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Tales From The Bazaar

Last week, The Bazaar, an Open Source meeting and exhibition, was held for the first time in New York City. It was not a well-attended event, with fewer than 3000 registered visitors, and the view from the show's main floor was downright dismal because most of the people there spent most of their time in tutorial sessions, not cruising the (sparse) display booths. But it was still an event many found valuable. Here are some "show tales" from Slashdot readers who were there. (click below)

From Jordan Greenberg:

The Bazaar was my first real chance to meet any of the big names of the Linux community. Though I missed all of the daytime events due to work, I showed up just in time to be bored by Ralph Nader and retreat to the Andover.net party before things got too crazy. Once there I was able to chat with such legends as ESR, Bruce Perens, Maddog Hall, Jeff and Robin, and was even able to make RMS laugh about the whole to GNU or not to GNU Linux naming debate. Personally, I was never a big fan of saying GNU/Linux - I think it sounds awkward and confusing and I did not like RMS demanding that people in his presence use the GNU (right Chris?).

With almighty tequila coursing through my veins, I found myself in the midst of a sermon by RMS on why he believes we need GNU terminology - and coming from his mouth it suddenly made sense (or perhaps that was the tequila too). Linux, or GNU/Linux as RMS would have it, depends not only on the quality of the software but about the freedom within, granted by the GPL. By using the GNU prefix we remind ourselves and others of this. GNU/Linux is not just about the software, but about the ideals behind that software.

But it still sounds awkward. "The problem is," I said to RMS and the others that were still listening, "that you need a catchier name for it. How about calling yourself an "impaladin?"

"Impaladin?" asked RMS

"Yes, impaladin - Have GNU will travel"

RMS laughed - he approved

So feel free to use this new name - maybe even create an impaladin distribution or just laugh at it - but enjoy.

-------------

Isaac Salpeter's take:

The heart of this conference was not to be found on the exhibition floor, nor in the (repetitive axe-grinding of the) keynotes, but in the classes and general sessions. Suggestion for the future: more open discussions and cooperation, less Ralph Nader yammering about how much Microsoft sucks.

Best conversation overheard:

"So, will the Andover party have a cash bar?"

"No, there's free beer."

"Uh-oh, Stallman's gonna be pissed..."

--------------------

Annelise Anderson, representing FreeBSD, says:

Whatever its raw edges, The Bazaar conference was worthwhile for the usual networking reasons. The best of the networking went on at the reception hosted by andover.net and the follow-on reception at the FAO Schwarz toy store, an inspired location for this crowd. This one was thanks to FAO Schwartz and IBM.

The BSDs could -- should -- have had a stronger presence here, perhaps with a combined exhibit booth in addition to the volunteers demo-ing on their own computers. Patrick Lynch of the NY users' group organized a pan-BSD BOF; Bob Bruce showed up there and said we might see an IPO with FreeBSD's name on it before the middle of next year. My little Sony picturebook was a source of some amazement -- FreeBSD -current running on such a little thing, with a couple of those stunning Eterms. The publishers in attendance were generally unaware that along with the multiple Linux distros, FreeBSD and the other BSDs exist and transfer an enormous amount of the traffic on the Internet.

---------------

Adam Matos, Systems Administrator and Student, The Beacon School, writes:

While attending The Bazaar here in Manhattan, I found it to be fascinating that so many people support the Linux community. I came with a colleague and teacher of mine, Chris Lehmann, Technology coordinator for The Beacon School. Chris was the one who first showed me Linux and how useful it can be. At Beacon we use Linux on our primary servers and wanted to let others know that schools, too, use Linux.

I attended a tuturial Wednesday morning, Enterprise System Management, that was suposed to teach me about running Linux servers. I walked out 10 minutes into the tuturial. I took a quick look at what was planned for the session and noticed I knew a majority of it. Not because I think I know it all, but because we've done most of it at Beacon. Such things as configuring Samba and writing shell scripts were something I learned under Chris Lehmanns's coordination at school. With less than two years Linux experience, I've been given the title Systems Administrator.

As I leave The Bazaar, I feel more comfortable about how many other Linux enthusiasts are out there. Linux is something everyone I feel can start adapting to. People can change.

---------------

From Nopalzin Torrres, Systems & Network Administrator, IllusionFusion!:

I was nervous when I first arrived, but the Open Source community welcomed my desire to learn and contribute. I walked out of the Building Firewalls with Open BSD tutorial saying "Damn, I can really make this work". I also picked up some great info on Samba and Linux system admin. I had a great time and met some great guys.

