Snow Time Like The Present
I apologise for my appalling play on words, I couldn't resist
The area I live in very rarely gets snow, where the rest of the UK grinds to a halt, we seem to be able to carry on. Though this morning, I got a rather pleasant surprise of waking up to this
Rather than go out and get cold, I decided to have a nice hot drink, and finally fix sendmail on my VPS. Once I'd done that, I decided to check my blog again, noting that it was out of date (it was running WP 3.0.1) I took the time to upgrade it to the latest version. I figured I may as well be productive while I felt like doing it
An Interview With zkriesse
This week we have zkriesse in the interview series. In my opinion, zkriesse is one of the Ubuntu community members who may not be well known, but certainly keeps things going as smoothly as possible. He's involved in a great number of things, including the Ubuntu Beginners Team.
1. Tell as much as you're willing about your "real life" like name, age, gender, location, family, religion, profession, education, hobbies, etc.
Name: Zach Kriesse
Age: 19 (20 in March WOO!)
Gender: Male
Location: Western, Rockford IL
Religion: Non-Denomination Christian
Profession: Student, Ubuntu Wiki/Doc Admin/Editor, Potential Army Recruit
Education: Some College Biology/Environmental Science
Hobbies: Medical Stuff, Computers, Fishing/Reading, Writing
Marital Status: Single
2. When and how did you become interested in computers? in Linux? in Ubuntu?
I started using computers when I was about 12, my dad made me take a computer learning program before I was allowed to really "use" it though...in/around 2007/2008 I started getting into Ubuntu/Linux, been using it on/off as the situation demands since then!
3. When did you become involved in the forums (or the Ubuntu community)? What's your role there?
Ah the Ubuntu Forums...my home away from home...started hanging out there when I started using Ubuntu so probably around 2008 or so...after that I found the Beginners Team, and from there the rest is history. (Or, so they say...
)
I'm just a regular user but I'm hoping to become a forum admin eventually down the road...more into the documentation side of things though...
4. Are you an Ubuntu member? If so, how do you contribute? If not, do you plan on becoming one?
TOTALLY! I do a bit of work through various teams...the most notable are the Ubuntu Beginners Team, the Ubuntu Youth Team, (Which I lead), the forums, the Lubuntu Project, and some other stuff...
5. What distros do you regularly use? What software? What's your favorite application? Your least favorite?
Don't really have a least favorite...my favorite would have to be Thunderbird...great email client, works well and it's pretty damn fast! Ubuntu would have to be my regular distro but I've tinkered with Fedora, Open Suse, and Lubuntu...
6. What's your fondest memory from the forums, or from Ubuntu overall? What's your worst?
Don't really have a worst memory from the forums but a favorite? Jeez, every moment really! The ability to provide answers and insight while learning in that same step? It's amazing!
7. What luck have you had introducing new computer users to Ubuntu?
I've introduced a few kids I know at my college and they've begun to enjoy it!
8. What would you like to see happen with Linux in the future? with Ubuntu?
Linux? Well I'd like to see better support honestly...same for Ubuntu...I say this as we are an open source community which means most, if not all, of us are volunteers...this isn't a paying OR a full time job which means we have real lives, real jobs, real concerns other than Ubuntu itself...
9. If there was one thing you could tell all new Ubuntu users, what would it be?
Don't give up right away...Ubuntu/Linux can be tough to get used to right away so don't be immediately discouraged!
An Interview With cprofitt
I have to sincerely apologise for not getting these interviews out as often as I should. Luckily, I have a great one to start getting back on track - cprofitt is a hard-working, dedicated member of the community, his work in the Beginners Team (that which I had contact with, at least) is nothing short of invaluable. Rather than tell you everything, read on:
1. Tell as much as you're willing about your "real life" like name, age, gender, location, family, religion, profession, education, hobbies, etc.
Name: Charles Profitt
Age: 43
Gender: Male
Location: Western, NY
Religion: Yes
Profession: Systems Administrator / Database Administrator / IT Security
Education: BA Political Science
Hobbies: Photography, Computers
Children: 3
Marital Status: Married
2. When and how did you become interested in computers? in Linux? in Ubuntu?
I became interested in computers around 1970 while my dad was at Syracuse University. I was completely hooked in 1979 when my I was exposed to the Apple II while in 7th grade. Later that same year my family got a Ti-99/4. I first looked at Linux in 1994 or 1995 when I tried Suse Linux. I did not adopt Linux seriously until 6.06 when I started dual-booting Ubuntu and Windows. I did not convert completely until I gave up gaming and finished a .Net programming project I was being paid to do. Gutsy Gibbon was the first version that became my full-time OS w/o Windows installed.
3. When did you become involved in the forums (or the Ubuntu community)? What's your role there?
I joined the Ubuntu Forums in October of 2006 and through my connection with the Ubuntu Beginners Team I became involved in the Ubuntu Community.
