February 11th, 2009
Xfce 4.6 Release Candidate 1 is now in the Jaunty archive! I just upgraded to Jaunty (Hardy -> Intrepid -> Jaunty) the other day and am really digging the new version of Xfce4!
One of my favourite new features is the ability to hide certain notification icons in the notification tray.

If you click the little arrow button, it’ll expand to show everything.
The properties dialogue looks very sharp IMHO:

Another big change is the settings stuff. Gone is MCS and here is xfconfd! They’ve also revamped the GUI for the settings:


W00T!
More screenshots soon!
Big thanks to Lionel Le Folgoc, Jerome Guelfucc, Michael Casadevall, and the Debian Xfce team! 
Posted in Development, Xubuntu | 9 Comments »
January 16th, 2009
JoeP wrote…My problem with the whole story was the news reporters. I can understand the lady not knowing what Ubuntu is, and that it even has Open Office already installed. I just got the feeling that the reporters were trying to cast Ubuntu in a bad light, or as a sub par offering from Dell. Maybe I am too thin skinned, but I felt the reporting was very bad. But that being said now most people (who are not FOSS users) that see the story will see Ubuntu/Linux as something trying to rip off Windows, and the people who do use it as a bunch of hateful/mean spirited immature people.
JoeP: The original story and follow-up blog post was very positive for Ubuntu in my opinion. The premise was that “Someone got an operating system they didn’t expect from Dell but in the end everything turned out well: the school said that their courses will work with any operating system and Verizon said they would send out a technician to help her.”. The bottom line: Ubuntu worked just fine, she just needed some help and hey… this looks pretty cool and its free!!
However now they followed up with how mean people were in response to a story that wasn’t even really about Ubuntu. Do you think those folk at the News Station or who heard about Ubuntu via this news story are going to want to try Ubuntu now? They’re going to think that they won’t be able to get help because they’ll be called “stupid”, “lazy”, and other mean names!!! People who made rude, mean comments have done a horrible disservice to Ubuntu and Linux at large! Those people are the true “Windows Robots”.
Posted in Community | 1 Comment »
January 15th, 2009
I’m sure most of us have heard about the girl who dropped out of college because she had trouble using Ubuntu. All I have to say is that I’m incredibly disappointed to hear about the reaction of some folks. Sending hate mail, personally attacking the young lady, etc. etc. isn’t very Ubuntu like at all nor very productive.
So very disappointed… : - (
Posted in Community | 4 Comments »
January 14th, 2009
Thanks to Mario Limonciello for fixing the Xfce4 & GKD issue. It turns out that xfce4-session starts gnome-keyring-daemon when “Launch gnome services” is enabled. The problem is that a pam module also tries to start gnome-keyring-daemon now (and correctly). By patching xfce4-session to no longer start gnome-keyring-daemon, the issue is resolved. 
Posted in Development, Xubuntu | No Comments »
January 12th, 2009
Hello Folks,
Just a quick note to those testing the development version of Xubuntu and other flavours/derivitives that make use of Xfce4. It appears that the new version of gnome-keyring breaks the desktop and prevents you from getting to your desktop. The current fix for those of you using the development version is to simply downgrade to the previous version for gnome-keyring, libgnome-keyring0, libgp11-0, and libpam-gnome-keyring until we get this fixed.
Cheers! 
Posted in Development, Xubuntu | 1 Comment »
December 22nd, 2008
At the Xubuntu Meeting held this past Saturday, the few of us who attended (all, except for myself, for their first time) the Ubuntu Developer Summit shared our experiences:
<cody-somerville> Unfortunately I didn't get to participate in the all the great sessions as much as
I would have liked on a count of being sick most of UDS, a close friend dying while I was
down in San Francisco :(, and being busy with OEM Services stuff. However, from the
sessions I did participate in and the time I was able to spend with the folks from the Xubuntu
community, I'd say overall it was a very productive get together.
<cody-somerville> We discussed a number of important issues, built friendships, got a better
understanding for how each other work (specifically with regards to Xfce4, thanks to
Jannis and Pasi for making the long trip), and fleshed out some ideas for Jaunty
<cody-somerville> Among our accomplishments at UDS, we: fleshed out a first draft roadmap
for Jaunty, discussed artwork for Jaunty, discussed how to grow the Xubuntu community,
and plans for xfce 4.6 in Jaunty
<cody-somerville> The jist of our discussions are documented in gobby documents at gobby.ubuntu.com
I'm hoping to turn them into specs (or get people to volunteer to turn them into specs)
-------------------
<knome> I think it was really great to meet the guys at UDS and we definitely were productive. Also
it was nice to get in touch with the Ubuntu community in general to make some connections with
other artists and teams which might be able to help us.
<knome> Even if Cody wasn't available all times, we got work done and things
going forward - and fast.
-------------------
<JPohlmann> So, first of all it was great meeting (almost) everybody and being able to discuss face-to-face.
