On Sun, Sep 26, 2010 at 11:55 AM, Emily Shaw <memilyrae(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm Stephen Shaw's (decriptor) wife and I can work on it if you'd like.
> Thanks for the website...it'll be very helpful!
> Emily Shaw
> memilyrae
>
>
> On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 5:31 AM, Kostas Koud <warlordfff(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> I've read all you said and I saw the cheat sheets you post,after
>> that I thought that the cube might not have enough sides and if Fedora
>> made it maybe we should try and make something slightly different like
>> a d8 or a d12, so I looked for paper dices,I found some things but
>> the best I found was at http://www.dicecollector.com/MY_PAPER.HTM .
>> Unfortunately I can't process it enough to make something beautiful
>> and practical so if someone can do something it would be nice.
>> Kostas "Warlordfff" Koudaras
>>
>> 2010/9/21 RICARDO CHUNG <ricardo.a.chung(a)gmail.com>
>> >
>> > On Mon, Sep 20, 2010 at 5:00 AM, Chuck Payne <terrorpup(a)gmail.com>
>> > wrote:
>> > > On Sun, Sep 19, 2010 at 11:55 PM, Stephen Shaw <sshaw(a)decriptor.com>
>> > > wrote:
>> > >>> I have a pdf that I create for South East Linux Fest based on 11.2,
>> > >>> I
>> > >>> need to update to 11.3, but it also needs the touch of some better
>> > >>> at
>> > >>> graphic design. I made this to go along with the zypper hands outs
>> > >>> we
>> > >>> have.
>> > >>>
>> > >>
>> > >> I'll pass this on to my wife and see what see can do with it.
>> > >>
>> > >> Cheers,
>> > >> Stephen
>> > >>
>> > >> PS Since my wife isn't a linux person, any suggestions, comments, etc
>> > >> would be very useful. (She is in the CC)
>> > >>
>> > >
>> > > AJ, Asked me to post to the wiki. I will try to get it up there today
>> > > along with the Open Office Doc.
>> > >
>> > > --
>> > > -----------------------------------------
>> > > Discover it! Enjoy it! Share it! openSUSE Linux.
>> > > -----------------------------------------
>> > > openSUSE -- en.opensuse.org/User:Terrorpup
>> > > openSUSE Ambassador/openSUSE Member
>> > > skype,twiiter,identica,friendfeed -- terrorpup
>> > > freenode(irc) --terrorpup/lupinstein
>> > >
>> > > Have you tried SUSE Studio? Need to create a Live CD, an app you want
>> > > to package and distribute , or create your own linux distro. Give SUSE
>> > > Studio a try. www.susestudio.com.
>> > > --
>> > > To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-marketing+unsubscribe(a)opensuse.org
>> > > For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-marketing+help(a)opensuse.org
>> > >
>> > >
>> >
>> > Hey
>> >
>> > opeSUSE has Zypper Cheat Sheet at
>> > http://old-en.opensuse.org/Zypper/Usage
>> > Can we make a new design like that F Cube or maybe a better other
>> > polygon.
>> >
>> > Best,
>> >
>> > --
>> > Ricardo A. Chung | openSUSE Linux Ambassador
>> >
>> > http://twitter.com/amon0thoth1
>> > http://amon0thoth1.blogspot.com/
>> > http://www.facebook.com/pages/openSUSE-Panama-Users-Group/326325121542
>> > --
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>> >
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> me I am not me
>
>
Guys,
I will add this up on the wiki later today, but here again is my pdf
and the open office doc I used to create it.
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-----------------------------------------
Discover it! Enjoy it! Share it! openSUSE Linux.
-----------------------------------------
openSUSE -- en.opensuse.org/User:Terrorpup
openSUSE Ambassador/openSUSE Member
skype,twiiter,identica,friendfeed -- terrorpup
freenode(irc) --terrorpup/lupinstein
Have you tried SUSE Studio? Need to create a Live CD, an app you want
to package and distribute , or create your own linux distro. Give SUSE
Studio a try. www.susestudio.com.
Hi all,
Some days ago on the IRC it poped out that I would be writing a small
article for openSUSE Build Service.
In the past days I've took the opportunity to take a closer look into
OBS from a scope that isn't mine, the one from a developer/packager.
I've signed up for the opensuse-buildservice list, picked a cool
soundtrack (Moderat/Aparat/Paul Kalkbrenner), and two packages.
notify-osd > a replacement for notification-daemon[1], and to make it
more interesting picked up leolik patch[2] alongside, which has been
criticized hard by Mark Shuttleworth. This patch allows the bubble of
notify-osd to be customized by the user, functionality that Shuttleworth
doesn't want out off the box in Ubuntu. A good candidate for all the
other distro's, lets make the difference ;)
notifyconf[3] > A small tool to customize notify-osd written in Qt (go
figure that out).
