Free & OpenSource Software Weekend
FOSDEM Team writes "This week-end, the fourth edition of the FOSDEM (Free and Opensource Software Developers' European Meeting) is taking place in Brussels, Belgium. Once more, famous speakers will be present for this 2 days event to talk in the different tracks presented (Linux Kernel, Accessibility, Desktop, Java, Scripting languages and Security); on Saturday evening, the FS Award ceremony will be conducted by Richard Stallman. This year, the introduction talk will be made by Tim O'Reilly and the end talk by Jon Maddog Hall. Don't miss the interviews made by the FOSDEM guys : Hans Reiser, Ian Formanek, Keith Packard, Tim O'Reilly, Robert Love and many others."
Is the meeting free? Is it free as in free beer? Or more importantly, IS THERE FREE BEER?!
WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
Don't miss the interviews made by the FOSDEM guys : Hans Reiser, Ian Formanek, Keith Packard, Tim O'Reilly, Robert Love and many others.
Darl McBride? Blake Stowell, Ralph Yarro?
They too are part of the Linux movement, in their own weird sort of way. I mean, think about it : aren't these people at least in part responsible for uniting the free software world behind Linux, and provide a much needed distraction from the traditional boring ole Microsoft hatred?
"A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
The Free Software movement has gotten so large and so mainstream that I would think that conferences like this that highlight the 'separateness' of Free Software would eventually wither away. As more businesses pick up Free Software, the movement would become more prominent at true software conferences that cover the entire industry.
Free Software is not a product, but its products are products. Apache, Linux, Perl, these are all products and have a place to stand among commercial products like IIS, Windows, and Visual Studio.Net. Free Software, OTOH, only describes a group of software that really has nothing in common with each other except that they share a common license.
I would rather see the Apache booth at COMDEX and SD than at FOSDEM. The earlier we can throw the yoke of 'Free Software' from our backs, the earlier Free Software will fulfill its mission.
I have been pwned because my
there are a lot of foreign people who can't be there to watch the presentations, so I would like to know if some speech/talk will be recorded (in video or just the audio maybe) and have it avaliable on the net for those of us who are not in Europe download it and enjoy this meeting too.
Can the Win2k SP1 developpers attend this year?
-Steve
it was called OSDEM back then, and RMS was there telling audience people off because they said "Linux" and not "GNU/Linux" when asking questions.
During his session he was talking about emulators for some reason and he said "Emulators like WINE" I yelled "Wine Is Not An Emulator!"
serves him right!
Software freedom is not something that chains you or in any way enslaves you. It is, as the name says, something that gives you freedom--freedoms you don't get with the other software you named. Even by the metric of mere popularity, Apache has apparently done quite well without booths at COMDEX and the like (Apache is still the most popular web server in use). But Apache is one of the outliers--most free software is not as popular in its field as Apache is in its field. I think we are better served by conveying how non-free software (not "commercial" software) restricts your freedoms to share and modify. There is nothing to gain by conflating the two definitions of "free" (except, perhaps, to point out how other languages don't have the problem English does because other languages separate freedom and price by using two different words). We gain more when we talk about software freedom and insist upon it. Insisting on software freedom has gotten us very far in the past 20 years. You don't gain success in a movement by throwing away the principles that the movement stands for.
Digital Citizen
Ok, so to do my part, I'll boot to my Slackware partition (instead of XP) and run that all weekend :)
:)
But seriously, weird "holiday" but enjoy it
This is the sig that says NI (again)
I'm gonna be there, and hope it's gonna be an awsome week end. Belgians are not used to see a huge event taking place in our country, but we hope you'll feel at home. And about beer, I'm right now having one of ours... Anyone from abroad should try a "Biere Speciale" and don't hesitate to ask wich one (there are hundreds of different ones, not bad for a ten million citizen country ;-) ). There's a place to check in case you'd like to discover this side of belgian culture close to the site. It's called "L'Atelier" ask any Bruxellois where it's at, they'll know ;-).
Have a nice FOSDEM.
The openMosix community is organizing its own meeting at FOSDEM 2004. http://www.fosdem.org/2004/index/dev_room_mosix
To those who might be concerned that Free Software is a North American thing, be assured that Europeans are taking a leading role.
...he's doing a presentation on Ruby.
The slide images alone should be worth attending... he's hunted far and wide for images of pythons, pearls, rubies, and such-like.
The Army reading list
Didn't they get the ESR memo that Java isn't popular in open source projects?