2012-06-24

Ubuntu Launch App Creation Competition With Big Prizes Up For Grabs


Could you create an entirely new application for Ubuntu in just three weeks?

That’s the challenge being put forward by the Ubuntu Development team as they gear up to launch an application creation competition with some awesome prizes up for grabs.

From June 18th seasoned and budding developers alike will be given three weeks to create an entirely new app from scratch using the user-friendly Quickly development tool whatever tools and toolkits they like.

Prizes


At the end of the three-week period a panel of judges (disclaimer: of which I am one) will assess the submitted applications on a series of critera.

Factors such as design, stability and Ubuntu integration will all be taken into account in order to determine three winners, two of whom will win shiny new System76 laptops, and all of whom will bag a Nokia N9 phone.

System 76 Gazelle laptop

Ubuntu users will then decide which three application authors will also win a MeeGo powered Nokia N9 by simply installing and voting for their favourites through the Ubuntu Software Center.

As an added incentive every application author submitting a successful app will nab themselves an Ubuntu t-shirt.

Getting Started Workshops


A series of workshops will be held on Google+. Aimed at all experience levels, these session seek to guide developers in using the Quickly development tool, adding Unity integration, multimedia support, etc.

For the full schedule of what’s happening and when head over to developer.ubuntu.com/showdown/workshops.

App Ideas


Chances are that developers won’t create the next Creative Suite in three weeks, but that doesn’t mean they have to think small.

A Reddit thread has been created for users to suggest app ideas for developers. Similarly, anyone taking a glance at the Mac App Store will spot a treasure trove of small, sole-focused applications that lack Linux equivalents.

Deadlines/Rules


The competition is set to run from June 18th until July 9th, which gives a nice 3-week window in which to create, make, iterate and submit an app to the Ubuntu Software Center.

The general rules are that applications submitted
  • must not depend on packages outside of the Ubuntu 12.04 archive
  • must run from the /opt directory
  • must be packaged into a PPA
  • must be submitted to the Ubuntu Software Center using the MyApps portal in order to be accepted

A full list of rules can be read online @ developer.ubuntu.com/showdown/rules/, whilst more general information on the contest can be found @ developer.ubuntu.com/showdown/


Source

Seif Speaks: Faster Zeitgeist for Everybody


It has been a while since I posted here, but the Zeitgeist team has been very busy lately and rest assured that lots of news will be hitting this site within the next 4 weeks.

Collabora has been pushing us to optimize Zeitgeist performance and scalability, and we delivered. The next release of Zeitgeist will provide you with better performance. In some cases there is over 100% speed improvement.

We benchmarked the some typical Zeitgeist queries and plotted them on a graph. Yellow is current release, blue was some state before we updated the latest code to what we have now, which is denoted in purple. Shorter bars means less time needed for querying.

These are pretty standard queries used by journal and simple applications.





These are more complex queries as used by Synapse and Unity.





So what does that mean for you the user? Quicker searches in the Unity files and application Lenses, faster exploring, and improved response time of all applications using Zeitgeist.

We are already looking into more improvements and we think we can still improve in terms of memory consumption and query times.

For now wait for our next big announcements (integration into applications) and some reviving of a dear project of ours.


Source

Download Mountain Lion’s Wallpapers


Apple have a knack for picking and shipping some stunning wallpapers with their OS.

And it looks like OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion will be no exception judging by the 15 or so backgrounds present in the most recent developer build: -

6/screen-shot-2012-06-15-at-15.03.41_1.jpg">OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion wallpapers

If you like what you can (barely) see in the image above, and want to use them on Ubuntu, then the folks at OS X Daily have got you covered.

Despite there likely being legal issues associated with third-party distribution of the photographic marvels, OS X Daily have, nevertheless, put all 15 wallpapers up on their site for anyone to download.

Better yet they are in humongous 3200×2000 resolution.

Don’t let the fact that these are included by Apple out you off; they are licensed from a variety of photographers and companies and look wonderful with Ubuntu’s chameleonic Unity interface.

LightDm login Screen with wallpaper


Source

Skype For Linux Loses Beta Tag, Hits 4.0


After more than 3 years in development Skype for Linux has shaken off its beta tag and made a substantial new release.

Bumping the app version from 2.2 all the way to 4.0, Skype have nicknamed the release ’Four Rooms for Improvement,’ because, they say, that this release ‘finally [fills] the gap with our other desktop clients and we are now making many of the latest Skype features, as well as a lot of UI improvements, available to our penguin lovers.’