I've struggled, squeeled, but also conquered and the packages in my
home repo[4].
I'm going to pick a cool project and then try to make them through to
openSUSE:Contrib. During all this process I've been taking notes,
gimping for help here and there and checking out the problems usually
people have and making notes of the documents people point to me.
Once I've finished the process, getting my packages approved or not
into the repo, I'll start scribing the article (I would assume depending
on answering times this would take 1 or 2 days more).
So here's the deal:
* Andreas, want to be my wingman on this? I am aware you have in your
possession some interviews to be processed. We can use them. I would
also need a small talk over IRC if possible (10/20 minutes) so I know
how you want to present OBS, to whom you want it to be appealing to, and
pretty much the stuff you want to promote. For the 'new user' experience
I'll base it on my own adventure. Also any interesting information you
can provide would be great.
* Marketing Team, is it possible that we create a simple Marketing
Banner/Badge, whatever to create a wiki template for Marketing articles?
(flag the article, print the article and inform the readers our
Marketing is alive and kickin').
* Artwork Team, could you provide such banner?
* Wiki Team, could we have such template? I would also like to know
what would be the best place to file this article on the current wiki
structure.
* Editorial Powers, need someone to review it later, and to make it
more english friendly.
I have really no schedule for this (only proves that I'm a poor
marketeer), but I would point for a final release soon before the
conference (as it can be used in the conference).
I'm running some extra qualitative research also through some
interviews with current packagers/contributors to get some more material
to support some claims.
PiratePad coming soon.
Nelson
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Folks,
SCALE (Southern California Linux Expo) Call for Papers is now open until
December 13, 2010. SCALE will be in Los Angeles February 25-27, 2011.
I would encourage anyone interested in giving talks about openSUSE to
submit their papers to this event. There's lots to talk about openSUSE,
so don't be shy!
Here's the link.
http://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale9x/blog/scale-9x-call-papers
Also of interesting notice is that SCALE will offer tutorial sessions as
well. A suggestion for any OBS experts out there, perhaps we can
organize a tutorial session showing how to use OBS to package for
different distros, and not just openSUSE?
At some point in the coming months, we'll also see about setting up an
openSUSE booth and will welcome volunteers to support the booth.
Thanks,
Bryen M Yunashko
openSUSE Board Member
openSUSE Marketing Team lead
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Dear friends,
I have made a page describing the tasks to do for the openSUSE conference. Input is welcome, especially of the kind "I will do that". IOW feel free to add things, especially if it's your name behind a task!
'on the ground', as in at the conference, we need at least 5-7 peeps to cover the tracks, make good photo's for flickr and articles and take care of the press. Who feels up for it?
Check the plan:
http://piratepad.net/H9whQFD9wU
Cheers
Jos
Argh, the obs team is too fast for us.
This is the internal announcement on the obs mailing list - we can make the
official one on news.o.o any time.
Carlos, Isabel, how can we help you?
Andreas
---------- Forwarded Message ----------
Subject: [opensuse-buildservice] OBS 2.1 Beta 1 released
Date: Wednesday 22 September 2010, 14:38:36
From: Adrian Schröter <adrian(a)suse.de>
To: opensuse-buildservice(a)opensuse.org
OBS 2.1 Beta 1 is available
===========================
As usual packages can be found inside of the openSUSE:Tools:Unstable
project of OBS and its repositories. The correct version tag for the packages
and inside git is 2.0.103 for this release:
http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/Tools:/Unstable/
Appliances can be accessed via this wiki page as usual:
http://en.opensuse.org/Build_Service/OBS-Appliance
Appliance users can just update the appliance image or the packages and
reboot for ugrading their instance. Others need to read the
"README.UPDATERS" file with information about manual updating the server.
There is also a new media, called obs-server-install inside of
http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/openSUSE:/Tools:/Unstable/images/…
which can be used to install an entire OBS server from scratch to hard disc.
Special thanks go to LinuxFoundation, Intel and Nokia for their contributions
to this release.
We plan to release 2.1 Final in about 2 weeks. The following is an extract of
the release notes with informations about the new features:
Features:
=========
* web interface improvements:
- Linked projects and packages are shown if existing.
- Source Service Editor can be used to add or remove source services.
Also to edit each service parameters and to trigger a run.
- Merged sources of linked packages can be shown and the merged files can be
edited.
- New submit requests can be created.
- Existing repository configuration can be edited. Add or remove pathes or
architectures.
- Additional reviews by users or groups can be added to requests. The
reviews
can be processed as well in web interface.
- Displayed load diagrams can be configured to any architecture now.
- Source history and commit view has been added.
* api
- Support Clone and supersed of existing requests. "osc rq clone" can be
used
to clone packages from an existing request. When submitting these cloned
packages the original request gets superseded.
- api: Improved LDAP support updating user information from LDAP server
(This functionality has been provided by Intel)
- Read access control for package sources. New created projects or packages
can get the "<sourceaccess>" flag to hide any access to the sources of a
package.
