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Launchpad

 
Album Review: Launchpad

  • Artist: Particle
  • Rating: StarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: March 23, 2004
  • Genre: Rock

Review

The long-awaited studio debut from these jam-happy road veterans does what it should for the band. It captures the quartet's indescribable all-instrumental concert vibe -- "space-porn" as they call it -- in a more controlled environment. Co-producer Tom Rothrock (Beck, Foo Fighters) slims down the band's tendencies for extended improvisation -- somewhat -- but keeps the juices flowing on an album that works apart from the trippy visuals and audience participation that enhance the band's notoriously long five-hour performances. Led by Steve Molitz's bubbling, psychedelic electronic keyboards and Darren Pujalet's surging drums, the group finds a groove and rides it. The "porn" aspect of the music results from a loose '70s feel that mixes elements of Pink Floyd's prog rock and Return to Forever-styled jazz fusion with insistent dance beats that shift from funk to near disco ("Metropolis" features disco drumming and knowingly schlocky '70s-styled synths). There are certainly no ballads, which creates a swirling tornado of sound that, like the live show, shape-shifts throughout the songs. The approach is at once contemporary and dated, recalling the experimental art rock of the '70s in "7 Minutes to Radio Darkness, Pt. 1" and then moving to a funkier driving rock for the following "Pt. 2." And although the pieces are condensed from their extended live lengths, the majority of the tunes still run over seven minutes, with one maxing out at ten. Certainly any fan of the foursome's mammoth live shows will appreciate how well their sound has been harnessed in the studio, and for those new to the Particle experience, Launchpad is an excellent primer for the group's strengths and distinctive sound. ~ Hal Horowitz, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Launchpad Particle Particle (7:17)
Metropolis Particle Particle (3:39)
The Elevator Particle Particle (7:30)
Below Radar Particle Particle (5:24)
The Banker Particle Particle (6:09)
Kneeknocker Particle Particle (8:40)
Road's a Breeze (@ 3AM) Particle Particle (8:10)
7 Minutes Till Radio Darkness, Pt. 1 Particle Particle (1:47)
7 Minutes Till Radio Darkness, Pt. 2 Particle Particle (2:30)
Sun Mar 11 Particle Particle (10:39)

Credits

John Paterno (Producer), John Paterno (Executive Producer), John Paterno (Mixing), Henry Diltz (Photography), Steve Molitz (Keyboards), Particle (Producer), Michael Tarantino (Engineer), Darren Pujalet (Drums), Steve Molitz (Group Member), Jonathan Shank (Executive Producer), Michael Caplan (A&R), Tom Rothrock (Mixing), Eric Gould (Group Member), Tom Rothrock (Producer), Eric Gould (Guitar (Bass)), John Paterno (Engineer), Vlado Meller (Mastering), Darren Pujalet (Group Member)
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Wikipedia: Launchpad (website)
Top
Launchpad
Launchpad logo.png
URL launchpad.net
Commercial? No
Type of site Project Management
Registration optional
Available language(s) English
Owner Canonical Ltd.
Created by Canonical Ltd.
Launched January 2004
Alexa rank 17,981[1]
Current status Active
Launchpad Suite
Launchpad logo.png
Developer(s) Launchpad Developers
Stable release 3.0 / 2009-09-23
Preview release 3.1.10
Written in Python
Available in English
Type Project Hosting Server
License Affero General Public License
Website https://launchpad.net/launchpad-project
Mark Shuttleworth with other Canonical Ltd employees. Discussing Launchpad at a design sprint in Germany.

Launchpad is a web application and web site supporting software development, particularly that of free software. Launchpad is developed and maintained by Canonical Ltd. On 21 July 2009, the source code was released publicly under the GNU Affero General Public License.[2] As of August 2009, the launchpad repository hosts more than 13,000 projects. The domain launchpad.net attracted 1 million visitors by August 2009 according to a Compete.com survey.[3]

Contents

Components

It has several parts:

  • Code: source code hosting using the Bazaar version control system.
  • Bugs: a bug tracker that allows bugs to be tracked in multiple contexts (e.g. in an Ubuntu package, as an upstream, or in remote bug trackers).
  • Blueprints: a system for tracking Specifications and new features.
  • Translations: a site for localising applications into different human languages.
  • Answers: a community support site and knowledge base.

A significant but less visible component is Soyuz, "the distribution management portion of Launchpad." Launchpad is currently primarily used in the development of Ubuntu, an operating system. Launchpad uses the FOSS (free/open source) Zope 3 application server.

Collaboration tools

Users

Several of Canonical Ltd's own projects use Launchpad for development including Ubuntu and Bazaar. Development of Launchpad is itself managed in Launchpad.

