Posts Tagged FOSS
My POSSE’s on FOSSway
If anyone is totally clueless to the hip-hop reference in the post title, its from Sir Mix a Lot’s SWASS album. Take a peek. It is also ridiculous given what the subject matter actually is:
———- Forwarded message ———-
From: “Karsten Wade” <kwade@redhat.com>
Date: Apr 30, 2010 6:34 PM
Subject: Professors’; Open Source Summer Experience – 5 to 9 July in California
(Please pass on! I don’t know enough faculty at local schools, your
word of mouth is appreciated.)
Have you considered the benefits of teaching open source participation
in the classroom? More than teaching tools and technology, teaching
open source is about giving students a chance to get hands on with
real code in real situations. A chance to build skills and
experiences that scale to fit the classroom.
Professors’ Open Source Summer Experience, or POSSE, is a week long
class taught by open source community experts from Red Hat and the
Open Source Initiative, for those who teach higher education or
advanced students in computer science/engineering and electrical
engineering (CS, CE, EE.) In this class we teach the skills to be
“productively lost” through participation in actual projects. These
skills are transferable directly to teaching open source participation
in the classroom.
http://teachingopensource.org/index.php/POSSE
We’re offering the first California POSSE in Mountain View, 05 to 09
July. If you or someone you know is interested, read more here:
http://teachingopensource.org/index.php/POSSE_California_CS
POSSE itself is free; attendees pay their own travel, lodging, and
expenses. To find out more or to apply, check out the program page and
send in an application.
http://teachingopensource.org/index.php/POSSE_California_CS
If you have questions, our general Teaching Open Source mailing list
is used for support, networking, and discussion amongst teaching
colleagues and open source experts:
http://teachingopensource.org/mailman/listinfo/tos
You may also email posse@teachingopensource.org for more information.
You are encouraged to pass on this email to anyone or anywhere there
might be professors interested in teaching open source.
–
name: Karsten ‘quaid’ Wade, Sr. Community Gardener
team: Red Hat Community Architecture
uri: http://TheOpenSourceWay.org/wiki
gpg: AD0E0C41
SCALE 8x
Posted by zeruch in FOSS, Out and About, Technology, linkedin on February 25, 2010
So after years of almost going, seriously considering going and sort of thinking of going, I finally went and attended SCALE. It was wholly worthwhile. A bargain (to paraphrase conference Chair Ilan Rabinovich, “You’ll spend more on parking than on a pass for all three days to the show”) it had a lot of pros and very few cons:
Pros:
- Great speakers talking about pertinent topics (i.e. Brian Aker, Jono Bacon)
- Great conference layout (the Westin LAX was well suited for the logistics of such an expo)
- Great accommodations (the Westin LAX had nice rooms at a decent cost if you went with the conference promotional rate)
- Great food within short driving distance (the Missus and I scored with Derrick’s Jamaican Cuisine)
- Well organized expo floor, where commercial firms, public-sector entities and .org’s all were commingled instead of broken out into ghettoized segments.
Cons:
- The Westin LAX is otherwise not in the most awesome neck of the woods; there are no really decent eats within walking distance, unless you happen to be an avid fast food junkie (which I am not).
- It’s LA, which never entices me a whole lot. Move the show to San Diego.
- Parking is extortionate, even for guests of the hotel, as was the wi-fi per diem costs if you were anywhere except the conference floors (which were free).
- The menu at the Westin is a tad limited.
- Too many sessions worth attending (an otherwise good problem to have) where two or more good talks would be going on at once.
To back up a bit, I started by opting to drive to the show, and take the 101 instead of Interstate 5. While this adds up to an extra hour of drive time, it also means you have a much more scenic route and better opportunities for photo opportunities and dining options.
Case in point, I opted to stop on the way down at Avila Beach and have a pit stop at Joe Momma’s, which had good coffee and also offered a rather odd item: King Crimsonade (Iced King Crimson Tea + Lemonade)
I arrived in LA, checked in, and meant to catch some of Friday afternoon sessions but ended up having lobby lounge discourse with Jono, Ilan and others into the wee hours.
