• Stormy’s Update: Week of June 1, 2010

    Had a million conversations (well maybe not that many), followed threads and kept up (mostly) with email. Too many different things going on for a short week.

    Organized a GNOME Roadmap discussion.

    Discussed copyright policy with team putting it together and adboard member with feedback.

    Discussed having a GNOME Mobile event at LinuxTag through WIPJam.

    Talked to Zonker about GNOME 3 press roadmap.

    Had some interchanges about GUADEC sponsors, logos, etc. I think all agreements are worked out except one now.

    Set up some meetings at LinuxTag.

    Met 1:1 with Brian and Rosanna (separately).

    Next week:

    • Get out board approved proposal for using the Nokia money for GNOME Mobile.
    • Put together presentation for LinuxTag.
    • Attend LinuxTag.
    • Write opening letter for annual report.
  • The GNOME Foundation is hiring a system administrator

    The GNOME Foundation is hiring a system administrator. Thanks to all of you who have made this possible!

    System Administrator Job Description

    The GNOME Foundation is seeking candidates for a part-time system administrator position. The GNOME infrastructure cluster consists of a distributed network of machines providing services such as version control, bug tracking, web sites, and mailing lists to hundreds of part and full-time GNOME developers, and to the GNOME user community. The system administrator will work with and assist the volunteer GNOME sysadmin team to keep these services running smoothly, securely, and reliably, and to implement enhancements.

    This position is not primarily a coding position, however a certain amount of programming ability is needed to be able to maintain and enhance the system administration scripts and custom web applications that run on the GNOME servers.

    This position reports to the Executive Director of the GNOME Foundation.

    The successful candidate will:

    • Be able to conceive and execute projects independently without detailed direction.
    • Have experience working with volunteer and geographically distributed communities.
    • Be technically strong with experience in many or most of the following technologies:
      • Multiple GNU/Linux distributions with specific knowledge of Red Hat Enterprise Linux and Debian / Ubuntu distributions
      • Python
      • SQL databases
      • PHP
      • LDAP
      • Puppet
      • Mailman
    • Have good communication skills in written and spoken English.
    • Be passionate about Free Software and have knowledge regarding GNOME.

    Other job requirements include:

    • Ability to communicate and manage projects and priorities with a distributed group of volunteers who make up the GNOME Sysadmin team
    • Weekly and monthly communication with the Executive Director and quarterly reports regarding the Sysadmin Team’s work to the GNOME Foundation.

    There are no specific educational requirements for this position, however a typical candidate will have completed or be in the process of completing an undergraduate degree. Several years experience maintaining production servers is mandatory.

    How to Apply

    To apply for this job, send your resume to board-list@gnome.org.

    Timeline

    • June 22nd: deadline for accepting resumes
    • June 15-July 15th: phone interviews by hiring team
    • July 25-30th: Follow up with top candidates.
    • August 9th: Job starts.
  • Stormy’s Update: Month of May 2010

    Attended the fantastic GNOME Marketing Hackfest. Got there and back – on the way home we took a six hour detour – making it a more than 24 hour trip home – and flew by the volcano. For something that has caused so much trouble, it’s not very impressive from an airplane.

    Put together a survey after the hackfest for attendees in order to help the GNOME Foundation and travel committee to make more informed decisions.

    Attended board meetings. Met regularly with Rosanna. Met regularly with Brian.

    Encouraged people to apply for the GNOME Board of Directors. Thanks to everyone who applied. Although it’s a lot of work, it’s an interesting and rewarding job!

    Had GNOME Advisory Board meeting on finances.

    Helped German update the budget. Discussed 2H (second half) budget plan.

    Talked to Marina about launching the Outreach Program for Women in the southern hemisphere.

    Worked with Orbitz to see if they have an account or processes that could help the GNOME Travel Committee.

    Continued to ping GUADEC sponsors and work out details. Almost all finalized. Kept up on a few GUADEC details and issues, including sponsored travel plans.

    Met with Jonathan Markow from Jasig and discussed how we do things and if there were opportunities to work together. Jasig makes open source software projects for higher education.

    Booked travel for most of my trips this summer. Still missing a few that will be paid for by the events. Bummed that tickets to Europe are so expensive this summer as it will make it much harder for us adn companies to sponsor all the folks we’d like to see at GUADEC.