This release marks only the second update to the Linux client in a year. The previous update, made last month, sought to resolve a minor bug issue in the static package.

With this release Skype will likely hope that rumours of the applications demise on Linux are finally put to rest.

New in Skype 4.0


If you’ve used a relatively recent version of Skype on Mac or Windows at some point in the last two years then the majority of what’s new won’t seem that, well, new.

But what has specifically has changed in the Linux client?
  • New Conversation and call views (see gallery)
  • Improved audio and video Quality
  • Additional Web Cam Support
  • improved chat synchronisation
  • New status icons and emoticons
  • “Tabbed” conversations

Download


Skype for Linux 4.0 can be download from the official Skype website. The version available in the Ubuntu Software Center partner repositories is, for the time being, out of date.

Also note that to install Skype 4.0 you will have to first uninstall Skype 2.2 to avoid package conflicts.

Download Skype for Linux 4.0

Today also sees updates released for Skype’s Mac and Windows clients, bumping them up to version 5.8 and 5.10 respectively.


Source

Ubuntu Launch App Creation Competition With Big Prizes Up For Grabs


Could you create an entirely new application for Ubuntu in just three weeks?

That’s the challenge being put forward by the Ubuntu Development team as they gear up to launch an application creation competition with some awesome prizes up for grabs.

From June 18th seasoned and budding developers alike will be given three weeks to create an entirely new app from scratch using the user-friendly Quickly development tool whatever tools and toolkits they like.

Prizes


At the end of the three-week period a panel of judges (disclaimer: of which I am one) will assess the submitted applications on a series of critera.

Factors such as design, stability and Ubuntu integration will all be taken into account in order to determine three winners, two of whom will win shiny new System76 laptops, and all of whom will bag a Nokia N9 phone.

System 76 Gazelle laptop

Ubuntu users will then decide which three application authors will also win a MeeGo powered Nokia N9 by simply installing and voting for their favourites through the Ubuntu Software Center.

As an added incentive every application author submitting a successful app will nab themselves an Ubuntu t-shirt.

Getting Started Workshops


A series of workshops will be held on Google+. Aimed at all experience levels, these session seek to guide developers in using the Quickly development tool, adding Unity integration, multimedia support, etc.

For the full schedule of what’s happening and when head over to developer.ubuntu.com/showdown/workshops.

App Ideas


Chances are that developers won’t create the next Creative Suite in three weeks, but that doesn’t mean they have to think small.

A Reddit thread has been created for users to suggest app ideas for developers. Similarly, anyone taking a glance at the Mac App Store will spot a treasure trove of small, sole-focused applications that lack Linux equivalents.

Deadlines/Rules


The competition is set to run from June 18th until July 9th, which gives a nice 3-week window in which to create, make, iterate and submit an app to the Ubuntu Software Center.

The general rules are that applications submitted
  • must not depend on packages outside of the Ubuntu 12.04 archive
  • must run from the /opt directory
  • must be packaged into a PPA
  • must be submitted to the Ubuntu Software Center using the MyApps portal in order to be accepted

A full list of rules can be read online @ developer.ubuntu.com/showdown/rules/, whilst more general information on the contest can be found @ developer.ubuntu.com/showdown/


Source

Seif Speaks: Faster Zeitgeist for Everybody


It has been a while since I posted here, but the Zeitgeist team has been very busy lately and rest assured that lots of news will be hitting this site within the next 4 weeks.

Collabora has been pushing us to optimize Zeitgeist performance and scalability, and we delivered. The next release of Zeitgeist will provide you with better performance. In some cases there is over 100% speed improvement.

We benchmarked the some typical Zeitgeist queries and plotted them on a graph. Yellow is current release, blue was some state before we updated the latest code to what we have now, which is denoted in purple. Shorter bars means less time needed for querying.

These are pretty standard queries used by journal and simple applications.





These are more complex queries as used by Synapse and Unity.





So what does that mean for you the user? Quicker searches in the Unity files and application Lenses, faster exploring, and improved response time of all applications using Zeitgeist.

We are already looking into more improvements and we think we can still improve in terms of memory consumption and query times.

For now wait for our next big announcements (integration into applications) and some reviving of a dear project of ours.


Source

Download Mountain Lion’s Wallpapers


Apple have a knack for picking and shipping some stunning wallpapers with their OS.

And it looks like OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion will be no exception judging by the 15 or so backgrounds present in the most recent developer build: -

6/screen-shot-2012-06-15-at-15.03.41_1.jpg">OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion wallpapers

If you like what you can (barely) see in the image above, and want to use them on Ubuntu, then the folks at OS X Daily have got you covered.

