[campware-newsletter] Campware Newsletter 1/2008: Got 3.0 Yet?

campware-newsletter at lists.campware.org campware-newsletter at lists.campware.org
Tue May 6 17:12:28 CEST 2008


Newsletter:
May 6, 2008
It's been a long time since we've sent out one of our Campware 
newsletters, but that's mainly because the Campware team has been quite 
busy working with independent media organizations in developing countries, 
developing software, implementing it and promoting the adaptation of free 
and open source software among the media. So without further delay, here's 
a quick yet lengthy rundown of what's been going on with Campware (please 
pardon the length, we've been meaning to tell you all of this for months 
:). 

In this issue:
        Campsite 3.0 
        Cream 3.0
        Campcaster 1.4 Update
        Campware stuff from Cafe Press
      What's in a Name?
        Donating to Campware
        Things we've got our eye on - open source software relevant to 
independent media
        Real time, chat-based discussion on the Campware IRC channels
Are you using Campware's solutions for your media organization? We'd love 
to hear what you've been up to. Write us at contact at campware.org with your 
news.
Campsite 3.0 update 
===================
Campsite, our flagship web content management system for media 
organizations, has finally released version 3.0. Campsite 3.0 is important 
for many reasons, mainly because it is the first all-PHP version of 
Campsite, replacing Campsite's template parser with the popular and 
widely-used Smarty templating engine. For users, the main difference they 
will see with Campsite 3.0 is that it can be installed on any server 
running MySQL and PHP, including Windows and MacOS X servers. Webmasters, 
system administrators and site designers will appreciate all the new 
features and functionality that can be built using the new templating 
system.
Campsite 3.0, codenamed "Filip," can also be installed on hosted servers, 
which will bring down the costs of operating a powerful, professional news 
site down even further. Root access is no longer required to install 
Campsite.
The Campsite 3.0 release also rolled up many of the features intended for 
the 2.7 release, including site replication and what we call the "Radio 
Package" for integration with our Campcaster radio management system. Site 
replication means that you can have one Campsite server installed in your 
office and then have it sync on a regular basis with a public server 
located at a fast hosting provider. The "Radio Package" enables users at 
radio stations to store their audio files on Campcaster's storage server, 
but to serve those files to the public via Campsite for audio-on-demand.
For those using older Campsite versions, there are upgrade scripts that 
should be able to help speed your transition to the new version.
We still need to update and refresh the Campsite manuals, and we are 
always open to new suggestions for items to go into those manuals. Also, 
for those of you who are multilingual, we would like to ask you to get 
involved in updating existing localizations into other languages and to 
localize Campsite into new languages.
You can download Campsite 3.0 "Filip" here: https://www.campware.org/projects/campsite
We're looking forward to your feedback on the new Campsite 3.0. You can 
use the 'Help-> Feedback' option from Campsite or join either the Campsite 
support mailing list at http://sympa.mdlf.org/wws/subscribe/campsite-support or the Campsite developers' list at http://sympa.mdlf.org/wws/subscribe/campsite-dev
Cream 3.0 and MDLF's Digital Kiosk
==================================
Campware's customer relationship management system, Cream, had a major 
release in mid-August of 2007. The 3.0 version of Cream includes a number 
of important improvements, including the fact that it now works with the 
free and open source MySQL database server, as well as providing better 
integration with Campsite for more automated management of users and 
subscriptions.
We decided to "eat our own dog food" with Cream, and since February 2008 
we've been using an altered version of Cream to run our Digital Kiosk 
e-commerce service. The Digital Kiosk lets you buy subscriptions, books, 
CDs, and other items from 14 independent publishers worldwide at http://digitalkiosk.mdlf.org.
The Digital Kiosk is a service that enables independent organizations to 
sell their products and services online; in many parts of the world, banks 
still do not allow their customers to take online payments. Campware 
created the Digital Kiosk as a way to enable these media organizations to 
accept online payments for their goods and services. Now that it's powered 
by Cream, we're able to have much better management of products, orders 
and customer communications.