    Submitted title and abstract for LinuxCon keynote.

    Attended a couple of the GNOME.Asia planning meetings. It’s coming along nicely this year. You should plan on attending. 🙂

    Met with James Vasile, our attorney from the SFLC, to talk about a few things.

    Met with a few advisory board members to discuss projects, GUADEC, issues, etc.

    Met with a potential sponsor.

    Pushed for a GNOME technologies roadmap process.

    Put together the list of 2009 donors for the Friends of GNOME page! Due to a Paypal “feature” this was a very manual process. Thanks to Vincent Untz for posting them. If your name should be there and it’s missing, let me know. Thanks to all our Friends both known and anonymous!

    Kept the conversation moving about how best to use the Nokia money to sponsor GNOME apps on Maemo/MeeGo.

    Worked with Brian Cameron and the sys admin team to launch the GNOME Developing World mailing list. If you are interested in how we can promote GNOME, the free desktop, in the developing world, please join the list.

    Talked to AEGIS and the GNOME Accessibility team about having a GNOME A11y Hackfest atAEGIS conference.

    Changed Amazon Affiliate accounts to pay out less often as the international checks cost quite a bit of money to deposit.

    Worked at finding people to represent GNOME at events. It was more difficult than I expected and after several conversations (including some at the marketing hackfest) we will be launching a GNOME Ambassadors program to try to improve this process and get better GNOME representation.

    May 31st is a US holiday.

    (Remembered why I normally do these weekly and not monthly! It’s hard to go back and remember all the things you did and discussed for an entire month.)

  • Stormy’s Update: Week of April 26, 2010

    GNOME Asia meeting. The GNOME Asia team is planning GNOME Asia 2010. While the exact event hasn’t been announced, I can tell you it will most likely be in Taiwan and they are already looking for potential speakers.

    I attended several GNOME A11y & HFOSS meetings. We are working with several universities this summer that will have students working on GNOME a11y projects. The GNOME a11y team is coming up with potential projects and mentors for the students to pick from.

    Board meeting. The board met. The minutes will come out soon. Brian’s doing a great job of taking minutes and making sure we all track and update our action items.

    Rosanna. Met with Rosanna for our regular weekly meeting but the meeting was eclipsed by our discussion of the fake check that someone tried to cash against the GNOME Foundation. Everything’s fine but we are working with our bank to make things as secure and safe as possible.

    Silicon Flatirons Patents and Free and Open Source Software event. Spent Thursday afternoon and evening at the CU law school at a legal event about patents and free and open source software. I was on a panel that talked about some interesting data that shows most startup software companies don’t pursue patents but they think VCs value them. The VC on our panel, Jason Mendelson, said he didn’t.

    1:1 with adboard member concerned about GNOME 3.

    Wrapped up a few last minute details around the marketing hackfest. Many thanks to Agustín Benito Bethencourt, Ignacio Correas, Alberto Capella for organizing it. Thanks to the Zaragoza Municipality, Aragon Regional Governmen, Technological Institute of Aragon (ITA), ASOLIF, CESLA and the GNOME Foundation for sponsoring.

    Travel to Zaragoza for the marketing hackfest.

  • Collabora Joins the GNOME Foundation Advisory Board

    UK software consultants to help in mission to create a free software computing platform.

    May 5, 2010 — UK-based open source software consultancy Collabora is joining the GNOME Foundation advisory board today. A long time supporter of GNOME and member of the GNOME community, Collabora contributes directly to GNOME projects like Empathy, PiTiVi, Totem and Epiphany.

    The GNOME Foundation works to further the goal of the GNOME project — to create a computing platform for use by the general public that is completely free software. On the advisory board, Collabora will work with the GNOME Board of Directors to help set vision and direction for the GNOME Foundation.

    “We are proud of the work we’ve done in the past on GNOME projects and are happy to join the advisory board and contribute to the GNOME Foundation as well,” said Robert McQueen, director and co-founder at Collabora Ltd. “We’re passionate about open source and we look forward to the chance to help shape the future direction of the GNOME project alongside the other advisory board participants.”

