Slashdot Asks: Appropriate Place For Free / Open Source Software Artifacts?
A friend of mine who buys and sells used books, movies, etc. recently purchased a box full of software on CD, including quite a few old Linux distributions, and asked me if I'd like them. The truth is, I would like them, but I've already collected over the last two decades more than I should in the way of Linux distributions, on at least four kinds of media (starting with floppies made from a CD that accompanied a fat book on how to install some distribution or other -- very useful in the days of dialup). I've got some boxes (Debian Potato, and a few versions of Red Hat and Mandrake Linux), and an assortment of marketing knickknacks, T-shirts, posters, and books. I like these physical artifacts, and they're not dominating my life, but I'd prefer to actually give many of them to someplace where they'll be curated. (Or, if they should be tossed, tossed intelligently.) Can anyone point to a public collection of some kind that gathers physical objects associated with Free software and Open Source, and makes them available for others to examine? (I plan to give some hardware, like a pair of OLPC XO laptops, to the same Goodwill computer museum highlighted in this video, but they probably don't want an IBM-branded radio in the shape of a penguin.)
Give them to Timothy.
With any luck it will keep him busy and we wont hear from him for a while.
Sell it.
I have a bunch of that stuff too. Try to sell it on eBay as a donation to FSF or EFF starting at $1 and if no one bids on it even with that arrangement then probably it's just worthless nostalgia stuff of no value to anyone but you...
Figure out before you try to get rid of them which knickknacks and giveaways are actually special somehow. Take all the other ones, put them into bags, and take them down to the your local landfill for recycling. Now put the valuable ones on eBay, perhaps in one or more lots divided by brand. Not expecting to get any notable money, but that would be a nice side effect. It's just a nice way to handle getting paid for shipping, really.
Nobody wanted most of that shit when it was new. It has never ceased to amaze me how an industry which literally creates XL and 2XL customers will have 2000 size M tee shirts made, and 200 size XL, and 0 size 2XL. I've had to see some horrifyingly hairy midriffs in various technical departments.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
Find the nearest dumpster and throw them in. Nobody (or very, very few people) wants worthless old CDs and floppies.
The Internet Archive is very good to preserve open source projects. It is not like Github, but it is good as a search library for ISO images, source code and old software. Also a lot of Creative Commons wikis get dumped there (and I guess we all know the wayback machine). Check it out: http://www.archive.org/
Do one of those stupid auction or flea market shows that dominate now. You might make a buck...
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
Sounds like something Jason Scott might be interested in.
All rites reversed 2010
Back in the dotcom days everything was funded, even Linux companies with too much VC money pushing physical CDs on everyone who'd take them. Vast numbers of discs were thrown away when they were no longer the latest and greatest version. I'm guessing for every person who'd want one there's a hundred thinking "yeah I might have something like that in my closet somewhere", personally I might have Red Hat Linux 6 (not RHEL 6) somewhere. I used to have OS/2, but I threw away all my floppies some years ago. Even for a trip down nostalgia lane I'd probably look for a VM/emulator to install it in from an ISO, it's not like they had album art and liner notes.
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
I hear Waste Management, Inc accepts all kinds of donations like this.
ahhh, yeah, hype of slashdot past...
I can't help thinking, that just for the comedic value, it would be worth having a box full of AOL CD's just so you (and by you I mean *I*) could prank mail them to someone. Everyday. For a year! Oh the fun!!
Upload them to some repository so they will always be available to anyone who wants it.