Intel CEO wants its technology in every device (even golf clubs)

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OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

With spider robots and BMX bike stunts taking the stage at the opening keynote for this year’s Intel Developer Forum (and hardly any details about actual chips) it’s clear Intel wants to be known for more than just computer CPUs. It’s a wise move, especially if you consider the dwindling PC market. Indeed, the company has been on this trajectory for a while now, with a push into the Internet of Things (remember the smart mug and connected baby onesie from CES 2014?). More recently, too, the company has made a big investment in wearables with its button-sized Curie module and the purchase of several wearable companies, including Basis and Recon. Intel has also branched out into other arenas, like RealSense, its depth-sensing, 3D-scanning tech. As Brian Krzanich, Intel’s CEO, said during an interview at IDF: "We want to be everywhere."Slideshow-313605

That is certainly the case with wearables, which Krzanich pointed out to me during a brief tour of the IDF show floor. "I believe we can bring a lot of capability to wearables, probably more than what you see now," he said. "We can make them much more connected." As mentioned earlier, there was a BMX stunt bike at the show equipped with Intel’s tiny Curie module to record data like bike spin, airtime and maximum height. But imagine if the cyclist was also sporting a wearable that measured heartrate, or a pair of smart goggles that told him how fast he was going. You could potentially combine all of that information, said Krzanich, and get some really interesting data on your performance. "It’s not just for athletes; you and I could use it too," he said. "There’s no reason [for example] we can’t transfer this same technology to your wristband or your golf club. And suddenly you’re an intelligent golfer."

"Here’s one of our newest employees," he said suddenly. We were standing on the ground floor of Moscone West in San Francisco when he smiled and gestured toward a yellow Labrador, who was wearing a guide dog bib. "We’re going to start working to build dog collars to help people understand how to better train guide dogs," he explained. It was a brief insight into how Intel is looking into integrating its tech beyond just the usual wearable, although Krzanich was also quick to show off already-announced items like the Recon Jet and Mica bracelet.

Krzanich was also keen to show off the capabilities of Intel’s RealSense, another passion project within the company. More than just a camera, RealSense aims to mimic the human eye, especially in terms of its depth perception. This, Krzanich said, makes interacting with technology much more natural and immersive. "Most cameras see in two dimensions. Ours see in three. It’s multilayered and much, much richer," he said. Imagine waving your hand over a vending machine to select what you want or a video game racing rig that knows where your gaze lands so the view of the cockpit moves with you.

Indeed, the most futuristic part of the IDF show floor was an area dedicated to RealSense. There were robot butlers that were smart enough to navigate rooms, 3D scanners that could scan your body and then send it to a 3D printer, depth-sensing drones that knew not to fly into trees and magical mirrors that let you virtually try on clothes. And, as was announced earlier this week, a smartphone integrated with Google’s Project Tango that puts the power of 3D scanning in your pocket.

While Intel’s interest in wearables is much more immediate, its investment in RealSense is a bet on the future — a sign that the company plans to cover as many bases as it can. When asked to sum up Intel’s overall direction, Krzanich was ambitious: "You’ll see Intel in every kind of device. From mirrors, to drones, to PCs and datacenters." And, yes, even spider robots.

Photos by Roberto Baldwin

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Tags: briankrzanich, idf2015, intel

LightBlue Bean+ Is An Arduino Board With Bluetooth Built-In

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aa6e8e0010731c8339136a6ea1a5bbbb_original If you’re anything like me you understand the power of Arduino but are stymied by limitations of education, imagination, or wireless connectivity to implement it into your own life. Thanks to the LightBlue Bean+, however, one of those roadblocks has been torn down. The Bean+ is basically an Arduino board that can be programmed via Bluetooth LE. Not unlike the Particle boards, this… Read More

OpenStack Community Weekly Newsletter (Aug., 15 – 21)

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Make your cloud sing with OpenStack’s Community App Catalog 

The Catalog can get you rocking with containers in just a few clicks – how it’s evolving and how your feedback can shape its future.

