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PUBLIC MARKS from tadeufilippini with tags community & support

22 September 2009 03:30

Local Support through Local Community (aka LoCo) Teams | Ubuntu

Home Face-to-Face Local Support Our worldwide network of Local Community ("LoCo") teams is providing a strong backbone to our already vast and extensive Ubuntu community. Many of these teams provide free, face-to-face local support, such as one-on-one troubleshooting, group sessions, and presentations about Ubuntu. Why not go and see the full list of teams! Contents 1. Non-English Support 1. Bengali (Bangladesh) 2. Brazilian 3. Catalan 4. Česky 5. Chinese 6. Croatian 7. Dutch 8. Finnish 9. French 10. German 11. Greek 12. Hebrew and Arabic 13. India (any Indian language) 14. Indonesian 15. Italian 16. Japanese 17. Korean 18. Kurdish 19. Persian (Iran) 20. Portuguese 21. Romanian 22. Russian 23. Slovak 24. Spanish 1. General 2. Argentina 3. Chile 25. Swedish 26. Tamil 27. Turkish 28. Urdu (Pakistan) Non-English Support Support channels on IRC and mailing lists exist for Ubuntu users whose first language is not English. You are welcome to join one of these or start your own. An important part of the Ubuntu manifesto is your ability to use your software in your local language. Part of that is ensuring that Ubuntu includes the best translations available for the Ubuntu desktop software (and you can help to improve those translations). Another part of that commitment is helping to create mailing lists and IRC channels for Ubuntu users in different languages. If you want to start a local team or to join an existing one, visit https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LoCoTeams Bengali (Bangladesh) * Website: http://www.ubuntu-bd.org/ * Forum: http://forum.ubuntu-bd.org/ * IRC: #ubuntu-bd on irc.freenode.net * Mailing list: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bd Brazilian * Website: http://www.ubuntu-br.org * Forums: http://forum.ubuntu-br.org * Wiki documentation: http://wiki.ubuntu-br.org * IRC: #ubuntu-br on chat.freenode.net * Mailing list: http://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-br

23 March 2009 07:15

Debian Lenny Based SimplyMEPIS 8.0 is Released | MEPIS

(via)
Debian Lenny Based SimplyMEPIS 8.0 is Released warren's picture Submitted by warren on Sun, 02/22/2009 - 18:09. Press Releases Morgantown, WV, Feb 22, 2009 -- MEPIS LLC has released SimplyMEPIS 8.0, the community edition of MEPIS 8.0. The ISO files for 32 and 64 bit processors are SimplyMEPIS-CD_8.0.00-rel_32.iso and SimplyMEPIS-CD_8.0.00-rel_64.iso. SimplyMEPIS 8.0 utilizes a Debian Lenny stable foundation enhanced with a Long Term Support kernel, key package upgrades, and the MEPIS Assistant applications to create an up-to-date, ready to use desktop computer system. Warren Woodford of MEPIS explained "Debian, which is renowned for it's stability and live cycle support, released Lenny a week ago as the latest version of Debian. By building on this excellent upstream base, we expect MEPIS 8.0 to enjoy a long life as a personal and business desktop system."

07 June 2008 04:00

emesene

emesene 1.0 released! The emesene dev team is proud to announce the release of emesene 1.0 codename unopuntocero. Features: * Clean and easy to use GUI * Tabbed chat * Custom emoticons * File transfers * Offline messaging * Personal messages * Nudges * Multilingual GUI * Customization o Themes o Smileys o Sounds o GUI o Conversation format * Plugins * MSN Plus! * Chat logging Things that were left in this release: * Audio * Video * Winks With this release we present our project to the community in order to keep evolving the client to give the users what they want, please download it and try to contribute in any way you can. * Translations * Plugins * Bug reports/fixes * Code * Themes * Spreading the word * Support to other users

03 October 2007 06:30

27 September 2007 03:00

21 August 2007 03:30

Licensing | Ubuntu

Categories of software in Ubuntu The thousands of software packages available for Ubuntu are organised into three key components: main, restricted and universe. Software is published in one of those components based on whether or not it meets our Free Software Philosophy, and the level of support we can provide for it. You can read about these components in more detail here. This policy only addresses the software that you will find in main and restricted, which contain software that is fully supported by the Ubuntu team and must comply with this policy. In the universe component you will find just about every other piece of software you can imagine, under a huge variety of licenses... really the full software universe. If you install software from universe please ensure you take the time to check the license for yourself. All software in Ubuntu main and restricted must be licensed in a way that is compatible with our license policy. There are many definitions of 'free' and 'free software' so we have included our own set of guidelines.

15 June 2007 05:00