Other prominent projects using Launchpad for various aspects of managing their development include:

Transition to open source

Launchpad was initially criticized by the Jem Report and other members of the free software community for not being available under a free license, such as the GNU GPL, despite its aims. In response, the developers stated that they aimed to eventually release it under a free software license, but that it could potentially take years.[11] On 9 July 2007, Canonical Ltd. released "Storm", the first Launchpad component made available under a free software license.[12]

Founder Mark Shuttleworth responded to this criticism that Launchpad needed paid-programmers to continue the development of the Launchpad platform and that there would be no point in developing multiple versions of Launchpad due to the probable incompatibility of the forks[13]. However, this still left some members of the open-source movement dissatisfied.[14] On 22 July 2008 Mark Shuttleworth announced at OSCON that the complete source code would be released within the next twelve months.[15]

On 19 December 2008, Canonical Ltd. released the Launchpad component "lazr.config" and "lazr.delegates" under version 3 of the GNU LGPL.[16][17]

An open API is currently in beta testing, which will allow programs to interact with the website. Calls for an open API to be released were aided by projects like Leonov that resorted to screenscraping to get data from Launchpad.

In December 2008, Canonical announced that the source code to the Launchpad website would be released under an open-source license by 21 July 2009.[18][19]. It was also announced that two large components of Launchpad, Soyuz (which is responsible for the build system, package management and Ubuntu package publishing) and Codehosting, would not be released under an open-source license.[20]. Later, the specific date was changed to a more general timeframe of July/August 2009.[21][22] However, on 21 July 2009, the software was released under the AGPLv3 (a fully open source license)[23], including the two components (Codehosting and Soyuz) that were initially planned to remain proprietary[24].

See also

References

  1. ^ "launchpad.net - Traffic Details from Alexa". www.alexa.com. http://www.alexa.com/data/details/traffic_details/launchpad.net. Retrieved 2009-08-01. 
  2. ^ "Canonical releases source code for Launchpad". Canonical Ltd.. http://www.ubuntu.com/news/canonical-open-sources-launchpad. Retrieved 2009-07-21. 
  3. ^ "aunchpad attracts 1m visitors yearly". Compete.com.. http://siteanalytics.compete.com/launchpad.net?metric=uv. Retrieved 2009-08-01 l. 
  4. ^ "Launchpad plugin for Eclipse - using the Launchpad API". 2008-11-14. http://news.launchpad.net/api/launchpad-plugin-for-eclipse-using-the-launchpad-api. Retrieved 2008-12-10. 
  5. ^ Arnö, Kaj (2008-06-19). "Version Control: Thanks, BitKeeper - Welcome, Bazaar". http://blogs.mysql.com/kaj/2008/06/19/version-control-thanks-bitkeeper-welcome-bazaar/. Retrieved 2008-06-19. 
  6. ^ "Launchpad 1.0 Beta Released". Press release. 2007-04-02. http://www.ubuntu.com/news/LaunchpadRelease. Retrieved 2008-06-20. 
  7. ^ "Inkscape moving to Launchpad!". 2007-11-21. http://news.launchpad.net/general/inkscape-moving-to-launchpad. Retrieved 2008-09-09. 
  8. ^ "(Inkscape) Source code repository has moved to Launchpad". 2009-12-09. http://www.inkscape.org/archive.php?lang=en&year=2009&month=12. Retrieved 2009-12-25. 
  9. ^ http://www.linuxmint.com/blog/?p=970
  10. ^ http://distrowatch.com/weekly.php?issue=20090727#news
  11. ^ "Launchpad Frequently Asked Questions". Canonical. 2006-08-05. https://launchpad.net/faq. 
  12. ^ "Canonical Releases Storm as Open Source". 2007-07-10. http://www.ubuntu.com/news/storm-python-orm-open-sourced. 
  13. ^ "Launchpad should be free software (free as in freedom)". 2007-04-18. https://bugs.launchpad.net/launchpad/+bug/50699/comments/10. 
  14. ^ "Ubuntu is built with proprietary software". 2007-07-10. http://www.thejemreport.com/mambo/content/view/325. 
  15. ^ "Launchpad Source-Code Within 12 Months". 2008-07-22. http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=NjYwOA. 
  16. ^ lazr.delegates 1.0
  17. ^ lazr.config 1.0
  18. ^ Youtube - UDS Jaunty - Graham Binns
  19. ^ https://dev.launchpad.net/OpenSourcing
  20. ^ http://blog.launchpad.net/general/how-we-are-open-sourcing-launchpad
  21. ^ "Open Sourcing Launchpad". Canonical Ltd.. https://dev.launchpad.net/OpenSourcing. Retrieved 2009-07-04. "The process should be completed in July / August 2009." 
  22. ^ "Canonical releases source code for Launchpad". Canonical Ltd.. http://www.ubuntu.com/news/canonical-open-sources-launchpad. Retrieved 2009-07-21. "Canonical, the founder of the Ubuntu project, announced today that it has open-sourced the code that runs Launchpad, the software development and collaboration platform used by tens of thousands of developers." 
  23. ^ Launchpad License
  24. ^ Launchpad is now open source.

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Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Launchpad (website)" Read more