Vincent Untz | 2 Apr 2009 13:17
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Planning for GNOME 3.0

During the first few months of 2008, a few Release Team members
discussed here and there about the state of GNOME. This was nothing
official, and it could actually have been considered as some friends
talking together about things they deeply care about. There were
thoughts that GNOME could stay with the 2.x branch for a very long time
given our solid development methods, but that it was not the future that
our community wants to see happening. Because of lack of excitement.
Because of lack of vision. Slowly, a plan started to emerge. It evolved,
changed, was trimmed a bit, made more solid. We started discussing with
a few more people, got more feedback. And then, at GUADEC, the Release
Team proposed an initial plan to the community that would lead the
project to GNOME 3.0. Quite some time passed; actually, too much time
passed because too many people were busy with other things. But it's
never too late to do the right thing, so let's really be serious about
GNOME 3.0 now!

Let's first diverge a bit and discuss the general impression that GNOME
is lacking a vision. If you look closely at our community, it'd be wrong
to say that people are lacking a vision; but the project as a whole does
indeed have this issue. What we are missing is people blessing one
specific vision and making it official, giving goals to the community so
we can all work together in the same direction. In the pre-2.x days, the
community accepted as a whole one specific vision, and such an explicit
blessing wasn't needed. But during the 2.x cycle, with our six months
schedules, it appeared that everything (community, development process,
etc.) was just working very well, and as the vision got more and more
fulfilled, the long-term plans became less important as we focused on
polishing our desktop. But we've now reached a point where our next
steps should be moving to another level, and those next steps require
important decisions. This is part of what the Release Team should do.
(Continue reading)

Olav Vitters | 6 Apr 2009 14:10

Propose new modules for inclusion in GNOME 2.28

It is time to expand the definition of GNOME with a batch of new
modules. If you are a maintainer, now is the time to propose your module
to be included in GNOME!

How should you proceed? It's easy, all the information is on:
    http://live.gnome.org/ReleasePlanning/ModuleProposing

The new modules proposal period will end on Monday May 18th at 23:59
UTC. We expect discussion to heat up about those proposals at the
beginning of July and to reach a decision around July 27th.
Also note that *early* feedback&testing help maintainers/developers to
work on the found issues (we want them fixed at the module acceptance
stage on 27 July).

For more information about 2.27, the full schedule, the official module
lists and the proposed module lists, please see our 2.27 page on the
wiki:
    http://live.gnome.org/TwoPointTwentyseven

For a quick overview of the GNOME schedule, please see:
    http://live.gnome.org/Schedule

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(Continue reading)

Stormy Peters | 7 Apr 2009 16:30
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Re: Gran Canaria Desktop Summit Call for Participation

Just a reminder to submit your papers for GUADEC and the Desktop Summit!

The correct url for call for participation should be http://www.grancanariadesktopsummit.org/node/43.

Stormy

On Tue, Mar 17, 2009 at 7:45 AM, Stormy Peters <stormy-rDKQcyrBJuzYtjvyW6yDsg@public.gmane.org> wrote:
The Gran Canaria Desktop Summit, co-hosting GUADEC, the GNOME Conference, and Akademy, the KDE conference, invite you to participate in the inaugural Desktop Summit, from July 4th to July 10th 2009, in Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, Spain.

This year's conference represents the first time that Akademy and GUADEC will be co-hosted, the core theme of the conference is "the Free Software desktop". The GUADEC planners invite talks from developers on core technologies which enable new ground breaking functionality, application developers building cross-desktop applications for Linux, and GNOME visionaries plotting the future of the computing user interface. We also welcome presentations by people from GNOME related projects, users of GNOME technologies and from our partner projects.

We are asking for four types of submissions:
- 30 minutes presentations on GNOME topics
- 30 minutes presentations on cross-desktop topics
- 5 minutes lightning talks
- BOF and workgroup proposals

We invite people to submit abstracts for 30 minute presentations about GNOME or cross-desktop topics to guadec-papers-rDKQcyrBJuzYtjvyW6yDsg@public.gmane.org, including your name, biographical information, and a photo suitable for the web, and a title and description of your presentation, of under 400 words.

