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indicator-{session,network}

December 9th, 2010 by

I’ve manage to hammer in 2 more indicators.

Indicator-session provides a quick and easy method to manage your GNOME session. The options are pretty intuitive and it works ok so far. A simple screenshot.

Then we have also indicator-network which was a bit more problematic to build and required a couple of very ugly quick fixes. Though I’ve built a package for it and it’s dependencies (including The Connection Manager). My concerns about it:

* It’s a piece of software under heavy development;
* The user configuration interface is very fuzzy and provides cool clear text passwords for LAN;
* nm-applet is far superior;
* Requires ‘connection manager’ – Connection Manager is a pretty cool application, and it’s compat mode with Network Manager makes it’s integration pretty easy… Though ‘connection manager’ seemed to be an outstanding piece of software, I’m not going through all the trouble to package and integrate it in openSUSE (integration should be pretty fast, just a init script, since it allows compat mode with Network Manager).

I personally don’t like this network indicator… Though I’ve packaged it,  I’ve decided not to share it because of 4 points above. I really don’t see anything positive about having it for openSUSE users, it would most likely turn their GNOME experience into something a bit fuzzy.

Either way… that’s how it looks…

Indicator ME has landed!

December 7th, 2010 by

The first package I pushed to openSUSE was Notify OSD (Canonicals Notification Agent/Bubble) with a small patch for extended features (skinning/theming) maintained by Roman Sukochev. This patch is popular and wasn’t merged with Notify OSD because it ‘breaks’ the spec of Notify OSD that states it shouldn’t be skinnable/themable on Ubuntu.

Now I’ve packaged a lot of dependencies… cracked and patched GTK with a patch taken from Ubuntu, spended hours of mind crushing frustration…. but finally it has landed! The first ‘Indicator’ has landed… Often known as “Ubuntu Me Menu”, under openSUSE it will be known as ‘indicator-me’.

This screenshot was taken on openSUSE Factory 11.4 Milestone 4. It’s a clean install with Sonar and the only tweak is the Faenza-Dark icon theme, which I also packaged and pushed to openSUSE:Contrib.

Top right corner… Indicator ME on openSUSE. It works… I won’t backport it and will only maintain it from 11.4 forward. I’m doing this for personal reasons, mainly to become an alternative on a localized openSUSE Spin that will be named ‘openSUSE IBERIA’, which was already taken into openSUSE-Project by Javier Llorente.

The main reason to bring this to openSUSE and into IBERIA is tightly related to the fact that most people on the Iberian Peninsula use Ubuntu, so we find the best approach possible to offer something as close as Ubuntu and hopefully even a better offer when it comes to localization. We don’t want to make of openSUSE a ‘clone’ of Ubuntu, instead we want to make the openSUSE experience more close to what people already use.

I’m also going to post a small pic of the same software, this time with Canonical’s Radiance Theme, which introduces a small ‘tab’ like visual on the bar. This theme is awesome… regardless of what people think of Ubuntu and Canonical… This is the kind of polishing that makes Canonical successful, not just the ‘marketing’ many point and even despise.

Indicator ME as landed… soon others will follow… My plans are to submit this pieces of software to GNOME:Apps, and not to push as default, but instead offer them at the distance of a ‘zypper in package’ to the openSUSE users out there. And at the same time, since the libraries behind it are also packaged… be more attractive to developers who might want to use them. I see no loss neither an identity crisis on openSUSE by providing more packages and alternative software to improve users Desktop experience…

Future work (after indicators):
* Synapse Launcher;
* Unity (depending on some wild dependencies and some progress in understanding cmake).

A new aeon, a new team of ambassadors!

December 6th, 2010 by

For a long time that I actively search the Portuguese Ambassadors… unfortunately I was unable to find them. I’ve learned once with someone which is very dear to me a single line that ended up by translating one great universal truth: “Stopping is dying”.

This afternoon, I’ve traveled northeast to the beautiful city of Oliveira de Azemeis, where I’ve met one of the unknown faces of the Portuguese openSUSE Community, João Matias. We’ve had a small chat about several topics… amongst them:

* OBS – openSUSE Build Service – howto, examples and how useful it can be for students projects!
* University Campus – Event creaton… how openSUSE can represent itself on 3rd parties events inside of the campus;
* Concerns about the growth of the Portuguese Community;
* Ambassadors or Campus Activists?
* The new ‘Portuguese’ Forum at forums.opensuse.org (Special Thanks to Jim Henderson and the Forums Team for their outstanding guidance during the submission process);
* Christmas Dinner @ 11th December and hot-topics.

We look forward to a smiling future full of work and hopefully with a stronger openSUSE presence in the Portuguese University Campus.

Unity (maybe) on Fedora

December 5th, 2010 by

According to this post by Adam Williamson (Fedora QA), Unity might actually land on Fedora.

Some time ago, I’ve dropped into openSUSE-GNOME mailing list an email regarding this topic, and the need that we openSUSE have regarding to protect a possible risk of having our users migrating to Ubuntu to check out Unity. The downside of openSUSE is the fact that we might be limited by manpower.

To me, this sounds the most sane strategy to promote a vertical defense of our community. Adam Williamson and Fedora seem to have acknowledged that it is important to provide users with software so that they do not feel the rush or need to change vendor to check out a new piece of software, specially when it’s something already strong in name as Unity.

From my side… I’ve started to work on building a test repository for Ubuntu stuff… currently I’ve got most dependencies already ready for Factory, including a gtk+ version with the patches to enable some functionality required for the Ubuntu Indicators.