Despite there likely being legal issues associated with third-party distribution of the photographic marvels, OS X Daily have, nevertheless, put all 15 wallpapers up on their site for anyone to download.

Better yet they are in humongous 3200×2000 resolution.

Don’t let the fact that these are included by Apple out you off; they are licensed from a variety of photographers and companies and look wonderful with Ubuntu’s chameleonic Unity interface.

LightDm login Screen with wallpaper


Source

It’s Not to Late To Enter Ubuntu App Creation Contest And Win A Laptop



Source

Ubuntu App Contest Rescinds Quickly Requirement


The use of the Quickly development tool is no longer a requirement for participants entering the launch-app-creation-competition-with-big-prizes-up-for-grabs" target="_blank">Ubuntu App Showdown Contest.

By allowing developers to craft applications in languages other than Python, the contest will open itself up to a wider range of participants.

Applications submitted will still need to include some form of Ubuntu integration, and should not depend on libraries or packages outside of the Ubuntu 12.04 repository.

So, if you were put off of entering because of the Quickly requirement you can proceed to join in the fun when the contest kicks off on June 18th.

For more information on the contest, its prizes and its rules, refer to developer.ubuntu.com/showdown/


Source

‘Ubuntu Accomplishments’ Makes Getting Involved in Ubuntu Fun




There are a myriad of ways for Ubuntu users to become involved in the wider community – but just where does one start?

Enter the Ubuntu Accomplishments system, which aims to make finding, working towards and tracking opportunities within the Ubuntu community and beyond from one place.

No wiki’s, no mailing lists and no IRC channels: everything you need to know about ‘accomplishing’ a specific goal has been built into the application itself.

And you don’t need to be a serial coder to start earning trophies either; there are a number of accessible tasks for users to begin with, ranging from  linking you Launchpad account with the Accomplishments app to reporting bugs and attending LoCo events.

For the more seasoned community members the trophies become harder to get, but more rewarding in their achievement, such as becoming an official Ubuntu member.

You can learn more about the system, its aims and how it works by watching the following video.


Beyond Developers


If you’re say there reading this thinking “but I’m not a developer”, that doesn’t mean there aren’t opportunities to be found. The latest release comes with support for Desktop accomplishments, too.

So far the tasks on offer in this part aren’t the most taxing, and mostly relate to using Rhythmbox and playing Mahjong. But they do offer potential in helping users orientate themselves with their desktops.

Using Accomplishments


The purpose of the application is to make the discovery of opportunities in the community/on your desktop easy. Having not tested a previous release I can’t say whether this release is better than before, but I can say that it makes the entire process of finding, earning and viewing rewards incredibly easy.

First off, finding new trophies is a snap; the “Opportunities” section of the Accomplishments app lists all available items, with a filter for more specific searching.



Finding out how to “earn” a reward requires nothing more than a click on the its trophy icon.



Then, when you’ve ‘accomplished’ a reward the trophy is added to your shelf the Trophies Lens: -

An Accomplishments Lens for Unity is also available. Again, like the app above, it makes the viewing and searching of rewards simple – in this case you just search:


Install Ubuntu Accomplishments in Ubuntu 12.04


Ubuntu Accomplishment’s isn’t yet at a fully-stable release so you won’t find it available to install from the Ubuntu Software Center.

But getting it is as a simple as adding the official Accomplishments PPA to your Software Sources and installing the required components -
  • sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ubuntu-accomplishments/releases
  • sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install accomplishments-daemon accomplishments-viewer ubuntu-community-accomplishments ubuntu-desktop-accomplishments accomplishments-lens


Source

[How To] Search OMG! Ubuntu! From GNOME Shell


OMG  Ubuntu GNOME Shell search

If you’ve ever wanted to search OMG! Ubuntu! directly from the GNOME-Shell Acvitities Overlay then you’re in luck!

Reader Ivan Blagojević has created a ‘search provider’ for OMG! Ubuntu! that lets you search the site without needing to first open a browser.

Although search providers don’t populate the overlay with results directly they nevertheless make searching Google, Wikipedia – and now this very site – faster.

Installing OMG! Ubuntu! Search in GNOME Shell


If you want to add us to your GNOME Shell set up you’ll first want to grab the search provider file by hitting the button below.

Download OMG! Ubuntu! Shell Search

Once downloaded, extract and, as root, move the ‘OMGUbuntu.xml’ file to: 
  • /usr/share/gnome-shell/open-search-providers



Lastly restart Shell (or log out and back in) and you’re good to go!