I am a forum moderator for the New York State LoCo team area.
4. Are you an Ubuntu member? If so, how do you contribute? If not, do you plan on becoming one?
I am an Ubuntu member. I contribute through the Beginners Team and several other teams. I have primarily focused on running my LoCo team and advocating for Ubuntu and open source software.
5. What distros do you regularly use? What software? What's your favorite application? Your least favorite?
I regularly use Ubuntu, but have played around with Debian, Arch and Fedora. If Ubuntu did not exist I would likely be using Fedora. My favorite application is nmap because I use it in my job to monitor the networks I am responsible for. My least favorite is... well... I do not really have one.
6. What's your fondest memory from the forums, or from Ubuntu overall? What's your worst?
My favorite just happened this past October when I attended UDS-N in Orlando Florida. It was an amazing experience to see how the community and Canonical work together to fashion an OS. To meet so many of the great people that contribute to the project was absolutely fabulous. My worst experience with Ubuntu was actually tied to the same event. My flight to Orlando on Sunday night was delayed and my connecting flight was going to be missed. I got rebooked on a flight for the next day, but
that too ended up delayed by an hour.
7. What luck have you had introducing new computer users to Ubuntu?
I have had great luck in converting people as individual users. Several clients that I had done work for resolving Windows issues have been converted to Ubuntu. I would guess I have converted roughly 15-20 people to Ubuntu over the last four years. In trying to convert large organizations to Ubuntu or Floss the process has not been as successful. While I feel that I have at least made people understand there is an alternative to Microsoft and Apple I feel that it is much harder to move a large organization. I just hope that my advocacy is gradually making an impact by eroding the belief that there are only two choices.
8. What would you like to see happen with Linux in the future? with Ubuntu?
I would like to see Ubuntu become easier for people to choose. Currently you can not walk in to a big box store and get a Linux based computer. It would be amazing to see smaller local computer shops feel as though they could compete by offering a Linux based alternative. It is close to impossible for them to do so in price. I think Ubuntu's focus will make them the OS of choice for desktop Linux should such a movement come to fruition.
I also think there is a chance that a company like HP may decide to use Linux on their desktops as they start to compete more with Apple has a hardware manufacturer. I think HP's purchase of Palm shows that there is a belief that Windows may be holding HP back. With the hiring of Leo Apotheker, a software centric player, it is possible that HP will look even closer at how software can help them compete. While HP has HP-UX at the server level it has not used an *nix in the consumer space.
9. If there was one thing you could tell all new Ubuntu users, what would it be?
Be patient because Ubuntu is not Windows or OS X. It will be bumpy to migrate, but the investment in re-learning some applications will set you free of vendor lock-in and leave you richer computing experience.
Back To Ubuntu
I recently started my final year at university, after spending a year out on an 'Industrial Placement' at PepsiCo. The year taught me a lot, which I shan't bore you with, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. The one thing I didn't like about the year was that I never managed to quite work out a good balance between work and spending time doing things I enjoy, such as participating in the Ubuntu community things...even if that 'thing' was just spending an hour being logged into IRC.
After finishing in September, and starting back at university in October, I've had to adjust to a totally different schedule (no university is ever 9-5, Mon-Fri...is it?), which has freed time on different days at different times. Thankfully, I've used this time to get back into the things I missed in Ubuntu, slowly but steadily. I still can't contribute as much as I'd like, because I know if I did I'd end up impacting my university work, but I'm content with what I'm doing now. Luckily, a lot of my lecturers are happy to support/discuss open-source, which obviously makes things easier at university...especially when one lecturer alone made it so Ubuntu was installed on every PC in the Comp-Sci department
It also means I was able to remotely participate in UDS fairly easily, something I haven't been able to do very well in the past.
One thing I'm looking at getting back into now that I have the time (and now I realised how bad I've been at keeping going), is the Ubuntu Community Interviews that I conducted. I already have a couple of people in line, so hopefully I'll get some more of those up soon, and I look forward to being able to participate more than I have been
Launchpad…gate?
So I'm sure I'm not the only person in the Ubuntu community who also owns an Apple product or 3. In turn, this means I'm probably not the only one who was interested to check out Apple's conference yesterday, where they announced iLife '11, new MacBook Air models and OS X 10.7 'Lion'.
Lion is where the interesting part lies, in that one of the new features is named 'launchpad' or 'the launchpad'. Now what does this mean for Launchpad, the web application by Canonical? I don't know...probably nothing. What I have seen is a lot of people commenting on what Canonical may or may not do.
Personally, I think that while Canonical do own the trademark to the name, it's probably not worth going after until it becomes clear whether Apple are going to continue using 'the launchpad' or not as the name. Don't get me wrong, it would give Canonical (and therefore Ubuntu) a lot of press, but I'm just not sure it would be worth it right now.