The Road to Tokyo 

Reports from Previous Events 

Deadlines and Contributors Notifications 

Security Advisories and Notices 

  • None this week

Tips ‘n Tricks 

Upcoming Events 

Other News 

The weekly newsletter is a way for the community to learn about all the various activities in the OpenStack world.

Indian airport now runs entirely on solar power

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If humanity is to survive, it’s going to have to embrace alternative forms of energy and ditch carbon at double-quick speed. India’s making a pretty big stride in that direction after declaring Cochin International Airport as the world’s first facility of its kind that runs entirely on solar power. All of the airport’s energy requirements are met thanks to a roof-mounted installation on the terminal, as well as a solar plant beside the cargo warehouse. The plant comprises 46,150 panels that spread across 45 acres and generates 12MW — with any excess power being pushed back into the local grid. Over the next 25 years, it’s expected to save roughly 300,000 metric tons of carbon, which is a start.

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Via: Economic Times, Time

Source: Cochin International Airport

Tags: Airport, Carbon, ClimateChange, Co2, CochinInternationalAirport, Green, SolarPower

Microsoft turns on Windows 10 file backup to Azure

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Think of it as archival-grade OneDrive with policies and you’ve got the idea

Microsoft has flicked the switch on its Azure Backup service for Windows 10 clients.…

Nuance’s Dragon Anywhere is a Mobile Voice Dictation App for Android and iOS

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The app will allow users to create and edit anything from a basic document through to a detailed report while essentially shouting at their mobile phone.

Mesosphere And Microsoft Bring Mesos To Windows Server

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14276323800_80f7a392e7_o Mesosphere, the company that aims to build a container-centric “operating system for the data center” based on the Apache Mesos project, is giving the first public demo of Mesos running on the preview version of Windows Server 2016 at MesosCon today. Read More

Two-factor system uses ambient sounds to verify your login

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Two-factor can keep your Gmail, iCloud and other accounts from getting hacked, but it’s unfortunately rather tedious to use. That’s why a team of researchers from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, Switzerland has developed a tool called "Sound-Proof" to make the process less painful. Any app or program with Sound-Proof integrated can authenticate your logins by listening to ambient sounds. That’s it — you don’t need to pick up your phone, generate a passcode or wait for a text with one, so long as you’ve already installed the tool’s mobile app.

For instance: if you sign into the app on your laptop browser, the app fires up on its own, and both your computer and phone will start listening for sounds. Once the system determines that both devices are hearing the same background music, AC hum or the rhythmic snoring of your dog, then you get logged in. According to the researchers, the tool only uploads the "digital signature" of the sounds around you and not the sounds themselves in order to protect your privacy. Plus, it doesn’t need extensions or any other additional downloads for computers, so it works even if, say, you’re using a roommate’s laptop.

While it’s definitely a lot easier to deal with than traditional two-factor, it’s also clearly imperfect. Determined hackers who already have your password can follow you around until you’re in the same place to access your account. Since the app starts listening in on its own, you might not even know that someone’s trying to hack you until it’s too late. Some elements might prevent sounds from matching up, as well, and don’t forget that you need a data connection in the absence of WiFi. We hope the team finds a way to make Sound-Proof more secure before releasing the tool as an actual product. As it is, it’s just a research project, which the team will present at the Usenix security conference this August.