---------------

starlady (AKA Jessica Lee Sheffield) finishes off by saying:

Having been to a show every month for the past four months, I thought I had some idea of what to expect when entering the exhibit floor, but my expectations were largely confounded as this was a much smaller show than I have experienced. I wasn't surprised to see Geek Compound 3.0 greet me as I walked through the door - Andover's .org pavilion, which was comprised of Linux.com, Linuxfund.org, NetBSD, KDE, and others, in addition to Slashdot and Freshmeat, of course. As I continued on through the floor looking for the UserFriendly booth, I noticed that several of the powerhouse booths at past shows, notably Red Hat and VA Linux, had a surprisingly subdued presence at this one, while Caldera (of "E-business!" fame at COMDEX) wasn't even in attendance.

The atmosphere at The Bazaar was very community-oriented, which is why it's a shame that the attendance was so low. Without the distractions of marketing ploys, people were free to discuss projects, collaboration, or simply say "Hey, I like your work." I had very nice conversations with some of the leading names in the Open Source community, and even witnessed a random guy walk up to Bob Young, notice his red beret, and ask, "Hey, are you with Red Hat or something?"

When Mr. Young nodded with a smile, the guy proceeded to ask him support questions, while I and Paul Ferris of LinuxToday snuck off before our snickering gave the game away. To his credit, Mr Young was very gracious in answering the man's questions and making him feel comfortable.

The relaxed nature of The Bazaar made it possible for smaller organizations to catch the eye and ear of the community and publicize their own open source efforts. One such was The Beacon School, an alternative public school in New York City where the students administrate Linux servers and run projects on them. The students are very enthusiastic and eager to be involved in the community, and I believe they made a very good impression on the attendees (except perhaps the ones that kept shooting the Nerf weapons kindly provided by Copyleft). Speaking of Nerf, Copyleft's "Shoot the Star Wars action figures, win a prize" campaign was a roaring success. I took a Slashdot frisbee home with me, so I can't complain. :)

All in all, I think The Bazaar was a success for its first year. The traffic wasn't as high as anyone would have liked due to bad placement within the Javits center, but I believe that is something they can improve in the future. The show was a great chance to see old friends and make new ones in the Open Source world, and I think a lot of positive things will come of that.

---------------

There were things that could have been improved, and the timing was wrong; theBazaar was held in the middle of finals week for most area colleges, which I believe was a big factor in the low attendance. And for some reason the heat in the Jacob Javits Convention Center wasn't working properly, which gave the whole thing a (literally) chilly atmosphere. Oh, well. Maybe next year's edition will be better-timed and better-attended.

- Robin "roblimo" Miller

232 comments

  1. Sounds like it was fun. by jd · · Score: 5

    But if you want more people to visit the booths, you'll need to make the sessions more boring, or get some hideous guest speaker. Next time, I suggest you have Al Gore give a discourse on how he invented the Internet. The booths should have plenty of people looking round, then.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:Sounds like it was fun. by BMIComp · · Score: 1

      For those of you who hadn't heard, our not-to-quick vice president claimed that he invented the internet earlier this year. Wired Article and Slash Discussion.

    2. Re:Sounds like it was fun. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope you're not just gunning for a "+1: Informative"; Because that post was truly drivel. Everyone here knows about the Al Gore story and now you've gone and wasted my time by forcing me to respond to your garbage. Damn you! Damn you to Hell!!!

    3. Re:Sounds like it was fun. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In retrospect, it kinda does seem like it. =) sorry.

    4. Re:Sounds like it was fun. by jd · · Score: 2
      You take a photograph and paste it onto the screen. I suggest using superglue, as this bonds with the HTML better. Before long, the image will appear in everything you do. Posts, e-mails, games, the lot.

      Don't forget, apply the superglue with your fingers. This is a vitally important part of the process.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    5. Re:Sounds like it was fun. by dsplat · · Score: 1

      I wonder if Mr. Gore's handlers are so inept that they would allow him to show up for an event that would guarantee hundreds of knowledgeable hecklers, many of whom would go on to post detailed transcripts on a geek website that the mainstream press actually reads.

      --
      The net will not be what we demand, but what we make it. Build it well.
  2. So was Illiad by ch-chuck · · Score: 2

    prophetic in last Sunday's comic?

    Boojum

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
    1. Re:So was Illiad by humphrm · · Score: 1

      As prophetic as one can be, writing on Sunday about something that happened last week.

      --
      -- "In order to have power, I must be taken seriously." -Mojo Jojo
  3. Attendance by YuppieScum · · Score: 3

    It was not a well-attended event, with fewer than 3000 registered visitors

    Possibly because it was not well publicised. I would have like to have gone, but I didn't find out about it until after the event.

    I don't even remember a mention of /. about it...
    (prepares to be flamed)

    --
    This sig left unintentionally blank.
    1. Re:Attendance by Black+Art · · Score: 1

      You were not the only one to find out about it late. I got the advert in the mail and went "Oh, this looks cool". Then realized it was later that week.

      Maybe next time...

