Sorry for the Mathematical title ;) As you’ve undoubtedly guessed – I’ve upgraded to Lucid, a.k.a 10.04!! So far, from what little time I’ve been able to use it, I’m really liking what I see (I’ve installed the 64 bit version, for those curious). Naturally there are some bugs, but I’m reporting these using the built in tool if/when they occur.

One thing that did frustrate me (immensely), while trying to install Lucid, was the partitioning situation. I wiped my Ubuntu partition(s) completely, including my /home and everything. I decided before installing that I’d make backups of the important stuff, and go from there. Somewhat frustratingly, the partition manager mid-way through ubiquity decided to give up the ghost and die. Not a problem, I thought, as I downloaded the daily live CD, I’ll just install from here….no go – the daily live CD was showing exactly the same issues as the Alpha 2 disc.

Before I ditched my attempts to install Lucid and drop back down to Karmic (9.10), I figured I’d try running GParted, and create the partitions before running ubiquity. Good job I did! This worked fine, without any hitches. Naturally I think I should’ve been able to specify my partitions as part of the ubiquity installer, but at least it’s installed now! More on my Lucid thoughts as I get any experiences to share with it.

 

I’m about 100% sure that the next person to be interviewed needs no introduction – everybody will have heard of Jono at some point, whether it be from his role within the community, his activity on identi.ca & twitter, or maybe even from Lernid…Either way, I hope you enjoy this as much as I have!

1. Tell as much as you’re willing about your “real life” like name, age, gender, location, family, religion, profession, education, hobbies, etc.

I am Jono Bacon, the Ubuntu Community Manager working at Canonical for three years now, I am 30 years young and an Englishman living in the Bay Area, California with my wife, Erica. My parents live in Northern England and I have a brother living in Northern England and another brother living in the Isle Of Man. I was born in the north of England in North Yorkshire, raised in the south in Bedfordshire and and studied at Wolverhampton University in in the Midlands, graduating with a 2:1 in Interactive Multimedia Communication, going on to become a a journalist writing for a number of Open Source magazines and websites and writing a few books. I then became an Open Source consultant for the UK government-funded OpenAdvantage before moving to Canonical to become the Ubuntu Community Manager. My hobbies include writing, recording and producing music, videogames, movies, writing, travel and relaxing with friends.

2. When and how did you become interested in computers? in Linux? in Ubuntu?

I got interested in computers when I was a kid playing with a Commodore 64. I used to play games on it and try to write simple little programs in BASIC. Computers fascinated me, and my interest in video games (I was an epic Sega dork) got me into first learning BASIC and then learning C.

When I was 14, complete with bowl haircut, jack ups and large white socks, I went to night school to learn C and got more and more interested in the technology behind how software works, despite largely sucking at C. Shortly before I left for University my brother Simon came to stay for a few weeks and got me interested in Linux, specifically Slackware 96. Although it was ultra-technical, what really fascinated me was the concept of a global community of passionate contributors working together to build an Operating System that we could all share. I went to University and immediately formed a Linux User Group in my new home and progressively got more and more interested in Linux, starting to contribute to projects and then starting to write for magazines. I heard about Ubuntu when it was known as No Name Yet and it really captivated me: it really represented something I had been dreaming about – the fantastic technical foundation of Debian, but a different focus on integration, usability and ease of use.

3. When did you become involved in the forums (or the Ubuntu community)? What’s your role there?

My primary involvement in Ubuntu at the beginning was getting to the know the community, contributing bug reports and feedback and co-writing The Official Ubuntu Book. At the time I was spending most of my spare time knee-deep in the GNOME project and working with local Linux communities in the West Midlands, and my interest in Ubuntu grew from there.

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, and proud to be one! I contribute in a range of areas. I lead a team at Canonical that is tasked with helping to produce a rocking community to participate in and we work on a wide range of projects as part of that role. My contributions include team management, governance, software development, some translations, bug triage, raising awareness of Ubuntu and creating new initiatives to get people involved.

Outside of Ubuntu I like to develop community best practice with The Art Of Community and the annual Community Leadership Summit, do some podcasting with Shot Of Jaq and FLOSSWeekly, videocasts with At Home With Jono Bacon and Severed Fifth: Live In The Studio, record Creative Commons metal with Severed Fifth and work on some software projects such as Lernid, Acire, Python Snippets and some other projects.