Jono Bacon’s Engines of Revolution talk actually finally got me to really notice Quickly, which now very much has my interest.
Don Marti led a really useful panel on Git adoption and usage that I really found useful (especially since some developers at work are starting to use it in lieu of SVN, but others are balking, and getting some consensus is proving elusive).
Mark Stone gave a rather interesting view into aspects of corporate participation in FOSS that I think gets overlooked (particularly in how “tribal” versus “institutional” knowledge and what certain hierarchical organizations expect to achieve from a particular engagement).
I missed the keynote by Karsten Wade, which I sorely regret; at least there are some decent notes. I have known Karsten for years and his thoughtfulness and outlook are really well suited to what he does. Bravo Karsten. Sorry about the crossed signals about dinner though (even if we ended up in the same spot anyway). heh
On the legal side, I managed to catch the tail end of Richard Fontana’s Improving the Open Source Legal System. Sadly, that same session produced also some stellar verbal segfaults like Bradley Kuhn’s “Everything that can possibly be bad, you can find on SourceForge“. Having seemingly inherited the diplomatic and interpersonal graces of RMS, all I can say is “stay classy, yo.”
I spent a decent amount of time speaking with Josh Berkus about everything from what makes for a good conference to the peculiarities of Bay Area public transit, including Epic Beard Man. That is part of the reasons these shows are so superior to any of the IDG-style low signal to high noise schmooze-fests; shows like SCALE manage to keep things collegial and friendly instead of constantly getting the sense you are being given the marketing equivalent to copping a feel by some sleazy field rep.
Big ups to Don Marti, Jake Edge, Karsten, Gareth and everyone else who helped put the show on, or whose session I attended. There were no bum notes in this concert.
The weekend was not all geekery however.
The Missus had arrived Saturday morning via LAX, and Sunday we ventured some 25 minutes from the Westin into Japantown to try a relatively new place, a place called The Lazy Ox Canteen. Calling it a “canteen” seems oddly quaint for such an otherwise really exceptional gastropub, tucked away with no signage but clearly having already won over a clientele that likes quality food and libations. Over the course of several hours K & I shared salt cod fritters, charred octopus with white beans, flat-iron pork loin, salmon on a bed of black orzo, tapioca brulee, tiramisu trifle, and I got a bottle of Ozeno Yukidoke I.P.A. A big win.
We also stopped by the Kinokuniya store in Japantown and picked up some items:
Other random bits done while hanging about include the above doodles of Chinese premier Hu Jintao and political commentator George Will.
Creative Commons at Parisoma
Posted by zeruch in Aesthetics, FOSS, Law, Observations, Out and About, Politics, Pop Culture, Technology, linkedin on February 17, 2010
Watch live video from VidSF on Justin.tv
Creative Commons at Parisoma. Somehow I actually managed to make it up here from the South Bay in time for the 7PM start. Spoke briefly with a guy working on FOSS test suit stuff, and a woman who works with the non-profit behind Sesame Street, which may give you an idea of the breadth of folks in attendance.
Props to CC CEO Joi Ito for being not only a very good panelist (read: not dogmatic, but grounded and clearly well prepared for questions).
SVLUG: David Weekly and “Infrastructure Memes”
Posted by zeruch in Aesthetics, Visual Arts, linkedin on February 4, 2010
On a lark I caught the last portion of David Weekly’s Infrastructure Memes talk at SVLUG. It was probably the first SVLUG meeting I had been too in 7-8 years, and the crowd was notably smaller, and no Rick Moen or Marc Merlin to be found.
The talk itself was a good mix of items that seemed quite obvious (then again, community building -both online and in real space- is not exactly alien territory for me), along with some interesting statistics and some things which struck me as quite interesting.
The discussion on trademarks and the states that use first-to-file systems was animated, although much of it seemed to forget that part of issue will always lay in regional/local political imperatives versus any transnational tendencies brought about by bandwidth and pagerank (although it isn’t totally immune to either).
Geeks and wonks don’t seem to hang out together as much as they should.
The most interesting part for me was talking to David briefly after his presentation and asking him about places where he saw the intersection of hackerspaces and design/aesthetics folken. He gave me GAFFTA, and I was blown away. How such a group had been sitting right under my nose…?
