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UDS-O in Budapest: Day 2

I woke up far too early again on Tuesday morning, jet lag fun! The first session I attended was the Community Roundtable again where Jono talked about some of the plans for the emerging QA infrastructure, and we discussed the need for quickstart getting involved pages and general wiki pruning for a lot of teams, and then plans for the revitalization of the Ubuntu Weekly News in a way that doesn’t overwhelm contributors (it was taking over 30 man hours to prepare it in the past, something I learned when Nathan Handler and I released an issue in January).

Forums Health Check

Apparently I am a pretty typical UDS attendee in that I don’t use or care for web forums all that much for personal use (I prefer IRC and mailing lists), but I admire and appreciate the tremendous value they bring to the support community. A major project that forums council member Mike Basinger has been tackling is the upgrade of this forum and this session he presented the fruits of some of this labor, most visibly the new theme but also a lot of underlying technical issues related to the upgrade including security and spam handling options for the newer version. Ivanka Majic from the Canonical Design Team was also attending and offering comments about the overall new design. Session notes available here.

Edubuntu plans for Oneiric

While Partimus.org doesn’t strictly use Edubuntu itself, we certainly use a number of metapackages from the project and it’s always nice to be able to give direct feedback to the project admins regarding our real world deployments. The session began with some follow-up from some known issues including translations in several areas and some small technical cleanup tasks. The discussion then moved to what attendees at the session and others had been requesting as far as features. Major pain points for school deployments appear to be some of the large, popular web applications that are commonly used for schools but which are either old in the Debian/Ubuntu archives (such as Moodle, discussion around this has been happening since my first UDS) or don’t exist at all (in the case of Koha). A suggestion was made to link to installation and maintenance documentation to the Edubuntu site itself so people have good resources at their fingertips even if it’s not as simple as an apt-get install. There was also some discussion about educational Windows apps that work in wine and how to get potential administrators of Edubuntu to be made aware of use the existing database at appdb.winehq.org. Session notes available here.

Debian Health Check for O

I have been attending this session since my first UDS in Dallas a couple years ago and each time I attend it feels like the social delta between the projects has been cut down so now these sessions are very calm and focusing on some key points of issue. Now with the recent launch of DEX the Debian team is also making a more public and direct effort to communicate with downstream projects that are based on it. I’d say it’s a pretty exciting time to be involved with collaboration between projects. Session notes available here.

It was then off to lunch, after which I had a great hallway discussion with Jim Campbell about documentation of all kinds.

Integrate Lubuntu into Ubuntu ecosystem

As far as flavors go I’m actually involved with the Xubuntu project rather than Lubuntu, but I’ve been greatly interested the work that Julien Lavergne and his team have been doing the past year in really getting Lubuntu cleaned up to be a flavor of Ubuntu. Becoming a flavor means that a project gains all the benefits of iso hosting, daily builds, release announcements (the other flavors are: Kubuntu, Xubuntu, Mythbuntu, Ubuntu Studio). I can’t count the number of times I’ve been asked how a version of Ubuntu becomes one of these flavors and I haven’t had a good answer, but with this move for Lubuntu to join the ranks they are working to smooth out the process. Mark attended this session and I joined him and Julien to take notes. The project now has the blessing to become included and right now there are really only some technical barriers to making this happen. Based on the feedback from this session it really looks like Lubuntu will be among the other flavors for 11.10. How exciting! Session notes available here.

How to run usability sessions

With the defaulting of Unity and all the changes that come with Gnome3 and the shell interface usability has really come to the forefront of testing in the Linux world. From my perspective the sharp rise in popularity of smartphones and slate/tablet systems has also increased my interest in how people use devices and methods of testing. This session was really great for all that, gave piles of very direct, practical tips for running even a small coffee shop usability study (ask 5-6 strangers in a coffee shop to try your new thing). Session notes available here, and are very detailed with everything that was discussed.

Discussion of the goals of the accessibility team in the Oneiric cycle

As a blessedly able person, accessibility really just started to show up on my radar last year because I never had a compelling need to seek it out. As I’ve watched the team over these past several months I’ve really come to learn that the team is so much beyond just making Ubuntu more accessible for people with disabilities, it’s about making Ubuntu really great for human beings and taking advantage of the amazing opportunity that a solid open source operating system community has to deliver a highly superior product when it comes to accessibility. While there are still many uncertainties, one of the things I was happy to hear from this session is that they want to do Classroom sessions to give some introductions to contributing to the team and some general Q&A sessions so the community has an even better opportunity to approach the team with questions. Session notes available here.

After the session I was able to get an email out about the Invisible Exhibition outing tonight with more details about costs and logistics (read here if you’re interested). I’m pretty excited about attending it tonight.

The evening was spent by first meeting up with some folks down in the ballroom for buffet-style dinner and checking out some of the cool hardware that Linaro had to show off. I then met up with Cherí Francis and around 9:30 we met up with several others for a ride down to the river to do some exploring. The river is beautiful and while we were there we ran into several other UDSers and mixed up our party a bit to explore in separate directions.

We did a bunch of walking, caught public transit for the first time and I ended up getting back to the hotel around midnight.

Now off to day 3!

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