Source

Ubuntu Dell Laptops Go on Sale in India




Dell computers pre-loaded with Ubuntu are being rolled out across 850 retail stores in India.

The move is the latest in a string of retail manoeuvres by Canonical and Dell, having arrived in 220 store across China late last year. That figure has now risen to 350.

And, much like the Chinese roll-out, in-store Ubuntu branding, training and support will be set up in stores to help relay the benefits of Ubuntu to the public.

To kick off the arrival Dell will be selling their Inspiron 14R and 15R laptops with Ubuntu from June 21st. Further models will go on sale later in the year.

This incursion into India matches up with Canonical’s expectation that Ubuntu will ship on 5% of all PCs worldwide next year.

‘Accessible’


Canonical's CEO, Jane Silber, who’s in New Delhi for  the Dell Women's Entrepreneur Network event, said of the announcement:

"A founding principle of Ubuntu is to make computing more accessible. By working with Dell to bring these machines to market, we're providing millions of people with the opportunity of an affordable, high-quality computing experience – in some cases, for the first time."

It’s expected that Ubuntu retail availability will be extended to additional territories before the year is out.


Source

Mass-Market Games Engine ‘Unity3D’ To Support Linux


unity engine logo

The viability of Linux as a gaming platform continues to grow, with today’s news that /unity3d.com/" target="_blank">Unity 3D (no, not that one), one of the most popular games engines used by developers of all calibres, will be supporting Linux.

The self-described ‘intuitive and flexible development platform’ allows games developers to “author once” but “deploy everywhere”. This move will allow gaming titles created using the development suite for Windows or iOS the option to be exported for use on Linux, too.

With Unity becoming a popular tool in the creation of “AAA gaming titles”, this introduction could pave the the release of mainstream gaming titles on Linux.

Linux = 10%


Interestingly, Unity Technologies say adding support for Linux will open up titles developed on the platform an estimated ’10% of the game-hungry PC market’.

Even the Linux share breakdowns from the Humble Bundle collections aren’t quite as generous as Unity Tech’s ’10%’ statistic, but as we’re in an unquestioning mood we’ll take it.

Shadowngun - just one example of a unity game that could come to Linux

‘Smart User Base’


In an interview with GamesIndustry International, Unity co-founder and CEO David Helgason elaborated on the decision to add support for Linux further, saying:

“Linux is something we’ve had a lot of questions about from the indie community, and the Humble Indie Bundle has showed that there’s a business on Linux. So we’re trying to commercialise on something we’ve been working on for a long time internally – we actually had some of our engineers kind of doing it in their spare time and on weekends.

We’ll be the first mass market engine to support Linux, and it’s not the biggest user-base, but it’s a very passionate group of people that are willing to pay, they’re smart, and they really love the platform.”

Continuing:

“I actually think our move will be a huge boost to Linux on the desktop. The most important ecosystems of our lifetime such as Windows, OS/2, and later Facebook and iOS, have been made, or undone, by having games, or not. It’s too early to say just how big the impact will be, but I’m excited.”

Other Features


Unity 4 is set to ship with a wide range of new features, options and support, including:
  • Shuriken particle system supports external forces, bent normals and automatic culling
  • 3D texture support
  • Navigation: dynamic obstacles and avoidance priority
  • Major optimizations in UnityGUI performance and memory usage
  • Remote Unity Web Player debugging
  • New Project Window workflows
  • Iterative lightmap baking
  • Refined component-based workflows
  • Extensible inspectors for custom classes
  • Improved Cubemap import pipeline
  • Geometry data improvements for huge memory and performance savings
  • Meshes can be constructed from non-triangle geometry – render points & lines efficiently
  • Search, live preview and buy Asset Store assets from the Project Window

Many of the above features will be demonstrated at the Unite event ion Amsterdam later this year (August 22nd – 25th).

The full press release for the Unity 4 update can be found behind the button below.
Unity 4 Press Release

Unity Technologies, provider of the Unity multi-platform engine and development tools, is excited to announce Unity 4, the next generation of the Unity development platform. The launch of Unity 4 demonstrates the platform’s AAA push that levels the playing field between the largest and the smallest studios, enabling anyone from the most indie game designer to the biggest multinational AAA studios to develop amazing groundbreaking games, and effortlessly deploy to multiple platforms. Customers who pre-order Unity 4 will be offered early access to the Unity 4 beta.