Campcaster 1.4 "Monrovia"
================================
Work is continuing on the 1.4 "Monrovia" release of Campcaster, our radio 
playout and automation system. Campcaster had a quiet release in the fall 
of its 1.3 "Dakar" version, which included a substantial reworking of the 
Campcaster Studio program to enable features such as drag-and-drop between 
windows. The main work in the 1.4 "Monrovia" release involves a rewriting 
of its interface with the Gstreamer multimedia layer under Linux. What 
this means is that sound handling is much faster, numerous file formats 
(including WAV and FLAC) can be supported and the system will be able to 
use other plugins from the Gstreamer multimedia framework. While a lot of 
that sounds like Linux audio geekery (and it is), this will greatly 
improve Campcaster's playback reliability and keep Campcaster on the right 
path for future development.
Work on the Campcaster 1.3 and 1.4 releases has been covered by a generous 
grant from the Open Society Institute for West Africa (OSIWA). In 
cooperation with West Africa Democracy Radio, a news and information 
network based in Dakar, Senegal, we are working on a deployment of 
Campcaster among community radio stations in rural Liberia.
What's in a Name: Campware Naming Conventions
=============================================
In case you've ever wondered why Campware usually includes a codename in 
its releases, there is indeed a method to our madness. Here's a quick 
guide.
Since the 2.2 version, Campsite releases have been named after someone 
close to the developers - in practice this has meant new births.
2.2 "Mara", released April 14, 2005 - named after Mugur Rus' daughter Mara
2.3 "Niko", released August 1, 2005 - named after Paul Baranowski's nephew 
Niko.
2.4 "Rade", released January 10, 2006 - named after Sava Tatić's son Rade.
2.5 "Eli", released  - named after Micz Flor's nephew Eli.
2.6 "Joey" - named after Douglas Arellanes' daughter Joey.
3.0 "Filip" - named after Pavla Čihařová's son Filip.
LiveSupport 0.91 (later renamed to Campcaster) was codenamed "Fritz" after 
developer Sebastian Goebel's grandfather Fritz, and it also used this 
convention. But then we changed it so that the Campcaster releases changed 
their naming to be after the cities in which the work was deployed. 
1.1 "Freetown" - Freetown, Sierra Leone
1.2 "Kotor" - Kotor, Montenegro
1.3 "Dakar" - Dakar, Senegal
1.4 "Monrovia" - Monrovia, Liberia
Cream doesn't have a naming convention yet.
Bonus trivia: On a training visit to Jakarta, Indonesia, Douglas Arellanes 
and Paul Baranowski found out that in Bahasa Indonesia, the main language 
of Indonesia, "Kotor" means "dirty." :-)))
Campware Stuff from Cafe Press
==============================
One of the useful ideas to emerge from the SummerCAMP developers' and 
powerusers' event in Prague in the summer of 2007 was to create our own 
CafePress store, where people can buy things like shirts and coffee mugs 
with the logo of their favorite Campware project. Proceeds from this go to 
maintaining Campware projects. Check out the store at this address:
http://www.cafepress.com/campware
Also, if you have any suggestions for stuff you'd like to see on a 
Campware t-shirt or other CafePress product, let us know about it. We're 
always interested in good ideas from you, our community.
Donating to Campware
====================
It's extremely easy to make a donation to Campware (through our parent 
organization, the Media Development Loan Fund), and it's even 
tax-deductible if you live in the USA. We take credit card donations 
online through our Digital Kiosk service (http://digitalkiosk.mdlf.org:8080/kiosk/app/template/StoreProduct.vm/id/1052).
Things We've Got Our Eye On - Open Source Software Relevant to Independent 
Media
================================================================================
(K)Ubuntu, Ubuntu Studio and 64Studio
----------------------------------
If a magic goldfish were to grant Campware a wish, it just might be for a 
good, specialized Linux distribution relevant to the media organizations 
we work with. But we're always bad with magic goldfish and the closest 
thing that's out there to our dream distribution is the Ubuntu Studio 
project, which gathers together a number of the top audio, video and 
graphics programs based on the Ubuntu Linux distribution. (We love Ubuntu, 
but you probably already knew that.) We especially like Ubuntu Studio's 
sound apps, including the outstanding Ardour digital audio workstation, 
and of course Audacity (see below). Ubuntu Studio includes a couple of 
things important for multimedia production, including a low-latency kernel 
(important for recording one track while listening to others in your 
headphones) and an automatically-configured version of the Jack program 
for handling audio outputs. Check it out at www.ubuntustudio.org. The 
project seems to have been quiet for a while now, so we hope they continue 
with it.
