News and Editorials
Fedora takes Linux to college
July 9, 2008
This article was contributed by Lisa Hoover
The idea of Linux in the classroom is nothing new. From a grassroots push for district-wide adoption in secondary schools, to a plan to offer the One Laptop Per Child program in every developing country, the FOSS community is always looking for ways to encourage schools to use Linux. Recently, however, there's a new movement afoot that's aimed at snapping up a segment of computer users before they spend their money on computers with commercial operating systems. Linux is headed to college.
For the last few weeks, volunteer members of Fedora's marketing team have been kicking around ideas on ways to encourage college students to give Linux a try and draw new users into the Fedora fold. Rather than approach university IT departments running Windows to convince them to switch operating systems, the team hopes to create a groundswell of college-aged users who will march into classrooms and lecture halls with Fedora-laden laptops and eagerly dive into work-study projects that focus on Linux development.
Jack Aboutboul, Red Hat's Community Engineer and the main impetus behind the tentatively-named Campus Ambassador program, says though it is similar to Fedora's existing Ambassador program, the new program will have a different governance model and slightly different goals. Students from Auburn, Texas A&M, Berkeley, and other U.S. colleges, as well as team members attending universities in other countries, have already shown an interest in assuming the role of Campus Ambassadors, and have agreed to speak at campus events about the benefits of Fedora and of Linux in general.
Taking the idea a step further, many Fedora team members would like to see the development of promotional material designed with college students in mind, such as posters that encourage students in the art department to volunteer their skills creating artwork for Linux distros. As one Fedora marketing team member notes, "How many marketing majors are aware that there are real life marketing opportunities for them within the Fedora project while they are still students? Reaching these students should be one focus of any campus outreach."
At least one school, Cabrillo College in Santa Cruz County, California, is already hard at work promoting Fedora on its campus. In addition to forming a GNU/Linux Users Group (LUG) and holding regular installfests, the LUG is also creating its own Fedora-based distro called Seahawk GNU/Linux, named after the school mascot. LUG President Larry Cafiero explains, "Not that the world needs yet another distro, mind you, but we're using the project as a teaching tool more than an actual distro that will take the world by storm." He says that not only do students gain hands-on familiarity with Linux, but "those who get introduced to GNU/Linux through the school-based distro get a sort of introduction to Fedora as well."
Since Fedora already has a strong Ambassador Program, the question of why a separate university Ambassadorship is necessary has come up. Essentially, it boils down to a difference in how users will be mentored. In the typical Ambassador arrangement, Fedora users simply evangelize Linux and encourage people to give Fedora a try while offering assistance and tips along the way. Marketing team member Chris Tyler sees the role of Campus Ambassador as more finely-tuned and as a "a matchmaker between a student, a potential need (project), and community resources." Tyler says that there are many benefits to this arrangement, including the opportunity for students to work on projects with a larger user base which, will therefore have a bigger real-world impact than student projects that remain inside the walls of the school.
Team member Jeff Spaleta says finding projects with a long shelf life is vital to keeping students interested in Linux, and good for the long-term health of the community. "If students as part of their degrees need to work on a year or semester-long project, I want Fedora to be obvious place to look for compelling things to work on, with an aim towards well scoped projects that have a good chance for long lived utility," he says. "I hate seeing good academic projects die because there was no real plan to hand them off outside of that academic group which incubated them."
Team members seem to be in agreement that the Ambassador program is a winning situation for everyone. Students get hands-on experience — and, in some cases, a grade — for participating in a software development project. Computer technology departments can offer a wider learning environment with little to no investment, Fedora may garner new users, and the Linux community as a whole grows.
In an effort to move the Campus Ambassador project forward, Jack Aboutboul plans to formally present the idea at a Community Architecture meeting later this month.
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New Releases
Gentoo Linux 2008.0 released
Gentoo Linux 2008.0 is out. "
Code-named 'It's got what plants
crave,' this release contains numerous new features including an updated
installer, improved hardware support, a complete rework of profiles,
and a move to Xfce instead of GNOME on the LiveCD."
Full Story (comments: 4)
Foresight 2.0.3 Released
The Foresight team has announced the latest release of Foresight.
Foresight 2.0.3 GNOME Edition is a minor release, featuring the latest
release of GNOME, 2.22.3, which has a new login manager for users, as well
as a number of bug fixes and updates.
Full Story (comments: none)
Ubuntu 8.04.1 LTS released
The first maintenance release to the Ubuntu "Hardy" release is available.
They've fixed a number of issues, but not all of them... "
While we have fixed a number of audio-related issues, including a
scheduler problem that caused audio stuttering under load, other
audio playback problems may still exist, because so far we have been
unable to verify a targeted fix that does not cause regressions for other
users."
Full Story (comments: 18)
openSUSE Build Service 1.0
The openSUSE project has announced the 1.0 release of its build service. "
The 1.0 release provides all the features
necessary to support building openSUSE in the public build systems and
allowing direct contributions to openSUSE from all contributors.
