Call For Open Source Awards 2008 Nominations
chromatic writes "Google and O'Reilly have published the Call For Open Source Awards 2008 Nominations. These awards, given at OSCON 2008, recognize individual contributors who have demonstrated exceptional leadership, creativity, and collaboration in the development of open source software. The nomination process is open to the entire open source community, and nominations close on May 15. Here's your chance to sing the praises of previously unsung hackers."
They're missing a category for the "It's a Trap! Award" as I would like to nominate The Prince of Darkness for his work with OOXML 'community acceptance.'
My work here is dung.
Argh! Looks like I still have a few bugs to work out...
I nominate Steve Balmer and Bill Gates, in the last month they have done more to promote the concept of alternative operating systems than anyone else in the market. Bill by saying the next Windows is out next year and Steve by saying that Vista is a work in progress. Without the sterling work of these two men in hampering Microsoft it would be much harder for Open Source software in the corporate world.
An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
I vote for Vista.
Persian Project Management Software as a Service
I nominate Mark Shuttleworth of Ubuntu fame. Ubuntu has done more to promote a desktop Linux than any other distro before.
Best Kernel Hacker - Andrew Morton (-mm kernel line)
Best Project Leader - Aaron Sergio (KDE 4)
http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
What might be more fun would be one for the worst OSS developers - there could be categories for least notice taken of user requirements, best flaming of dumb newbie questions on the support forums, most hostile to new developers joining the team...
I'm too polite to nominate anyone though.
ccalam - acoustic versions of new songs.
and yet, what I find intriguing is OSS has capitalised on this "failure" exactly 0% with regards to desktop coverage; or no noticeable difference anyhow.
Apple may have gotten more popular because of Vista, but I've not seen any figures to suggest OSS is making any dents in the Windows market.
throw new NoSignatureException();
So says anonymous coward.
Almost everything in my post is easily verifiable.
For the record, I don't take kindly to being called a liar by someone who is not only full of shit themselves, but also unwilling to post under their own name.
http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
If you have read your messages I know you've seen these figures:
Windows sinks 24%
PC Shipments up 12%
This gap is about 1/3 of the market. Apple's computer sales are up 50%, but as you note their numbers are well counted and can't account for a gap this large. Those computers shipped with some OS on them. What was it?
eWeek, which I've always regarded as a loyal Microsoft fan, has declared Ubuntu ready to take on Windows. I think you'll find that's where the missing numbers are, though Redhat is doing well too as is Asus with their eee and myriad others.
Now you can't deny you've seen the figures.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
The Asus eeePC is a runaway smash hit and all the first versions shipped with linux. Which means they weren't vista. That's more than 0%. Granted, they are dragging out some sort of XP training bra version to fit it in for some people, but the first foray was pure linux. (for this observation I will take a minilaptop as part of joe consumers personal home computers, which is what I think you meant, that market)
Probably a bad idea. I heard he's planning to fork the ceremony later on.