SharePointless
Posted by zeruch in FOSS, Observations, Technology on January 3, 2010
So I get these banal emails about ‘IT whitepapers’ (read: extended-length ad-copy masking as independent research) in my office inbox, and this week was a doozy.
Ten Things to Look for in a SharePoint Recovery Tool
You know what one thing I look for in a SharePoint recovery tool? Alcohol content. Because if something goes wrong with Sharepoint, the desire to drink oneself into a loathsome stupor is immense, and you may as well have raided the top shelf where the good and potent stuff is.
Let’s face it, if there is that strong of a push to promote recovery tools, that means that doing so is likely just as difficult and cumbersome and unpleasant as the sound of the street makes it out to be. To follow that, your software should have a fairly straightforward method of recovery, that the evolution of a buoyant (and IT white-paper focused) 3rd party development ecosphere should not develop to fulfill that crucial task.
There is no ‘point’ to SharePoint except to go back to 1990s-era vendor lock in and painful administration costs. It is garbage and can be more cheaply, openly and flexibly be replaced with a multitude of options, including MindTouch, Alfresco, or depending on what your organizations actual needs are, something like Redmine, Sciret, or any of a long list of document repos, wiki engines or other collaborative tools (even Google Wave is probably more utile at this point).
Open Office Has its Moments
Posted by zeruch in Uncategorized on December 7, 2009
Open Office has made some amazing strides, and its been my default word processing application since about 2003. That being said, Open Office is stupid when it loses total focus of a document, allowing the cursor to take up residence wherever it wants until you either restart the app or close and reopen the doc.
It has done this since the latest major revision on XP (oddly, this does not happen under Linux) and it is irksome.
Linux Foundation gives out lifetime @linux.com email addresses
Posted by zeruch in FOSS, Technology, linkedin on December 2, 2009
I upgraded my membership with the The Linux Foundation to include a lifetime @linux.com email address (well, the forwarding thereof anyway).
It is really reasonably priced, and since I am looking for a new minitower soon, the discounts on hardware from Lenovo and HP is a nice perk (so are the big discounts on attendance at SCALE and OSCON).
Twitter + jQuery + Simile
Posted by zeruch in FOSS, Observations, Politics, Technology, Visual Arts, linkedin on November 24, 2009
So the idea of making a timeline of someone’s Twitter feed did not strike me as very interesting, until someone did it using Simile (or rather, the timeline widget thereof), which I think is a cool project.
It also allows you to play/edit with the sourcecode easily.
I have been thinking of good way to use it for both work in terms of visualizing a product life cycle (including all downtime incidents and planned maintenance) and for wonkish pet projects involving tracking terrorist/conflict events and electoral results/regime shifts for the political actors involved.
It might also be a cool way to represent a semi-interactive CV/resume.

A Decade of Sourceforge
Posted by zeruch in Aesthetics, FOSS, Technology, linkedin on November 18, 2009
Today, Sourceforge turned 10 years old.
Tony Fusion94 Guntharp was the original project manager and taskmaster, Uriah Precision Welcome was the first walking swiss-army knife of system/network admins I ever encountered.
Of the original four (the other two being Drew Dtype Streib and Tim Perdue) they are the two I still am in contact with and still call friends. Uriah is the only one of the original four who remains at what is now its home, Geek.net
And that gets me to a first point, since it bears restating: Sourceforge was given life by those four men. That is the list. Four.
Anyone else laying any claim to creation is questionable, unless their name is Larry Augustin, who was CEO of VA Research (VA Linux) at the time that the original software archival project ColdStorage was expanded to what was referred to internally as Alexandria (it was going to be called Ptolemy). There was a small circle of other people in the company that knew what was going on in the middle office in the west wing of 1382 Bordeaux Avenue in Sunnyvale. It was VA’s very own skunkworks, and it was exciting.
I am proud to have been involved, if only mostly at the minimal level of being just someone to vet an idea, spur a tirade, or otherwise support an concept that I thought then (and still now) made an immense amount of both practical sense and offered the possibility of being something Bill Joy often referred to as “disruptive technology”. Even though the tech itself was mostly well known at the time (within FOSS circles at least), putting it together in that way was ambitious, it was ballsy, and no one knew better than to think it was not doable.