If ‘openSUSE IBERIA’ happens to happen… it’s GNOME version will be very close to Ubuntu (and in some cases even featuring extended functionality, like GDM Configuration tool, Notify-OSD skinning, amongst other small goodies). Why to build something close to Ubuntu? EASY ANSWER! PORTUGAL AND SPAIN are dominated by Ubuntu… by providing something very close to the Ubuntu experience we might become more attractive to those users and establish positive synergies to attack their user base! YES, we, proud Portuguese and Spanish are packing out stuff to take the fight to the streets! Which reminds me of an old English saying:

“Españoles en la mar quiero. Y si es en tierra, San Jorge nos proteja…” (The spanish we want on the sea. If in land we find them, Saint George protect us…”


s/Williams/Williamson
Many apologies for the mistake.

Christmas Dinner: 11th December @ Aveiro, Portugal

December 2nd, 2010 by

On the next 11th of November the Portuguese enthusiasts are meeting up for a friendly Christmas Dinner in the beautiful city of Aveiro in the Silver Coast of Portugal (Litoral Center, the famous Aveiro Geographical Delta, the biggest natural geographical delta in Europe).

This isn’t a formal meeting, but instead an effort to get the existing enthusiasts to know themselves personally, to have some fun and trade ideas. During our Christmas Dinner we expect to receive input from our enthusiasts regarding the assembly of a Portuguese Task Force to handle our representation in the openSUSE International Community.

Though we don’t have a stone set script for the topics some of us would like to approach, I would like at least to approach the following ones:

* openSUSE Iberia – When I was superficially enrolled with the Fedora Project, I’ve tried to rebuild the Portuguese Community associated with the Spanish Community. It didn’t happened back then, but I rejoiced in happiness when this possibility was approached by Javier Lorentte and directed to Carlos Gonçalves. I am a great supporter of such initiative for the following reasons:

– Geography stands as an Opportunity; Both Portugal and Spain are the two countries on the ‘Peninsula Iberica’ (Iberian Peninsula) and share at least the last 1000 years of history. By working together we can accomplish outstanding deeds, specially related to Events and promotion.

– Culture stands as an Opportunity; Culturally speaking, Portugal and Spain are very similar in many ways and share the last 1000 years of History. Both countries present a strong Roman Catholic background, this means that societies behaviors, values and identity are pretty much shared between us. The language itself becomes friendly as most Spanish and Portuguese can actually dialog in a mix of our languages. For example the Portuguese language was born from Galaic-Portuguese, which is also the root of the language spoken in Galicia (Spain).

I look forward to see what the other Portuguese enthusiasts have to say about this issue and how we can work alongside with the Spanish enthusiasts to expand openSUSE in the Iberian Peninsula. Additionally I would like also to make people sensible to the fact that if this happens, the Portuguese crew is still committed to work with our Brazilian friends and also work when possible with them to help in any way we can to the deployment and promotion of openSUSE in Brazil and South Americas. I also hope to see the Spanish community working alongside with their South American counter-parts.

DISCLAIMER: Though I personally encourage such initiative and would love to see it happen, I do have to recon that it also depends on the Spanish Community, and their concerns are as much important as our own. I hope the vast majority of the Spanish Community and Portuguese Community can figure out a good way to develop this idea in the best interest of all.

Image By: Javier Llorente

* Ambassadors Team; I’m also expecting to approach this sensitive issue and check if we are actually strong to get two active Ambassadors. Unlike the ‘traditional’ openSUSE Ambassadors, I expect that the Portuguese enthusiasts approve a different strategy for Portugal (even on an Iberian perspective), 90% focused on University Campus activities amongst our IT students, our future professionals, and 10% oriented to small scale localized events (obviously and hopefully most of them in the Campus of the Universities).

* Mentoring/Tutorship; Because we are so few, we can benefit from other processes that would overkill for the international community. I would like to see if the people more committed to openSUSE could be part of a local ‘mentoring/tutorship’ program for the people who want to get enrolled with openSUSE in a more serious way. If we can make this happen, even with very limited resources (specially manpower), this might become a decisive factor for our local community. Building loyalty with users is a hard task, we will take advantage of the language and cultural tradition to make it happen.

* Forum Moderators; I have filled a request which is under review by the Forums Team to create a localized Forum for Portuguese under the official openSUSE Forums existing structure. This will become a strong tool if approved. I would love to gather two moderators of trust, committed and with time to perform their tasks (though I expect a very low traffic for such forums, as the Brazilian Community have their own resources). I’ve spoken already with Carlos Ribeiro, one of the Brazilian Ambassadors to work with us establishing a link between those forums and the Brazilian Community, as we Portuguese, have all the interest in working with them and informing their initiatives and resources to our local community in Portugal and establish a link with both communities so that we can grow together in the best interest for both Communities.

* Self Assessment; By far the most important, and this is actually a must. We need to account all the resources, specially manpower that we will require to start an effective and self-sustained operation in Portugal. We need to work out the methodology to analyse and take action when required, specially with issues that focused on our growth as a Community.

* ENOS; ENOS is the National openSUSE Encounter (Encontro Nacional openSUSE), an initiative started by Carlos Gonçalves (et al), the great dinossaur of the openSUSE Portuguese Community. One of the ideas around ENOS is to morph it into an Iberian event. We will study this option and we look forward for positive acknowledgement by the Spanish Community so that we can work together into that way. This would be a great accomplishment if it becomes to happen.

So… this seems like we’re going with lot of plans… So far, that’s what they are… plans… a few ideas that with the help of the unknown faces to the International openSUSE Community might end up with a life of their own.

The invitation for our small un-official Christmas Dinner is opened to everyone who wants to come!