Unity 4 includes an overhaul of the Unity engine and tools suite to accommodate critical new features such as the highly anticipated all-new Mecanim character animation system, DirectX 11 support, hypermodern mobile graphics, and the addition of Adobe® Flash® and Linux as new publishing platforms. These new features and improvements comprise the first in a series of Unity 4 releases that will empower developers with the first truly democratic AAA game engine.

“We’ve been working on Unity 4 for a long, long time and are happy to finally be able to unveil its imminent arrival and outline its core features that will change the industry,” said David Helgason, CEO, Unity Technologies. “The revolutionary animation system and add-on deployments to Adobe Flash and Linux are some of the critical features introduced in Unity 4, which together maintain Unity as the strongest, fastest evolving modern games development platform available.”

Unity 4 includes a host of new features, updates, and improvements:

Mecanim – Groundbreaking character animation technology

Mecanim, Unity’s powerful and innovative animation technology, brings your characters to life in a few mouse clicks with incredibly fluid and natural motion. Mecanim combines a slick interface with powerful tools for creating state machines, blend trees, IK rigging, and auto retargeting of animations all inside of the Unity editor.

“The introduction of the Mecanim suite of animation tools into Unity will completely change how developers integrate interactive animations and will result in awesome new gameplay experiences from the Unity community,” said Robert Lanciault, Lead Animation Developer, Unity Technologies. “These tools will allow animators to work directly in Unity to create advanced and detailed animation blend trees and state machines for incredible and natural character animation.”

An impressive array of retargetable animation will be available in the Unity Asset Store. Developers will have access to a wide range of options that will help bring their characters to life with fluidity and grace.

Visual Fidelity and AAA Rendering

Unity 4 fully supports Microsoft’s DirectX 11. This offers developers the ability to take advantage of the GPU in new and exciting ways: increased shader capabilities with shader model 5, tessellation for smoother models and environments in game worlds, and compute shaders for advanced GPU computation.

Mobile platforms have also received a boost in visual fidelity with optimizations and new features. Unity 4 features real-time shadows on mobile, skinned mesh instancing, the ability to use normal maps when baking lightmaps, and a refined GPU profiler. It’s easy to make extremely high-end visuals that scale across the best of what’s available on modern PCs and the most advanced mobile graphics chips.

Extend multiplatform publishing with Unity add-on for Adobe Flash Player

With Unity 4, developers can create a new game, or take existing Unity 3D content — for iOS, Android, desktop, or the Web — and publish it to the Adobe Flash Player, installed on more than a billion PCs worldwide. Leveraging its industry leading Editor productivity tools, Lightmap and Lightprobe baking, and Occlusion Culling tools, Unity 4 is the powerhouse development tool for creating 3D content for the Adobe Flash Player.

Linux Publishing Preview

Unity 4 will include a preview of a new deployment option to publish games to Desktop Linux, clearing a path for the Unity community to bring exciting new content to the estimated 10% of the game-hungry PC market. Desktop Linux standalone publishing will be available for all Unity 4 users at no additional cost.

Furthermore, Unity 4 introduces a great many additions and improvements such as:
  • Shuriken particle system supports external forces, bent normals and automatic culling
  • 3D texture support
  • Navigation: dynamic obstacles and avoidance priority
  • Major optimizations in UnityGUI performance and memory usage
  • Dynamic fonts on all platforms with HTML-like markup
  • Remote Unity Web Player debugging
  • New Project Window workflows
  • Iterative lightmap baking
  • Refined component-based workflows
  • Extensible inspectors for custom classes
  • Improved Cubemap import pipeline
  • Geometry data improvements for huge memory and performance savings
  • Meshes can be constructed from non-triangle geometry — render points & lines efficiently
  • Search, live preview and buy Asset Store assets from the Project Window

Unity 4 is available now for pre-order from the Unity store (https://store.unity3d.com/).

Unity 4 will be demonstrated and discussed in further detail at the Unite 2012 developer conference that takes place August 22nd – 25th in Amsterdam. For tickets and more information about Unite, visit http://www.unity3d.com/unite/.

About Unity Technologies
Unity Technologies is the creator of Unity, an intuitive and flexible development platform used to make wildly creative and intelligently interactive 3D and 2D content. The “author once, deploy everywhere” capability ensures developers can publish to all of the most popular platforms. Unity Technologies boasts a thriving community of 1,000,000 registered developers including large publishers, indie studios, students and hobbyists. Unity Technologies aggressively re-invests in its award-winning 3D development tools and democratization initiatives, such as the Asset Store digital content marketplace and Union game distribution service, in order to remain at the forefront of innovation. Unity Technologies is headquartered in San Francisco and has offices in Canada, China, Denmark, Lithuania, Sweden, the United Kingdom, Japan and Korea. For more information, visit:http://unity3d.com.