Either way, it should be interesting to see where it goes and what happens.
New PC Build
I finally got around to purchasing the parts I wanted/needed to enable me to build a new PC. Part funded by selling my older PC (minus 1 DVD drive & HDD) to my parents.
The new PC is a totally different architecture from the last. Where my previous PC was an Intel C2D E8400 (3.0Ghz) with 4GB RAM, the new build is an i7 920 (2.66Ghz) with 6GB RAM. Naturally, that means a change of the motherboard as well due to the differing nature of the processor sockets.
As I'd already got my dual boot system on a 1TB drive, I took that out, and hoped all would be well once I'd built the new PC....they weren't, it wouldn't boot. After much deliberation, and an RMA raised with ebuyer for the motherboard, a friend and I found that ASUS had shipped the board with a jumper in the incorrect location, which was preventing the system from booting. Once we placed in the correct position, everything fired up as expected (much to my relief).
First thing I notice - Windows blue screens upon boot...time to reinstall that then, but not before testing my Maverick installation on the other partition...which booted fine, and detected my CPU rather nicely:
Why thank-you, Ubuntu, for making my hardware upgrade utterly painless...
...and curse you, Windows 7, for making it half a day of hell to reinstall everything
Printer Woes
The printer we have at home is an Epson Stylus DX4200 - I dislike it rather a lot, but it works so there's no need to buy a new one. When I say it works, I mean it prints. It prints fine from every OS I've tried it on except one.
Now at this point, I imagine some of you will be thinking that it's Ubuntu that the printer doesn't play nice with. Quite the opposite is true, it works perfectly with Ubuntu via my Airport Extreme, it is in fact Windows 7 that doesn't play nice with the printer (OS X works on it, as does XP & Vista). I've even installed the correct printer drivers on Win7, but no joy, it just will not work.
On the plus side, this gives me good reason to suggest a new printer, so does anybody have any recommendations in mind? I'd quite like a colour laser printer, however, the problem lies with other peoples use of the printer, such as scanning documents etc.
New Forum Staff (Again!)
It seems not that long ago that I was blogging about new additions to the Ubuntu Forums staff team.
Well...that time has come round once more, and this time we have the following users who accepted the position of moderator:
Please join me in congratulating our new staff. I trust they'll do well, and most importantly, enjoy their new position
iPhone 4 – HDR Photo Feature
I'm sure that, to a lot of the people reading this on Planet Ubuntu, this post will be of little interest. If you're one of these people, I apologise, please glance over this post
To everybody else, what I'm about to discuss, and demonstrate, is some sample photos, and my thoughts, however brief, on the new HDR photo option coming in iOS 4.1 next week.
Sample 1
As you can see here, the image on the left looks...ok, it's not to bad, especially for something taken on a mobile phone. However, I feel that my laptop screen is looking rather bright, and almost dominates the shot, given that it's just a huge blob of white. The cupboard on the left of the image is quite dark, as is the space to the right of the cupboard in the centre of the shot.
When we compare this to the second image, we can see that the cupboard on the left is that little bit clearer, and you can see that the wall on the right hand side is, in fact, red. Further to this, that overly-intrusive laptop screen, which was previously bright white, is now much clearer, and far less intrusive, you can make out much more of the on-screen detail. The cupboard in centre-shot also appears lighter, especially in the areas surrounding the unit.
Sample 2
As we can see in the second sample image, the screen (funnily enough) dominates the image. Nothing wrong with that here, it was the point of the exercise. What we can see, is that it looks like I'm working in the lowest lighting conditions I could possibly find. This, I'm pleased to say, isn't quite true. I did actually have a light on, as you can see more in the HDR example on the right. I have to say, however, that the HDR example makes the images on my screen look more washed out than those in the non HDR sample do, at least, in my opinion.
Summary
One thing I did notice, was the lack of flash on HDR photo's. The software prevents the use of both at the same time, which, initially, I found somewhat odd and incredibly frustrating. I had a play around taking images with flash on, and HDR on, but still found no way to add the two together. It then dawned on me this morning, that when a photo is going to need a flash to provide the necessary lighting, chances are the HDR image would like almost exactly the same, and provide no benefits.
Nonetheless, I'd like to see the option, in a subsequent iOS update, for the ability to have both on, where it's possible to set the flash to 'Auto' with HDR on, and if a flash is required due to low level lighting, don't take a HDR photo. Something like this, in my opinion, would make the feature better than it already is. In all, I have to say, I'm pleased with the update - mainly because I don't take photo's all that often, so it doesn't really benefit me to go out and purchase a proper digital camera, but a 5 megapixel camera with HDR functionality that's on a device I carry around all day anyway, is perfect for me.





