Search Results: "stratus"

27 March 2007

Gustavo Franco: simple-cdd 0.3.0 is NEW!

Just uploaded simple-cdd 0.3.0 to experimental, as a simple-cdd user since Sarge days, I've helped a lot Vagrant with Etch support that required a huge amount of development due to the d-i and debian-cd changes. Thanks for those who helped us with testing and patches!

If you're lost, simple-cdd is a limited though relatively easy tool to create a customized debian-installer CD. It supports multiple install profiles for your CDD project (We can ask your user which to install, you can simple have one or preseed it); You can preseed the packages that will be installed as you can do using d-i; i18n support for those who want custom Debian localized images; multiarch support; postinst support for profiles; simple-cdd-profile udeb take care about extra packages installation, it doesn't need tasksel.

So say we all!

23 March 2007

Gustavo Franco: Us and Them

There's a lot going on, since we're getting closer to the International Free Software Forum 8.0 that will be held in Porto Alegre, Brazil. Sacix new website is online at: www.sacix.org.br (sorry Portuguese only yet), and we've received a impressive amount of new subscribers to the related mailing lists.

Paulo and I managed to add usbfloppy support into ltspfs that I've forward to Vagrant from pkg-ltsp in Debian, Oliver (ubuntu/edubuntu) and upstream. It was just a detail for many but a huge step for us, considering that more than 100.000 end users are using their floppies into a usbfloppy drive so we really needed that in time for Sacix next release (Sagui).

Quick notes:
* My new car has a week of life
* Developers, please vote for DPL!

I'm now warming up for Roger Waters gig. See you!

13 March 2007

MJ Ray: Debian: DPL Debate (3)

I hopped onto IRC and put most of the debate questions to Gustavo Franco (stratus). You can read it next to the others - SynrG and pusling tried to help recreate the cage fight, but I think we're just too tame. There's also this linux.com article where Steve McIntyre and Anthony Towns don't answer questions and it seems the reporters didn't notice Sven Luther's withdrawal.

12 March 2007

MJ Ray: Debian: DPL Debate (2)

Wouter Verhelst wrote:
"That line 754 came across pretty horrible, TBH. I didn't have much time to think my reply through, and it shows. What I wanted to say is that for the bits the NMs are actually involved in (ID check, T&S, P&P, etc), P&P is what takes up the most time. Waiting for an AM, waiting for the FD to check the report, and waiting for the DAM to figure it out and say "okay" all does, indeed, take much longer than that, on average."
I still don't understand how this matches the NM statistics that show the AM processing step (which includes ID check, T&S and P&P IIRC) has a shorter median than waiting for DAM. Waiting for DAM is what often takes up most time. During the audience discussion, I was told by a 2007 DD that they spent a year waiting for DAM, just like I did back in 2002. (I also was re-tested about free software while seeing NMs with very questionable philosophies get fast-tracked past me - I don't know if those still happen.) NM is still broken, but it's somehow not a campaign topic in this year's DPL election AFAICS. Elsewhere, gustavo posted that his no-show was because he was in a car crash - I think that's a fair reason for missing the debate. I'll hop on IRC after 1400 and see if I can record his answers.

11 March 2007

Gustavo Franco: The DPL debate

My apologies for not showing up for the debate, due to a car accident (not involving me) it was too late to actually being able to connect on IRC.

I just read the debate log and will be able to answer tomorrow (monday) the same questions and more for anyone interested. I'll be at OFTC as stratus (#debian-desktop) during 14:00UTC until 21:00UTC. See you there!

9 March 2007

Gustavo Franco: DPL Candidate Calendar 07'/08'

Well, after reading the rebuttals of my platform for DPL, i noticed that from the others candidates only one really disagree with a proposal I've included - 'backports' related. I'm really happy that they agree with some of the proposals. Unfortunately, it seems that it's common sense between the others candidates that I won't be able to do everything that's in my platform during a one year term. They're right, i won't. I won't do everything that is in my platform simple because Debian isn't a single person project. :-)

My platform is a request to in a way lead some changes and if you disagree with any idea, feel free to email me and do your suggestions. Keep in mind that I can't please every single person using or contributing to the Debian project. I'm sure that i can motivate enough people in the project to help me work on that proposals and I'll be directly involved in a lot of stuff that is there, but I've no problem share power, influence or whatever you call for the better of our operating system.

