Bamboo Wacom SVGs

Posted in Art and Creation, Doctor's Art, Ubuntu on November 6th, 2010 by doctormo

Showing off the couple of extra drawings I did for the newer wacom bamboo tablets:

Like last time I haven’t finished all of the tablets or released the svg files, contact me if you need access. Once finished I’ll hopefully publish them all.

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Birthday Today

Posted in Hat Talk on November 5th, 2010 by doctormo

Taking the day off really from doing much… or I would be if only I hadn’t booked myself solid with community work. Alas it never ends.

I did have a wonderful breakfast and dinner made by my lovely wife who I adore. And not just for occasions like this, but these warmest of events do fire the whole adoration somewhat more than say a ham sandwich would.

Wacom vs Wizardpen? Did you know…

Posted in Programming and Technical on November 4th, 2010 by doctormo

Did you know that there is work going on to integrate some kernel based code made for the waltop tablet device into the wacom user space driver in such a way as to allow most wizardpen based tablets to work through the same tools as wacom tablets do?

It’s happening… show your support below.

Ask Ubuntu Review

Posted in Education, Free and Open Source Software, Ubuntu on November 3rd, 2010 by doctormo

I’ve been giving the Ubuntu Stack Exchange some attention and I wanted to do a little bit of a review. Firstly I’d like to thank Jorge Castro and other members of the community team for getting a tool in place to replace the failing launchpad answers functionality.

With that I do want to make a criticism. This site was pushed as a JFDI and as such it doesn’t really take into account the views of the larger ecosystem. What do I mean? well now we have to decide if we want to keep launchpad answers around, how projects/the ubuntu project will specify to go to askubuntu instead and how to transition existing data over, migration of data, who owns it and how access is guaranteed. This is all made harder by the proprietary and out sourced nature that the stack exchange service is being offered to us.

This is mitigated slightly by some help from Robert Cartaino of Stack Exchange who is excited to help us with our functionality and integration issues. It’s just not as ideal as I would like.1

The service it’s self is well thought out, with questions being editable, comments being useful and answers being constructive. The functional stepping stones that you go through as you get more reputation are interesting and beneficial, although missing is the functionality to have reputation per tag and have that shown in your answers to questions.

There isn’t much to the site over all, it’s clever design takes some good elements and mixes them together in just the right way to produce a clever output. It’s useful and seems to be a winner with the community. The ranking, badges and increasing reputation make the system more of a game and use the best elements of addictive research to keep people participating in the volunteer support site.

I did want to list all questions which has never gotten an answer, all I could do was list questions that had never had an answer accepted. Which is not quite the same thing. I also see there is a _lot_ of questions with answers without the answer being picked. Something we may have to do some future house keeping on.

The chat functions are a bit erroneous and should probably be integrated into irc somehow instead. But perhaps it’s just a place to do house cleaning so maybe it just needs putting in a better place than on every page.

So far the culture on AskUbuntu has been very good. I haven’t seen rudeness or condescension anywhere and people have been polite and helpful throughout even with really hard problems of hardware issues where a number of back and forths are required to sort them out.

Overall I think I’m happy with the Ask Ubuntu site. It’s too late to now back up and move to the FOSS solution so we’re stuck with what we got. But if we must be stuck using a proprietary system, at least let that system not suck. Which this one doesn’t at all.

1 Canonical tends to have a bit of a blind spot for making sure community and development tools are FOSS. Take Launchpad’s extended exile for instance. It’s all rather reminiscent of BitKeeper and the price we pay for not learning from that mistake.

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Wacom Tablets in SVG

Posted in Art and Creation, Doctor's Art, Ubuntu on November 2nd, 2010 by doctormo

I’ve been doodling these wacom tablets in svg so I can have a play at improving the gui configuration tool for these tablets in Ubuntu. Can you spot your tablet here?

When I’m done they’ll all be released in source format (svg) as creative commons attribution share-alike. For now, enjoy this rendering.

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UDS-N Poll: Why are you working on Ubuntu?

Posted in Ubuntu on November 1st, 2010 by doctormo

One of my goals of UDS was to do a little survey on the floor to get a feel for why participants were contributing to Ubuntu and how they see the reason for doing all this work. I set out a simple 5 questions and asked attendees one after another and recorded them on my phone. The Data Source was then compiled into the following statistics with some answers folded into each other since spellings and meanings of difference words meant the same thing.

  • Males: 53
  • Females: 7

What is your role in Ubuntu?

  • developer: 33
  • manager: 7
  • design: 6
  • marketing: 4
  • quality assurance: 4
  • business admin: 2
  • systems admin: 2
  • writer: 1
  • translators: 1

Why do you work on Ubuntu?

  • It’s my job: 15
  • Enjoyment: 7
  • Free software: 6
  • Interesting: 6
  • For myself: 4
  • Best software: 4
  • Give back: 5
  • Making Better Software: 5
  • Open source: 3
  • Recognition: 2
  • Challenge: 2
  • Community: 2
  • Research: 1
  • Change the world: 1

What will benefit the world when Ubuntu succeeds?

  • Freedom: 12
  • Making Better Software: 11
  • Community values: 7
  • Improving Collaboration: 7
  • Improving Access/Empowerment: 7
  • Alternatives/Competition: 5
  • Improved Flexibility: 3
  • Free Cost Software: 2
  • No benefit: 3
  • Improving Education: 2
  • Getting Developers Recognition: 1

Canonical Employees: 33

I really did enjoy doing this survey, hearing each person recount what they thought and having them reflect on what it is we’re trying to achieve here in the Ubuntu project was very enlightening. I hope you too can post your reasons for being involved in Ubuntu or Free and open Source in the comments below.

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