Saturday, May 06, 2006

Sebastian Trueg @ K3B interview


I saw the success of my MPlayer review, and I looked for another open-source project, which developers I should interview. The first name came to my mind was "K3B". I dropped the maintainer a mail, and today evening we were ready. So who's the guy on the picture on the left?

Sebastian Trueg - K3B project founder, maintainer, and main programmer


Me: Please introduce yourself!

Trueg: I live in Freiburg, Germany since I moved here from northern germany for my studies of computer science which I finished this year. :)


Me: I bet you were among the first students.

Trueg: Not really. I never attended that much lessons but I am quite happy with my final score. And it could not have been that bad becasue my prof offered me a job and the opportunity to make my PhD. so at the moment I am employed at the University of Freiburg.


Me: When did you start the K3B project? Why?

Trueg: K3b, well here comes the main reason for me not being among the best students... I started working on K3b in 1998, shortly after I arrived in Freiburg, and A LOT OF TIME was spent on K3b, at times way more than on my studies. The reason for K3b... Well, when I came to Freiburg I had never tried a linux system and didn't know anything about it. A friend gave me, I think it was SuSE 5.something. I gave it a try, but at the time I was not too interested. Some time later I tried again, became curious to see if I could perform all the tasks I use a computer for on a linux system. To be honest: it were not that many tasks. ;) CD-burning was one of them, especially MP3->Audio CD. And that's when it started. There was simply no program around which satified my needs. You either had to use cdrecord on the command line or do the exact same thing in xcdroast (which was a real front-end, nothing more). I wanted to burn mp3 files to an audio cd without converting them beforehand, so I thought: "Well, try it yourself!". I had never programmed something this big but I was eager to learn so I started and it went quite well (mainly becasue of the good QT/KDE documentation). At some point (I don't think the first version of K3b could actually burn mp3 files on-the-fly...) I heard of sourceforge and put it online. The response was incredible, I had never thought that this many people would use my program... the rest is history :)


Me: How much time do you invest in developing K3B?

Trueg: Hard to say. There were times when I worked on it every day for many hours, but there was also a year in which I did nothing at all (that's the reason for the 500+ open bugs on bugs.kde.org :) At the moment I do not have that much time for K3b since I work full time at the university, but I hope that I will find a way to tend to K3b more often in the future.


Me: What is your favourite feature in K3B?

Trueg: Well, my favorite feature. There is, of course, the audio decoding which is nicely integrated using the plugin structure. Since it was the main reason I started K3b it is one of my favorite features since it works so well (IMHO). But then there is one thing in K3b which you don't fin in any other burning app (at least I know of none): the "auto" modes which I try to implement for as many things as possible. There is the auto-writing mode selection, the auto-multisession-mode selection, the auto-data-mode selection (for data cds). I think that's a very cool feature becasue it allows K3b to provide the parameters for advanced users on the one hand while being simple for beginners on the other hand. Oh, yeah, CD-Copy for multisession CDs. I don't think there are that many applications that do that. :)


Me: Speaking of other applications, have you ever tried any other CD-burning software except the mentioned XCdRoast and cdrecord?

Trueg: I knew Nero from Windows. It was my reference which probably shows... I tried KCDsomething, Arson, CDBakeoven, and GnoeToaster, but all of them did not get very far. At least Arson and CDBakeoven seem to be dead.


Me: Do you fear NeroLinux? I mean, do you treat it as a powerful competitor, or trust in the open source community which tends to use mainly open source software (and Nero isn't open-source).

Trueg: I do not trust in all linux users to use open-source. They will use what works best. I do fear NeroLinux a little. For the time being they do not put very much effort in NeroLinux, but that might change and if that day comes I might have a problem... But for now NeroLinux is far from being as powerful as K3b, (which I only know from feature descriptions since it never finds any devices on my system..)


Me: You had a fundraiser.. What success have you had?

Trueg: Incredible! Awesome! I set out to raise 1000 euros and was not sure at all if I would get that far... But the community prooved me wrong: within two days! the goal of 1000 euros was reached and by the end of the fund-raiser I received nearly 5000 euros. It was such a great feeling to be appriciated in such a way. The reson I started the fund-raiser was a new computer system. With that kind of money I was able to get a really cool one: a silent PC which does not make a sound (except if you put your ear to it you may hear the harddisk spinning). Most of the money came from private users, but I received two big donations from Mandriva and Linspire. I have to say that I had never dared to dream about such a success.


Me: At the announcement of the fundraiser, you promised K3B 1.0 as a "reward". Are you planning to release it soon, or it needs some more work?

Trueg: I am planning on releasing a preview soon. K3b 1.0 is almost feature-complete but there are still some quirks to work out. I am planning on releasing a preview soon. K3b 1.0 is almost feature-complete but there are still some quirks to work out. Data Project verification has been an issue for many years and I did not get it right yet. And I'd like to close most of the bugs on bugs.kde.org before releasing k3b 1.0 final. But it's not that far away. :) K3b 1.0, that is. I hope to release the first preview by the end of May, but who knows...


Me: There were some gossips about porting KDElibs to Windows. Will you release a Windows version if that will need some extra coding to do (or will you anyways release a Windows version)?

