my blog

Tuesday 27 November 2007

Dark theme

Bruno, Wouter: guys, just use the Darklooks theme shipped in gnome-themes-extras or Darkilouche (although I can't find a package for the latter). Much easier :-)

When people look at my screen, I usually get some very positive comments about the theme, so it seems many people are enjoying a dark appearance. Oh, and of course, everybody should use our default background.

Thursday 8 November 2007

Travelling for GNOME...

Long time no blog... It's been a few weeks since I've wanted to write many many many many many many posts (yes, that many) about many many many many topics (also that many). I guess I won't have time to write all those posts, though... Anyway, it's time to try to stop the no post curse, with one long post. In the past few months (and especially this month), I've been travelling quite a bit, mostly for GNOME-related things (there were also one or two personal trips) and some summary of all this is long overdue.

(Skipping FOSDEM in February, since I blogged about it)

Last May, Canonical invited me to the UDS in Sevilla. It was a good occasion to meet at lot of people, and of course some GNOME friends (Ryan, Raphaël, Sébastien, Don, Olav, Fernando and probably other I forgot, sorry!) and Ubuntu friends (won't list everybody, but there's the German Gang: Daniel, Michael and Martin). I discovered there that Raphaël is a mangeur de tripes. It was a great event, but the thing that made it really rocking for me is that it helped me start hacking again. During my return trip, I had a whole night at the Barcelona airport, where I could fix a few gnome-session and libwnck bugs: this was an amazing experience, being alone in the dark, in a small corner of this big airport.

In June, I went to Paris to participate with David Larlet (Ubuntu-fr), Tristan Nitot (Mozilla Europe) and Sophie Gautier (OpenOffice.org) to a roundtable about communities during Paris Capitale du Libre. I felt there was some quite interesting discussion, unfortunately I don't think anybody posted notes of this session. It was also good to catch up with friends of the French Free Software community. Christophe Fergeau was kind enough to host me. You definitely want to go to his home to see a big TV.

July came and I went to the RMLL in Amiens where I helped with the GNOME/GNOME-FR booth. I really have to do a whole post about this event: it was just fantastic! Frédéric and the magic Claude Paroz (translation hero) were there too. I also talked about the GNOME community for the community track, and the presentation went quite well. Thanks to the Foundation for sponsoring me to get there! After the RMLL, I went directly to Birmingham for GUADEC. Some girl saw my computer (with a Ubuntu sticker) at the airport and laughed: she told me she was using Ubuntu at home! As people probably guessed by reading some of my blog entries, I really enjoyed GUADEC :-)

Jumping to October, and the JDLL in Lyon. This is probably one of my favorite events each year for a few reasons: I always feel at home there (it's not far from where I live, and I lived in Lyon for a few years), it's also a good occasion to see some friends in Lyon, and a few years back, I went to the JDLL for the first time and it was the first free software event I attended. I made a presentation about GNOME and how we're trying to reach as many people as possible; the talk went okayish, but it could have been way better. Probably because I was so tired (previous weeks were very busy)... There was of course a GNOME/GNOME-FR booth, mainly manned by Laurent, a friend of mine. Of course, lots of people were there, and I was quite happy to see Dave, and some familiar faces from Mozilla, Fedora-fr and the whole French community.

One week after the JDLL (ie, last week), I went to Boston for the latest UDS (although it turned out to be really difficult to fly to Boston because of the Air France strike; some people never made it). Again, the main point for me was to meet people to discuss and it worked quite well. There was a whole GNOME mafia, with Pedro, Sébastien, Ryan, Andreas, Christian, Jorge, etc. I also tried to catch up with mails: Sébastien now believes that most of my day is used to reply to mails, which is not so far from the reality... Thanks Canonical for inviting me there!

I left UDS one day before the end to do two talks about GNOME during the Gutsy Party in Paris last week-end. One of the presentations was the same as the one I did for the JDLL and the other was about what's new in 2.20; everything went quite well and it was great to see the Géode again. I would have loved to attend a Fedora 8 release event too, but I don't think there is one :/ Oh, and thanks Pascal for hosting me (and allowing me to visit the Mandriva offices)!

