<p>Vincent Untz, perennial GNOME hacker and a member of the <a href="https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DesktopTeam">Desktop Team</a> has published the first issue of the <a href="http://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-desktop/2005-December/000097.html">Ubuntu Desktop News</a> (UDN). Highlights include gconf and rhythmbox improvements, Michael Vogt’s slick new click-and-install .deb tool, <a href="http://people.ubuntu.com/~mvo/gdebi/gdebi-3.png">gdebi</a>, and shots of the new logout window prototype.</p> <p>Vincent caps off the first issue an interview with the GNOME packaging machine, aka Sebastien Bacher, who handles a large part of bringing desktop goodness into the distribution:</p> <blockquote><p>Some people call me “sebuild”, I’m kind of a “serial updater” :). Joke aside my main job is to update GNOME packages every time upstream roll a new tarball and to handle bugs we get about the GNOME packages (most of the desktop stuff).</p></blockquote> <p>In related Desktop Team news, the <a href="http://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-desktop/2005-November/000025.html">minutes</a> from the first desktop meeting are up in case you missed them. If you’re interested in helping out the desktop folks, then <a href="https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuBugDay">Bug Day</a> is a good day to start.</p> Link To Original Article
Over at distrowatch a few weeks back, some felt that the tone of the UDN is really dumbed down and even insultingly so. Anyone else see that? I surely didn't...
Originally Posted by tuxradar Linux's audio architecture is more like the layers of the Earth's crust than the network model, with lower levels occasionally erupting on to the surface, causing confusion and distress, and upper layers moving to displace the underlying technology that was originally hidden
Hmmm, I just read their "dumbing down" article, but that seems to refer to Ubuntu in general, not just UDN. *shrug*
Some of the comments made by readers are specifically targetted at the UDN issue.... Oh well
I'm a new Ubuntu user and really enjoyed reading the UDN. I hope they continue publishing it.
Ubuntu Forums Code of Conduct