Ubuntu Maverick development updates

For last 2 hours, I dug through all the mails from ubuntu mailing lists, esp the announcements related to development, recalled many changes which I heard in last week or two and penned them down.

  • Ubuntu Maverick Meerkat Alpha 1 released with Linux Kernel 2.6.34-5  #
  • Ubuntu sparc and IA64 ports are candidates for decommissioning unless someone comes up to take the responsibility of maintaining it. #
  • Maverick won’t run on processors below i686 #
  • DebianImportFreeze on June 24th, Alpha 2 will come on July 1st #
  • On Alpha 1 alternate, creation of encrypted /home is broken #
  • Shotwell replaces F-Spot as Image organizer #
  • Daniel Holbach invites everyone for Operation Cleansweep. It aims to bring down bugs with patches down to 0(zero) by the time of Maverick release. #
  • Ubuntu User Days has been postponed till July 10th, 2010 #
  • Jono Bacon has invited interested people to come forward and take over Acire and PyJunior development #
  • Maverick rebased to Kernel 2.6.35-rc1 # # # (Status: Maverick (ogasawara) section)
  • Maverick will be getting 1.8 X Server due to which all drivers need to be rebuilt. It might break X when upgrading. Later in the cycle X will be upgraded to 1.9 #
  • Chromium is default for Ubuntu Netbook Remix #
  • Martin Pitt has a page for burn-down chart and work progress for Maverick Alpha 2 #
  • Lots of Software Center UI enhancements on the way #
  • Next Ubuntu Hug Day targets Gnome Games to be held on June 10th. 68 New bugs, 28 Incomplete and 14 Confirmed. #
  • Aptitude has been removed. Though it is still available in repos. #

Ubuntu: luckyBackup a powerful, fast and reliable backup & sync tool

The main goal of luckyBackup, as its name states, is the creation of backups of your data.
Somebody once said:
if you haven’t backed up your data is like not having them at all !! ”
That is because, based at the laws of probability, some time, for some reason, something will happen and you will lose valuable data. Another guy once said:
computer users can be divided into 2 categories:
Those that have lost data
…and those that have not lost data YET ”
I really wish you to never come to that situation.
But if you do, then I hope that you backed up your data the very last minute either by using this application or not 🙂
luckyBackup is an application for data back-up and synchronization powered by the rsync tool.
It is simple to use, fast (transfers over only changes made and not all data), safe (keeps your data safe by checking all declared directories before proceeding in any data manipulation ), reliable and fully customizable.
On Ubuntu, line command, type:
$ sudo apt-get install luckybackup
After that, go on Applications->System menu…

Ubuntu 10.04 – Abrir terminal numa determinada pasta

As vezes é necessário abrir o terminal numa determinada pasta, que por acaso estamos trabalhando nela. Ora, em vez de abrir o terminal e navegar até essa pasta não seria melhor abrir o terminal logo nessa pasta?

Isso é possível com o pacote nautilus-open-terminal que faz aparecer mais uma opção quando é clicada a tecla direita do mouse numa pasta. (screenshot acima)

Para instalar o nautilus-open-terminal, veja abaixo:

$ sudo apt-get install nautilus-open-terminal

How to Convert M4A to MP3 in Linux

M4A is a popular digital audio format, most prolifically employed as the native format of iTunes. M4As can be either “lossy”, meaning they give up some audio quality to shrink the file size, or “lossless”, meaning they retain all the quality of, say, a Compact Disc. MP3 is the most famous and widely-used lossy digital audio format. By using the open source Sound Converter software, M4As can easily be converted into MP3 in Linux.

Difficulty: Moderately Easy

Instructions

Step 1

Use your Linux distribution’s package manager to install Sound Converter and the necessary plugin (gstreamer0.10-plugins-ugly-multiverse) that enables MP3 encoding. Each package manager is different, but the following steps explain the process in Synaptic Package Manager, which is used by the very popular Ubuntu, as well as all Debian-based Linux flavors.

Alternatively, you can visit the Sound Converter website and web page that distributes the plugin and simply download and install the software. (See Resources.)

If not running Ubuntu or another Debian-based distribution, skip to Step 5.

Step 2

Click “System->Administration->Synaptic Package Manager.”

When the program opens, enter “Sound Converter” in the Quick Search box. Sort the list of search results by clicking the “Package” header, then find “soundconverter” in the list. Click the checkbox to the left of “soundconverter,” then click “Mark for Installation.” If asked to install other required packages or perform other tasks to properly install the software, click “Mark,” “Apply,” or equivalent.

Step 3

Enter “gstreamer” in the Quick Search box. Sort the list of search results by clicking the “Package” header, then find “gstreamer0.10-plugins-ugly-multiverse” in the list. (The number in the file name can be different.) Click the checkbox to the left of “gstreamer0.10-plugins-ugly-multiverse,” then click “Mark for Installation.” If asked to install other required packages or perform other tasks to properly install the software, click “Mark,” “Apply” or equivalent.

Step 4

Click “Apply” in the program’s toolbar. Click “Apply” again in the dialogue box that pops up and Synaptic Package Manager will install the software.

Step 5

Run Sound Converter. When the program opens, click the “Add File” button if you want to convert a single file or a group of selected, specific files; click the “Add Folder” button if you want to convert an entire folder’s worth of files at once.

Step 6

Browse to and select the file(s) or folder you want to convert, then click “Open.” Your file(s) will be added to the conversion list.

Click “Edit->Preferences.” In the “Type of result?” section, select the MP3 file format; you can also adjust the quality of your MP3s, if you wish. Click “Close.”

Step 7

Click the “Convert” button in the program toolbar and Sound Converter will convert your M4As into MP3, placing them into the same folder as the originals.

Ubuntu 10.04 / Gnome 2.30 – Barra de localização “editável” do Nautilus

Foi lançada a nova versão do Ubuntu, 10.04 LTS – Lucid Lynx, com o Gnome 2.30.0.

Gostei que o Nautilus, que agora vem com opção de um painel de navegação extra (F3), mas a barra de localização por onde podemos digitar caminhos (diretórios) a percorrer com recurso de autocompletar não é padrão (default) e nem aparece o ícone para trocar o tipo de navegação: digitando caminhos ou clicando em botões como nomes dos diretórios. Para habilitar isso, temos duas opções:

a) Basta dar Ctrl + L — O Ctrl+L funciona, mas, a cada sessão aberta do Nautilus, têm-se que repetir esse comando.

b) Pode-se fazer isso pelo Gconf-editor. Dê um Alt+F2, digite: gconf-editor. Abra (na “cruzinha”) apps, depois nautilus e, por último, preferences. Aí, é só marcar a opção “always_use_location_entry”. Pronto.