      --
      "Trademarks are the heraldry of the new feudalism."
    2. Re:Attendance by Bryan+Ischo · · Score: 2

      Also because those who were registered received no notification about the event until about a week beforehand.

      Consider my case. I registered for the Bazaar in November of 1998 (!!!). I received a note at that time letting me know that they would fill me in when all of the details for the show were finalized.

      I heard *nothing* about it (and in fact forgot about it completely) until one week before the show. Then I got a message on my answering machine from someone letting me know that I needed to go back to their site to confirm my registration.

      By that time it was too late to make the appropriate plans to attend.

      I think that the Bazaar would have been much better attended if anyone had actually been informed about it within a reasonable time frame ... say a month or two before the event, so that people could make plans.

    3. Re:Attendance by shapeshifter · · Score: 1

      I scoured the internet with Google before the show looking for "Linux conference" etc. and didn't even find it. I was bummed when I found out I'd missed a great show!

    4. Re:Attendance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hear hear. I don't remember ever hearing about until last week. 3000 registered visitors is incredible for a show that wasn't advertised until the week it was held!

    5. Re:Attendance by joe52 · · Score: 1

      very true.
      I went to look at the expo, but I was only able to go because I happened to be at my parents house just outside NYC and I wasn't doing anything when I heard about it. I actually took a shower and hopped on a train as soon as I realized that it was taking place so close to where I was sitting around doing nothing. I made it there late on the second day. Had it not been for the full page ad in the business section of the New York Times, I would have missed it completely (I was having breakfast and reading the paper at noon when I found out about the date & location).

      The ad in the Times was nice as far as reaching the business community (though the Journal would have been better for that, I don't read it so I don't know if the ad ran there as well), but some ads targeted at geeks would have been a good idea. A run of banner ads on Slashdot a month beforehand probably would have gotten my attention.

      joe

  4. Conflicting RMS reports by Foogle · · Score: 2
    I hear of so many different sides to RMS - what is this guy really like?

    Forgive my offtopic-ness: A lot of times people make RMS out to be this no-fun-and-games kind of stickler. I remember reading a story in Wired about how he absolutely refused to let some guy give him a piggy-back ride, just because it was silly. But then, like yesterday, I hear stories like "POSIX_ME_HARDER" and this story where the fellow said that he made him laugh (he can laugh?), so I think "well, maybe he's just got a bad rep".

    Anyone out there know him personally?

    -----------

    "You can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding."

    1. Re:Conflicting RMS reports by remande · · Score: 2
      RMS has a sense of humor, at least at times. I've met him face-to-face exactly once, at a science fiction con. Karma works; several hours ago, I had purchased a button reading "Does Emacs have the buddha nature? Why not, it has bloody well everything else!"

      It turned out he was wearing a button stating "I won't * ane", with the * being replaced with a red playing-card diamond. As I was on sleep deprevation at the time (hey, it's a con), he had to explain the translation ("I won't die mundane") to me.

      If he had no sense of humor, I can't imagine him going to an SF con.

      --

      --The basis of all love is respect

    2. Re:Conflicting RMS reports by nevets · · Score: 2

      I've met Mr. Stallman three times. Once at my college, and twice at Linux World Expo in San Jose back in March, where I was able to get into a lengthy discussion with him.

      My experience with him is that he is very focused. That doesn't mean that he can't laugh. I thought he was actually a nice guy with strong beliefs. I don't 100% agree with him, but what I hear him say makes a lot of sense. I don't much like reading about him because all reports are bias in one way or another. What I recommend is to try to go to one of these Open Source/Linux/Free Software events that he will be attending and meet him for yourself. Keep an open mind, and forget all that you have read about him. Listen to what he says and then judge him as you like.

      I believe he is a man before his time, and eventually, the world may be the way he wants. But for now it will take a lot to get there. Maybe GNU/Linux (or Linux, which ever you prefer. I really don't care) will help pave the path. Or better yet, try to get your college/work pay for him to come and give a lecture.

      Steven Rostedt

      --
      Steven Rostedt
      -- Nevermind
    3. Re:Conflicting RMS reports by richieb · · Score: 1
      I went to the Bazaar mainly to hear him speak. I thought he's talk was excellent (I never heard him before). He appears laid back, yet his arguments are very convincing. He clearly has thought all this stuff through.

      He also has a sense of humor. I liked it when he refered to people wanting to keep source closed as "privateers" (as opposed to "pirates")...

      ...richie

      --
      ...richie - It is a good day to code.
    4. Re:Conflicting RMS reports by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      Why not come to a show where he'll be and find out for yourself? :-) I could try to explain him for you, but it would be hard to do. He's very nice though, often misrepresented in press and by other people who haven't met him.

    5. Re:Conflicting RMS reports by Bryan+Ischo · · Score: 1

      I met RMS at a Linux User's Group meeting in NYC two years ago or so.