The amount of work effort was heroic, with people operating on a perpetual diet of caffeine, nicotine, honor and distilled hate for failure. The atmosphere was part M*A*S*H, McGuyver, the A-Team, and an Akira Kurosawa film with lots of angry dudes with katanas.
To know it is still going, and having carved a path that has helped indelibly change the entire software industry (which is something I think really gets overlooked in an age of “Forges” and forge-like sites like Launchpad, GitHub, Codeplex, et al) is not an understatement and it is amazing.
Something like that is worth noting, as are probably a slew of interesting stories about colorful personalities, weird happenings, and crazy adventures that surrounded the gestation, birthing and nurturing of it…which I will not tell in any detail here for reasons of both brevity and to not name too many names (some of which may not want to know how they bartered servers for Single Malt Scotch, or didn’t recognize that guy named Guido who wanted to host Python on SF.net, or who garnered the reputation for the worlds worst collection of plaid shirts since the invention of textiles, or who terrorized upper management the most over a litany of issues both technical and political).
Cheers guys. You did damn good.
SCALE 8x is coming
Posted by zeruch in FOSS, Out and About, Technology, linkedin on November 7, 2009
The Southern California Linux Expo (SCALE) is coming up in February and I think I will actually make it out this year. It is one of the few tech shows with a track of any interest to me that is also logistically easy. That, and I trust Gareth Greenaway and Co, to put on a decent show; the CFP period is still open for those that might want to actually present.

Upcoming GIMP 2.x Releases
Posted by zeruch in Aesthetics, FOSS, Observations, Technology, Visual Arts, linkedin on September 29, 2009
So my usage of the GNU Image Manipulation Tool over the past 10 years has been hit or miss (more often the latter) not because it lacked too many features (it did early on but got much better, and had some great ones all to itself) but mostly because of two things:
- It did not have the good sense to do what Adobe did with InDesign with respect to migrating users from Quark: get very granular key-mappings/lexicon so as to make transitioning users much easier.
- It had a general user interface experience that I would put barely above Blender and slightly below MS Windows 3.1.
The former (and a small part of the latter) was partially addressed by the advent of projects like GimPhoto and GIMPShop, but these were effectively forks, and not the most actively supported and stable.
Finally, it seems that GIMP itself is getting a real makeover with a single window and clean menu system closer to Photoshop, without losing the strengths it inherently has, and in a way that will allow users the choice of UI layout. FOSS wins again.
Let’s face it, I paid a hefty sum for my Adobe license (I waited years to go to the full CS3 suite from version 7.0 of just PS, and am still not sure if it was worth it for the PS upgrade) and if I can get an app that gets me what I want in a manner that is easy to transition to, you have a test case to win over a lot of other users.
The idea of having an application that has the bulk of features PS does, for zero dollar cost, smaller resource footprint, and is built to let people test the waters easily, is a big step in the right direction.
Here is an image from my time at Damage Studios, working on the Rekonstruction MMOG, which made use of GIMP to some degree:
p.s. yes, I still think the GIMP is a completely asinine name (recursive acronym or not).
Joey Hess pwns the Palm Pre
Posted by zeruch in Aesthetics, FOSS, Politics, Technology, Visual Arts, linkedin on August 26, 2009
Now, there will be a more fleshed out version of this someday. I have detailed preliminary pencils completed, but after a couple of dry runs with ink pens, I have this one, and none too soon, seeing as this fellow is in the news.
Joey Hess was hired at VA Linux Systems as a Debian developer some months after I had come on board in a different group. He was a quiet fellow with a very civil, soft-spoken manner, even when he was articulating very strong convictions on any number of topics, including personal privacy (which as I recall, we shared a lot of the same convictions) and a highly competent engineer.
After a while, Joey left to go live out in the Virginia hills and that was the last I had heard of him for years…until last week.