I've been working on a public Google Calendar with my schedule (if elected), maybe it will help some of the others candidate and Debian Developers understand how and when:

XML:
http://www.google.com/calendar/feeds/qkkr1fd8b2qu4ms0cr9dkq56i0%40group.calendar.google.com/public/basic

ICAL:
http://www.google.com/calendar/ical/qkkr1fd8b2qu4ms0cr9dkq56i0%40group.calendar.google.com/public/basic.ics

HTML:
http://www.google.com/calendar/embed?src=qkkr1fd8b2qu4ms0cr9dkq56i0%40group.calendar.google.com

There's also my Live Platform online. The Live Platform is basically my platform as in vote.do containing some HTML fixes and additional comments (in bold) based on questions or general feedback about my platform content.

See you during the debate!

6 March 2007

Gustavo Franco: Debian, get a life

"Second Life runs on 2,000 Intel and AMD servers in two co-location facilities in San Francisco and Dallas. The company has a commitment to open source, with servers running Debian Linux and the MySQL database. Linden Lab chose Debian Linux because the software is suited to scaling massively with a small IT staff, said Linden Lab CTO Cory Ondrejka. MySQL allows the server farms to scale horizontally, by adding large numbers of low-power servers as needed, rather than vertically, which would have required Second Life to run on a few, powerful systems, Miller said."
Joe Miller is VP of platform and technology development for Linden Lab.
Source: http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=197800179

We know that, but sometimes we spend more time and effort with pointless discussions. Discussions are good, don't get me wrong, but they need to start and end. Get a life, go squash some bugs, package something NEW and upload to experimental, write documentation or tell the word who else is using Debian. Debian is bigger than our own egos and debates.

Don't you care that Second Life uses Debian? Aren't you a Second Life user? I'm not a Second Life user, but if Joe Miller come out and tell the word that they use something else, a lot will go and say 'look, Debian is better than that, but the world don't care let us keep fighting'. Debian aims to be a universal operating system, and the universe is bigger than OFTC and lists.debian.org.

Raphaël Hertzog: Alioth and OpenID

Stratus seeks for comments from Alioth admins. Yes I’d like to see OpenID integration with Gforge. The upstream situation is a bit difficult, so I don’t think that you’ll have official opinion from them. In my case, I want OpenID integration because it would be cool to offer a standard wiki and be able to define ACL on some pages which refer to the Alioth accounts that people are used to use. In the longer term, we have other web services which are going to need authentication (DWTT, new version of the PTS, …) in order to provide customized content and it would be great to rely on OpenID for that part. I’m waiting your patches! ;-) And next time you want an opinion from the Alioth admins, please mail us instead of hoping that we won’t miss your blog entry in planet.debian.org.

5 March 2007

Gustavo Franco: Random thoughts on GForge and OpenID

I was thinking about mentors.debian.net and how much it's useful and unknown for many DDs and potential contributors. I don't think our GForge installation (http://alioth.debian.org) reached its full potential (in terms of audience) but is more known than mentors.

I like the mentors documentation on how a non-DD can upload packages to their repository, and almost everything else there except for the need to create yet another account in a website. I would be glad to see the code move to nm.d.o/mentors, but being less hungry why not some integration with Alioth?

I think that if we add OpenID support into GForge and push that to Alioth, services like mentors will benefit instantly any Debian contributor (DD or not) using svn.d.o, for example. I have no knowledge on GForge internals, but feedback from a GForge hacker if this feature is planned or if this contribution would be welcome will be appreciated. That would be great hear the opinions from alioth and mentors admins.

In other words: I want my Alioth OpenID and i'm sure you can think about new interesting use cases (eg.: forums, debian-community anyone?).

