Hi,
Its time for Google Summer of Code '08. Many of you are already
following it. But just a reminder and a friendly poke incase you
forgot all about it.
Of course, KDE will be there like previous years. Check [1] for
more details.
As a student, all you need is some enthusiasm, willingness to
contribute to KDE and Free Software in general. Knowledge of C++ is
almost taken for granted in KDE GSoC. Knowledge of Qt/KDE/PyQt
framework and programming is a definite ( huge ) plus. If you are
already a contributing code to some KDE application, firstly you r0ck,
nextly you did yourself a huge favour and have HUGE PLUS-PLUS :). It
also works if you have been sending in patches regularly. So if you
are one of them, DO submit a proposal.
There is a nice *idea* page on the KDE techbase page [2]. Feel
free to browse through that and find something that you like or you
might be able to pull off. *Strong recommendation* - Please be
creative and write your own project proposal. Nothing impresses
mentors more than your own enthusiasm to do something uber cool for
the project. It is million times better if you write your own project
proposal - may be even your own idea that is not there in the idea
page which you think might be a cool feature / addition to KDE -
instead of copying something from the idea page. Its a idea page after
all and not a proposal template page ;). Please read [3] about
certain instructions of participations in KDE GSoC. I repeat, please
read [3] before applying. It is very detailed and will mostly answer a
lot of your questions and will help you frame your proposal in much
better way.
Last year KDE GSoC participation [4] [5] was really
wonderful. It got 40 projects sanctioned by Google which probably was
the largest allocation among all the participating projects. There
were 213 proposals submitted to Google and 40 were allocated. 3 of
those 40 students were Indians, you have ask them about their
experiences. I am very sure that they have good things to talk about
the same. Since I have met Piyush and Sharan many times in recent past
after the SoC '07, I know for sure that they ( and Anirrudh, the third
guy ) loved the whole experience and had a blast.
Looking forward to your proposal. Good luck.
[1]http://code.google.com/soc/2008/kde/about.html
[2]http://techbase.kde.org/index.php?title=Projects/Summer_of_Code/2008/Ideas
[3]http://techbase.kde.org/index.php?title=Projects/Summer_of_Code/2008/Part…
[4]http://dot.kde.org/1176336589/
[5]http://code.google.com/soc/2007/kde/about.html
Cheers!
Pradeepto
--
The KDE Project : http://www.kde.org
KDE India : http://in.kde.org
Mailing List : http://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-india
Hello All,
If anyone of you is planning to buy a system or a new motherboard then
avoid Intel original ones like plague. They take more than a month to
simply pick up boards in warranty and their communication channels are
pathetic. My colleagues and I have some warranty boards lying with us
for more than a month and they have yet to be picked up by Intel. Their
service is too bad.
--
Regards,
Rony.
GNU/Linux !
No Viruses
No Spyware
Only Freedom.
Free software in schools. Download this from here
http://www.divshare.com/download/4053521-61e
From Farida Umrani <mailtofarida(a)gmail.com>
I am working with Prof. Sridhar Iyer at Dept of Computer Science, IIT
Bombay on content development for school computer science based on
Edubuntu . We will have the content for elementary class ready in
2008. I am sending you a draft of a textbook for class I (the file is
bulky; hence split and send in two mails). [DOWNLOAD FROM URL ABOVE]
At present, I am implementing this curriculum in one of the pilot
schools. We have included Scratch as a programming language for
students in Grade 3 & 4. Currently we are focusing on elementary
classes and plan to scale it up in the next academic year.
We are facing difficulties in getting the teachers familiar with open
source. Most schools do not have a system administrator or even a
regular Internet connection to get the regular updates and prefer an
installable CD that gives them everything. But to a windows user, this
does not appear intuitive and hence they are put off by it. I wanted
to know about your experience with Goa schools? I have read that GCSP
trained engineering students and teachers. Did these students help the
local schools? We announced a training program for school teachers,
but got poor response and therefore deferred it. Did you face similar
problems? How did you deal with them?
I myself have a Psychology background... and it has taken me several
hours of work and reading up the forums to understand the installation
and getting all the dependencies right. However, what is encouraging
is that students have received the open source applications very well.
I hope to learn from your experience at Goa.
--
----------------------------------------------------------
Frederick 'FN' Noronha | Ym/Gmailtalk: fredericknoronha
http://fn.goa-india.org | fred(a)bytesforall.org
Independent Journalist | +91(832)2409490 Cell 9970157402
----------------------------------------------------------
> As for using Ubuntu on a server, I concur with other posts. Ditto for
> the "community" versions sponsored by the commercial linux distros.
Leaving aside Ubuntu, what other distributions are you (that can be
anyone on this list) referring to? Specific bug reports, Bugzilla or
GNATS entries?
Cheers,
Debarshi
--
"From what we get, we can make a living; what we give, however, makes a life."
-- Arthur Ashe
On Monday 17 Mar 2008, linuxers-request(a)mm.glug-bom.org wrote:
> Message: 2
> Date: Sun, 16 Mar 2008 13:05:30 +0530
> From: Rony <gnulinuxist(a)gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: [ILUG-BOM] [LIG] [LONG] [RANT] Ubuntu and Quality
.... snip ...
> I have used Ubuntu's many versions, from 5.10 onwards and they do
> whats expected of them. I hardly update them and if so, just after
> the installation, when the system is still fresh and not customized.
> Another way is to keep the net running so the latest packages get
> installed during the main installation itself. After that the door is
> closed for further updates. I never upgrade a distro. I prefer to
> clean install a newer version if necessary.
.... snip ...