He discovered some interesting aspects of the Palm Pre phone, which has gotten the attention of the press (for good reason, seeing as the Pre sends back data about what the phone is doing and where it is, back to Palm) . Palm is, to say the least, spending a lot of effort to properly squeegee their face of the massive egg that landed on it.
And the following euphemistic, sanctimonious drivel is the reason at this point that I would never buy something from Palm:
Palm issued a statement about Mr Hess’ discovery and said it “offers users ways to turn data collecting services on and off”.
It added: “Our privacy policy is like many policies in the industry and includes very detailed language about potential scenarios in which we might use a customer’s information, all toward a goal of offering a great user experience.”
Part of a great user experience is being open and honest with your clients, and giving them the features and service they seek in a product. This should happen upfront, not after getting caught doing something that is fundamentally at odds with a great user experience and more complimentary to a great questionable pilfering of personal data that the user may of may not be aware he/she is providing.
Commander Taco Hates Me
Posted by zeruch in FOSS, Observations, Out and About, Technology on August 19, 2009
….sort of. But only in a snarky way. Not really. He is actually an amazingly nice guy, and funny as all be damned.

The Slashdot guys can be so cruel.
When I was at OSCON I spent some time with Rob Malda and Uriah Welcome and other former colleagues in a little party over at the Agenda, and I was reminded that I had recently dug up some old relics of the overdriven, semi-insane dot com era we all shared a trench in, including the business card above. It was one of many titles I held at VA (others included Corporate Enforcer, Professional Services Project Manager, something regarding EU business, and several others I do not recall clearly at all).
My desk was in the community development area on the second floor in a semi-open space with free access from an adjacent atrium area; when Rob and Jeff from Slashdot were on a visit shortly after VA had acquired Andover.net (the then parent company of Slashdot) I came back from some meeting or other with one of my fineliner pens missing (I was a stickler for buying my own pens, which were always several grades better than the generic ballpoints in the stationary supply cabinets anywhere in the building), and the aforementiond card on my keyboard.
Yes, my email address was a single letter, yes he was joking, no I can’t account for his penmanship.
But the levels of haha and win are epic.
L.A. DevMeet
Posted by zeruch in Aesthetics, Law, Observations, Out and About, Politics, Technology, Visual Arts, linkedin on August 2, 2009
So, the past few weeks have been a bit of a whirlwind, which is why I am finishing this post two weeks after being in Los Angeles for the DevArt meet in Echo Park.
Part I: Traversing The State Easy, Traversing LA Slightly more Convoluted but sort of Funny
The drive down was uneventful, as was checking into our hotel. The cab ride to the meet was a little more colorful. I had one called up to the front of the Le Parc, driven by a very pleasant, heavily accented Armenian gentleman.
You may be wondering how I picked him out as Armenian; well, he had, embedded into the ceiling of the cab near the rear view mirror, a rather large (~ 7″) crucifix with what I guessed was either Armenian script (I actually have a hard time telling the difference at a certain distance, but this was somewhat obvious), denoting he was an adherent of the Armenian Orthodox rite.
I have found that being culturally aware has its advantages with many people in many situations, not the least of which being taxi drivers; they seem to get you there faster when they are aware that you know their cultural identity exists. This guy was no exception. He asked me what I was,to which I replied “American”. This caused the customary response of “yeah, but what are you?” at which point I admitted my family originates from Portugal. I also noted that one of the most famous people in Portugal, was an Armenian oil baron who spent most of his later years in Lisbon and started a foundation named after him, the Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian.
This got him moving at a rapid clip (nearly escape velocity), and he said his credit card rig in the cab was on the fritz, didn’t mind taking me to the closest grocery in a questionable borough and waiting for me in the parking lot as I sought an ATM, where I gave him a ridiculously oversized tip and a thank you.
Part II: The actual DevMeet; Mostly Great People and A Few That Are Considerably less than Great.
As I arrived in Echo Park, the crowd had swelled to a three digit number of attendees, of all makes and descriptions. Some were even socially tolerable. I say this because in my years as an admin at DA, there were certain demographic slices on the site that would cause my misanthropy gland to swell to the size of K2 quite rapidly. One of those would be admin fanboys/girls. People whose only interest in you was that you held some perceived mystical status, replete with near omniscient powers, inerrant thoughts, and possibly the secret combination of Kentucky Fried Chicken’s 11 herbs and spices.