3 March 2007

Adrian von Bidder: Platforms: random thoughts

These are some random thoughts based on a not very thorough reading of candidate platforms of the DPL Election 2007, and my subjective view of the candidates based on the mailing traffic I remember reading. Wouter Verhelst: Has quite a broad Debian-background, the platform also seems to share quite a bit of my view of where Debian's problems are at the moment. Doesn't propose a course of action right now, not sure how to judge that. Not sure if I remember Wouter being heavily involved in flamewars, but I do remember reading quite a few of his emails in discussions with interest. broad Debian-background, the platform also seems to share quite a bit of my view of where Debian's problems are at the moment. Doesn't propose a course of action right now, not sure how to judge that. Not sure if I remember Wouter being heavily involved in flamewars, but I do remember reading quite a few of his emails in discussions with interest. broad Debian-background, the platform also seems to share quite a bit of my view of where Debian's problems are at the moment. Doesn't propose a course of action right now, not sure how to judge that. Not sure if I remember Wouter being heavily involved in flamewars, but I do remember reading quite a few of his emails in discussions with interest. broad Debian-background, the platform also seems to share quite a bit of my view of where Debian's problems are at the moment. Doesn't propose a course of action right now, not sure how to judge that. Not sure if I remember Wouter being heavily involved in flamewars, but I do remember reading quite a few of his emails in discussions with interest. Aigars Mahinovs: Quoting from his platform: “My goal of running for DPL is not to be DPL, but to get a few concepts closer to real life.” So don't run for DPL, but start doing these things you're thinking about. Not being DPL has the advantage that you don't have to spend time on DPL stuff that would detract you from these goals. Speaking about your goals: (i) No release: I've thought about that, too, but I feel this would quickly make Debian irrelevant. (ii) $HOME configuration files organisation: take it up with the upstream developers of all the application. I think this is a very good idea, but freedesktop.org would be a better platform. (iii) Old Maintainer Process: Idea looking for a problem. (iv) Dropping Trademarks: not sure what to think about this. Gustavo Franco: Some focus on the desktop, and a constructive attitude towards Ubuntu, both positive in my book. (The first one primarily because on servers Linux is already quite well established, while the desktop is where more work is still to be done. Not because servers are less important.) His goals: (i) Core teams: as with Wouter, he sees that people and what goes on between them are where the problems are. (ii) Release goals: I think building the release based on release goals could be a driving force, but this is more RM area than DPL. (iii) Adding features to the bts doesn't need DPL powers. (iii) New developers: certainly an area that still needs attention, but the intended course is not entirely clear to me. (iv) NEW queue: same. (v) CTTE: Not sure what the idea behind this is. (vi) Groups: yes, but again not entirely clear what and how. (vii) Backports: yes, new versions of some software should go into Debian (stable) faster. Officially supporting backports or something else, I don't know, but this is an area where a DPL could pull together the RMs, security team(s), backports.org people etc. (viii) Universal OS: is this about more media coverage or about more face to face meetings? Both are good, but we should set clear goals beforehand. (ix) Much work is needed, especially in the area of buildd management (meaning: the processes and people behind it!). Does Gustavo have previous involvement here? (x) Vendors, Website, Publicity: This is more or less all about media coverage and popularity. Much needed, but as Debian as it is will never be able to commit to a public official opinion of anything, we'll need to think hard about what to do here. (xi) NMU: I don't see a great need for action here, personally. Overall: this platform contains too much material, I fear trying to tackle all these areas will lead to a burned out DPL within three months and little actually getting anywhere. Sven Luther: It's true that it always needs at least two people for a flamewar. But having a DPL who is always ready to provide one side of an argument is not a good idea. Sam Hocevar: Everything is high-level on his platform. Both good and bad. Not sure how to rate this platform, but I see myself nodding along. Learn from other OSs is good, but I hope he also means active cooperation and not just passive let's see how they do it. Steve McIntyre: Should have won 2006. Certainly did a lot of both behind-the-scenes work and some good communication. The platform lacks mention of relations between Debian and the outside world, which is an area where I feel some work is missing (and where the DPL as the only person with a official role also known outside Debian can make a difference), and also lacks mention of legal problems (trademarks and patents) where I'm not sure how solid Debian's work is. Additional argument in favor of Steve: Having a 2IC and promoting him to DPL the year after might be a good idea overall. Maybe we should actually elect the 2IC and only have a confirmation vote to promote him to DPL? Raphaël Hertzog: I like the DPL board idea. I also like how Raphaël focuses, in his platform, on the DPL board idea and some selected problems. On the other hand, the platform is wholly focused inward, outside relations are important, too ! Anthony Towns: Not sure what to think of the current DPL. I think he had good ideas, and I still think the original “spend Debian funds for the release”-idea was not that bad, but seeing how it all worked out was very, very painful for too many people. The platform seems pretty much empty, so I guess ajt won't have my vote this time. Simon Richter: Maybe I miss something, but I only see “don't repeat the dunc-tank flamefest” in his platform, which seems a bit thin. His observation that the real power of the DPL is to get everybody's attention may be partly true, though, even if this power will be spent as soon as a DPL, trying to mediate, lets himself be drawn into the flamewar instead (I don't accuse Simon that he ultimately will do this, but I fear that it happens all too quickly). Now what? I really don't have the time to thoroughly follow the campaigning, but I'll certainly have a look at the rebuttals, and perhaps somebody will do some summary. So the ballot below will certainly change. (You might also be able to buy the vote if you're rich enough ;-)
 [ 1 ] Wouter Verhelst
 [ 5 ] Aigars Mahinovs
 [ 3 ] Gustavo Franco
 [ 6 ] Sven Luther
 [ 3 ] Sam Hocevar
 [ 1 ] Steve McIntyre
 [ 2 ] Raphaë Hertzog
 [ 5 ] Anthony Towns
 [ 4 ] Simon Richter
 [ 5 ] NOTA