The above philosophy may work for a desktop setup in a "closed" LAN.
For a server visible on the 'Net this is not an option. If it is
running a service that needs to be patched with a security fix - it
needs to be patched. Otherwise face the consequences of a compromised
box.
As for using Ubuntu on a server, I concur with other posts. Ditto for
the "community" versions sponsored by the commercial linux distros.
-- Arun Khan
Please mail to krupa(a)netcore.co.in do NOT reply to this post
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First thing yesterday morning: urgent IM message from Suresh
Ramasubramanian (hoster of this mailing list):
Mailman is down, can you help?
OK, so we start investigating his box. He has upgraded Python2.4 to
Python2.5, and applied a Mailman security patch package. However,
whenever we try to access the page, the server barfs. On to server
logs -- syntax error in one of the Mailman support files.
Right, I can understand an upgrade causing logical errors, but a SYNTAX
ERROR!??!? Nah, I must be missing something, so I look all over the 2
upgrades. Switch back to Python2.4 from Python2.5, no joy. Recompile
all the Mailman files from scratch, no joy. Recompile the Ubuntu
Mailman package from source and reinstall it, no joy. Bang head
against wall, no joy.
Finally, desperate, I start comparing Mailman files on Suresh' server
against Mailman installed on other servers. While they are different
versions of Mailman, I do notice one anomaly: where one file has:
mlist.subject_prefix = Utils.canonstr(
val, mlist.preferred_language) <- *** Note this line ***
elif property == 'info':
Suresh' server has:
mlist.subject_prefix = Utils.canonstr(
elif property == 'info':
Saying, `no, no, it can't be!' I insert the missing line into the file
on the broken machine, cross fingers, eyes, legs, etc and restart
Mailman.
It works!
[Shift to today]
Ubuntu issues a security notice that says, in effect, ``We screwed up
with the previous Mailman patch, so here's the latest and greatest
version of Mailman, and this one really, Really, REALLY works! Believe
us!''.
I don't believe them. In the past 6 months Ubuntu has issues 80 new
security advisories. For those 80 advisories, they have issued no less
than SEVEN regressions (a regression is a patch to fix a broken patch).
A near-10% regression rate sends only one message to me -- we can't be
bothered with doing any quality control before we release packages.
Before Ubuntu came onto the scene, I didn't even /know/ what a
regression was. Today it's a common word in my lexicon, because of
Ubuntu's pathetic testing and quality control process (or lack of
process, more likely). An operating system vendor who issues a package
with a syntax error (so that the package doesn't even start up, leave
alone do something wrong), is a pure crap snake oil vendor in my book.
So, the question: will I trust Ubuntu on an Internet-connected system?
Nah.
Will I trust Ubuntu on a server? Er, please excuse me while I finishing
laughing hysterically!
Use Debian or CentOS or any of those reasonably tested other
distributions for your boxes, and when someone asks you to use Ubuntu,
in the immortal words of Fancy Raygun, ``Just Say No!''.
Regards,
-- Raju
--
Raj Mathur raju(a)kandalaya.org http://kandalaya.org/
Freedom in Technology & Software || February 2008 || http://freed.in/
GPG: 78D4 FC67 367F 40E2 0DD5 0FEF C968 D0EF CC68 D17F
PsyTrance & Chill: http://schizoid.in/ || It is the mind that moves
i am trying to write a script on my *test machine *to check if the process
are running , and if they are not need to start them
any idea why this is not working ??
#!/bin/sh -x
SERVICES= `ls -la /etc/init.d/ |awk '{print $9 }' |sed -e
's/[^[:alnum:]]//g'`
for i in $SERVICES
do
if [ $(ps -aux|grep -v grep |grep $i |wc -l) != 0 ];
then
. /etc/init.d/$i start
else
echo " the service $i is running "
fi
done
--
Regards
Agnello Dsouza
On Sunday 16 Mar 2008, Justin Moore wrote:
> Why are you using Ubuntu for production servers? Look how many major
> releases they have had vs. Debian, or RHEL. They push out the latest
> version of the software as fast as possible because that is what
> their user base wants. That's why I use Ubuntu on my desktops. But
> they can't possibly keep the same quality control on such a release
> cyle. For production servers I use Debian, except when a client
> requires enterprise support, then I use RHEL. I suggest the same.
It's possible that Ubuntu isn't meant to be a server distribution (but
in that case they shouldn't have a Ubuntu server version). Regardless,
it is completely irresponsible to make a package available for download
that did not get even one command's worth of testing after packaging.
A simple
/etc/init.d/mailman restart
after installing the new package would have shown that mailman wasn't
working. Please note that this is not some error condition that only
surfaces under some weird combination of environments or events.
Whatever your hardware or software configuration, whatever applications
you are running, whatever network connectivity (or lack) you have,
merely starting up the newly-installed mailman would have failed.
Whether desktop or server, a distribution that permits the release of
an Internet-service package without even that one, basic command is
broken beyond repair IMNSHO.
Ubuntu needs to make a package testing and release policy real quick.
The next time it could be a security patch to Firefox that gets messed
up, and then we'll have millions of cracked Ubuntu systems merrily
spamming away. Before something like that happens, it would be better
if Ubuntu just withdrew gracefully from the list of Linux
distributions.
Regards,
-- Raju
--
Raj Mathur raju(a)kandalaya.org http://kandalaya.org/
Freedom in Technology & Software || February 2008 || http://freed.in/
GPG: 78D4 FC67 367F 40E2 0DD5 0FEF C968 D0EF CC68 D17F
PsyTrance & Chill: http://schizoid.in/ || It is the mind that moves