      He is nice in person, but like other have said, he is focused. I went up to him to thank him for making emacs, which has done more to make me a productive programmer than just about anything (which I told him). He said thank you and told me that projects like that will not happen unless people like me program them.

      Then he had dinner at a Chinese place nearby with a bunch of geeks (me included) and this is where it got kind of out of hand. RMS is nice but the cronies that flock to him can be a little much. The kind of boisterous geekiness that I thought I left behind in the computer clusters of CMU. At one point someone mentioned how he refused to have passwords on his computer at MIT and I was honestly intruiged to hear his reasoning behind this. But I didn't have a chance to ask the question because as soon as I tried the others started jumping down my throat for trying to bring up that "old, tired debate." I wasn't trying for that at all. I respect RMS and I just wanted to hear what he had to say about it, with possibly a little devil's-advocate prompting ...

      So RMS is nice, the people that congregate around him can be a little much if you ask me ...

    6. Re:Conflicting RMS reports by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've met RMS quite a few times socially, and I have to say that he's a rather unsettling fellow. He's a brilliant coder, certainly, but he's so focused on Free Software (and hitting on women, oddly enough) that it's often impossible to have a normal conversation with him. I have female friends at MIT who would avoid entire buildings in order to avoid meeting RMS accidentally. I often have the weird feeling that he's exactly like an overly-earnest, fanatically self-promoting MBA with a startup (the kind all over Palo Alto) only with exactly the opposite agenda -- he wants to make great things and not make any money. Pretty cool goals, actually, though they don't make him much fun at a party. Guess why I'm posting anonymously. Before I get flamed (too late?) I should point out that I love what he's done, and use Open Source/Free Software whenever possible, including some rather well known web sites. I just would rather admire RMS from a distance.

  5. FreeBSD on a Picturebook???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damn -- I almost got one of those, but figured the camera would't work in FreeBSD. Um, come to think of it, maybe it doesn't...

    1. Re:FreeBSD on a Picturebook???? by c_r_a_s_h · · Score: 1

      Just like in Linux, it doesn't (Sony hasn't released the specs yet.) Generally, a Win partition is kept around for that purpose.

  6. Impaladin? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I doubt that I am the only one who didn't get the `impaladin' in-joke, and why it is appropriate as the new name for GNU/linux. Anyone in-the-know care to enlighten?

    1. Re:Impaladin? by ENOENT · · Score: 1

      Impala: a large brownish African antelope. Compare to gnu--a different species of large brownish African antelope.

      Paladin: champion of a cause; trusted military leader.

      Hence, Impaladin: Impala Paladin, GNU Leader.

      Not bad.

      --
      That's "Mr. Soulless Automaton" to you, Bub.
    2. Re:Impaladin? by waynem77 · · Score: 2

      Paladin was the main character in the 50's TV series "Have Gun Will Travel". He was a wild west gunslinger and righter of wrongs, sort of...

      IMDB has info here.

    3. Re:Impaladin? by BoneFlower · · Score: 1

      I doubt that I am the only one who didn't get the `impaladin' in-joke, and why it is appropriate as the new name for GNU/linux. Anyone in-the-know care to enlighten?

      I don't get impaladin, however paladin is the name for a character class in AD&D. They are holy warriors who constantly fight for whats right and good. If they fall off the path they lose everything that makes them special. Kind of like GNU/Linux, a fight for whats right and good in the software world, and those who fall off the path(IE make a proprietary version of the linux kernel or GNU untilites without completely rewriting the code will be sued and lose what they gain from GNU. Also, they do all this not for money(they aren't allowed to keep more money than they need) but because they truly believe in the ideals, like OSS programmers who mainly believe in the software not the money. Though I'd view the whole movement as chaotic or neutral good rather than lawful good as paladins must be. I could be completely wrong on the intent, and I have no clue what the prefix 'im' means, but the AD&D paladin class may well be the inspiration, and thats what I took it as.

    4. Re:Impaladin? by jordang · · Score: 1

      Thank you....

      I've had that particular pun floating around in my head for quite some time now and was just waiting for a good chance to try it out - talking to RMS was definately good.

      And to answer some other questions...speaking to RMS in person was much more informative than reading about him and his ideals here on ./ Not only does he make much more sense in person, but he also seems to be a pretty nice guy

      But impaladin can also be: the name of a distribution, toolkit, consultant....pretty much any noun that is portable and uses GNU


      Jordan

    5. Re:Impaladin? by VP · · Score: 1

      So should we expect an Impaladin notebook line, preloaded with Debian, from VA Linux? :-)

    6. Re:Impaladin? by Alanzilla · · Score: 1

      Impala: a large brownish African antelope. Compare to gnu--a different species of large brownish African antelope.

      My Impala is a large greenish Chevrolet muscle car.


