Search Results: "Tiago Bortoletto Vaz"

26 April 2013

Francesca Ciceri: And the winner is...

I totally forgot it, but as the DPL elections are now done, we have a winner for the #DPL game. Of the (more or less) fifteen persons who participated to the game (thank you!), only four received points for having at least one of their Fantastic Four running for DPL: As Lucas is now the new DPL, our one and only winner of the DPL game is... ... Mehdi Dogguy! Congrats!

23 February 2013

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: #DPLgame

in a random disorder:
MadameZou - photo by Andrew McMillan, CC-BY-SA 2.0 dkg moray h01ger

11 September 2012

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: New domain for trying alternative web services

I'm maintaining a host under acaia.ca. I intend to share it with friends and encourage them to use non-evil services to host their stuff. For now I'm providing the following: ...and testing these: As I'm not happy with minigal I'm trying mediagoblin, Zenphoto and Plogger for media hosting. Any other idea? I want light and simple stuff, my VPS is cheap. (btw, I didn't renew my flickr pro last month so I'm very likely leaving this service. I used flickrbackup to have all my pictures and some of meta-data saved, as they didn't provide me any better way to do a backup.)

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: New personal domain and email

I'm no longer using the domain tiagovaz.org. So website and emails under it will be off soon. I mostly use now tiago @acaia.ca and @debian.org.

9 July 2012

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: apt-get source --build debian-organic-coffee

debian-coffee

7 July 2012

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: Some pictures of DC11 Cheese and Wine party

In DebConf9 i worked on some photo editing and ended with a sort of over-saturated album which is still available online. For the C&W party in DebConf11 i tried to delivery a black and white set of pictures by just doing some adjustments using ufraw. Pictures were taken with a Nikon D50 camera + Nikkor 50mm 1/1.4 in raw mode. Here are some examples of the result:
debconf11debconf11debconf11
debconf11debconf11debconf11
debconf11debconf11debconf11
You can enjoy these and other DebConf11 shots by following the links in DC11 wikipage. (update: sorry for this old post being re-published in the planet, i've migrated my blog and this post got a new timestamp)

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: Recycling old Debian t-shirts

debian-bed ...and having beautiful dreams :)

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: VoIP in Neo Freerunner with Qtmoko and Linphone

I keep using a Neo Freerunner with Qtmoko in a Debian Squeeze (+ some Wheezy) chroot as my daily phone. It also works well for SMS, GPS, MUA, IM, IRC and some Web browsing with Aurora (using both Wifi and GPRS). Last weekend I managed to play a little with VoIP possibilities in Qtmoko and ended with a functional SIP client in my hands. I want to share some points which may be useful for other brave freerunners: UPDATE: I didn't make clear that I get a very nice audio quality using internal mic/speaker with the above voip-handset state file. The issue is only when using the headset, which demands understanding and setting up a proper state file. Enjoy some shots:

3 January 2012

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: GTA04 Group Tour

GTA01 and GTA02 lovers should take a look at GTA04 project. For those who want to own one, it's time to act. It's not so affordable, but for a small production device it's not bad at all. Note that GTA04 is a motherboard replacement for the Neo Freerunner (GTA02) or the Openmoko Neo 1973 (GTA01). You need such a device to install the new motherboard. Default rootfs is Debian Squeeze + LXDE. Other Debian-based projects like Qtmoko have also been ported.

22 November 2011

Raphaël Hertzog: People behind Debian: Stefano Zacchiroli, Debian Project Leader

picture by Tiago Bortoletto Vaz, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0


