Interview with Ben Williams
- Fedora Account: jbwillia
- IRC: Southern_Gentlem / kk4ewt (usually in #fedora, #fedora-ambassadors)
- Fedora User Wiki Page
Across the Linux and Fedora communities, there are several members of various communities that write and maintain their own blogs across all four corners of the world. With that being said, both of these communities are large and sometimes it’s a challenge to keep track of an individual contributor’s blog versus all of the other noise on the Internet. How can one expect to keep up with what’s going on in the world of Fedora and the greater Linux community? Fortunately, the Fedora Project offers a solution to this problem: Fedora Planet!
It’s that time of year again: the Fedora Elections cycle for November / December is here. As jkurik described in his detailed post, there are a wide number of seats open this election cycle. Unlike prior elections, there will not be any IRC Town Hall sessions due to the difficulty of scheduling across time zones, which prolongs the election process itself. Instead, this cycle, campaigning and interviews will be done through the Community Blog.
The nomination period will be ending 23:59 UTC on November 23rd. After this period, candidate interviews will begin appearing on the Community Blog. Please see the November / December 2015 Elections Questionnaire for the questions that will be available to the candidates. You are encouraged to add your own, especially if it’s the “tough questions”! Candidates may (or may not) choose to answer as they fit.
Tune in for more Elections coverage on the Community Blog over the next couple of weeks.

Team picture of the Fedora G11n team. Source: pravin-s.blogspot.com.au
On November 1st – 3rd, 2015, the Fedora Globalization (G11n) team held their Fedora Activity Day (FAD) in the Red Hat office in Tokyo, Japan. A Fedora Activity Day is a mini-conference where contributors get together to work on major tasks related to Fedora. The G11n team met with objectives of working on Fedora 24 development plans, brainstorming on a Fedora globalization workflow, and deciding strategy for different Fedora products.
Fedora contributor and member of the G11n team, Pravin Satpute, wrote detailed reports of the happenings over the course of the FAD. You can read his Day 1, Day 2, and Day 3 write-ups on his blog.
This article originally appeared on contributor Matej Stuchlik’s personal blog.
The Python 3 Porting Fedora Activity Day wrapped up this Sunday. In the span of ~48 hours and three continents, we’ve done a lot of things:
This all with the help of people from around the world, from all sorts of distros, cooperating on-line and off.
I’d like to thank frafra, michel-slm, fujimotos, michaeleekk, rodrigc, barracks510, fitoria, rupe120, decause, sayanchowdhury, Richard Sarkis, Sebastian Dyroff, Fale, dperson, fabaff, Riamse, carlwgeorge, MSK61, jflory7, mayorgatellez, staranjeet, QuLogic, hroncok, booxter, tyll, pigjuliux, williamjmorenor for making this awesome, and abadger, threebean and encukou for handling all the awesomeness. 🙂
One thing is for sure, this isn’t the last Python 3 Porting day! It’s been a lot of fun and we’ve learned a lot, so we would like to have another P3P Day in a month or two. Be sure to tweet at me, or join the #fedora-python channel on Freenode, if you have any suggestion on how to make it even better than it was. 🙂
If you liked this post, you can share it with your followers or follow me on Twitter!
Network World recently published an article review comparing three major distributions: Fedora, Ubuntu, and OpenSUSE. What did they have to say about Fedora?
I’m going to say this as simply as I can: I experienced not one single issue with Fedora 23. I used it as my primary system for a few days in a row and never, not once, hit any sort of glitch. It was fast and stable and I just don’t have anything bad to say about it.
[…]
This is, without a doubt, my favorite release of Fedora in many years. Possibly my favorite release they’ve ever done. Fast, stable, and great looking.
This upcoming weekend, a group of Fedora developers are convening for the Python 3 Fedora Activity Day (FAD) to make more progress on porting Python 2 packages to Python 3. If you want to lend a hand, jump into the #fedora-python IRC channel on Freenode between [localize_time tz=”EST”]8am Nov. 14, 2015[/localize_time] and [localize_time tz=”EST”]8pm Nov. 15, 2015[/localize_time] and introduce yourself.
The Python 3 FAD is part of a larger initiative started two years ago to make Python 3 the default implementation in Fedora. Great progress has already been made, but there is still much work to do – only 32% of Python packages in Fedora are ported to Python 3. As a result, this weekend’s Python 3 Fedora Activity Day aims to accomplish improving those numbers by porting over more Python 2 software to Python 3.
Not only is this is a great opportunity to make an impact on the software that the community uses every day, but it’s also a chance to gain one of the more rare and exclusive Fedora badges, Parselmouth! To help show how you can help, Fedora Python maintainer Matej Stuchlik answered some of the Community Operations team’s questions.
The Fedora Project is proud to announce the launch of the new Fedora Developer Portal. The Developer Portal supports developers working on software projects with Fedora as their primary operating system or inside a virtual machine. It helps them install essential development tools, language runtimes, and databases. It also introduces distribution and deployment options using COPR and OpenShift.
Read more on the Fedora Magazine.
Fedora 23 released this past Monday, and several supporting articles were published on the Fedora Magazine to help users learn what was new, how to upgrade from Fedora 22, and of course, read the release announcement. This release set a new all-time record of the most views in a single day for the Magazine. The end-of-day count for November 3rd was 34,019 views across the site. This record was closely followed the next day, with a high of 31,880 by the end of November 4th. Ultimately, the Magazine has continued on an upward trend for the past few release cycles, a pattern that the Marketing Team wishes to continue as we enter the next release cycle.
On Monday, November 2nd, the Fedora Outreachy internship application period officially ended. Fedora was seeking to fill two positions in the Project, one to assist on development of the upcoming Fedora Hubs web application and another to assist with community operations. Selection decisions will be posted on November 17th! Best of luck to all of our applicants.
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