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Via: Wired

Source: Arxiv

Tags: mobilepostcross, security, sound-proof, two-factor

Play Tetris to alleviate cravings, researchers say

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Tetris Gameboy
Researchers have found that playing Tetris for as little as three minutes could help reduce cravings. A group of psychologists from the University of Plymouth and Queensland University of Technology were looking into […]

The realities of a $50 smartphone

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Inside The Google I|O Developers Conference

As mobile networks kill off phone subsidies, users might now begin to appreciate just how much their new smartphone really costs. It’s an even bigger problem in the developing world, where relatively few have the cash to buy even a mid-range phone like the Moto G. Google attempted to remedy the problem with Android One, but the first generation of "affordable" devices were far too expensive. That’s why the company is pledging to get the cost of a smartphone down to just $50 — a price that, right now, seems impossible to achieve. If Google can do it, however, it’ll be able to connect countless people in countries like India, the Philippines and Turkey. Fifty dollars isn’t a lot of money to put together a device, so what sort of phone can you get for the money?

"If you had asked me this a year ago, I would have said that it was impossible." Wayne Lam is the principal telecoms analyst for IHS, a market intelligence firm that looks at the technology market. As part of the experiment, he offered to cook up a hypothetical device that, if someone built it today, could probably be mass-produced for under $50. He worked out that the upper limit for a bill of materials would be around $42, and worked backward to build out a spec list from there. It wasn’t pretty, since "any time you put a constraint on the design, like a maximum price, you end up having to make compromises."

Display:​ $8

Google Hosts Its Annual I/O Developers Conference

The most expensive individual component in your smartphone is probably the display, and a 5-inch-plus Quad HD panel alone can cost up to $100. Samsung makes its own screens and could only cut the price of the curved, 5.1-inch unit that sits atop the Galaxy S6 Edge down to a reported $85 (with the standard S6 display going for about $24 less). If that’s a first-class ticket, then the $50 smartphone will probably be traveling in coach, or maybe freight — or maybe just paddling to its destination in a coracle.

Lam suggested that the most likely display for our affordable smartphone would be a 4- to 4.5-inch FWVGA (854 x 480) panel. That’s the same screen that you would have found on Sony’s Xperia M from 2013, spec nerds. According to Lam, the display would account for roughly 15 to 19 percent of the $42 bill of materials, which we work out to be about $7.98. If you wanted to push your luck, you could swap that out for a 4.7-inch HD display, although the cost would skyrocket to closer to 30 percent of the cost: $12.60.

Design: Free

The trick to designing a low-cost smartphone, according to MediaTek’s VP of corporate marketing Siegmund Redl, is making use of a reference design. That’s when a company (in this case Google) lays out a blueprint for what a cheap device could, or should, be and leaves the manufacturer with the task of building it. As he explains: "The manufacturer no longer needs to worry about the basic underlying technology, but can solely concentrate on the industrial and feature-add design." If you’ve ever wandered into a Best Buy and wondered what the difference is between all of those $150 smartphones, the likelihood is: not much. That’s because the majority of them are based on the same reference design, albeit with a few tweaks depending on the generosity (or not) of the company in question.

System-on-a-Chip: $10

The most important thing a smartphone needs is the tiny portable computer that resides beneath the steel, plastic and glass. Most high-end phones come with a name-brand chip from an outfit like Qualcomm or NVIDIA, with the most prominent right now being the Snapdragon 810. That’s the chip that you’ll find inside the HTC One M9, OnePlus 2 and LG G Flex2, among others, and it costs a pretty penny.

You’re not going to find one of those inside your $50 smartphone, which is likely to run on a chip from a second- or third-tier firm like MediaTek or Allwinner. It’s not as if it’s just a CPU, either, since these systems-on-a-chip combine everything that you’d need to run a phone. Let’s take MediaTek’s MT6582 as an example, since it was the basis for the first generation of Android One devices when they launched last year.

This unit packs in a 1.3GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 CPU, Mali 400 graphics, a HSPA+ modem, WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS and FM radio. This same product is also capable of supporting 8-megapixel cameras and has enough power to push pictures for a 1,280 x 720 HD display while recording full HD video. If that all sounds a bit too jargon-y for you, then the short version is this: It may be cheap, but it’s no slouch.