We also welcome informal proposals for 5 minute lightening talks to be held on Saturday July 5th and proposals for BOFs and workgroups which will be held from Tuesday July 7th until Friday July 10th. Proposals for lightning talks and BOFs will be accepted on a first-come-first-served basis, in the limits of available space. Please send your proposals to guadec-papers <at> gnome.org.

The deadline for submissions is Friday April 10th, 2009.

Successful candidates will be selected and notified by the organizing committee by April 24th, 2009.

More information at http://www.grancanariadesktopsummit.org/callforpapers

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Vincent Untz | 10 Apr 2009 03:19
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TARBALLS DUE: GNOME 2.26.1 Stable Release

Hi,

Did you ever consider creating some rules like "never send mails between
midnight and 7AM"? Things would be quite different with such a rule.
(oh, and people trying to cheat because of some timezone magic would be
punished very hard -- they'd have to triage the evolution bugs for two
weeks) So, yeah, things would be different. Some people would sleep
more. Some people would work less. This doesn't sound bad so far. But
now... imagine... I wouldn't be able to send this mail. This would be
bad, wouldn't it? I mean, those tarballs due mails are so great, with
deep spiritual messages... They certainly the change the life of people
all around the world. Can you imagine life without them? I'll let you
meditate on this for a while.

Tarballs are due by Monday April 13th before 23:59 UTC for the GNOME
2.26.1 Stable Release, which will be delivered on Wednesday.

Please make sure that your tarballs will be uploaded before Monday 23:59
UTC: tarballs uploaded later than that will probably be too late to get
in 2.26.1. If you are not able to make a tarball before this deadline or
if you think you'll be late, please send a mail to the release team and
we'll find someone to roll the tarball for you!

The schedule for 2.26 stable releases and more information about making
releases can be seen on the 2.27 page on the wiki:
   http://live.gnome.org/TwoPointTwentyseven

For a quick overview of the GNOME schedule, please see:
   http://live.gnome.org/Schedule

Thanks,

Vincent

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Matthias Clasen | 15 Apr 2009 20:12
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GNOME 2.26.1 Released!

=============================================
GNOME 2.26.1 Stable Release
=============================================

This is the first update to GNOME 2.26. It contains the usual mixture of
bug fixes, translations updates and documentation improvements that are
the hallmark of stable GNOME releases, thanks to our wonderful team of
GNOME contributors!

The next stable version of GNOME will be GNOME 2.26.2, which is due on
May 20. Meanwhile, the GNOME community is actively working on the
development branch of GNOME that will become GNOME 2.28 in late
September 2009.

More information about the GNOME schedule is available here:

 http://live.gnome.org/Schedule

The GNOME 2.26 release notes are available at:

 http://library.gnome.org/misc/release-notes/2.26/

The notes that describe the changes between 2.26.0 and 2.26.1 are here:

admin    - http://download.gnome.org/admin/2.26/2.26.1/NEWS
bindings - http://download.gnome.org//bindings/2.26/2.26.1/NEWS
desktop  - http://download.gnome.org/desktop/2.26/2.26.1/NEWS
devtools - http://download.gnome.org/devtools/2.26/2.26.1/NEWS
mobile   - http://download.gnome.org/mobile/2.26/2.26.1/NEWS
platform - http://download.gnome.org/platform/2.26/2.26.1/NEWS

The GNOME 2.26.1 release is available here:

admin sources    - http://download.gnome.org/admin/2.26/2.26.1/
bindings sources - http://download.gnome.org/bindings/2.26/2.26.1/
desktop sources  - http://download.gnome.org/desktop/2.26/2.26.1/
devtools sources - http://download.gnome.org/devtools/2.26/2.26.1/
mobile sources   - http://download.gnome.org/mobile/2.26/2.26.1/
platform sources - http://download.gnome.org/platform/2.26/2.26.1/

To compile GNOME 2.26.1, you can use the jhbuild
(http://library.gnome.org/devel/jhbuild/) modulesets available at:

 http://download.gnome.org/teams/releng/2.26.1/

We hope you'll love it,

The GNOME Release Team
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Kristian Høgsberg | 15 Apr 2009 23:27
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Git day minus 1

Tomorrow, Thursday April 16th, is the big flag day for the GNOME
repositories. We've moved over quite a few repositories from SVN,
GitHub, freedesktop.org and other places that people have put GNOME
git repositories, but tomorrow we finish the migration and move over
everything else. We've timed it so that the 2.26.1 release could be
finished first, and since that just happened, now is the time to push
the big button. Thanks to a lot of sysadmin legwork from Owen, the
GNOME git infrastructure is looking great: we have cgit set up on
git.gnome.org and the various commit hooks and mailing lists scripts
have been setup and tuned.