2 March 2007

Mike Hommey: DPL platforms summaries

Enrico, you forgot your own advanced ways of wasting time (and have some fun). ;) Here are the summaries of the candidate DPL platforms, in one sentence each: 93sam
Once we don’t Select a friendly community where the packages towards a lot of software, community are most noticeable use to show their packages towards a problem good job.
aigarius
While I were elected DPL, I have to time leave Debian Developers Corner Site, map Search about it should not have not be Even if he has, the NM; process is before.
ajt
Ideally, I’d expect that we ought to make It work together in Linux and a DPL review of the community and October firmware resolutions recall vote maybe That’s been some of stuff I’ve been a server near you United States.
hertzog
The sponsorship, principle.
sho
I believe admit volunteers to scratch our bug tracking system I do what I would like LowThresholdNmu to happen again; Admit it has rhymes with a few of it Debian; is to be really like to automatically see them.
sjr
To the web site, map Search Not Published Yet Back to the Debian Project Select a server near you United States; the web Site, map Search Not Published Yet Back to the debian For other contact information, See the Debian Project Select a server near you United States.
stratus
It is today in the web team, the users: and waited supergroups i will that any Debian support: this change our major Desktop, with Lenny development website, we’ve now almost our official status and how a statistics page.
svenl
To the ban.
wouter
I am of a native Dutch is not an area where possible.
These summaries have been generated by the following script:

for i in 93sam aigarius ajt hertzog sho sjr stratus svenl wouter; do
  echo $i
  lynx -dump -nolist http://www.debian.org/vote/2007/platforms/$i dadadodo -c 1 - 2> /dev/null
done
It is somehow subobtimal, as aigarius and sjr’s summaries show: the headers and footers of the page have some influence, but well… it was fun anyways.