It s been one year since the first People behind Debian interview. For this special occasion, I wanted a special guest and I m happy that our Debian Project Leader (DPL) Stefano Zacchiroli accepted my invitation. He has a difficult role in the community, but he s doing a really great job of it. He s a great mediator in difficult situations, but he s also opinionated and can push a discussion towards a conclusion. Read on to learn how he became a Debian developer and later DPL, what he s excited about in the next Debian release, and much more. Raphael: Who are you? Stefano: I m Stefano Zacchiroli, but I prefer to be called Zack, both on the Internet and in real life. I m 32, Italian, emigrated to France about 4 years ago. I live in Paris, and I find it to be one of the most gorgeous and exciting cities in the world. As my day job I m a Computer Science researcher and teacher at University Paris Diderot and IRILL. In my copious free time I contribute to Debian, and I m firmly convinced that doing so is an effective way to help the cause of Free Software. Besides, I find it to be a lot of fun! Raphael: How did you start contributing to Debian? Stefano: Flash back to 1999, when I was a 2nd year student in Computer Science at the University of Bologna. Back then in Italy it was uncommon for young geeks to get exposed to Free Software: Internet was way less pervasive than today and most computer magazines didn t pay much attention to GNU/Linux. Luckily for me, the professor in charge of the student lab was a Free Software enthusiast and all students machines there were running Debian. Not only that, but there was also a student program that allowed volunteers to become sysadmins after having shown their skills and convinced the director they were trustworthy. Becoming one of those volunteer Debian admins quickly became one of my top objectives for the year, and that is were I ve learned using Debian. The year after that, I got in touch with a research group that was to become the happy bunch of hackers with whom I would have done both my master and PhD theses. They were designing a new proof assistant. Most of the development was in OCaml and happened on Debian. OCaml was available in Debian, but many of the libraries we needed were not. So I approached the Debian OCaml Team offering to help. Before I realize what was going on I was (co-)maintainer of tens of OCaml-related packages. At some point I got told I think you should apply as a Debian Developer . So I did and in a couple of months I went through the New Member (NM) process, that was back then in its infancy. I still remember my happiness while reading the account created mail, the day after my 22nd birthday. I know the NM process went through some bad publicity in the past, but I m happy to see that nowadays the process can be as swift as it has been for me 10 years ago. Raphael: It s your second year as Debian Project Leader (DPL). Are you feeling more productive in the role? Do you fear to burn out? Stefano: I m feeling way more productive, no doubts. The task of the Debian Project Leader is not necessarily difficult, but it is a complex and scarcely documented one. It is also profoundly different from any other task that Debian people usually work on, so that experience doesn t help much in getting started. Before becoming effective as DPL one needs to get to know many people and mechanisms he is not familiar with. More importantly, one needs to set up a personal work-flow that allows to keep up with day-to-day DPL tasks (which are aplenty) as well as with urgencies (that tend to pop-up in the leader@debian.org INBOX at the least convenient time). Finally, one also needs to do proper traffic shaping and always retain enough motivation bandwidth to keep the Project informed about what is going on in DPL-land. Finding the right balance among all these ingredients can take some time. Once one is past it, everything goes way more smoothly. The above is why I m constantly encouraging people interested in running for DPL in the future to reach out to me and work on some tasks of the current DPL s TODO list. I swear it is not just a cheap attempt at slavery!. It is rather an attempt at DPL mentoring that could be beneficial: both to give future candidates more awareness of the task, and to reduce the potential downtime when handing over from one DPL to the next. Regarding burn out, I don t feel prone to its risk these days. If I look back, I can say that my contributions as DPL have been pretty constant in volume over time; my enthusiasm for the task, if anything, is on the rise. The effectiveness of my contributions as DPL are, on the other hand, not mine to judge. Raphael: If you had to single out two achievements where you were involved as DPL, what would they be? Stefano: I d go for the following two, in no particular order: OK, let me cheat and add a third one I m also proud of having been able to report to the Project my whereabouts as DPL, thoroughly and periodically, since the very beginning is first term. People annoyed by my reporting logorrhea now have all my sympathies. Raphael: Among the possible new features of Debian Wheezy, which one gets you excited most? Stefano: It s multi-arch, no doubt. Even though it is not a directly user visible change, it s a very far reaching one. It is also one of those changes that make me feel that moment of truth of coders, when you realize you are finally doing the right thing and ditching piles of ugly hacks.
It s multi-arch [ ] you realize you are finally doing the right thing and ditching piles of ugly hacks.
