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bzr status schwuk
Well it’s been a while I wrote here (if you ignore the Twitter spam :)) - in fact July was the last time I blogged in earnest - and a few things have changed, so I thought I’d talk about some of them.
First of all I’ve moved to the Distro QA team here at Canonical. This means that I’m now working directly on Ubuntu, and my work will be much more visible - both in the distribution and here on this blog. I’m working with a great team here within Canonical - Henrik, Leann, Brian, Steve, Ara, Pedro, and Marc - and the wider Ubuntu QA community, as well as the rest of the Distro team and of course the whole Ubuntu community. At the moment I’m focused on hardware testing, and you’ll be seeing a lot more attention given to testing in Ubuntu over the next few releases.
Apart from working I attended the “last” LugRadio Live - see you all again next year! - and had a great holiday in the South of France. I also spent a long weekend in the woods in Wales at the Bushcraft UK Bushmoot where I got the chance to meet Mors Kochanski who is an amazing, inspiring and above all friendly guy. The ‘moot itself was well worth the trip, just like LugRadio Live is, but meeting him made it absolutely worthwhile.
Last November I pondered moving to 64-bit. Last week after a few stability and performance problems (entirely self-inflicted) I decided to bite the bullet, wipe Vista from my hard drive forever (it came with the laptop, and I left it around “just in case” but it never really got used) and perform a fresh install. This was my first “real” install (if you ignore my testing work) since I first put Feisty on the laptop when I got it, and the install experience is really nice these days. Since I had the opportunity I decided to go with 64-bit, and I’m pleased to say that I’ve had zero problems with it. Flash is commonly criticised as being difficult under 64-bit, but it installed via the package in Synaptic and has worked since. If anything Firefox + Flash has been more reliable than it was under 32-bit.
In August I succumbed and got myself an iPhone 3G, even though I’m months away from the end of my current contract with my N95. So far I have been seriously impressed with it - browsing is excellent, and it is by far the best e-mail experience I’ve had on any mobile device to date. Oh, and it’s a decent phone too!
I’ve not really encountered any of the performance/stability problems many others have complained about, except when I had it configured to sync OTA with Google via NeuvaSync when it would occasionally get a bit sluggish. That was with the 2.0.2 firmware, and I’ve not re-enabled OTA syncing since upgrading to 2.1 yesterday. This is my first iPod as well - the only other current iPod in the house belongs to Schwuklet #1, although Schwuklet #2 has put an order in with Santa Claus for a 4th generation Nano. The iPhone has increased my podcast consumption as well, which can only be a good thing.
That’s it for now, but I’m sure I’ll think of more things to post soon.
Whatsisname
Since everyone else is doing it…
Previously I shared Emma Jane’s predilection for names taken from the Lord of the Rings. At various points I’ve had Aragorn, Frodo, Bilbo, Merry & Pippin (two identical machines), Faramir & Boromir (same machine, dual boot), Arwen, Treebeard, Saruman and Sauron. See if you can guess which were running Microsoft Windows…
I thought Treebeard was a fitting name for my current laptop (anyone who’s seen it will know why), but when I recently switched to 64-bit (and wiped Vista in the process) I renamed it to Hagrid - mainly because at the time I was re-re-reading the Harry Potter books. Treebeard lives on in it’s old 32-bit incarnation for now, but I suspect he will be gone soon - I’m very happy with my 32 extra bits.
Since I switched naming schemes Severus has also joined my network.
The rest of my current machines are named quite unimaginatively: Xbox, Xbox 360, Wii, Gatekeeper (my IPCop box), and iPhone. I did go through a phase of assigning names to network devices (like access points) but I grew out of that.
Schwuklet #2 also has a tendency to name things, although he has his own influences: he calls our car Anakin. Should I be proud that he’s following in my footsteps or sad that he thinks Star Wars always had six episodes?
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look good