5. What distros do you regularly use? What software? What’s your favorite application? Your least favorite?

I naturally use Ubuntu as my Operating System, both on my desktop as well as on the server that hosts my site and a range of other sites I run. I have so many fave applications – I love Empathy, OpenOffice.org, The GIMP, TomBoy, Scribus, Thunderbird, Docky, Network Manager, Gwibber, Quickly, Glade, and many more. As for least fave, I am not really sure I have a least fave – there are so many programs I haven’t got to yet.

6. What’s your fondest memory from the forums, or from Ubuntu overall? What’s your worst?

Fondest memory is a kid who emailed me telling me how he walked five hours from his village in Africa to an Internet cafe to to work on Ubuntu for an hour and then walked back. He emailed me telling me it was worth the effort and that he loved Ubuntu.

7. What luck have you had introducing new computer users to Ubuntu?

Fairly well, I think. Basically anyone who is not an Ubuntu user gets the advocacy pitch from me about how Ubuntu would rock their world. Many have tried it, which is what I consider a win, and a bunch have switched. Some don’t, which is fine, but my first goal is to have people take a sip of Ubuntu before they drink the rest of the bottle. :)

8. What would you like to see happen with Linux in the future? with Ubuntu?

I want to see free software, delivered via Ubuntu, become the most ubiquitous platform in the world for users and developers, available to all, respecting local languages and culture, and inspiring innovation and sharing.

9. If there was one thing you could tell all new Ubuntu users, what would it be?

Welcome to the Ubuntu community and welcome to the start of awesome journey in which we can all put a brick in the wall to create an incredible free software platform. I look forward to meeting you all!

 

…….Members!

That’s right, we have 1,000,000 members on Ubuntu Forums now, and I’m glad I could be a part of that awesome community :)

A snippet of the screen:

UF's Member 1,000,000

Ubuntuforums.org Millionth Member

 

I know, confusing title…though maybe some people get it already?

As mentioned in my previous post, I’ve upgraded both my graphics card, and my monitor recently – both of which, I love, especially the monitor…1920×1200 is a lovely resolution :D That said, I decided to reinstall Ubuntu last night, because I’d been running the same install since Alpha4 of Karmic, and I’d been experiencing a few oddities. I didn’t know whether this was the 64 bit version I was running, or some odd config files left over from somewhere.

Because I was lazy, I used the Karmic CD I got from ShipIt, completely forgetting that these are 32 bit versions of Ubuntu, not 64 bit. I only realised once I’d booted into the system. The upside of this is that I noticed a couple of issues had gone, and that there really is little difference between the 32 bit or 64 bit. So much so, I’ll be going back to 64 bit for Lucid :) Kudos to the developers though, the installer picked up my resolution perfectly on the LiveCD, and also noticed that I have 4GB RAM, so installed the PAE kernel without even asking! Colour me impressed!

All in all, reinstalling showed me a couple of new things that I seem to have missed out (mainly things like that on the installer), and it has indeed fixed a few issues. I estimate this install will last around 6 weeks, and then I’ll install Lucid…but we’ll have to wait and see….

Jan 072010
 

So I have a new graphics card…1 guess as to what that may be!

I previously had a 9500GT, so it’s a relatively small upgrade, but I got it as some games were crashing/bluescreening, and giving a graphics card/driver related error. When I tried rolling back the drivers, and then reinstalling older & newer versions to no avail, I figured the next logical step was new stuff! :)

I have to say, I was suitably impressed, Ubuntu loaded up, picked up my dual screen* setup perfectly, and it was as though nothing had ever changed. Brilliant…now for Windows 7! I foolishly expected minimum fuss, as it had been good to me when I installed it all those many moons ago, only to boot it twice since then. How wrong I was. 800×600 single screen until I downloaded and installed the drivers, and rebooted.

I think we’ll give the point to Ubuntu then!
* About 30 minutes after installing the new graphics card, I’d purchased a new 24″ screen online, to replace my current 2×20″ setup. I need more desk space!

 

…Linux Commands, Editors, & Shell Programming.