Raphael: If you were not DPL and could spend all your time on Debian, what project would you do? Stefano: I would sit down and do software development for Debian. It s impressive how many important and beneficial changes for Debian could be delivered by specific software improvements in various parts of our infrastructure. We tend to attract many packagers, but not so many people willing to maintain Debian infrastructure softwares like dak, britney, debbugs, the PTS, etc. Their maintenance burden then falls on the shoulders of the respective teams which are generally very busy with other important tasks. As a project, we seem to be more appealing to packagers than to software developers. That is a pity given the amount of exciting coding tasks that are everywhere in Debian. Part of the reason we are not appealing to developers is that we are not particularly good at collecting coding tasks in a place where interested developers could easily pick them up. It also takes quite a bit of inside knowledge to spot infrastructure bugs and understand how to fix them. I long for some spare hacking time to check if I m still good enough of a coder to hunt down longstanding bugs in our infrastructure, which have ended up being my pet peeves. I d also love to dive again into RCBW. It s less committing than package maintenance, more diverse and challenging, and also an immensely useful activity to get Debian releases done. Raphael: Martin Michlmayr is worried that there is so few paid opportunities around Debian. Do you agree with his sentiment, and if yes do you have ideas on how to improve this situation? Stefano: The idealistic me wishes Debian to be a community made only of volunteers that devote their free time to the Project. Oh, and that me also wishes Debian to be competitive with similar projects, no matter how many full-time employees others have! That is coherent with a view of society where everyone has a day job, but also engages in volunteering activities ensuring that public interest is pursued by people motivated by interests other than profit. But I do realize that for Free Software to succeed companies, employees, and salaries should all have a role. I admire projects that strike a good balance between volunteer and paid work. The Linux kernel is emblematic in that respect: many developers are paid by companies that have a commercial or strategic interest in Linux. Nevertheless volunteers contributions are aplenty and the Linux community gives a convincing impression that choices are driven by the community itself (or by its benevolent dictator) without money-driven impositions.
I do realize that for Free Software to succeed companies, employees, and salaries should all have a role.
Such an ecosystem does not exist around Debian. We do have a partner program that allows for it to happen, but we have very few partners with an interest in doing distribution development work. Like Martin, I m worried by this state of affairs, because it de facto means we lag behind in terms of available people power. In a community of volunteers, that might frustrate people and that is not good. To improve over the status quo the first step is to federate together small and medium companies that have a strategic interest in Debian and listen to their needs. I m already in touch with representatives of such companies that, in many cases, already employ Debian Developers to do some distribution work in Debian. We will be soon sending out a call to reach out to more such companies, but since we are discussing this, why waiting? If some of our readers here are representative of such companies, I encourage them to get in touch with me about this. Raphael: You know that the fundraising campaign for the Debian Administrator s Handbook is on good track but the liberation of the book is not yet assured. What do you think of this project? Stefano: I m happy about the project, to the point that I ve accepted writing a testimonial for it :-) . I m sad about the scarce availability of up to date and high quality (DFSG-)Free books about Debian and I welcome any initiative that might help closing that gap.
I m sad about the scarce availability of up to date and high quality (DFSG-)Free books about Debian.
Free Culture is a great offspring of Free Software and I m convinced we need to stand up against double standards in the two camps. Letting aside software-specific licensing details, the basic freedoms to be defended are the same. They are those freedoms that ensure that a reader is in full control of his book, pretty much as they ensure that a computer user is in full control of the software that runs on it. I m therefore proud that Debian has long resolved that the Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) apply not only to software but also to books and other pieces of documentation. But the status quo implies that not only we have very few up to date, high quality books about Debian. It also implies that, at present, we have no such book that we can distribute in the Debian archive, showing off the Free Software (and Free Culture!) values we stand for.
Crowdfunding is considered to be a good mate for Free Culture, where the services model that applies to Free Software is more difficult to exploit. I so wish any luck to yours and Roland s initiative. A different matter is whether Debian, as a project, should endorse the initiative and actively campaign for it. As you know, I think it should not. While we do advertise general project donations, we don t do mission-specific fundraising campaign for Debian itself. Coherently with that, I don t think we should relay crowdfunding campaigns for 3rd parties, even when the result would be beneficial to Debian. Raphael: Is there someone in Debian that you admire for their contributions? Stefano: There are two classes of people that I particularly admire in Debian:
Thank you to Zack for the time spent answering my questions. I hope you enjoyed reading his answers as I did.