    “As a member of the GNOME community and the employer of key GNOME contributors, we are delighted to welcome Collabora to our advisory board,” said Stormy Peters, Executive Director of the GNOME Foundation. “They are already a key part of the GNOME community and their perspective on the advisory board will be of huge benefit to both the GNOME project and the other companies represented on the board.”

    Collabora was a founding member of GNOME Mobile in 2007 and their technologies form key parts of the GNOME Mobile stack. In addition they work on many technologies that benefit the GNOME project like GStreamer, Telepathy, Farsight, D-Bus, X.Org and Webkit Gtk+. Their work is key in realising the GNOME vision of a free, accessible desktop and mobile platform for everyone.

    “I’ve enjoyed working with Collabora since they joined the GNOME community, and they’ve made some significant contributions over the past few years, so it’s great to see them joining the GNOME Foundation too.” says Michael Meeks, Linux Desktop Architect at Novell, Inc. “Their frank insight and dynamism will be most welcome in the advisory board.”

    GNOME technology forms a key part of mobile platforms such as Nokia’s Maemo, Intel’s Moblin and their merger to form the Linux Foundation’s MeeGo platform, launched at Mobile World Congress 2010. Companies like Collabora work with the GNOME community and the platform companies to deliver free and open source solutions. Members of the GNOME Advisory Board help the GNOME Foundation work with partner companies effectively and get the chance to collaborate with each other on their use of GNOME technologies.

    About Collabora Ltd

    Headquartered in Cambridge, UK with a network of developers worldwide, Collabora Ltd. is a software consultancy specializing in delivering the benefits of open source to the commercial world. Collabora combines years of open source software expertise with hard-won experience from working in the mobile and consumer electronics industries. They help clients effectively take open source technologies from the community to real-world consumers, re-using existing components to reduce time to market and focus on product differentiation.

    For more information please visit www.collabora.co.uk.

    About GNOME and the GNOME Foundation

    GNOME is a free-software project whose goal is to develop a complete, accessible and easy to use desktop for Linux and Unix-based operating systems. GNOME also includes a complete development environment to create new applications. It is released twice a year on a regular schedule.

    The GNOME desktop is used by millions of people around the world. GNOME is a standard part of all leading GNU/Linux and Unix distributions, and is popular with both large existing corporate deployments and millions of small business and home users worldwide.

    Composed of hundreds of volunteer developers and industry-leading companies, the GNOME Foundation is an organization committed to supporting the advancement of GNOME. The Foundation is a member directed, non-profit organization that provides financial, organizational and legal support to the GNOME project and helps determine its vision and roadmap.

    More information about GNOME and the GNOME Foundation can be found at www.gnome.org andfoundation.gnome.org.

    Media Enquiries

  • OSUOSL Give6 campaign

    For the last 6 years our good friends at Oregon State University Open Source Lab have been doing an incredible job of providing mirroring services for many big Free Software and Open Source projects.

    Right now the Open Source Lab is looking for funding, and they are just asking for $6, one per each year they have been online.

    GNOME already signed up with $60. Every user of this fantastic mirror and hosting service is encouraged to donate. Give them 6!

    http://osuosl.org/give6

  • Stormy’s Update: Week of April 19, 2010

    • Quarterly report. Put together the GNOME Q1 2010 quarterly report. Thanks to all the team members who wrote up the actual updates, Vinicius Depizzol who worked on the design and Vincent Untz who published it on the website during his vacation.
    • Review. Wrote up first half of fiscal year 2010 results for the board to review.
    • Orbitz. Worked with Orbitz to see if a business account would help the travel team. Still working with them.
    • 1:1’s. Met with Brian and Rosanna (separately.)
    • Marketing hackfest. Booked travel for the marketing hackfest. (Was waiting on some final scheduling before booking.)
    • Odds and Ends. Weighed in on a few discussions, had a few discussions with board members, pushed a few things along.

    Overall, it was a very productive week. Here’s hoping this one is too!

  • Stormy’s Update: Week of April 12, 2010

    Logistics:

    • Spent Monday traveling home from the French Quarter Festival in New Orleans.
    • Tuesday I caught up on a ton of mail. Like a lot of mail. Got back down to 10 mails in my inbox.
    • Wednesday-Friday I traveled to and attended the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit. I hope everyone from Europe makes it back home soon!