The bottom end of the chip-manufacturing world is highly competitive, and no company would go on the record to reveal how much they’d charge for a comparable system. We did, however, speak to one source familiar with the matter who revealed that they’d expect to pay around $10 for this sort of budget system. It’s important to note that this figure doesn’t include either storage or RAM, two of the more expensive individual components that you’ll find inside a smartphone.

RAM and storage: $10

Hardware Icon Set

Flash-based memory is one of the most competitive markets in the smartphone-manufacturing world, and nobody was prepared to talk to us, even off the record, about the costs involved. That’s why we’re forced to rely upon IHS’ calculations for how much it costs to produce the RAM and storage inside Samsung’s Galaxy S6 Edge. According to the firm, 3GB of LPDDR4 SDRAM and 64GB of eMMC NAND storage would set you back $27.50 and $25, respectively.

By comparison, most of the first-generation Android One devices shipped with 1GB RAM and 4GB storage. If we assume everything else is equal, we can work out that 1GB of RAM would cost roughly $9, with 4GB storage being priced at about $1.50. From this, we can be fairly sure that these two components together would probably round out to $10. It also goes some way to explaining why low-end smartphones still ship with microSD card slots while their higher-end rivals sacrifice them in exchange for more onboard capacity.

Battery and cameras $5

Battery icons set on white background, flat design, vector eps10 illustration

What are the other two things you always look for when buying a smartphone? The battery and camera, and we went back to Lam to ask what he expected these two components to go for. In his calculations, a 1,600mAh unit would come to roughly 5 percent of the overall price, or $2.10. On the imaging front, a 5-megapixel primary camera and a 2-megapixel forward-facing unit would take up a similar share of the bill, bringing the cost for both parts to around $5.

The rest: $9

India Republic Day

If we’re working from the idea that the materials can cost no more than $42, we’re left with $9 to turn these components into a smartphone. That’s barely enough to get a satisfying meal at McDonald’s, let alone be able to source useful sensors, audio equipment, antennas and housing required to build a device. You could borrow some cash from the leftover $8, of course, but from that budget you’ve got to cram out packaging, marketing, transportation, logistics and maybe have a few cents left over to pay your employees. On the upside, Google reportedly coughed up $1 billion to help subsidize the first generation of Android One devices — but that couldn’t have lasted long in a country like India, with a population of 1.2 billion people.

If this thought experiment has revealed anything, it’s that there’s no such thing as a profit in the Android world any more. You know it’s true when a company as notable as HTC is considered to be effectively worthless and LG makes just 1.2 cents in profit for every device it sells. Samsung may continue to earn a profit, but it’s an exception rather than the rule, and one that may not hold true forever.

Profit, however, has long since ceased to be the goal for the majority of these companies, and instead it’s all about scale. It’s the idea that if you flog enough devices cheaply enough, you’ll have a broad customer base that will come back to you in two or three years’ time. Hopefully, then, when device prices are cheaper and some of your weaker rivals have collapsed under their own weight — maybe then you can squeeze a little cream from the top of the milk. Of course, it’s a false hope, since "price-conscious" buyers will simply move on to the next big thing, and you’ll be left fighting off angry letters from the bank.

These manufacturers, of course, will break their backs in the hope of bringing smartphones to India, but they won’t benefit too much from it. Google, however, can sit back and relax, writing a check every now and again while it waits for all of these new users to roll in.

[Image Credits: David Paul Morris / Bloomberg via Getty Images (Sundar Pichai); Stephen Lam / Getty Images (Android One phones); iFixit (Samsung Galaxy S6 Teardown); Getty (Hardware icons); Tsering Topgyal/AP Photo (India crowd)]

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Tags: Android, AndroidOne, Budget, google, mobilepostcross, uk-feature

Samsung develops 16TB SSD that still fits in a 2.5-inch drive bay

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samsung-16tb-ssd
The Galaxy Note 5 and its throwback QWERTY keyboard accessory weren’t the only things Samsung revealed yesterday. They also took the wraps off the biggest digital storage drive you can buy, and it’s […]

OpenStack Community Weekly Newsletter (Aug., 8 – 14)

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OpenStack continues to strengthen its commitment to interoperability

The latest on interoperability, Neutron, RefStack and how you can shape what’s next.

