Hi, You might have already heard about 5-a-day. It's the effort to get more people triaging and working on bugs. The idea is that everyone tries to work on a small number of bugs a day.
You don't need to fix the bug, you don't even have to understand what is going on, for instance the first line of bug triage has to do things like: * check the bug is filed against the correct package, or pick one if it filed without a package. You don't need to be certain that you have the correct package, just that it is the right area. If you assign to a package that is not quite right then someone else will assign it to the correct place. * Make sure the submitter has provided enough information. Have they explained what they were doing at the time of the crash? Have they explained what is wrong with the web page they are viewing? * Ask the submitter to try various experiments. Can they connect to their wireless access point if it is unencrypted? Does the printer work correctly if it is connected directly to the computer? This sort of thing is vital in figuring out exactly what the bug is. * Has the bug already been reported? Search launchpad for similar bugs and mark them as duplicates if you can find one. If you have an idea of what a good bug report looks like, or you are skilled in figuring out what is wrong by trying different things then you have all the skills needed to do this. With 5-a-day you can use a script or a panel applet to keep track of the bugs you work on, and then watch yourself in this list: http://daniel.holba.ch/5-a-day-stats/ If you want to find out how to get involved then look here: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/5-A-Day If you look at the bottom of the stats page you will see that there are team rankings. This means that you can ally yourself with your LoCo team and then the bugs that you work on are also counted against your team. I think it would be great to have ubuntu-uk higher up that list. There are some pointers to interesting lists of bugs that could be easy to work on on the wiki page, so that's a good place to start. Another alternative is to join #ubuntu-bugs-announce so that you can grab bugs as they are filed. Alternatively you could take your favourite package and work on the bugs for that package. There is also #ubuntu-bugs where there's a load of friendly helpful people who can help you if you are unsure about how to do something. If you need something you can also grab me (james_w) on IRC and I'll point you in the right direction. Thanks, James -- ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk https://wiki.kubuntu.org/UKTeam/