    What I actually did:

    • Had a lot of great conversations with existing GNOME Foundation sponsors and members at the Collaboration Summit about things we are working on and GUADEC. I talked with (some in depth, some very briefly) Robert McQueen(Collabora), Phillippe Kalaf (Collabora), Quim Gil (Nokia), Juan Jose Sanchez (Igalia), Ryan Singer (InitMarketing), Amanda McPhearson (Linux Foundation), Alan Clark (Novell), Rob Taylor (CodeThink), Jono Bacon (Canonical), Dave Neary, Paul Cutler. And if I talked to you and you aren’t on the list and want to be, just leave a comment. I talked to a lot of people!
    • Had a couple of great dinners. Yorba hosted a great GNOME dinner (Adam Dingle got  us all together!) and I had a great time catching up with the Yorba folks, Philip from Igalia, Christian Schaller, Paul Cutler, Phillippe Kalaf and Robert McQueen. (There were more people there but I wasn’t able to hear them from down the table. 🙂 Had dinner the night before with Ryan Singer, Jonathan Corbet, Jake Edge, Paul Cutler, Dave Neary and Josh Berkus. Don’t ask me who all I chatted with at the evening event on Wednesday …
    • Spent most of the day on Thursday in the MeeGo talks … when I wasn’t meeting with people individually.
    • Ran the Desktop track on Friday morning. Many, many thanks to Dave Neary and Zonker Brockmeier for helping put it together. We had some good sessions and great discussions about web applications and the desktop. (Talks about Snowy, KDE web apps and Mozilla Weave.) We wanted a controversial panel and we got one. I think the whole room shouted through the whole thing but I think I kept it enough under control that we got a few questions answered. It was exciting if not 100% productive.
    • Heard my favorite idea so far with what to do with the funding that Nokia has given to GNOME Mobile. Robert McQueen suggested that we do like a Google Summer of Code but for mobile. And not limit it to students. I really liked the idea and ran it by several others like Quim and Juanjo and everyone seemed to like it.
    • Got a free Nexus One phone from Google. (They gave one to everyone that attended their keynote!)
    • Attended the GNOME Board meeting.
    • Sent thank you’s to people who donated to Friends of GNOME through Paypal.
  • Stormy’s Update: Weeks of March 29th and April 5th, 2010

    • Friends of GNOME ruler was a great success! We met our goal for hiring a sys admin. (My work was just to provide updated numbers frequently and to dent and twitter. And sending thank you notes to all our generous supporters!)
    • Talked to InitMarketing with Paul Cutler about how they might be able to help us with some of our marketing tasks.
    • Planned the Desktop Track at the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit with Zonker and Dave Neary.
    • Attended the board meeting.
    • Met with Rosanna.
    • Met with Jonathan Corbet from LWN.net to discuss partnership opportunities.
    • Met with Jeremy Allison, our newest GNOME Advisory Board member.
    • Had a meeting with the folks going to the events in Africa representing GNOME and some of the other board members.
    • Started a conversation on the mobile list about how best to use the funding from Nokia.
    • Had lots of exchanges with events looking for me to speak at them. (In all cases I asked for lots more info. In one case I offered to speak in exchange for a donation to the GNOME Foundation.)
    • Started working on my write-up for my 6 month evaluation.
    • Spread the word to recruit a few people for the GNOME press team.
    • Created the GNOME wish list.
    • Agreed to pay Texas Linux Fest a nonprofit $100 booth fee. (Zonker and the Ubuntu team will be running the GNOME booth.)
    • Followed up with a few potential GUADEC sponsors.
    • Sent and received a record amount of email!
    • Taking some vacation – going to the French Quarter Festival in New Orleans!

    Next week:

    • Catch up on email from vacation.
    • Attend the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit and chair the Desktop Track along with Zonker and Dave Neary.
    • Continue to follow up with GUADEC sponsors.
    • Help Paul Cutler with prep work for the marketing hackfest.
  • GNOME Project Updates Free Desktop with 2.30 Release

    BOSTON, Mass — March 31, 2010 — The GNOME Project is proud to announce GNOME 2.30, the latest stable release of the popular Free Software desktop environment and applications suite. GNOME 2.30 builds on previous GNOME releases and brings hundreds of improvements for users and developers, including enhancements for user management, Web browsing, support for Facebook chat, and new productivity features.