Jumpstart your OpenStack know-how with Upstream Training

Join experts for this free, fast-track course that combines work with play.

The Road to Tokyo

Reports from Previous Events

  • None this week

Deadlines and Contributors Notifications

Security Advisories and Notices

Tips ‘n Tricks

Upcoming Events

Other News

The weekly newsletter is a way for the community to learn about all the various activities in the OpenStack world. 

Fresh Prince getting revival, Will Smith producing

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Fresh-Prince-Reboot
Now, this is a story all about how a classic ’90s show came back on the air. Smith is producing with Lassiter as his pair, but who will be the new Fresh Prince of Bel […]

Chaotic Moon Is Building A Fitness Tracker For Wheelchairs

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chaotic moon freewheel Here’s a different kind of fitness tracker — Freewheel, a prototype developed by Chaotic Moon Studios.
The Austin-based design and development studio was in the news recently because of its acquisition by Accenture. Freewheel was created by Chaotic Moon’s BASE innovation lab, but the idea came from one of the studio’s content strategists, Tyler Hively, who uses a… Read More

Ohm Is A Smarter, Lighter Car Battery That Works With Your Existing Car

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ohm While you probably don’t think about them until you have to, automotive batteries — the chunky boxes that helps start your car’s gas engine — are pretty terrible. They die without warning, leaving you stranded. They weigh as much as a small child, making them tough to swap and eating into your gas mileage. They’re filled with garbage materials that are terrible… Read More

Cisco network kit warning: Watch out for malware in the firmware

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Someone’s reverse-engineered ROMMON to craft an admin-level attack

Cisco has warned users to watch out who’s got admin access to kit, because it’s seen malicious ROM images in the wild.…

Apple Updating Bootcamp with Windows 10 Support

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If you’re a Mac user and you’re dying to give Windows 10 a whirl, then you’re in luck, because Apple has revealed that it’ll be adding support for Windows 10 in Bootcamp really soon.

Dropbox gets more secure with support for U2F keys

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fido-u2f
Want to keep the contents of your Dropbox secure, but don’t like messing around with one-time use codes? Now it’s easier than ever to add a second step to the authentication process, thanks […]

BitMicro Says 8TB Server Flash Drive Can Shrink Your Data Center

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HotLink Enables Azure, OpenStack Management Through vCenter

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Windows 10 for Raspberry Pi now available for free

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raspberry-pi-2
If you own a Raspberry Pi 2 or Minnowboard, then Windows 10 is now an option, albeit a stripped down GUI-less one.

Makerbase knows who built your favorite website

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Javascript code on computer screen

Makerbase, a new site from Lifehacker founder Gina Trapani and former blogger Anil Dash that’s being billed as the IMDb of web design, has just launched. Just as IMDb maintains archives of the people that help produce television shows and movies, Makerbase focuses on those that create the sites and tools that make the web what it is. You won’t find listings of corporate stuffed shirts and legions of VPs here. Instead you can get information on the likes of Tracy Chou of Pinterest or Buster Benson from Locavore.

The service currently is likely to be of more use to journalists and aspiring web developers than it is for people who can’t remember what company Sergey Brin founded. Still, it could prove to be a useful networking tool for the web development community. You know, like LinkedIn but not terrible. Plus, the web itself and the technology used to build it (not just the cat videos that it contains) is becoming more deeply ingrained in pop culture. So we can expect to see more and more of these people becoming household names — looking at you Shingy — and this site wants to be where you turn to research who the rest of the office is talking about over the water cooler.

"At a surface level, it’s fun to see who makes the apps and sites we use every day, and fun for hackers and creators to be able to list all their work," Dash told TechCrunch. "But at a bigger level, this is a powerful tool for opening up opportunity in the industry, because it shows the network and connections between people, and maybe even offers those who aren’t in the industry a glimpse into who’s making things and a chance to gain access."

