A Better Alternative to the TSA?
Most everyone agrees that going through airport security and being groped by the TSA is not only offensive, but also a major nuisance.
How about replacing the TSA with privately run airport security?
It sounds like San Francisco travelers much prefer their privately run airport security than the TSA at all other US airports.
openSUSE 12.2!!!!
Here is a quick way to promote openSUSE's release at your own website. This is taken from Yaloki's website.
If you have a website/blog, here is the HTML markup to add in order to include the openSUSE release countdown image:
The markup above will add a 256x256 pixel image. If you prefer to have the smaller (130x130) one:
And in case you prefer the huge one (400x400px) for maximum visibility: 
Enjoy :D
GSoC Concluded
This week Google Summer of Code concluded. It was great learning experience working under openSUSE and getting to know people here especially my mentor Michal Hrusecky, whose brilliance helped me sail through GSoC. But unlike GSoC, the Karma plugin still has a long route to travel before it approaches completion. I have chalked out the following things to work upon in the coming weeks.
- Talk to the artwork team and improve upon the badges and come up with cooler and more creative ones. ;)
- Karma user rank Calculation does not fare well with current elgg and PHP version, so find out a better way to calculate ranks.
- Karma OBS implementation is not very clean. Run some tests to improve it. Also it takes a whole lot of time to complete searching for packages that have been updated latest, so, find out a better plan.
- The twitter implementation is not able to reward protected users on Twitter, try to fix that.
- Work on allowing people to iframe their karma stats on their blogs like on Ohloh suggested by Michal.
Last months
- Akademy-es in Zaragoza
- Flying to Berling to work on KDE eV economic report and LinuxTag
- Moving to Nuremebrg
- Begin to work as openSUSE Team Lead at SUSE
- Prepare my Akademy keynote and my talk about KDE Connect
- Develop and present the economic report during KDE eV AGM plus Board elections
- Complete the administrative work derived from relocation
- Flying to GUADEC
- Looking for a flat and moving.
and working, of course. All of them time consuming, but specially, vital energy consuming. So this August I've been trying to cool down a little and go back to routine, now that I have my flat (how important is this step, right?).
Meanwhile, at SUSE.....
the openSUSE Release team, together with the community, have managed to release 12.2 RC2 on time. This could be no news for openSUSE users and supporters. But for us means that we are delivering even tough we are in a transition phase, and despite the fact that we are reducing the pressure over the Release Team instead of increasing it. Delivering on time is always a good sign.
12.2 RC2 is usable so, if you are a developer or an openSUSE power user, consider installing it and giving us feedback. No major bugs should be expected but your reports are very valuable to us. I already have it in my laptop and, except for little details, it works as expected. If you prefer to wait until September 5th, you will be able to install the fresh 12.2. openSUSE Team at SUSE is finishing these days the last few tasks, specially related with generating the Gold Master and creating marketing material.
This month of August openSUSE Team is also putting energy into the openSUSE Conference organization. As you probably know, this is not a normal event. We host four events in one
- Future Media
- openSUSE Conference
- Gentoo Conference
- Linux Days
so there is a lot to do, as you can imagine. Organizing Free Software events is something that follows me in every job I take, no matter where that is. I'm kind of getting used to it. Don't know if that is a good sign though.
openSUSE community in America has an important milestone in September at openSUSE Summit, the community conference organized right after the SUSE Conference in Orlando, Florida, USA. So if you live in South, Central or North America and like openSUSE, don't miss it. More than 50 people have registered already so it looks like is going to be a good opportunity to give a push to our community in North America.
So September and October are going to be busy months for me and the Team.
II Semana da Infraestrutura da Internet no Brasil
Na semana de 03 a 08 de Dezembro de 2012 promoveremos os 05 mais importantes eventos sobre a infraestrutura da Internet no Brasil: o PTT Fórum, o Fórum IPv6, o ION, o GTER e o GTS. Programa-se e participe! A participação é gratuita.
Saiba mais em: http://nic.br/semanainfrabr/.