Unity and all other product names are trademarks of Unity Technologies or its subsidiaries or affiliates. Adobe and Flash are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated in the United States and/or other countries. All other product names and trademarks belong to their respective holders.

Marketwire, Via John Pugh


Source

‘Qreator’ Offers Fast Creation of Qr Codes in Ubuntu




If you ever need to quickly create your own Qr codes – those small scannable black and white squares often found in print advertising  - then Qreator is just the tool you need.

As a recent addition to the shelves of the Ubuntu Software you might not have heard of it before.

But the simple interface and tight Unity integration mean that it is just as capable, if not more so, than similar offerings we have looked at in the past – like as QtQr.

Qreator Qrcode in Ubuntu

Features of Qreator


The usefulnesss of Qreator is in its feature set. It is able to quickly make Qrcodes for four different types of data – not just hyperlinks.

These are:
  • URL
  • Text
  • Location
  • Wifi Network

QrCodes based on the data chosen above are generated instantly, and can be saved straight to your desktop or copied to the system clipboard to paste in a graphics editing app, such as GIMP or Pinta.

A handy Unity quicklist is also in tow, giving you right-click access to all of the above features.

Qreator Quicklist

Qreator is a free download and available for Ubuntu 12.04 via the Ubuntu Software Center – just hit the button below to get it.




Source

Ubuntu 12.04 Firmware Released for SmartQ T20 Tablet



Source

Use One of These Simple Wallpapers for a Distraction Free Desktop


Finding a new desktop wallpaper is not hard, is it? All it takes is a quick Google. 

But sometimes we’re our own worst enemy. The wallpapers we choose, for all of their allure, can be distracting – from blinding bokeh backdrops, nature scenes that we can’t resist daydreaming over, to the bright lights of an urban city-scape continually drawing the eye.

To use a clichéd motto: it sometimes pays to keep things simple.

Simple Desktop = Your One Stop Shop


That’s where the curated collection of wallpapers from SimpleDesktop come in. If clean, distraction-free wallpapers are what you’re after you need never go anywhere else.

The site itself is as simple to navigate as the wallpapers it presents; you just need to hit the navigation buttons to start looking.

I cannot stress enough how much it’s worth spending some time to dig through the (seemingly) thousands of wallpapers on offer; there are some real gems to be found.

And the best bit is that these wallpapers look awesome in Unity. 



Visit SimpleDesktops

 


Source

[How To] Add RuneScape Wikia Lens to Ubuntu 12.04


If you still play RuneScape – one of the worlds most popular free MMORPGs – then you may find yourself referring to the dedicated RuneScape ‘Wikia’ site from time to time.

A new Unity lens, created by Runescaper Ryan McClure, brings that Wikia to the Ubuntu desktop.

runescape wikia lens for Ubuntu

Ryan told us more:

Essentially, it is a search Lens for the site: www.runescape.wikia.com, which is a Wiki site devoted to the Jagex game, RuneScape.

It is a slightly popular java-based game, and this site is used by many of its users. I created this lens to make searching even quicker for a player–instead of having to search for a page after opening a new tab, simply typing in the lens will display the page instantly!

Sounds niche, but handy.

Install Runescape Wikia Lens


To install the Lens in Ubuntu you will need to first add Ryan’s PPA to your Software Sources, then proceed to update and install the ‘unity-lens-runescapewikia‘ package using the Ubuntu Software Center.

Alternatively, for an easy life, you can complete both steps by running the two commands below in a new Terminal window:
  • sudo add-apt-repository ppa:ryanmichaelmcclure/ppa
  • sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install unity-lens-runescapewikia
After installing you will need to log out and back into Ubuntu before the lens becomes ‘active’.


Source

Puducherry Linux Group Bring Ubuntu to Internet Center


When I say that readers of this site are awesome I really do mean it.

Prasanna Venkadesh, and the PuduvaiLUG (Puducherry Linux Users Group), are shining examples.

Like many Linux Users Groups around the world, they spend a lot of their time working on ways to spread awareness of GNU/Linux in and around their home territory of Puducherry, India.

Seeing an opportunity where Linux could benefit a local business (and in turn help locals encounter Linux, many for the first time) they approached the owner of a local Internet center to see whether he would be interested in switching his computers over from Windows to Linux.

The switch would give his computers a more responsive, less taxing OS, but also provided an unparalleled level of security for both his machines and the users using them.

The good news is that he was keen, Prasanna tells me, and they settled on using ’the Ubuntu flavour of GNU/Linux’.