Trueg: I never had any plans for a Windows version. If anyone is interested in porting K3b, be my guest. I don't know if it would be that hard, probably there is only one file which needs to be changed (as was done for the FreeBSD port) and that is k3bscsicommand.cpp. Well, of course one had to have the kdelibs installed on the Windows system...


Me: What would you like to transmit to the OSS community, in particular to my readers?

Trueg: Well, especially after the fund-raiser I think the OSS community is an incredible bunch. ;) I find it astonishing how this many different people come together and create something with (mostly) only one reward: compliments. The free distribution of knowledge and the impact that this distribution has on the world (even the commercial one) is just incredible. I really hope that I can be a part of it for a long time to come and there is one thing I missed up to now: I've never met any of "the big guys" in person. I've never attended any of the KDE meetings and such. I really have to change that. As for your readers: support Open-Source. Install latest versions and help out where ever you can. :)


Me: Thank you for the interview, for your time spent with me. I wish you success in life and with your project!

Trueg: Thanks a lot. It was a pleasure!

26 comments:

Anonymous said...

Nice interview. Posted a link to it on www.myl.ro ;)

Anonymous said...

Great interview!

Anonymous said...

Excellent ! Keep up the interviews and the distro reviews !! Rockin'

cruocitae said...

Thanks for the reactions :>

Anonymous said...

Nice interviews.. Keep the good work :D

Anonymous said...

Version 1.0. Can't wait. Excellent Trueg.

D.

Anonymous said...

Nice interview. It does have several spelling mistakes though, like "becasue" at the very beginning, "fin" instead of find at the favorite feature answer, small G on Germany at the beginning etc. It doesn't take that long to run a spellchecker before you publish your story :-D

Anonymous said...

Great, Sebastian! :)Thanks a lot!

K3b does a great job.

cruocitae said...

I know it's not nice to tell, but those spelling mistakes are not my faul.. I mean, I copy/pasted Sebastian's answers.
Thanks for the idea of a spellchecker, really. WOuld you suggest one, please?

Anonymous said...

Ну всё, венде теперь точно пипец!

cruocitae said...

Wow, I'm getting strange comments here..
You, russian, whould you please translate what you've said?

Anonymous said...

Аццкий сатана!

Anonymous said...

Hmm... I think OpenOffice 2.0 comes with a spell checker. Now that I looked, also Kate and Emacs seem to have spell checkers. I guess Kate and Emacs are using Ispell, you can install that from your distro's package management. If you're using OO, check Tools->Options->Language settings->Writing aids if you have a spell checker installed or not, you can found more languages from their website.

cruocitae said...

Thanks a lot..

@Andrey: English please! If you were able to read the interview, I suppose you're able to comment in english!

Anonymous said...

Hey, cruocitae, come on man, dont give up reviewing linux distros .. though i dont like to try tons of distros, i LOVE to read experiences of others. And seriously, your gnu/linux reviews were excellent !! Forget those who email'ed you to discourage -- such people will always be there ! Please, review distros -- suse 10.1 for starters ? I hope you seriously get back to work .. ;)

cruocitae said...

Don't worry, I have several (well, 3) half-done articles (2 reviews) saved as drafts, and I have SuSE 10.1 in the pipe as well, just wait. I'll publish this evening an explanation of Linux's boot process. Check back soon! (a hour later, zum beispiel :)

Anonymous said...

Ein nettes Interview - Danke Sebastian - weiter so :)

Anonymous said...

@cruocitae
Don't worry too much about these non-English commenters above, they are both morons. Tuzeg came from linux.org.ru , shortly LOR, where people love to take on *nix flame wars, so he's not worth mentioning. Andrey's comment is just some kind of new Russian web slang, particularly expressing his non-serious exaggerated attitude about your post.
Just had a feeling to apologise them before you.
Sorry for my poor English, basically I read technical articles and don't have good talking practice. ;-)

cruocitae said...

Thanks for the apologies!

P.S.: Your english isn't a problem, until it can be understood. :> You might have noticed even I have a few spelling mistakes... So.. :+)

btw, if I get so much russian comments, does that mean some .ru sites linked to me? If I understood well, LOR did, although I can't check it because the letters.. cyrillic or what.

Anonymous said...

I came to your blog through the link at madpenguin.org, whose RSS I constantly read. And of course you are known in Russia, I'm sure you are read by many here.

cruocitae said...

Great!

Anonymous said...

I came here from link on k3b homepage. I think interview is cool.

PS. Now I know that Trueg is cool guy.

cruocitae said...

Of course he is.. :-)
Most of the oss coders are (though unfortunately there are some exceptions)

Anonymous said...

Really cool interview! Trueg seems like a real down to earth guy. To me, K3B sets the standard for what a cd burning application should be for Linux. I have used several cd burning apps in the past and found that K3B worked just fine for my needs.

Anonymous said...

Great story. Thrilled for Sebastian there! I've linked to this interview too from my blog,

Linux Learning Curve
.

Blessings!
Ruth

Anonymous said...

Sebastian Trueg... Finally found really useful information on the topic, thank you.