[Image Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto]

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Source: TechCrunch

Tags: anildash, database, GinaTrapani, imdb, Lifehacker, locavore, makerbase, pinterest, TechCrunch, webdevelopment

Shure wants dedicated spectrum for wireless audio gear in the UK

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Snoop Lion In Concert - Indianapolis, Indiana

The proliferation of mobile phones is great, and so is the availability of 4G in the UK. However, dwindling spectrum available for wireless audio gear could cause problems at your local music venue or playhouse — especially in the UK. Shure, the pro audio company, wants a dedicated radio spectrum for wireless microphones, in-ear monitors and other tech. As the company puts it, the best area for the audio gadgets to work is UHF bands IV and V or 470 – 854MHz. In the UK specifically, the 800MHz band has been approved for use by 4G networks and 700MHz is next. Those bands were made available after television service switched from analog to digital a few years back.

In order to ensure that pro audio gear for concerts, stage productions and other live events is able to operate properly, Shure wants dedicated spectrum for wireless audio gear to operate that’s off limits to mobile companies. "Electromagnetic spectrum is a national resource, just like gold or oil, there is only so much of it," the company says. "And, if the Government continues to clear more UHF spectrum, we will eventually run out."

[Image credit: Joey Foley/Getty Images]

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Source: Shure

Tags: audio, interference, mic, microphone, proaudio, radio, shure, spectrum, wireless

Technical Committee Highlights August 11, 2015

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This week, the Technical Committee will not hold the regular Tuesday meeting. Here’s a round up of the discussions and decisions from the last week or so. Let us know how these posts are working for you by emailing, tweeting, commenting, or finding us on IRC.

Midway focus points for the TC

“Technical discussions are like lasagna. You need to layer ML threads and IRC discussions to reach consensus.” – Thierry Carrez

Thierry challenged us to think about the “hard problems” we mean to solve this release as a technical community leadership body, so we discussed for a half hour this past week. The service catalog specifically came up and we also talked about cross-project specifications generally. It’s difficult to get exact assignees for cross-project specs, and we also discussed the communication channels we have for cross-project work. Currently it’s the mailing list, IRC, and the weekly cross-project meeting along with a special summit track just for cross-project work.

Should we, could we move the day/time of the cross-project meeting for better communications? Originally it was set up after the TC meeting as a convenience for chairs and attendees alike, but it seems like we could get a wider attendance rate by moving it earlier in the day. I know that moving to earlier does not help our New Zealand or Australian members, but comments from both the East coast US and Europe mention they currently find it tough to attend regularly.

Current tags under discussion

In the big tent, projects may be at a different pace of development. As a result, projects have different priorities that cause tradeoffs in speed or innovation. The pace and priorities can cause deprecation of a configuration option or API feature or other capability within a project.

Deprecation policy tags under review intend to communicate assertions that projects commit to whether they would purposely deprecate user-visible features and APIs and if they would deprecate, under which predictable conditions. Providing this tag should help determine how to mitigate any risk factors for adoption as it provides a key factor in assessing a given project maturity.

Different teams are trying out different approaches to the release process, and these also are tags under review for release tagging, and size of the team indicators.

All these tags intend to provide essential bits of information to give users and deployers evaluation criteria while also giving projects an idea of what measures are applied to their work.

Stackforge and renames of overarching organization

The passing of the Stackforge namespace retirement means no projects will be added to the stackforge namespace. Look for more specific communications and how-tos from the Infrastructure team about what this means for current projects in the stackforge namespace. They are working hard to ensure transition plans are in place.

Debian packaging team

The Debian packaging team led by Thomas Goirand continues to focus its mission to have the packaging Git repositories for Debian hosted in the /openstack git namespace.

 

I in Team

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There's no "I" in "VOWELS".