‘Surprises’


Keen to make a good impression on their boss willing to give Linux a go, the PuduvaiLUG have come up with a few surprises. One of which is a handmade spray-painting of the OMG! Ubuntu! logo to be hung on the wall of the internet center itself.

Not only does the internet cafe get Ubuntu, it gets some OMG! Ubuntu! love too!

Prasanna sent in some photos of the artwork (which has yet to be boxed and hung) and it looks brilliant.

But what’s even more brilliant is knowing that, thanks to these guys, a whole new group of people are about to be introduced to Ubuntu.

puducherry-linux-group with OMG! Logo


Source

Can a System76 Ubuntu Laptop Meet One Photographer’s Needs?



Source

Canonical Clarify Ubuntu SecureBoot Plans


The drama surrounding Microsoft’s decision to make ’locked down’ bootloaders a requirement for computer makers wishing to ship Windows 8 has been rumbling on for a while.

The devices will use the UEFI-based SecureBoot specification to “prevent unauthorized firmware, operating systems, or UEFI drivers from running at boot time”.

Put simply: only operating systems that have a verified digital key/signature will be able to boot.

UEFI, SecureBoot and Ubuntu


Ever since the Windows 8 SecureBoot dilemma reared its the big question has been: “Can I still use Ubuntu?” .

Canonical have today responded with plans on how they intend to approach the SecureBoot situation to ensure that Ubuntu ‘works smoothly’ for users of devices enabled with it.

Firstly, Canonical has generated an Ubuntu key that, once manually added to affected systems, will allows users to boot Ubuntu.

‘Simple ways for enterprises and consumers to use this key‘ will be announced in due course.

Ubuntu will also use a different kind of boot-loader for Ubuntu on SecureBoot hardware – one not based on the traditional GRUB2.

The reason for this is legal rather than technical, as Steve Langasek explained on the Ubuntu Development mailing list:

“The reason we’ve arrived at a different plan is that Ubuntu has a rather extensive base of preinstalled systems. Microsoft’s Windows 8 logo requirements do say that there must be a way for users to disable secure boot or to install their own keys, and we strongly support this in our own firmware guidelines; but in the event that a manufacturer makes a mistake and delivers a locked-down system with a GRUB 2 image signed by the Ubuntu key, we have not been able to find legal guidance that we wouldn’t then be required by the terms of the GPLv3 to disclose our private key in order that users can install a modified boot loader. At that point our certificates would of course be revoked and everyone would end up worse off.”

To remedy this Canonical have decided to use Intel’s efilinux loader (code which will be familiar to with Intel Mac dual-booters), to which they will apply a few tweaks and add a ‘simple menu’ for OS switching.

Ubuntu CDs


Secondly, Ubuntu CDs will make use of a loader image signed by Microsoft’s ‘WinQual‘ key. This will allow Ubuntu to boot on ‘more or less every off-the-shelf [Windows 8] system’.

Steve Langasek explains this particular part further in a mail to the Ubuntu Development mailing list:

“This will then chain to efilinux signed by our own key (so we don’t have to go through the WinQual signing process every time we want to make a minor change there).

We hope that we’ll also be able to make the first stage loader detect whether Secure Boot is enabled and otherwise chain to GRUB 2, to ensure that we don’t regress behaviour for those with UEFI systems that do not implement Secure Boot or that have it disabled.” 

Calm Before The Storm?


None of the above is set in stone, and things may yet change.

With the first Windows 8 UEFI/SecureBoot devices not out of the gate yet, Canonical do have a bit more breathing time in which to evaluate and implement solutions.

But they’ll be keenly aware that they need to do it before the flood of devices arrives. 

 


Source

Ubuntu App Showdown Progress


Ubuntu’s App Showdown contest, in which users are tasked with making an application from scratch in just three weeks, is barely been running  a week yet there are already some notable app projects in development…. 

Below is just a small selection of applications that I know about.

There are plenty more out there, many of which are being worked on in secret. But if you’re not shy about your work we’d love to track its progress – so get get in touch via the usual methods.

DayJournal


Zach Burnham is working on a daily journalling application called ‘DayJournal‘ (below left).

It’s purpose is simple: make keeping a digital journal as simple and straightforward as a physical one.

But what happens when a slick journaling web app goes away? What happens when the desktop app that stores your journal entries in a password-protected cryptic file format becomes outdated? You'll start to lose confidence in keeping a digital journal and try to keep on with pen and paper. And that just won't work. Because you want to type it.

Progress can be tracked via Zach’s PPA.