    GNOME contributors have added improvements across the board for GNOME 2.30 in accessibility, productivity applications, Web browsing, instant messaging, and games. This release includes hundreds of new features, enhancements, and improvements over the GNOME 2.28 release from September 2009.

    “I’m really pleased with all of the updates in GNOME 2.30,” said Stormy Peters, GNOME Executive Director. “I’m excited that I can automatically sync my Tomboy notes between my desktop and laptop computer, easily configure Facebook chat in Empathy instant messenger, and do more with PDFs in Evince. GNOME 2.30 provides everything I need for work and play.”

    The GNOME Project thrives by consistently improving on previous releases while retaining compatibility and delivering a user-friendly desktop environment and applications twice a year. GNOME combines a commitment to Free Software with a focus on usability and working well with downstream projects to deliver a high-quality suite of free software.

    “GNOME’s commitment to usability, quality and predictable delivery is a key contributor to Ubuntu’s success,” said Mark Shuttleworth, founder of Canonical. “GNOME sets the standard for a diverse and vibrant community that shares the goal of a Free desktop that is both familiar to users from any computing background, and also innovative. Congratulations to the project on this significant release.”

    The 2.30 release contains significant user-visible improvements, adding numerous platform improvements for developers, and builds towards the upcoming GNOME 3.0 release with a preview of the revolutionary GNOME Shell. GNOME Shell, which will replace the existing GNOME Panel, changes the way users will interact with the desktop.

    “I’d like to congratulate the GNOME project on a state of the art GNOME 2.30 desktop release,” said Andreas Jaeger, program manager of openSUSE for Novell. “I’m glad that we are able to include it in our next release and also have it available for easy installation on openSUSE 11.2. We’ll be providing packages via the openSUSE Build Service to allow users to easily test drive the upcoming GNOME 3.0 features like the GNOME Shell.”

    GNOME 2.30 is immediately available via GNOME Live Media, and will soon be available from the many vendors and projects that support GNOME.

    “The GNOME environment and platform have been a central part of Fedora’s releases since our earliest days. Over that time, GNOME has matured into a vital and healthy project that consistently combines simple, beautiful, user-friendly features and a robust platform for community-driven development,” said Paul Frields, Fedora Project Leader. “It’s a point of great pride that Fedora community members including Red Hat’s Desktop engineering team have contributed significantly to GNOME. I’m excited that we’re already involved in planning for the next generation of desktop technologies, including GNOME, that will help us build the free software desktop of the future.”

    GNOME is also committed to delivering a Free desktop for all users, and translations and Accessibility work is an important part of the GNOME 2.30 release. This release includes a number of improvements in GNOME’s Orca Screen Reader that improve performance and use on netbooks, and platform improvements to ready GNOME’s Accessibility interface for GNOME 3.0. The 2.30 release also delivers comprehensive support for more than 50 languages, and partial support for many others.

    “I’m extremely excited with the number of different languages currently supported by GNOME,” said Og Maciel, Foresight Linux Community Manager. “If there is one single feat about GNOME 2.30 that I’m proud of is the great work done by the Asturian and Shavian translation teams! We now have more than 50 different languages with at least 80% of the user interface translated, which means that more people will be able to enjoy their favorite desktop environment in their native tongue!”

    About GNOME and the GNOME Foundation

    GNOME is a free-software project whose goal is to develop a complete, accessible and easy to use desktop for Linux and Unix-based operating systems. GNOME also includes a complete development environment to create new applications. It is released twice a year on a regular schedule.

    The GNOME desktop is used by millions of people around the world. GNOME is a standard part of all leading GNU/Linux and Unix distributions, and is popular with both large existing corporate deployments and millions of small business and home users worldwide.

    Composed of hundreds of volunteer developers and industry-leading companies, the GNOME Foundation is an organization committed to supporting the advancement of GNOME. The Foundation is a member directed, non-profit organization that provides financial, organizational and legal support to the GNOME project and helps determine its vision and roadmap.

    More information about GNOME and the GNOME Foundation can be found at www.gnome.org andfoundation.gnome.org.

    Media Enquiries

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