I was lucky enough to be asked to review the 2nd edition of the aforementioned book. I just received my copy today, so many thanks to the guys that made that possible! From what I’ve read of the book in its draft form, it’s a book that will come in incredibly useful to me, as I’m a big fan of shell programming & generally using the shell*.

If you’re looking to become more familiar with the shell/command line in Linux, I’d definitely recommend it.

Amazon Link

*No flames please! ;)

 

I have a feeling that not so many of you will have heard of Paultag, unless you’re on the Ubuntu Beginners Team, or the Ohio LoCo. But I’ve experienced Paul’s commitment to Ubuntu, and he’s always willing to help out…which is good, because I find myself asking him things surprisingly often :) He has some awesome programming projects, but I won’t give them away, I’m not sure if I’m meant to! So before I dig an even bigger hole – I give you Paultag!

1. Tell as much as you’re willing about your “real life” like name, age, gender, location, family, religion, profession, education, hobbies, etc.

I’m Paul Tagliamonte, a 20 years young hacker. I live in Ohio, Boston native, working on my undergrad in Turology. That’s Computer Science to the less hip. My favorite hobby really boils down to writing software that looks good, functions good, and gets out of the way. Other then that, I love playing Bass Guitar, music in general and skiing. If I had to plug top three favorite bands ( and I will ), I’d have to say Air, Tycho and Black Moth Super Rainbow.

2. When and how did you become interested in computers? in Linux? in Ubuntu?

Sheesh. What a question. I’ve always loved computers, there is even a photo of a 5-year-old me typing on a DOS terminal ( don’t tell anyone! ), with my feet not even hanging off the end of the chair in a shoebox somewhere. I got into linux when my Mother brought me home some Mandrake GNU/Linux 8.1 CDs in 2001. For those keeping track at home, I was in middle school. I stuck with Mandrake through 9.1, 10.1, and 2006. During that time I switched to Debian GNU/Linux 3, and switched totally over to Debian at 4. Along the way I threw Ubuntu, Gentoo and CentOS into the mix. When I got out of High School in 2007, I installed Ubuntu on my brand new laptop, because, well it just worked right out of the box. It all went downhill from there!

3. When did you become involved in the forums (or the Ubuntu community)? What’s your role there?

It took me about a year to try to venture into the Ubuntu community. I had tried to get into the Debian community, and really found it harsh and unaccepting. I kicked off into the Ubuntu Forums, and “felt the love”. I got hooked within the first day, and really started to get exited. I messaged ( the great ) bodhi_zazen about working with the UBT ( although then it was the Ubuntu Forums Beginners Team ), about 10 guys strong at the time. I found them to be a bunch of really down-to-earth guys. Not much has changed accept the name ( Ubuntu Beginners Team now! ), and the member count. In 2009, I took over as Ohio Team Contact, following in the footsteps of vorian and jacob. I love working with my LoCo, we have a really strong community, and I could not be happier.

4. Are you an Ubuntu member? If so, how do you contribute? If not, do you plan on becoming one?

Sure am. I have been working with the UBT ( Ubuntu Beginners Team ) for over two years now. On the side, I code and I have been starting to sink my teeth into packaging. I picked up rights as an Uploader for Fluxbox in Debian, and I figure I’ll start submitting more patches to both Debian and Ubuntu, and get even more collaboration between Ubuntu and Debian. I am also the Ohio Team Contact, and really love my Local Community, big shout-out to my Ohio brothers and sisters!

5. What distros do you regularly use? What software? What’s your favorite application? Your least favorite?

Well, let’s see here. My primary box ( Loki ) is running Zenix 9.10, Ubuntu 9.10, Kubuntu 9.10, Debian Unstable, Fedora Core 6 and Mandrake 9.1. Long story, I’ll skip over those. My secondary box, Metatron is running Ubuntu 9.10, and has an empty few gigs for an LFS build in a few days. My Book Computer ( Che ) is running Nkrumah, my own little branch of Slax just for that motherboard. ( it’s actually just a motherboard inside a hardcover book, awesome, I know. )

In the past I’ve been known to run Fedora ( although I cut that off at around RC 7 ), Gentoo, Wolvix, and Slackware.

I love mplayer, elinks, gnome-do, and g++.

I don’t like rhythmbox muchly anymore, that plugin system really kills me, same goes for the current build of amaroK, although the old version was one of my loves.