  7. Now I get the joke... by ronfar · · Score: 1
    --
    All the creatures will die, And all the things will be broken. That's the law of samurai. (Jubai, 1605)
    1. Re:Now I get the joke... by Dilbert_ · · Score: 1

      Me too... I also wondered what that user friendly comic was about. Thank God there is such a thing as Slashdot to explain it :-)

      --
      superblog.org: all your favourite blogs on o
  8. Hey.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... that's just like the link in the story!

    /me points up

    :)

  9. Re:FIRST by Ice+Station+Zebra · · Score: 3

    Why doesn't slashdot add a feature to posting so that the first person to read an article will get a big banner saying "YOU ARE THE FIRST PERSON TO READ THIS ARTICLE. WE HAVE AUTOMATICALLY MADE A FOOL OF YOU AND POSTED AN I AM THE FIRST POST MESSAGE FOR YOU".

  10. There's a lot of contributing factors by richj · · Score: 1

    I think a large reason the attendance was so low was the Metro Transit Authority (MTA) was threatening to strike, which kept a lot of us who live in the NYC area at bay.

    Even before an agreement was made, there were delays as buses and trains were held in the station longer than usual by the MTA workers to put the pressure on the city. If people didn't *need* to be in Manhattan, they didn't go near it!

    I managed to make it to the Bazaar on Thursday, and actually like a low attendance to a high one. The vendors were more available to answer technical questions without having a bunch of suits there asking "How is this going to facilitate the methodologies for my vertical strategic initiatives......"

    Overall a good show, and am looking forward to the Expo in Feb.

  11. Bazaar Pronunciation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Could somebody please describe how to pronounce this word : "bazaar"? Does it sound like 'bizarre'? Does it sound like BAH-zer, or some other combination thereof?

    Thanks.

    1. Re:Bazaar Pronunciation by Booker · · Score: 2

      Webster's collegiate says... oh heck, I can't make backwards upside down "e" things...

      b(e-upsidedown)-'z(a-with-umlaut)r

      sort of like "buh-ZAHR" I think.

      Or maybe it's guh-NOME. :)
      ----

    2. Re:Bazaar Pronunciation by noc · · Score: 1

      This might be nit-picky but that was totally wrong; it's:
      b@'za:(r)
      where @ = ago
      and a: = arm

    3. Re:Bazaar Pronunciation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good man. IPA is the only way to do pronunciations.

  12. Some 50's TV show by georgeha · · Score: 1

    Named Have Gun,Will Travel had a protagonist named Paladin. I've only seen one or two episodes at most, but my dad thinks a lot of it.

    George

  13. There is of course.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the HURD which has the GNU profix and it is a dismal failure (how many years late?). So not all good software has the prefix.

    One has to wonder though, if HURD was released would Stallman care whether it was GNU/Linux?
    He only seemed to start caring after it becamse popular. Very phony in my view.

  14. I would have gone... by vawksee · · Score: 1

    I dont remember hearing anything on it...at least there should have been a little click banner on here or somthing. *shrug*

  15. It has an invisible "r" by georgeha · · Score: 2

    so the correct pronunciation is

    brah-zeer

    As in,

    "Did you read that article, the Cathedral and the brah-zeer?"

    "Whoa, this is a huge brah-zeer"

    "Do you need help opening or closing that brah-zeer?"

    "Honey, I have to go to New York City to see an important brah-zeer."

    I hope this helps.

    George

  16. Stop the name dropping by mlesesky · · Score: 0

    How was the conference besides the innane name dropping. I am glad that everyone's heros haven't let 'fame' go to there heads and can still carry on a conversation and answer a few questions. To attend a show that was this size is a great oppurtunity to meet these people and ask 'dumb' questions. It is a blessing that many in the open source world cannot be readily id'd just in a glance.

  17. A success story... by SmileyBen · · Score: 1

    I happened on The Bazaar completely by accident after my friend had dragged my to the ebusiness conference upstairs. Having found that terribly boring, and thought the people all really boring we wandered downstairs.

    The success was that my friend, a Microsoft Certified Professional, was incredibly impressed by how un-phony everyone was, and found himself arguing with himself, unable to accept all the old reasons why Free Software won't work, and why the model will fall. I definitely think we have a convert (Which I must say, I wasn't expecting) - he'll certainly be keeping a close eye on various developments, particularly what Miguel De Icaza does next...

  18. The Bazaar was fun. by Kit+Lo · · Score: 1
    I went to the Bazaar last Tuesday (the 14th) and Thursday (the 16th). I did a little shopping in the LinuxMall booth, chatted with the folks from Linuxnewbie, and saw Illiad from User Friendly . If I had brought a camera, I could've had a picture taken with Rob and Jeff.

