blogosphere
  • Ubuntu Server BoF at Velocity 2010
  • Canonical’s (Possibly) Excellent Adventure
  • Linaro announcement at Computex
  • Perfectly good waste of “social”
  • GoogleCL Brings Google Services to the Command Line
  • 5 Things New Linux Converts Should Know
  • Featured Podcasts
  • Ubuntu Development Teams Weekly Meeting Minutes Links
  • Upcoming Meetings and Events
  • Updates and Security
  • and Much much more!
  • This issue of The Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter is brought to you by:

    • Amber Graner
    • Chris Johnston
    • Liraz Siri
    • J. Scott Gwin
    • Penelope Stowe
    • Daniel Caleb
    • Jonathan Carter
    • Alan Pope
    • And many others
    • If you have a story idea for the Weekly Newsletter, join the Ubuntu News Team mailing list and submit it. Ideas can also be added to the wiki!

      Except where otherwise noted, content in this issue is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License BY SA Creative Commons License