Jacobo Tarrío Barreiro: And now, for something completely the same

Enrico: if you extract the platforms using lynx -dump -nolist (or w3m -dump ), you’ll only extract the text, with no HTML, and the keywords will vary slightly:

1 March 2007

Enrico Zini: dpl-platform-keywords

Representative keywords of DPL platforms The DPL platforms are too long and you could use a very, very short executive summary? No problem, I have the technology for it. After the results you can find the kit to build yourself an extractor in the comfort of your home. The results Acquiring the data
for i in 93sam aigarius ajt hertzog sho sjr stratus svenl wouter
do
    wget http://www.debian.org/vote/2007/platforms/$i
done
Tokenizing
#!/bin/sh
for file in "$@"
do
    lynx -dump -stdin < $file   tr -c '[a-zA-Z]' ' '   tr '[A-Z]' '[a-z]'   sed -e 's/ /\n/g'   sed -e '/^$/d' > $file.tok
done
Extracting the most representative keywords
#!/usr/bin/python
import sys, math
def read_tokens(file):
    "Read all the tokens from one file"
    return [ line[:-1] for line in open(file) ]
# Read all the "documents"
docs = [ read_tokens(file) for file in sys.argv[1:] ]
# Aggregate token counts
aggregated =  
for d in docs:
    for t in d:
        if t in aggregated:
            aggregated[t] += 1
        else:
            aggregated[t] = 1
def tfidf(doc, tok):
    "Compute TFIDF score of a token in a document"
    return doc.count(tok) * math.log(float(len(docs)) / aggregated[tok])
# Output the top 5 tokens by TFIDF for every document
for name, doc in zip(sys.argv[1:], docs):
    print name, sorted(set(doc), key=lambda tok: tfidf(doc, tok), reverse=True)[:5]
Errata Jacobo suggests to use lynx -dump -nolist or w3m -dump for a more tokenizer-friendly text expansion.

8 February 2007

Gustavo Franco: Linspire switches from Debian to Ubuntu^WDebian

Canonical and Linspire announced a technology parternship today. I think it doesn't mean much for Linspire and Freespire success since it's basically a switch from Debian to Debian. Ok, maybe less work to merge bleeding edge stuff into Linspire products but not really mind blowing.

What's really impressive on the deal is the CNR usage in Ubuntu. I believe they're gonna use the CNR regular client for the next release for commercial software, but i bet that in the second semester will push to a integration with the www.cnr.com or a cnr.ubuntu.com. It means a lot to Canonical and Linspire companies and Ubuntu, Linspire and Freespire users. Read more about my view on what could be coming from this CNR on the web thing.

After cnr.com launch, the missing piece will be Red Hat and/or (Open)SuSE come up with a similar service providing a way to upstream developers (maybe through sf.net and similar services) distribute development snapshots or releases not verified (signed if you want) by distributions. It will pave the way to turn the Linux software distribution and installation easier than ever. The shame is that Debian isn't playing a major role on this silent move.

5 February 2007

Gustavo Franco: Debian Custom Search - The Cabal

Update (05/1): The cabal now emphasize Debian related websites (even the most obscure ones) but also return results to any other topic. I'm sure it's better than Google vanilla for Debian contributors, developers and dedicated users. Give it a try. ;-)

Update (02/1): OpenSearch support has been added. In other words if you're using Firefox or IE7+ (ouch!) add The Cabal in your browser now.Go to The Cabal page and click on your search engines box on top right, you will see "Add The Cabal" on the list.

I've just added a Debian related custom search engine to my people.d.o page. Actually it works using Google Custom Search Engine, but i plan to add Yahoo Search Engine Builder to the mix. The search engine is called "The Cabal".

What it is:
What it isn't:
What is coming?
Search examples:
Suggestions and feedback about how you are using the search are welcome.

1 February 2007

Gustavo Franco: Yes, it runs linux

In a boring day with some spare hours and influenced by Amaya's post, i've decided to brick^W install ipodlinux on my ipod mini 4gb after i've found that both Apple's UI and podzilla (ipodlinux UI) can coexist.

I'm impressed with the games, menus and podzilla usability but the audio player sucks. They did one thing right adding the album information and not only the artist / music that is playing. The problem is that the Song X of XXX is on the same block and you end up with the album information below the progress bar, really buggy.

podzilla came with a file browser and some friends were impressed when reading /proc/version and /proc/cpuinfo output. The funny dialog of the day was:
Co-worker: "Is your ipod running java?"
Me: "No, it runs Linux and a user interface called podzilla without overwriting the Apple's UI. The Linux flavoured one contains more games and is modular. I'm gonna check if i can run iboy, a game boy emulator over that"
Co-worker: "Are you serious? Linux is cool!"

oh, the humanity (and the game industry)...