6. What’s your fondest memory from the forums, or from Ubuntu overall? What’s your worst?

I’d say my most treasured memory is the first time I met the folks in #ubuntuforums-beginners ( now #ubuntu-beginners ). It has really stuck with me through the years. Second to that, I’d say seeing my face on Planet Ubuntu for the first time. I can’t say that I have a bad memory in the community, truly a rarity in the F/OSS world.

7. What luck have you had introducing new computer users to Ubuntu?

Amazing is the only word I have to describe it. In fact, my roomates ( a largely non-technical household ) have been able to use Ubuntu on their machines without any problems for a few months now, and even are at the point of diagnosing and working around their own issues. My circle of friends has really embraced it, and that’s not even counting the Computer Science majors! It’s almost not even fair how much Ubuntu sells it’s self as a computing platform.

8. What would you like to see happen with Linux in the future? with Ubuntu?

I’d like to see more efforts in the wider F/OSS field to adopt a CoC ( or analogous document ) to really aid collaboration between projects. It’s always frustrating to meet those people who know their stuff but act pious, and think they are better then everyone else.

With Ubuntu, I’d love to see more upstream work, it’s all too often I hear about Debian Developers who don’t get the Ubuntu patches because the MOTU fear that the DDs hate the them. I’d love to see Ubuntu become a bit more stable, perhaps that’s something we can all start working to achieve as a community. Another idea is to keep new features out of our releases until we are sure they won’t bork machines. We should not loose focus that we are doing really well, and I think we have a model that works. Small corrective actions is what we need, not huge swings of the wheel.

9. If there was one thing you could tell all new Ubuntu users, what would it be?

Pray you don’t have Broadcom, or ATI!

Really though, I would say that there are always bugs, and always issues. Don’t get too caught up with knowing everything, and I know going from going from a power-user to a novice again can be hard, but stick with it. It’s well worth it. Rely on the community, the UBT is always here to help ( </plug> ). Never stop learning, and don’t forget that even a modest know-how is worth it’s weight in gold, so try answering a few questions on the forum!

 

OMG Chrome Beta for Linux is available!!11!!…………………….is all I saw on Twitter/identi.ca the other day. So I figured I’d give it a go, knowing it should be much different from Chromium.

It seems that, somewhat surprisingly, I was wrong. I downloaded the 64 bit .deb file from the chrome site and installed it. Easy enough – there’s also RPM’s for any of you using Fedora etc. One thing I liked, though incredibly insignificant, was the Chrome logo – I just prefer the green, red & yellow to the Chromium blueness.

From what I can gather from various bits of info online, and my own personal use of the browser, it’s very similar to the latest builds of Chromium, except it carries the official Google backing. One thing I did notice though, which is a deal clincher for me right now – is that flash (specifically YouTube & BBC iPlayer, I haven’t tried anything else really)….works! Now I have received a Flash Player update today, but it worked before that :)

Another thing that seems to have been fixed is the double posting issue a lot of Linux/Chrome users were experiencing over on Ubuntu Forums – thankfully I haven’t had it happen yet, but I’m keeping an eye on it. I just have the privilege of being able to remove my double posts without having to report it first ;)

All in all – I’d say it’s definitely worth looking into, especially if you’ve been put off trying Chromium

 

I imagine quite a few of you have heard of this next interviewee. Daniel (a.k.a dholbach) has been involved in Ubuntu for as long as I can recall. He always seems incredibly enthusiastic, especially when it comes to the awesome community we have. Not to mention having a blog I find well worth a read. Enjoy!

1. Tell as much as you’re willing about your “real life” like name, age, gender, location, family, religion, profession, education, hobbies, etc.

My name is Daniel Holbach, I’m 30 years old, male, still enjoy living in Berlin, Germany. Live together with Murphy, my dog, work for Canonical in Jono Bacon’s community team. I like wandering around in the city, reading, all kinds of music, learning languages, good food and lots of other things. I DJed every now and then, playing Drum&Bass music, but haven’t for some months now and I miss it already. Another thing on my thing “TODO list” is: more holidays. :)

2. When and how did you become interested in computers? in Linux? in Ubuntu?

We had a computer at home for as long as I can remember and I always liked toying around with it. I think I wrote my first program in Basic or Pascal, when I was 11 or 12.