    I knew the finals week was in the way for the big chunk of people who would've gone to the Bazaar, but it's better this way because I didn't have to be trampled by them. I think the LinuxWorld Expo would require more space in the Javits Convention Center for college folks to move around. I wish I could buy a Slashdot t-shirt from Copyleft

    From now on, we shall call Jeff Bates "Cute Little Hemos!"

    I can't wait for LWE!
    --

  19. because by phi1o · · Score: 1

    then you'd make a big deal of $3(0//D P0$7

  20. RMS is an elitist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    RMS is reported to have said: "I won't die mundane."

    What a bunch of elitist claptrap! "Mundanes" are what the elitists call people who are beneath them. RMS just lost a lot of respect in my eyes.

    1. Re:RMS is an elitist by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      I think RMS meant that as in, "I won't die without having done my best to change the world." But you should ask him yourself instead of relying on what people tell you and what you think he meant.

    2. Re:RMS is an elitist by remande · · Score: 2

      RMS was the one who explained it!

      --

      --The basis of all love is respect

    3. Re:RMS is an elitist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >RMS is reported to have said: "I won't die mundane."
      > What a bunch of elitist claptrap! "Mundanes" are what the elitists call people who are
      >beneath them. RMS just lost a lot of respect in my eyes.

      Elitist? I was thinking more along the lines of "socially inept nerd who thinks his button is much more clever than it actually is".

  21. A good time, though small, is still a good time by Snibor+Eoj · · Score: 1

    I was at The Bazaar. It was a lot of fun.

    Yes, the exhibit hall was a bit sparsely attended. I can't say that I blame the attendees, though. To be honest, I was disappointed with the exhibit hall. There were a few interesting things here and there (I loved the magician that Andover.net hired!), and some interesting conversations, but by and large, after spending an hour in the exhibit hall, I got bored.

    I still think the conference was a success, though. I went to two of the tutorials, and came out of them feeling that I'd definitely learned some useful stuff. The keynotes that I saw were at least mildly interesting; they might've said some things I knew, but they definitely said some I didn't, and it was interesting to hear it from the source. The Andover.net party was faboo (thanks, guys!), and the FAO Schwarz party was cool. It was fun to hang out with Roblimo and Hemos and Trae McCombs for a while; I don't think I can call it networking, because I doubt they'd have remembered me half an hour later, much less any time in the future.

    If The Bazaar happens again, and it's still in NYC, and I'm still in NYC, I'll go again. It has room to grow and improve, certainly, but there was also a lot of good stuff there already.

    -Joe

    1. Re:A good time, though small, is still a good time by mlc · · Score: 1
      (I loved the magician that Andover.net hired!)

      I dunno, I thought he was kinda strange and grostequely commercial. "Now I'll say the magic word: AndoverNet." "For this trick, I'll need some help from the audience. This is like SlashDot, because the users participate..." I thought it was very odd to have this silly commercial ploy put on by what until recently had been a site just run by a couple enthusiasts. Still, he was kinda amusing.

      But the Bazaar people gave a free tshirt to every atendee, so it was worth the subway ride.

  22. Mistakes in the Program by doon · · Score: 1

    I went, but due to some other meetings that I had on those days, I only caught the end of the show.

    The part that got me was if you read the show program. There were a couple of big mistakes in it. One that caught my eye was the notes on CmdrTaco saying that he co-founder and contributor to slash.org. While those of us that are loyal readers, will understand, the people that wandered upstairs from the ebusiness expo might be confsed.

    Also what is with all this "News for Geeks, Stuff that matters" That they used in the program.

    Other then that, I am bummed that I didn't get to meet as many people as I would have liked to. There is always next time..

    You know you're a redneck Jedi if:
    You consider your lightsaber the best bugzapper yet invented

    --
    To E-mail me, replace the first period in my domain with an @
  23. I liked it by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 2
    I liked this event very much, though I did not get a chance to talk to any of the "Big Guys". I did walk over to the .org pavilion at one point and spoke to the NetBSD guy, but it felt oddly out-of-place for me, so I walked back to the FSF booth where I had a good time selling GNU stuff and speaking about the GNU project (it was especially fun because most people were very interested in freedom issues, even those who had scant knowledge about computers, or perhaps I should say; those who had never used a computer agreed more about the issues of freedom than those who had).


    As someone pointed out, RMS wasn't there much, which was a shame. He took the time in New York to visit his sick mother at the hospital, so I guess he's excused.


    The andover.net party was terrific, and it was sad that we had to be dragged away from it to go to FAO Schwarz, which I didn't particularly enjoy.


    Oh, I tagged along with RMS, Bruce Perens and some other people to a burmese restaurant at Broome Street in NYC (number 380 if I remember correctly). The place is called "Mandalay Palace" and I strongly recommend it.

    From us in the FSF booth, I'd like to say Thank you! to the various volunteers who played with our computers and got them moderately working, and likewise to everone who kept talking about freedom and everyone who bought things from us.