29 January 2007

Gustavo Franco: Weird results

Your results:
You are The Joker


































The Joker
65%
Venom
53%
Mr. Freeze
49%
Riddler
49%
Dark Phoenix
49%
Dr. Doom
45%
Magneto
42%
Lex Luthor
40%
Green Goblin
38%
Apocalypse
38%
Two-Face
38%
Juggernaut
34%
Mystique
30%
Kingpin
29%
Catwoman
26%
Poison Ivy
15%
The Clown Prince of Crime. You are a brilliant mastermind but are criminally insane. You love to joke around while accomplishing the task at hand.


Click here to take the "Which Super Villain am I?" quiz...

25 January 2007

Gustavo Franco: The truth that hurts

The follow up of my previous blog post: FLOSS in Brazil turns out to be a joke, was published today on Linux.com written by Bruce Byfield, with the name: Brazil's FOSS utopia image at risk.

Some of those who simple ignored my blog post are the ones calling and mailling me now. I don't like answer calls during the workhours, i prefer answer emails and i'm doing that a lot lately. I'm glad that Carlos Morimoto (Kurumin fame) mailed me open to discuss changes in their website and distribution to inform better their users what's free software into Kurumin distribution, where's the source code, what exacly isn't free software and the reasons. Let me inform you that Kurumin isn't maintained by a company as Bruce wrote, the only error in the article so far, IMHO.

What about the free software initiatives in your country? Do they really fit with what the gov't is spreading everywhere over the press? Do they really fit with what people write on their company website? Let the world know the truth, even if that hurts.

Update: I've just visited plurall.net website and some hours after the Linux.com article, that was translated and published in some Linux related brazilian websites. They managed to setup a svn repository and put the code there. The announce into their site states in Portuguese "Finally, after some technical problems we've published the Plurall source code at: http://svn.plurall.net/plurall_boot_server". Looking into the source now...

24 January 2007

Gustavo Franco: Click and Run

Linspire will launch in the 2nd quarter of the year a interesting service: Click and Run - their 'linux software ready to go' warehouse, into the web. The site code and related stuff are proprietary, the thing they call a plugin (it isn't a new package manager and not a browser plugin) to run into the users machine will (or already is?) be free software. The site will deliver software for Debian, Fedora, Freespire, Linspire, OpenSuSE and Ubuntu.

I had two ideas based on their service, considering that the plugin software is quite good and reliable (i've no idea yet):

- non-free.debian.net - What if we launch a web service listing the packages into non-free and let the users install it through a simplified Click and Run plugin (we don't need multiple package managers support) ? That's clear we need to consider individual package and system upgrades, but i bet Linspire did it already. With this in mind, the new service would avoid the user need to edit the sources.list, learn how a package manager works and stuff like that. Those with non geek friends using linux when asked "How do i install java?" could answer "Go to non-free.debian.net and install it from there". It drives me to a strange world...

- CNR's everywhere - Consider a world where Red Hat put Red Hat Network to work over Fedora packages with a sane API to publish package metadata information (eg.: yet another rss2 extension) and the packages itself (we still can use http and ftp), we tune packages.d.o to do the same and there we go for others distributions. With a stable enough Click and Run "plugin" from Linspire we could sit and watch people building their own Click and Run based services providing signed software right from the projects, non-free software from partners, software by subscription, games, making profit from ads and more. I think that the API standardization could be something interesting to Linux Foundation try to push, while Click and Run would give the community the "plugin"and benefit from being the first and jumping on this new thing first. Thoughts?

With or without CNR's everywhere, i would still give non-free.debian.net a try since we don't need the CNR plugin too, but we can wait until the 2nd quarter and organize the ideas better. Volunteers?

16 January 2007

Gustavo Franco: debconf in US sooner than later?

One can dream, considering that Obama started a Presidential Exploratory Committee. It's too early, but with or without him running for president i wish the world^W USA a better president.

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