The first Linux I looked at was a SuSE 5.x and I was intrigued by the idea of people writing code for the greater good and sharing it. It took me a bit longer until I decided to remove Windows from my computers and stick with Linux. It was Debian Potato which I fell in love with and I spent a lot of time with.

I was lucky enough to meet Michael Vogt in Dortmund where I was studying and I still remember how he told me about “No Name Yet” over a beer and that I should try it.

3. When did you become involved in the forums (or the Ubuntu community)? What’s your role there?

When Ubuntu had its warty release I was busy with my thesis and I found that I needed a newer version of a library for what I was working on. I knew that it would involve packaging and Michael and S√©bastien Bacher helped me a lot to get the job done. It took me a bit to figure the packaging out and I was amazed that S√©b and Michael stayed that calm with me during the whole time. It wasn’t anything like what I expected from Open Source developers.

In the meantime I had read about Ubuntu’s goals, especially from a community perspective and I excited me a lot that this was so clearly codified and everybody was working together like that. I definitely wanted to be part of it.

The community was much smaller back then, so it was easy to stay on top of almost everything that was happening (Ok, I was neglecting my thesis a bit at that point). I helped out with supporting users on IRC and on the mailing lists and after some encouragement started to help out with packaging and trying to think of ways to best organise all the technical tasks in our slowly growing community.

4. Are you an Ubuntu member? If so, how do you contribute? If not, do you plan on becoming one?

I became an Ubuntu member after my first uploads and first attempts at writing TODO lists for all of us. I was really passionate about fixing packages not only on my machine for myself, but for thousands of users. This still exictes me today.

When I joined Canonical I helped out in lots of different areas: I helped Séb with the maintenance of Desktop packages. I helped with some of the planning for the MOTU team, I was involved in setting up Bug days and the Bug Squad, I even packaged Artwork for some time. The work was pretty diverse and I always enjoyed it.

I’m glad I’m now part of the Community team, Jono’s four horsemen. Where I mostly work with the Developer community, but lots of other parts of the community as well. Since last cycle I’m part of the Ubuntu NGO team too, which tries to help non-profits and charities to help more effectively by making Ubuntu work better for them.

5. What distros do you regularly use? What software? What’s your favorite application? Your least favorite?

Exclusively Ubuntu. I’m a fan of Thunderbird3, of python, Django, GNOME and lots of other stuff. :)

6. What’s your fondest memory from the forums, or from Ubuntu overall? What’s your worst?

There’s many great memories I remember: my first upload to the archive, the first user who thanked me in a bug report for fixing their bug, when Mark invited me to UDS. Everytime I get to know so many brilliant and wonderful people. When I was flash-hugged at UDS. When I DJed with James Westby at the last night at UDS Prague. I could go on for hours.

I can’t really say there’s any “worst moment”, but maybe it’s all the small moments where we forget what amazing things we’re doing together and we need to remind ourselves.

7. What luck have you had introducing new computer users to Ubuntu?

Here in Berlin I find a lot of people converted to Ubuntu already. Just the other night I was in a bar where the computer that played the music was running Xubuntu or when I was talking to somebody and she asked what I did for a living and I asked “Do you know about Linux?” and she said “Oh you mean Ubuntu – yeah, I’ve been using that for ages now, it’s awesome!”

Also an Ubuntu T-Shirt works wonders here. :)

8. What would you like to see happen with Linux in the future? with Ubuntu?

Even more Ubuntu users, even more Ubuntu community members. :)

9. If there was one thing you could tell all new Ubuntu users, what would it be?

It’s such a great feeling to realise that you can help out easily and make a difference, not just for your own good, but also for others.

 

I’m currently writing an application which will be running from a MySQL backend, along with a good friend of mine. So we get to play with SVN, as well as MySQL. I’m wondering whether it would be worth setting up MySQL replication on one of the servers, as we have 2 to use if we need them. Possibly even 3.

If anybody has some good guides on how to set this up, it’d be great to hear from you, now I have my install set up to allow the test user to connect remotely, I’m looking for another mini-project to include in this larger one :) Also…if you notice any DB oddities on here, please forgive me :)

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