The fixation moves into the bizarre when they ask you to do things like confer some fundamentally awe-inspiring benefaction upon them, like signing their cricket bat (which actually occurred) or acknowledging that they have been staring at you for the last three minutes without blinking, to the point that their corneas have dried up. It’s quaint for a moment, but quickly can turn into really weird and almost creepy.
After the group photo -see if you can even spot me in this- we broke out into smaller groups based on mediums, and proceeded to do a kind of un-conference set of discussions.
The small group I joined was my former responsibility: the traditional galleries. We covered the new portfolio feature before dispersing (in general, I feel very positive about the portfolio feature, and see quite a lot of potential for it), with some of us going to DA CEO Angelo Sotira’s presentation on groups (which I did not even know about until I ran into Angelo and he told me about it).
It was in all of this that I met some new people, including Margot Dent who gets maximum coolness points for her “Same as it Ever Was” tattoo (Talking Heads fans of the world, unite). I also finally got to meet eStunt, whose real name I still do not know, but who made for good company, and I finally got some clarification about the ‘blue blob’.
The real cool part was hooking up with some of the ‘old guard’ from the IT and development groups: Sasha and Chris specifically. In the end I spent most of the afternoon and evening with them, talking about various fun and thrilling things like UTF-8 usage in MySQL tables, and the pros/cons of Trac vs. Redmine (I prefer the latter), and Lucene vs. Sphinx (I still have no preference).
Related to all this, I can understand the rationale Angelo has against using an open DA API akin to what Facebook and other social media websites use. Being able to control what gets put onto a DA page is important for economic and branding reasons (unlike the aggragating Social media sites, DA is not trying to be everything to everyone, it is trying to be very specific things to a particular community – large and varied as it is).
That being said, I still believe there is a benefit to an API for allowing users (subscribers) to export/pipe/control content to other places. In general, in terms of APIs, features and the like, I kind of rambled about the following:
- Have an API that makes one able to create a widget that automatically takes any new works I submit to create a status update to a microblog (i.e. Twitter, Identi.ca) or to automagically post to zeruch.net, or even to a Flickr account.
- To use something other than the rather clunky flash object to embed images elsewhere. That whole thing needs a re-write, or an alternative method closer to what Flickr does. Simple and elegant process, is simple and elegant.
- Opening some sales/geographic data to users in a way that allows people to see where sales of ones work is happening. Being able to take frequency and location of transactions, and marry them to say Google Maps, might be a neat premium widget.
- Like Artician, develop ways to import content into DA in a simple way; in a similar way to what Artician has done, allow my Wordpress (or other blogging service) posts to be autoposted to my DA journal, or pull in my content from other popular sites.
By the time all this jabbering was done, we were all sitting at formica tables at Happy Tom’s, an eatery I can only describe as ‘kitschy’ in that way that is kitschy not because its trying to be. Here, the bulk of the time was myself, Chris, Sasha and for some of the time, Angelo, looking at some new features in depth, and the Groups feature really has some legs on it. Much more than I suspect the average user would think about at first pass.
This all gets to support my general assessment that DA has made some serious improvements in its infrastructure and in how its managing development and rollout. While there is always room for improvement(s), the fact is that DA seems on a path that looks solid, and may lead to real game changing evolution if it keeps this going.
Part III: Escape From LA
I did not get to try the pool on the roof of my hotel, but room service was a good supplement to the flavored grease of Happy Tom’s (my guess is Tom is Happy because he has a decent cardiologist), and since we were too tired to go out on the town, the missus and I just ordered said room service, and watched Highlander on the TV.
Which reminds me: can someone please explain how Sean Connery, who is Scottish, has made a career out of playing any number of other nationalities with his Scottish accent, gets to be in a movie mostly filmed in Scotland, with a name like ‘Highlander’, and end s up playing a Spaniard born in Egypt? Or that the title role is played by a French-American with a Geneva accent? Who did casting for this damn film? I LOL with great fury.