This includes access to the source files, source and debug packages and
build log.
(This functionality has been provided by the LinuxFoundation)
* backend:
- Source services to checkout from external SCM repositories have been
added.
This includes also necessary source services to compress tar balls, use
spec/dsc
files out of them or to update the version in spec/dsc files.
- Accepted submit request store the exact merged versions to allow later
tracking
of the requests. osc and the web interface can show now the diffs of
accepted requests
as result.
- aggregate allows to skip source packages now.
(Functionality has been provided by Nokia).
- File provides can be mapped to packages now in prjconf
- GPG sign key can get modifed with increased expiration date
- scheduler kills building jobs when switching to blocked/excluded/disabled
state
- Cross Build support for MIPS architecture
(Functionality has been provided by LinuxFoundation)
Changes:
========
* It is recommended to switch to MySQL database for the webui. Please see
README.UPDATERS for details.
--
Adrian Schroeter
SUSE Linux Products GmbH
email: adrian(a)suse.de
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-----------------------------------------
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Twitter: jaegerandi | Identica: jaegerandi
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Hi,
*In case of need* because - as Stathis mentioned - many times we' ll
probably have the opportunity to present openSUSE in schools and other
organizations that may be somewhat suspicious about "the 'hacker' in
front", what is the official bureau of the openSUSE community,
recognized by law in the European Union by which we could have a
signature over a piece of paper?
In case there is not one, at who do we go for this? Novell?
Thank you
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Hello there,
I was thinking that having an openSUSE Handbook (or handbuch ;) in pdf format
ready to be downloaded, printed and even ready to be sent to a publishing
company is a good idea.
So, here's my proposal:
First, we would have to make a list of topics to be included and organise them
in chapters, like the following draft:
******************************
The openSUSE Handbook
******************************
Introduction
- What's the openSUSE project?
- What's openSUSE?
Installing openSUSE
- Different types of install methods
- AutoYaST
Installing applications
- Using 1-click
- Using YaST
- Using zypper
Desktop environments
- An introduction to DEs (KDE, GNOME, XFCE, LXDE).
- Enabling proprietary drivers (ATI, NVIDIA)
- Multimedia
- Printing
- Games
System administration
- Introduction to the command line
- Networking
- Security
- Storage
- Virtualization
- Keeping openSUSE up-to-date
- Upgrading openSUSE
Servers
- Apache and lighttpd
- MySQL and PostgreSQL
- Postfix
- BIND
- Samba
- CUPS
etc
Other openSUSE Technologies
- Build Service
- SUSE Studio
- KIWI
Second, we would have to write about those topics not included in the wiki and
review those already written. That way we would have more relevant bits in
both the wiki and handbook. Each topic doesn't have to be 100 page long ;-)
And last but not least we would have to put all the pieces together and make
it available in pdf.
Drawbacks:
We would need to update some of its contents for each openSUSE release.
It needs more than two people to make it happen ;-)
On the other hand, I think that the handbook would make openSUSE more
"visible" and a bit more "ready to use."
Comments and suggestions are welcome! :-)
Cheers,
--
Javier Llorente
I'm going to be working on some custom appliances using SUSE Studio. I love the susedoc style sheets but I'm not clear on the usage requirements and wanted to make sure that I can use susedoc to create manuals for my appliances that look exactly like the actual openSUSE manuals. I know the code for susedoc is GPL but are there some documentation guidelines for folks like me that have this type of project in mind?
Thank you.
Cheers,
Christian Bryant, UCLA Health System
Project Manager, IT Operations
Medical Information Technology Services (MITS)
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It all started a few days ago when I translated in Greek Robert Lihm's
flyer and asked for the source files in order to print it. Jos told me
that this flyer was good but a little confused and asked me if I could
push people to create two flyers that have clearer target points,one
for the potential contributors and another one for unsuspecting users.
Depending the crowd we make our presentation to give the right flyer
so that everyone would take the information he/she needs.
Now I would like your help and your contribution on this one,we need
the text to fulfill each flyer. So I opened two Etherpads in order
each one of you to write down his/her thoughts
You can find the Potential contributor flyer at
http://doc.etherpad.org/I05Lp5I9yZ and the unsuspecting user flyer at
http://ietherpad.com/nDU83dbe98
My opinion is to keep Robert Lihms layout from the flyer he created
for both flyers because I find it great.
You can find Roberts Flyer at :
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/294274/opensuse/PR-Kit/oS-Project-Flyer-V5b.pdf
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Moin,
I updated/extended the "Junior Job" page [1] and like to get your feedback or
your edits on the page.
Purpose of the page is to give a low level entry point to people with basic
technical knowledge interested in openSUSE. Therefor I'd like to give a short
list of todo's and not a detailed one.
Best
M
[1] http://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Junior_jobs
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