Imgur Browser


Discuvr (above, right) is a desktop-based browser for the Imgur photo sharing website.

So far Discuvr doesn’t let you comment or vote (key features on the Imgur site itself) but it does let you see the latest popular (and usually very funny) images without needing to open up your browser.

LibreEdit


E-books fans should keep an ear out for LibreEdit. Developed by Neil Munro, it aims to make the ‘import, edit and export ePub books’ easy.

“It will do this graphically and not having to break open the epub files manually, everything from changing the author information to the actual chapter content should be handled inside the application,” Munro writes on his blog.

And from the initial screengrabs of his work thus far, it’s looking good:


RSS Readers


RSS Readers appear to be the idea de jour of the contest. I know of a least 4 such applications being worked on.

Two of these are ‘publicly known’, including one from the development team behind task management app NitroTasks. From the peek i’ve been given I looks very slick.

Also in the works is a ‘Pandora style’ client by ‘jjed’: -


Manga Reader


Like Manga? The developer of this app aims to create a desktop app for reading your faovurite Manga without needing to open a browser.

‘You can choose through a list of 40 mangas,’ he writes on Reddit, ‘And you can save any manga’s page into your disk or create a Pdf file with the episode you choose.’

Houston


I like the sound of this one: a cloud management application that aims to provide a GUI for ‘configuring and starting instances, applying DNS settings, running  provisioning scripts, provides server status’.

Reddit App


This one doesn’t need much explaining, and from the WIP screenshot already available it looks like it has some super handy features already:




Source

NitroTasks Update Adds Theme, Feature Improvements


The slick task management application Nitrotasks has been updated with a raft of new features and improvements. 

Alongside a new ‘Linux’ theme that respect a users GTK theme comes additional integration with Ubuntu’s Unity desktop.

Other new features include: -
  • Resizable sidebar
  • Customisable background/headings
  • Tag support
  • Sorting options
  • Ability to select multiple tasks using the CTRL + click

New Stuff In Pictures


The new Linux theme better matches a users GTK theme, and makes use fo system icons where possible.



The Nitro Unity item displays a count badge for all unfinished tasks under ‘Today’:

Nitro adds Unity badge

The ‘Sync’ panel has a refined, consistent look: -



Sorting your tasks by date, priority or other means is now easy:

sort nitro tasks in 1.4

Installing Nitro 1.4 in Ubuntu 12.04


As Nitro is not available to directly install from the Ubuntu Software Center you will need to add and install from the following PPA: -
  • sudo add-apt-repository ppa:cooperjona/nitrotasks
  • sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install nitrotasks


Source

Chrome Web Apps No Longer Merge in Unity


Michael Quinlan wrote in to let us know that Chrome and Chromium web apps no longer merge in Unity’s launcher.

I don’t what what got updated, but I’m using Chrome 19.0.1084.56 on Ubuntu 12.04 and just noticed that my Google Reader (Chrome Application), Google Drive (Chrome Application), and Chrome itself all have arrows indicating that the “app” is active, and I can use the Unity launcher to switch between them.

Prior to Ubuntu 12.04 I was using the classic interface specifically due to the merging icon issue, but have been giving Unity another go since updating to 12.04. I’m glad I did!

To be honest it may have been like this for a while; I stopped using Chrome web apps in Ubuntu a while back because of this issue. Trying to manage 3/4 open web-apps at once was harder when they all hid behind one icon.

But that has now changed, so if you were put off previously it might be time to give it another whirl.




Source

ScreenCloud Lets You Take, Share Ubuntu Screenshots Quickly


A new screenshotting tool has been added to the Ubuntu Software Center.

Screencloud sits the menu area, allowing for quick snapping of windows, specific areas or application windows, then directly uploads them to either FTP or the ScreenCloud website for easy sharing.


Features


The charm of ScreenCloud is undoubtedly in its simplicity. It takes and uploads screenshots, nothing more.

But for advanced options you’ll want to head on into the preferences. Options there include: -
  • Set timer delay
  • Enable ‘Capture window borders’
  • Enable/Disable Notifications
  • Set app to run on start up
  • Adjust account/upload/filename/shortcut settings

Uploading


One drawback is that to share photos on the ScreenCloud service you need to sign up for an account. If you don’t want to do so then your “uploading” choices are limited to FTP or local storage.

With FTP or ScreenCloud account set up, screenshots are automatically uploaded seconds after being taken. Image URLs are instantly copied to the system clipboard for sharing.



Screencloud is a free download, available from the Ubuntu Software Center.




Source