Anyway, we left LA on Sunday and instead of taking I-5 opted for 101, which is a much more picturesque drive. I was quite happy to be off the road and back on my patio with a drink and a book.
Microsoft’s Latest FOSS ‘development’ a new strain of FUD, but its not all bad
Posted by zeruch in FOSS, Law, Observations, Technology, linkedin on August 1, 2009
…We don’t know why Microsoft positioned the news as something it was not.
The writer was being facetious, because he then partially answers his own question:
Maybe it was because of the strategic and political importance of Hyper-V to the company, the unmissable kudos of embracing GPL and helping Linux on Windows, and how such an act could finally silence doubters.
I think the Hyper-V angle played in, but more to the point is that it offered them a rare chance to manipulate a potential legal and public relations morass into a ‘landmark’ bit of marketing sunshine, blown with great fanfare up various tech pundit skirts everywhere.
Now, as cynical as I sound, I do not think it is without warrant; MS has such a long, long, loooong track record of malignant business badness that even summarizing here would take pages. I do however share in the sentiment of Linux Torvalds, inasmuch as that if the code is good and useful, then that should be the measure of its contribution, not the legal deflection that prompted its arrival.
If nothing, it does provide a glaring example that all the nonsense Redmond has been caterwauling about with regards to FOSS (and the GPL) was largely bunk to prevent having to compete on technical merit and acumen.
OSCON Day II
Posted by zeruch in FOSS, Observations, Out and About, Politics, Pop Culture, Technology, linkedin on July 25, 2009
Sourceforge is a totemic thing for me, if only because in many ways it represents some of the best of what came out of the so-called dot-com boom, and of which I had some passing involvement with (even if most of that involvement was in rant sessions or partying with half the project team).
It was, and is, something of actual relevance. It still matters, and it could matter even more if it keeps things going the way it has been. The latest site redesign is the most aesthetically clean since the VA Linux days, and I have noticed some better pageload speeds. Kudos, yo.
All this leads to the real reason I am rambling about a site I stopped having even marginal involvement with back in 2002; they threw a party. A very well done party on all three floors of The Agenda Lounge, a place that also holds special relevance for me. I spent much of the 1990s as a denizen of the SOFA district, with places like the Cactus, The Agenda and The Ajax as part of my regular social regimen.
The whole evening was oddly nostalgic in appearance, but thankfully, everyone grew up and didn’t feel any need to relive 1999 as much as enjoy 2009. In this case, for the SF Community Choice Awards. There were geeky personages, loads of free libations, strange conversations, tattoo booths, netbook stations so people could microblog about being there, bad arhythmic dancing, one bizarre but amusing altercation between a very large bouncer and a very moronic barfly from down the avenue trying to get in, and of course…an award show.
Just walking to the lounge I ran into Hemos, and by the time I got in line, Precision had seen me on one of the various camera feeds (SF.net had various crews roving around taking footage to feed live to CCAlive for the event) and came around. I also finally met Matt Asay, which for some reason I found pretty cool, since he writes good copy on FOSS, and has decent musical taste.
The really nice surprise(s) were running into old friends and colleages: LMA, Jay, Tim, Dean, Gareth, Priyanka, Rob, Xunil, et al. Great time, folks.
The swag given out was some of the first decent stuff I have seen at a trade event in many years; a military style pack bag with various Thinkgeek merchandise inside, and a t-shirt that actually looks like it will last through more than just one wash cycle. Speaking of Thinkgeek, can I say that they sell the extremely full of win ION uRecord Vinyl & Cassette Ripper, which if anyone wants to get for me as a belated birthday gift, it will not go unappreciated.
The actual award announcements (hosted by Ross Turk) were done as short segues between sessions of mingling, and several of my choices won; congratulations to Portable Apps, XMind and OpenOffice.
By the end of the evening there was some late night dining at Original Joe’s and eventually congregating at the Cinebar, but at that point I still had a morning commute to contend with and a dwindling window for sleep.
All in all, I think it was a solid affair. Big ups to all involved. Let’s do this again soon.