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1 October 2011

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: flickr backup tool in Debian

Forked from hivelogic-flickrtouchr, which is forked from flickrtouchr, flickrbackup is a simple tool to perform a backup of your photos in flickr. It's is in a very early development stage and code looks weird, but critical functionality is working :)
tiago@x61:~$ flickrbackup -h
Usage: flickrbackup [OPTIONS] -o OUTPUT_DIR
Backup your flickr photos.
Options:
  --version             show program's version number and exit
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -o OUTPUT_DIR, --output_dir=OUTPUT_DIR
                        set the local directory where you want to store your
                        pictures
  -e, --metadata-exif   store flickr metadata (title, description etc) as EXIF
                        tags in your local files [default: False]
  -x, --metadata-xml    store metadata as default flickr XML files [NOT
                        IMPLEMENTED]
  -u, --metadata-update
                        update flickr metadata to your local files. Use this
                        option with -x and/or -e [default: False]
  -g, --html-gallery    generate a local HTML gallery [NOT IMPLEMENTED]

29 August 2011

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: VoIP in Neo Freerunner with Qtmoko and Linphone

I keep using a Neo Freerunner with Qtmoko in a Debian Squeeze (+ some Wheezy) chroot as my daily phone. It also works well for SMS, GPS, MUA, IM, IRC and some Web browsing with Aurora (using both Wifi and GPRS). Last weekend I managed to play a little with VoIP possibilities in Qtmoko and ended with a functional SIP client in my hands. I want to share some points which may be useful for other brave freerunners: UPDATE: I didn't make clear that I get a very nice audio quality using internal mic/speaker with the above voip-handset state file. The issue is only when using the headset, which demands understanding and setting up a proper state file. Enjoy some shots:

26 July 2011

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: Some pictures of DC11 Cheese and Wine party

In DebConf9 i worked on some photo editing and ended with a sort of over-saturated album which is still available online. For the C&W party in DebConf11 i tried to delivery a black and white set of pictures by just doing some adjustments using ufraw. Pictures were taken with a Nikon D50 camera + Nikkor 50mm 1/1.4 in raw mode. Here are some examples of the result:
debconf11debconf11debconf11
debconf11debconf11debconf11
debconf11debconf11debconf11
You can enjoy these and other DebConf11 shots by following the links in DC11 wikipage.

13 July 2011

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: i can haz hotel

DC11 hotel picture source

28 June 2011

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: learning from a mistake

I've pasted here something from an IRC channel which revealed a person's name in a given situation. The "fun part" that I tried to show in the "things i love in debian" post was mainly related to the way we (debian people) use to deal with things in a non-personal way in order to be fair at the end (don't tell me about your life, just give me your username so i check the logs). It had not to do with the individuals involved. I apologize if it has caused any damage to one's life. Of course removing the post doesn't help too much, but at least may reduce a little the noise. Thanks to those who kindly pointed that out to me - btw, kindness is another valuable thing that i like to see in debian community.

24 June 2011

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: Things I love in Debian

00:32 < AbsintheSyringe> I'm with one of the users, that registered and he registered as "sponsored" however now he has no category and of course when he tries doing "sponsored" it doesn't work 00:32 < AbsintheSyringe> is this the way it's suppoused to be 00:33 < nattie> who is this? 00:36 < AbsintheSyringe> he's one of the volunteers, he'll be doing everything that has to do with the sound and concerts and so on, regarding concerts and everything else, in real life he's machinist constructor and works as a dj, very popular and good one 00:36 < nattie> that's not the point. we need the name so we can check his penta logs 00:37 < darst> (and not name publically, preferably) 00:37 < AbsintheSyringe> Mirza Alibalic (nickname: masta)

16 May 2011

DebConf team: DebConf Newbies/Non-Regulars Funding for 2011 (Posted by Tiago Bortoletto Vaz)

As previously announced in Ganneff s blog and Debian News, a special funding for DebConf11 is available for Debian Developers and Debian Maintainers who have either never attended a DebConf before, or who have not been to a DebConf since DebConf7 (in Scotland). How to apply Email the DebConf Newbies Team (newbies@debconf.org) providing the following information: the DebConf team

9 May 2011

DebConf team: DebConf10 Final Report released! (Posted by Tiago Bortoletto Vaz)

After numerous contributions from many of you, the DebConf team has finally released the DebConf10 Final Report. It s a 46-page document which gives the reader an idea about the conference as a whole. It includes descriptions of talks, DebCamp and Debian Day activities, personal impressions, attendee and budgeting numbers, the work of various teams, social events, funny pictures and so on. If you attended Debconf10, the report will refresh some of your remarkable memories and bring you closer to the organization team work. If not, it will certainly encourage you to be part of future Debian events :) The report is available in two PDF sizes and can be downloaded from Debconf media website. Enjoy! the DebConf team

6 May 2011

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: Q: What is the most historical day in Brazil's recent history?

A: Today!/me happy

24 April 2011

Tiago Bortoletto Vaz: New members on the Brazilian Internet Steering Committee

I feel happy about the last CGI.br election results, mainly concerning two new representatives from the third sector. I want to point them here:

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