Fonte: http://ipv6.br/ii-semana-da-infraestrutura-da-internet-no-brasil/
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Kozumi K-5400GR+Arnet+Linux
openSUSE Release and openSUSE Summit
On the subject of chameleons, I have been pondering recently about the variety of designs that can come from this reptile. It is one that changes colors to adapt to its environment, it also has a tongue that extends sometimes longer than its own body and it lives in trees eating insects. I own a chameleon myself and as I have lived with it, I have realized that it is a great design inspiration. Recently also, I found these images from Igor Siwanowics
Cómo convertir imagenes a formato iso
Puede que en algún momento nos hayamos topado con una imagen en un formato no estándar. Pues bien, aquí os digo brevemente como convertirlas a formato iso en Linux 
de bin/cue a iso:
- Instalamos bchunk:
zypper in bchunk - Lo ejecutamos:
bchunk archivo.bin archivo.cue archivodesalida.iso
de daa a iso:
- Nos descargamos la versión de PowerISO para Linux:
wget http://poweriso.com/poweriso-1.3.tar.gz - Lo extraemos:
tar xzvf poweriso-1.3.tar.gz - Lo ejecutamos:
./poweriso convert archivo.daa -o archivodesalida.iso -ot iso
de uif a iso:
En este caso tenemos dos opciones: usar uif2iso o MagicISO.
- Instalamos uif2iso (búscalo en build.opensuse.org, ya que no está en los repositorios principales e instala el paquete rpm)
- Ejecutamos
uif2iso archivo.uif archivodesalida.iso
Si no nos funcionase uif2iso, podemos probar con MagicISO (el formato uif es de éste programa). No está disponible para Linux, pero funciona perfectamente bajo Wine.
- Nos bajamos MagicISO.
- Instalamos wine:
zypper in wine - Después instalamos MagicISO:
wine Setup_MagicISO.exe - Para ejecutarlo hacemos clic en el acceso directo o bien directamente en el archivo uif.
- Y finalmente convertimos el archivo.uif a iso yendo a «File»→»Save as» o «Tools»→»Convert» e introduciendo los datos que nos piden (ej: nombre del archivo iso de salida).
La imagen iso resultante la podremos montar en algún lado (ej: mount -o loop -t iso9660 image.iso /mnt/) o abrir directamente haciendo clic derecho sobre ella desde Dolphin; Acciones → Examinar ISO. Se nos abrirá una nueva ventana mostrándonos los contenidos de la imagen iso.
También comentar que existe una aplicación muy útil que se llama AcetoneISO. Desafortunadamente, no admite el formato uif pero admite bastantes como, por ejemplo bin, nrg, img, daa o dmg. Está en KDE:Extras
Month of birthdays
August is a busy month for birthdays!
This all starts with openSUSE, on August 9th. Seven years ago, the development of SUSE Linux opened up and openSUSE was born. The openSUSE project is actually pretty young, compared to the other projects delivering distributions. But it has 20-years old roots... I joined the project in February 2008, and I've seen the community grow and become more and more involved and, more importantly to me, in charge.
On August 15th, we celebrate the birthday of the GNOME project. Miguel announced the GNU Network Object Model Environment Desktop project fifteen years ago. I'm happy the letters in GNOME don't stand for anything anymore ;-) It's been a long ride, with the great GNOME 1.0 release in 1999 (let's be honest, it was crappy by today's standards — I tried GNOME back then, and quickly gave up), the GNOME 2.0 release in 2002 (I joined the project around that time, I still remember the excitement in the community) and the recent GNOME 3.0 release in 2011 (I can't believe I wrote the 3.0 plan more than three years ago already...). Even though I'm less involved nowadays, GNOME is my family.
And finally, on August 16th, Debian reaches a new milestone. In 1993, the imminent release of the first version was announced, which makes the project nineteen years old now. I've always loved Debian, and I've long wondered whether I should become a Debian Developer, but I never made the jump as I chose to focus on upstream activities instead for my free time. And then I joined openSUSE. But it's never too late, so who knows, maybe one day...
I use what those three projects deliver daily, literally. Many thanks to everyone who made and still make this possible!
Karma weekly report and minor fixes.
Next, Karma widget also shows user rank. This is the rank of a user based on total karma score attained. This rank is purely score based irrespective of whether karma is developer or marketing type. I have kept the Rank calculation also a part of the cron script, so that means ranks are calculated every 5 minutes.
Also, during this time Marguerite Su, chinese wiki admin pointed out that wiki score calculated during karma score updation didn't include localed wikis. So I corrected the wiki and planet openSUSE part to include localed wiki and global posts.
I also fixed some minor bugs with wiki score calculation and kudos calculation.
I have started off with the documentation, though not much has been done, I will now concentrate solely on that.