    1. Re:I liked it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well, if those IBM computers didn't have those Trio3D cards, Debian 2.1 would've been _much_ happier. Shame regarding lack of decent net access, or else I would've just dumped a line into /etc/apt/sources.list, and would've had it all up... Ahh well, mebbe next year.

      Starfox

  24. OPEN SOURCE PERSPECTIVE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i happened to be one of the lucky
    once i closed my booth, i got out and made some contacts. i ended the night by finding rms. i tried to convince him to replace the cow logo with a natalie portman logo. i explained he should try to associate himself with the copyrighted undistributable concept of "free love" rather than the pseudo-communist gnu ideal of "free speech".

    rms admitted that he had been intrigued by my postings on slashdot and begged me to let him cop a "free" feel. i declined, pointing out that the copyrighted undistributable open source natalie portman and open source drew barrymore project was not only about the freedom to love the shit out of the hot young actresses, but my own absolute exclusive right to them.

    we ended the night by getting drunk for jesus on jack daniels and waltzing on the emptied main floor. i think esr was jealous. eventually we collapsed into a sweating mass on the floor (quivering, though still viable).

    rms thanked me for the handsome rewards of the copyrighted undistributable open source natalie portman and open source drew barrymore project just before he passed out in a pool of his own vomit.
    i quietly collected my booth in the basement and left under the cover of darkness.

    thank you.

  25. So that's what that User Friendly comic was about! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really, did they tell anyone about it beforehand?
    Or was it publicized in the basement, where the stairs and lights had gone, in cabinet in a disused lavatory with a sign on door that read 'Beware of the Leopard' ?

    I was not the only one completely bewildered by the cartoon. I was almost speculating it was some comment on all the IPO stuff and folks not hacking so much now they were 'rich'.

    --
    Linux is Linux. GNU is just trying to Hurd it.

  26. Nitpicky by Booker · · Score: 1

    Yes, that was nitpicky. :)

    Perhaps you pronounce things completely differently than I do, but to me...

    buh ~= the "a" in ago, and
    zahr (if it were a word) would be pronounced exactly like the first part of "arm" with a "z" in front of it.

    However, I'm not a particularly cunning linguist, so feel free to tear that apart, too. :)

    (Actually, Webster's isn't much help, because their example for how to pronounce the sound \a:\ when it's spelled "aa" is the word... "bazaar")
    ----

  27. Last one (ok, getting OT) by Booker · · Score: 1

    But now I see what you're talking about Thanks for the hint, AC.
    ----

  28. Didn't get my badge till it was too late by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I got my badge on the last day of the show. So I didn't show up, I wonder how many other people were in the same boat?

  29. my impression by Asparfame · · Score: 1

    I met him at a talk in Vancouver once, and talked to him afterwards. Several things struck me. He does seem to have a sense of humour in many way, but he is also very obbsessive about many things. For example, don't ever talk about "Open Source" software, only "Free Software".

    --

    There's no reason for a sig here.

  30. In defense of Gore by SandHawk · · Score: 2
    Of course Gore was very helpful in obtaining government funding during the crucial transition from ARPA to the current net. He didn't "invent" the internet, but he didn't claim he did.

    And the embarassing ignorance shown by Declan McCullagh and Wired in trying to ridicule Gore for his pronounciation of "router"! Yes, the correct prounciation is "raut-er" if you're talking about a wood-working tool! But cisco makes machines which selects routes (a new meaning, not in standard dictionaries), so surely the pronounciation he used is completely valid. (I've heard many versions of the American classic "Route 66" and all pronounced it "root 66." Now where are the songs about routers?)

    1. Re:In defense of Gore by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Gee, every magazine and newspaper in the country lambasted Quayle for not spelling Potato(e) correctly. If it's good enough for Danny it's good enough for Al.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    2. Re:In defense of Gore by JabberWokky · · Score: 2
      >> And the embarassing ignorance shown by Declan McCullagh and Wired in trying to ridicule Gore for his pronounciation of "router"! Yes, the correct prounciation is "raut-er" if you're talking about a wood-working tool! But cisco makes machines which selects routes (a new meaning, not in standard dictionaries), so surely the pronounciation he used is completely valid. (I've heard many versions of the American classic "Route 66" and all pronounced it "root 66." Now where are the songs about routers

      Here in the (American) South, we call 'em routers ( raowt-ters ), and if I say: "I'm going to route the traffic through the detour", the word "route" is pronounced "raowt", or "raute", rhymes with "shout". I deal with network guys (including the guys at BellSouth) all the time, hang out with sysadmins from a dozen companies, and we all agree that Cisco routers "Sis-co raowt-ters", (rhymes with "shouters") are the best (except two admins, who like Bay, pronounced "Bay", rhymes with "May" :).