OSCON Day 1
Posted by zeruch in FOSS, Law, Observations, Out and About, Technology, linkedin on July 23, 2009
It is not the actual first day of the O’Reilly OSCON, but it is the first day I made it to the show.
I had wanted to see the bulk of the Understanding Legal Issues in Open Source but since work beckoned I only managed to see the opening session on VC investments in OSS. The second session was on license selection; even though I didn’t get to see it, I am quite sure Larry Augustin did a solid job.
From there I took a fast run around the expo floor:
- Picked up Intellectual Property and Open Source by Van Lindberg. I had wanted to get this when it was first pubbed last year, but for some reason didn’t actually manage to until a nice, fresh copy was right in front of my face. Oh yes, I know I am the most interesting man in the world. Forget that dude in the Dos Equis ads.
- Bumped into Tuxpaint’s main author Bill Kendrick, who was talking with Ilan Rabinovitch from the Linuxfund. Bill and I go back a ways, and it never ceases to amaze me his general enthusiasm for hitting the trade shows (in the .org sections no less), install fests, farmers markets…you name it, all in the name of promoting FOSS.
- Randomly ran into Ted T’so, who I had not seen in years. He was just as genial and insightful as ever. We spent quite some time talking about the ‘content industry’ and how business models need to change and adapt. ..and that many current old guard media firms were doing the exact opposite of that. There was also a lot of talk of the Linux Foundation and their recent reboot of the Linux.com domain; they have done a great job with the look, feel and orientation of the site so far, so big kudos all around. Everyone, go buy an individual membership to the foundation. I’m serious.
After leaving the salt mines I came back for the “parties”. Parties at these kinds of events are somewhat comical, although not because they are trying to be and not like other tech conventions.
It is because the quality, quantity and variety of social awkwardness is spectacular to behold.
Every club and speakeasy rented for these events becomes less a hip venue for socially lubricated interaction, but to watch whole fields of wallflower poppies in bloom.
Not all are this bad really. But seeing a place like Motif, which usually is packed with metrosexual beefcake and surgically augmented überbabes in haute couture and drinking frou-frou cocktails being as ‘fabulous’ as possible, stuffed with pudgy and fashion deranged geeks -some with laptops, some with piles of showfloor swag- roaming about like a mutated crossbreed of lemming and three-toed sloth, one feels like they are in some kind of avant sitcom plot device.
The Sun Microsystems sponsored eat and greet at the E&O Trading company was nice; I ran into some great former colleagues/friends, including Gareth from SCALE (who is one of the nicest and laid back guys you can meet) and Colin, who is now enjoying himself far too much at Amazon.
I am now home, but I suspect I’ll find the gumption to mosey over to the Sourceforge Community Choice Awards hosted on all three floors of the Agenda Lounge tomorrow.
International Free and Open Source Software Law Review Debuts
Posted by zeruch in Law, Technology, linkedin on July 15, 2009
In something I had hoped to see happen for a while, there is the International Free and Open Source Software Law Review, which in their own words:
a collaborative legal publication aiming to increase knowledge and understanding among lawyers about Free and Open Source Software issues. Topics covered include copyright, licence implementation, licence [sic] interpretation, software patents, open standards, case law and statutory changes.
I have wanted to see a major U.S. law school start something like this for a while (preferably one near Silicon Valley,where the logistics of having schools like Stanford, Boalt, Hastings and King, along with the corporate and independent developer/contributors are all in close proximity would be beneficial), but this is a good step in the right direction.
I have only just started to peruse the first issue (currently paused from reading something on Peer to Patent) , but so far it looks quite interesting.
Hobnox
Posted by zeruch in Aesthetics, FOSS, Sounds, Technology, linkedin on June 14, 2009
So, Melvin Gibbs posted a great flash-based web app (one of the few really), the Hobnox Audiotool.
I am still stumbling around with it, but so far it has some great features (the ability to use splitters and rafts of pedal effects is but one of the major pluses) and -given the complexity of what is available- the UI is sharp and well thought out.
The icing on the cake is that they open source some of their code libraries, and have access to an SVN repo.
This has a lot of potential as a kind of next gen Aviary, but for sound composition and editing.