Developers can now submit contributions to openSUSE directly at
build.opensuse.org." The service can also be used to build packages
for several other distributions.
Full Story (comments: none)
Distribution News
Fedora
Rawhide users: brace for a new RPM
Fedora Rawhide users are about to be treated to an "alpha snapshot" of the
crucial RPM utility. This is a good thing in the long run; RPM development has
been stalled for far too long. But the developers are warning that life
could be interesting in the short term. "
BACKUP YOUR RPMDB, NOW! We're not aware of any baby-eating bugs in rpm
but I'd be shocked if there were no new bugs at all... Better safe
than sorry.
Full Story (comments: 13)
Fedora Board Recap 2008-JUL-01
Click below for a look at the July 1st meeting of the Fedora Board. Topics
include Board Elections, Guarding Privacy and Trademark Guidelines.
Full Story (comments: none)
Gentoo Linux
New Gentoo council elected
Elections for
Gentoo
council are finished. The newly elected council members are Donnie
Berkholz, Mark Loeser, Diego Pettenò, Petteri Räty, Luca
Barbato, Markus Ullmann, and Tobias Scherbaum.
Comments (none posted)
Distribution Newsletters
Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter #98
The Ubuntu Weekly Newsletter for July 5, 2008 covers: Ubuntu 8.04.1 LTS
released, Intrepid Alpha 2 due out Thursday, Ubuntu Brainstorm, Two new
Ubuntu Teams, Kubuntu Intrepid News, Ubuntu Nicaragua TV show, Launchpad
1.2.6 released, Launchpod episode #6, New Ubuntu Forums Interviews Host,
Ubuntu-UK podcast #9, and much more.
Full Story (comments: none)
OpenSUSE Weekly News/29
This issue of the
OpenSUSE Weekly
News looks at openSUSE 11.1 Roadmap, Novell Client for Linux Public
Beta for openSUSE 10.3, People of openSUSE: Jan-Simon Möller, John
Anderson: Find duplicate files by content not name, Lukas Ocilka: Package
Search and One Click Install in YaST, Miguel de Icaza: Moonlight 0.7 is now
Available, and several other topics.
Comments (none posted)
Fedora Weekly News Issue 133
The
Fedora Weekly
News for July 5, 2008 looks at Planet Fedora articles "Func and
Certmaster 0.20 Released", "Transifex receives some updates", "Inkscape
tutorials", "New Fedora business cards", and "Bug Triage meeting", plus
Fedora reviews, Help Wanted at the Utah Open Source Conference, Development
articles "SELinux Eats Babies, Confines Wives, Gives Birth", "Help Wanted:
Samba4, Heimdahl, OpenChange", "Java, So Many Free Choices", "Fedora 9 Now
Officially Supported On Itanium/IA64", and "Running As Root", and several
other topics.
Comments (none posted)
DistroWatch Weekly, Issue 260
The
DistroWatch
Weekly for July 7, 2008 is out. "
What were the most exciting
Linux events of the first half of 2008? The continued success of Linux on
ultra-portable laptops? The arrival of KDE 4? The miscellaneous
distribution releases? Our lead article takes a quick look at the most
interesting events in the Linux world that shaped the year so far. In the
news section, the first stable release of Gentoo Linux in 14 months hits
the download servers, Ubuntu receives high marks from French legislators,
Xandros acquires Linspire and its software assets, PC-BSD releases the
first BSD with integrated KDE 4.1, and OpenBSD prepares for the forthcoming
release of symbolic importance - version 4.4. Also not to be missed, news
about Ikki Boot, a compilation CD with an excellent collection of rescue
utilities, and the latest distro statistics from this site's web server
logs. Finally, we are pleased to announce that the recipient of the
DistroWatch.com's monthly donation for June 2008 is the MythDora
project."
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Debian Misc developer news (#9)
This edition of Misc developer news has some advice on quilt usage, plus
update-grub starts using UUIDs by default, wxwidgets2.8 upload to unstable,
and Volunteers needed to handle update of release notes.
Full Story (comments: none)
Distribution meetings
Next Ubuntu Developer Summit
The next Ubuntu Developer Summit (UDS) has been scheduled for December 8 -
12, 2008 at the Google Campus, Mountain View, California, USA. The primary
topic will be version 9.04. See the
UDS wiki for more information.
Full Story (comments: none)
Interviews
People of openSUSE: Joe Brockmeier
Here's a People of openSUSE
interview
with Joe Brockmeier, openSUSE community manager. "
What
especially motivates you to participate in the openSUSE project? I
want to see openSUSE become a more independent project, to allow external
contributors to have a strong voice in its development and direction, and I
want to see as many people as possible introduced to Linux through
openSUSE."
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Page editor: Rebecca Sobol
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