I think after the docs session, we have a rough idea in mind on how this collaboration could work at
least. I'm really hoping that we can form a joint team for that.
<JPohlmann> One thing that clearly needs more discussion is *how* we want the documentation to be
written and with which technologies.
<JPohlmann> We also discussed the main complaints in Xubuntu and how to solve them for jaunty, like
disappearing panels, non-fd.o-compliant menu, samba/network browsing in Thunar etc.
<JPohlmann> I think NCommander started to backport Xfce 4.4.3 to intrepid
<JPohlmann> And the idea to port the user switcher applet to the xfce panel came up. Not sure who's
going to work on that though
<JPohlmann> I guess that's it.
-------------------
NCommander was unavailable
The rest of the meeting minutes follow:
- Charlie Kravetz joined the Xubuntu Team as the Xubuntu QA Lead. Charlie will head up our QA, bug triage, and image candidate testing efforts.
- Charlie Kravetz accepted the action to send reminders to the mailing list about upcoming test days; improving the test cases on the wiki; and working with the Ubuntu QA team to resolve some minor issues with the QA ISO Tracker website.
- It was agreed that having a list of people on the wiki who we know can perform certain tests (ie. amd64) would be a good idea. Charlie Kravetz, by default, accepted this action item.
- Jerome announced a new release of xfce4-screenshooter plugin was upcoming.
- Jim Campbell accepted the action of scheduling a meeting to discuss documentation efforts for Jaunty.
- General consensus was reached on the proposed Jaunty roadmap. Cody Somerville accepted the action of sending out an e-mail detailing the roadmap to the mailing list.
- A meeting schedule heuristic was agreed on and Jim accepted the task of drafting the actual schedule:
<cody-somerville> I propose an official meeting monthly
<cody-somerville> but I encourage sub-teams to get together as often as they'd like
<cody-somerville> and I definitely encourage spontaneous meetings in #xubuntu-devel when ever people fancy
-------------------
<j1mc> We'll move them to Sundays and see how things work. I'll try to avoid major holiday weekends.
Posted in Xubuntu | No Comments »
December 8th, 2008
A cerebral aneurysm or brain aneurysm is a cerebrovascular disorder in which weakness in the wall of a cerebral artery or vein causes a localized dilation or ballooning of the blood vessel. A disorder one would never imagine would take the life of a friend so young. We thought we were invincible, once again we’re proven wrong.
Forever Young
A gentle wind blew cross the land
Reaching out to take a hand
For on the winds the angels came
Calling out your name.
Left behind, the people’s tears
Loving memories of the years
Of joy and love, a life too short.
On angel’s wings, a heavenly flight
The journey home, towards the light
To those who weep, a life is gone
Forever young, a sweet fawn.
Posted in Other | No Comments »
October 27th, 2008
We’re oh-so-close to Intrepid Ibex being released and I’m most certainly feeling the excitement building. This is the first full release cycle as the Xubuntu Project Leader and I must admit that I’ve learnt a lot about being a leader, managing goals and objectives, herding sheep (joking), developing community spirit, and making touchy decisions. In reflection, what I find the most exciting is the growth and maturity we’ve seen in the Xubuntu community over the last six months. We’ve gone from two to three active contributors to over ten! I can only imaging that we’ll continue to see the number of contributors to Xubuntu increase in Jaunty - hopefully at a similar rate. For those interested, a great way to get started is to hang out in #xubuntu-devel on Freenode and help test our cds in preperation of the release.
As for the actual product, Xubuntu 8.10 for the most part will be a more polished version of Xubuntu 8.04 with our biggest ticket item being an improved multimedia experience. We’ve made it easier to not only enjoy your music but also to manage your collection with the Listen Media Player. What about Samba you ask? Unfortunately it didn’t quite get finished in *time* but it did get finished and will be included in Jaunty. I imagine we’ll provide a backport or something similar within a few shorts weeks for Intrepid.
Looking forward to Jaunty, I’m pumped (and hope you are too, w00t w00t!). We’ve already got some great brainstorming going on and Xfce 4.6 will most definitely be ready for Jaunty.I’ll be sure to blog more about our plans for Jaunty once the Jaunty release cycle begins.
Posted in Development, Community, Xubuntu | No Comments »
October 9th, 2008
Wow. The Xubuntu Hug Day was a *huge* success. Xfce4 developers, Xubuntu developers, Debian folk, and members of the Xubuntu and Ubuntu community all came out to help test and iron out bugs in the Xubuntu beta. For our first hug day, I’m very happy and very impressed with the number of participants and bugs tackled. Huge Kudos to Charlie Kravetz for heading the initiative and doing an excellent job.
The most exciting part of it all is that a number of folks who used the hug day as an opportunity to get involved for the first time haven’t stopped! Seeing such growth in the contributing Xubuntu community is exciting and very encouraging.
Anyhow, Kudos to everyone who took part! I’m sure we’ll do these types of events more often! 
Posted in Community, Xubuntu | 3 Comments »
October 4th, 2008
Posted in Xubuntu | 2 Comments »