Ubuntu in and of itself is pretty great. It and its KDE-based variant 
Kubuntu are really the first Linux distributions we feel comfortable 
promoting to journalists on deadline. Campware has versions of its 
Campsite and Campcaster software available in packages tailor-made for 
Ubuntu, and if you install them online, you get the added benefit of being 
able to automatically update the software when new versions come out. You 
can visit the Ubuntu website at www.ubuntu.com
We had the good fortune of meeting Daniel James of the 64Studio project, 
which, like Ubuntu Studio is a specialized Linux audio distribution, but 
one based on Debian. As its name implies, 64Studio works quite well on 
AMD's 64-bit CPUs, but is also very good on regular Intel chips. Daniel 
and his team are doing some good work, and now offer custom Ubuntu 
distributions of 64Studio and other bespoke programs. Nice stuff! http://www.64studio.com 
Audacity
---------
Audacity is a sound editing program, and as such it has special importance 
for Campware's target audience of media organizations, both because it's 
extremely powerful, has a lot of features and is available for Windows, 
Linux and Macintosh. Plus it's free and open source. We're using and 
promoting it among the radio stations we work with as an alternative to 
programs like CoolEdit, Vegas and Audition. Go to http://audacity.sourceforge.net for more.
OpenOffice
------------------
OpenOffice continues to get better with every release. The latest, 2.4, is 
pretty slick, and at least the word processing and presentation programs 
are on a par with MS Office. Those who work with people who use lots of 
macros in Excel would still probably be better off sticking with that, but 
for simple spreadsheets, OpenOffice works fine.
At Campware, we strongly support localization and internationalization 
efforts, and we're happy to see that OpenOffice has been ported to a 
number of world languages, including spell checkers. You can download the 
latest version of OpenOffice at www.openoffice.org.
There are a couple of variants of OpenOffice that are also worth keeping 
an eye on.
IBM Lotus Symphony is a new version of the OpenOffice.org office software. 
We're just testing it now, but already it looks a lot slicker and 
user-friendly than OpenOffice. And there are Windows, Mac and Linux 
versions too. More at http://symphony.lotus.com. Our Mac-using friends should take a look at NeoOffice, which is a 
version of OpenOffice that's been altered to take better advantage of 
native OS X features.
Google Documents
----------------
Because Campware works with people all over the world, collaboration 
becomes pretty crucial to whatever we do. We're starting to experiment 
with Google Documents for documents where a) people are spread out b) 
where we need to keep track of who made which changes at which time. 
Google Documents is pretty good in this way, and it works with both MS 
Office formats and OpenOffice.
Trac
----
We love Trac. Trac is a wiki-based ticketing system and, well, a wiki, but 
one that interfaces with the Subversion server our programmers use to 
submit their programming changes. Trac is what we use to run our developer 
pages (all of which are at https://www.campware.org). And of course it's open source. Visit http://trac.edgewall.net for more info.
VLC
---
VLC is a media player that will play just about any multimedia file out of 
the box. VLC supports all kinds of video formats, including Windows Media, 
and it runs on all three operating systems - Windows, Mac and Linux. More 
at http://www.videolan.org/vlc
Real-time discussions on the #campsite and #campcaster IRC channels
===================================================================
If you've got a burning question that won't wait for the various Campware 
mailing lists, you might want to try visiting the #campsite and 
#campcaster IRC channels on irc.freenode.net. If you have an IRC-friendly 
chat client program, it's very easy to head there, and if you don't, try 
installing the very easy-to-use Pidgin instant messenger client. Then you 
can navigate over to irc.freenode.net and the #campsite and #campcaster 
channels.
About this newsletter
=====================
Campware News is supposed to come out quarterly, providing an update on 
goings on in and around the Campware Initiative, which seeks to create 
free and open source tools for independent media in the developing world. 
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