This brings us to today. On Saturday, I'm going to Nice to talk about the GNOME philosophy at the JM2L (will be glad to see Baptiste, it's been a long time) and then, next week, I'll go in Italy for SFScon where I'll talk about, guess what, GNOME. Oh, and I can't wait to see there the lovely Andreas!

That's quite a bunch of events, isn't it? I must admit I now feel really happy to stay at home for a few days... You may notice the lack of travel between the end of GUADEC and October. This is a period where I've been more generally much less active, for one specific reason. More on this later :-)

Monday 10 September 2007

svn vs {git,bzr,hg,blablabla}

Yay. We've started again a new discussion about whether GNOME should move away from svn to $YOURFAVORITEDSCM. On foundation-list, which is not really the best place for it, as Lucas points out. The start of the thread was about some problems people are facing wrt the GNOME infrastructure, and the board is trying to address those, pushing for some solutions, but that's not the topic of this post.

I could talk about distributed source code management and how I'm still a bit skeptical when it comes to this, since I didn't see a lot of people wanting to work on the modules I work on... But instead of using stop energy, I figured I'd try something. So, over this week-end, I took a break from work[1], and looked a bit at git. It's not the first time I look at it, and last time I did, I just got confused after a few minutes. So I tried harder. And it seems either git improved since last time, or I'm more clever than ever. It's probably not the latter, though.

Now, to the constructive part: I'm making a live test. I've been away from code in the last few weeks, and some modules I'm supposed to maintain could do with some love. If you need a proof that they need some love, just look over there. So help would obviously be welcome, and I've heard people telling that svn is a barrier for contributions. Therefore, let's remove this barrier! I'll try as hard as possible to maintain a git mirror of gnome-desktop, gnome-menus, gnome-panel, gnome-session and libwnck in the next few weeks or months. Since I'll manually do the updates, it will probably lag behind svn every now and then, but it shouldn't really matter much. I'll also try to do my development with git/git-svn.

So, how do you start? Easy:

git clone http://www.gnome.org/~vuntz/git/gnome-desktop.git/
git clone http://www.gnome.org/~vuntz/git/gnome-menus.git/
git clone http://www.gnome.org/~vuntz/git/gnome-panel.git/
git clone http://www.gnome.org/~vuntz/git/gnome-session.git/
git clone http://www.gnome.org/~vuntz/git/libwnck.git/

It's important to note that the official development of those modules still lives in svn.

Don't ask me any question about how git works, or how to publish your branches: I probably won't be able to reply correctly. And of course, you'll need to bear with me: I'm probably going to do some stupid things with git, and I don't have a lot of time so patience is a virtue that you'll need.

Oh, some people might ask why git?. I honestly don't know. It could have been bzr or something else. I don't care that much at this point, and I needed to look at it anyway since some freedesktop.org modules are using git.

Notes

[1] okay, this is just a way to pretend I was working this week-end ;-)

Tuesday 21 August 2007

Party time in Rhône-Alpes: 10 years of GNOME!

I'm a bit late, but I can't avoid saying it: happy birthday GNOME! It's been 5 years of fun for me, and it's amazing to think it all started 10 years ago. 10 years is a looooong time. Thanks everybody, and be proud of what you accomplished! Of course, we're not done yet ;-)

10 years of GNOME

Of course, I couldn't let Quim promote a party in Helsinki without doing this for our small party in Rhône-Alpes :-)

So we'll be doing something (to be defined) somewhere (to be defined) somewhen (to be defined). Sounds cool, doesn't it? Okay, the somewhere will be either Lyon or Grenoble since there are a bunch of great people in both towns. Please register and put ideas on the wiki page! Hopefully, everybody will be able to join, especially our oldest contributors. No Daniel, I'm not thinking of you! (well... maybe a bit)

Also, I guess some people will organize a similar event in Paris. Note that a free software-related picnic is already planned, and it can be a good place to go celebrate our birthday!

Thursday 9 August 2007

Tourisme en Norvège

Spécialement pour Romaric, voici un lien envoyé par mon frère. Je le partage avec tout le monde car d'autres personnes peuvent souffrir des mêmes problèmes. Je n'ose pas en dévoiler le contenu, et je vous laisserai donc suivre le lien.

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by Vincent