What will happen tomorrow is that all SVN repositories will be marked
readonly around 10am EST and then we'll start the migration. The git
repositories will show up in cgit as they're converted and will be
ready to clone and push to. We've done a few test runs on all the
GNOME repos and I expect the conversion process to take most of the
day.

Part of the migration project has been to update the documentation and
there's a introduction document in place for developers and a guide
for translators as well. There's room for improvement still, but in
the meantime a lot of GNOME contributers are already familiar with git
and can help out on irc etc.

See you on the other side!
Kristian
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Owen Taylor | 16 Apr 2009 22:58
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Adding module descriptions

The great migration to git.gnome.org is now underway. Once your module
shows up on http://git.gnome.org/cgit/, you'll notice that it is
described as:

 Unnamed repository; edit this file to name it for gitweb.

Since you want something better than that, what you are going to do to
fix is add a file in the toplevel of your module named:

 <modulename>.doap

Which is a DOAP file (in RDF/XML) for your module. As an example, for
the pango module, the file would be called 'pango.doap'. A DOAP file is
a "description of a project" file, and allows listing all sorts of
things about your module in machine-readable form. We'll likely use more
from it in the future, but for now the only thing that matters is the
'shortdesc', which should be a phrase like:

 Internationalized text layout and rendering library

(No leading 'A' or 'The', no trailing period)

Thanks to Shaun McCance there's no need to worry about how to create a
DOAP file, just find your module in:

 http://www.gnome.org/~shaunm/pulse/web/

And select the "Download DOAP template file" link to get a DOAP file for
your module that you can then edit as necessary. It might even already
have a good shortdesc if Pulse could find one from your .desktop file.

- Owen

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Rodney Dawes | 19 Apr 2009 21:25
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intltool move

Hey Everyone,

As some of you may have seen in my blog post[1], Danilo and I have
decided to move intltool over to Launchpad[2], as the project is not
specific to GNOME, and Launchpad gives us some features which none of
the other code hosting sites have. Particularly, there have been a fair
number of complaints about Launchpad Translations vs. upstream, and how
it is somewhat difficult to keep the two in line. One feature I have
been personally wanting to do for quite some time now, is to integrate
Launchpad Translations support into intltool, to make dealing with the
differences easier, or to make the problems go away entirely, for some.

The intltool product on bugzilla.gnome.org is now closed for new
reports, and the SVN module was moved over to svn-archive before the
gnome.org transition to git. The latest intltool code is already in a
bzr branch on Launchpad (lp:intltool) and, all new bugs should be
reported at http://bugs.launchpad.net/intltool/ from now on. There are
still a few open bugs in bugzilla, which Danilo or myself will deal
with as appropriate, by fixing, moving, or closing as wontfix.

If there were any status scripts, or tools, which were pulling intltool
from SVN, please update those to pull from the bzr branch now instead.

I hope the transition has been smooth (nobody's made loud noisy
complaints yet), and we can expand our user base outside of GNOME
through the efforts Danilo and myself are making with intltool. If
there are any problems, questions, or complaints, feel free to bug
either one of us on IRC, or via e-mail.

Thanks!

-- Rodney

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Andre Klapper | 26 Apr 2009 21:52
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2.27.1 tarballs due moved back one week.

> >> With the outstanding git migration problems (and the resulting
> >> inability to jhbuild) perhaps we should postpone 2.27.1 by one week?

2.27.1 will be postponed by one week because of git migration issues
with some modules.

New tarballs due for 2.27.1: May 4th, 23:59 UTC.

andre
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