      Route 66 is pronounced "Raowt sixty-six", but "Root sixty-six" sounds fine to my ears as well. I would probably pronounce it "Raowt", and recognize either pronuciation.

      Somebody ask Mandrake (from Atlanta, Georgia) or some of the Red Hat sysadmins (North Carolina) how to pronounce "route". At least here in Florida, it's firmly "raowt".

      Oh, and traceroute is "Trace-rawot", rhymes with "face-trout", "or "space-shout", and when I've called Cisco for support, they didn't bat an eye at the way I pronounced it (of course, it was 3am, and I was transferred to Austrailian tech support).

      --
      Evan

      --
      "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
    3. Re:In defense of Gore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And just what, pray tell, is it alleged that Mr Gore has done wrong?

    4. Re:In defense of Gore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And the embarassing ignorance shown by Declan McCullagh and Wired in trying to ridicule Gore for his pronounciation of "router"! Yes, the correct prounciation is "raut-er" if you're talking about a wood-working tool!
      You're wrong. You cannot prove your statement that there's anything wrong with pronouncing router that way. Therefore, you're just trolling with obnoxious flamebait. Die die die.
    5. Re:In defense of Gore by Tom+Christiansen · · Score: 2

      Please use ASCII IPA to describe the pronunciations you intend. I can't make heads or tails out of what you're saying.

    6. Re:In defense of Gore by SandHawk · · Score: 1
      I think you misunderstood my claim, perhaps because you didn't read the Wired article I was attacking. (Given the source and quality, I can't really blame you.)

      I was not arguing that any one particular pronounciation of router was the sole correct one, but that saying "rooter" was perfectly acceptable. The article attempted to lampoon Gore for saying "rooter", and I think that shows Wired's (perhaps willful) ignorance.

      Given this much-easier-to-support point, I think I provided sufficient evidence to prove my point beyond a reasonable doubt. (I'm not a lawyer, but I did sit a Jury Pool for many boring hours yesterday. That should count for something!)

    7. Re:In defense of Gore by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Uh, read the thread. He supposedly mispronounced "router".

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
  31. Guh-noo-Linnucks by Arandir · · Score: 5

    Hmmm, Richard is still personally offended by the mention of Linux in his presence. To paraphrase, "no one should own software, but if you don't call I claim is mine by the name I prefer, I will take great umbrage".

    No, I wasn't involved in the creation of any of the original Linux distributions. I never rolled my own OS with linux 0.99. But I can make some educated guesses as to what that primordial atmosphere was like.

    First of all, there was no GNU System in 1993-94. All there was from the GNU camp was a collection of software. Linus managed to get some GNU software running under his linux prototype. No big deal, and certainly not sufficient to call the result "GNULinux". After all, at the same time, I was using gcc, emacs and some other GNU software under OS/2.

    So then Linus gets his kernel working. Added to this were some core OS parts like lilo. Missing is a central C library. Linus wanted to use GNU's. But it didn't work with Linux! It was Linus and Co., *not* RMS Esq., that ported glibc to Linux. Bear this in mind, GNU was ported to Linux, and not the other way around.

    Add in a few naughty non-GNU stuff like a filesystem, drivers, etc., and you still don't have a workable OS. Throw in some GNU software, some BSD software, and a few other miscellaneous pieces, and you now have something that can be called an OS. Where are we, 1995? There is still no GNU Sytem. But a lot of GNU software is vastly improved however, the beneficiary of a thousand prying eyes. A new paradigm had arisen not seen before. It didn't come from the ivory towers or dank dungeons of MIT, but from the trenches of Finland, Norway, India, Brazil, United States, Germany, and other equally important locations too numerous to mention.

    Enter the first ur-distro. Probably only three or four floppy disks given to a neighbor. From this humble creature with the bravery to crawl up from the antediluvian sludge into the bright sunlit atmosphere, arose all of the distributions we know today.

    And what did this ur-distro contain? Four basic parts: kernel, infrastructure, libraries and apps. The kernel was Linux, and included some non kernel stuff like drivers and lilo. The infrastructure was provided by the ur-distro and included stuff like init scripts and messy bits. The libraries, for the most part, originated from GNU. But remember that they were ported to Linux. Finally, there were the applications. Stuff like bash, gcc, lprd, slipd, etc. Most of the front end apps were GNU. Most of the back end were BSD. However, none of the apps were truly necessary for an operating system.

    As I see it, this ur-distro does not resemble the GNU System as envisioned by the FSF. The only essential part of the distro is glibc, and that had to be ported to get it to work. The other GNU software are not essential. Of all of them, only bash is the universal default of the various distributions, but it can be trivially replaced by any other shell.

    In short, contrary to the claims of RMS, the Linux kernel was NOT inserted into the GNU System as its final missing piece. Rather, pieces of GNU were inserted into what its creator named "Linux" to add functionality.

    If RMS wants to see a genuine GNU System, then it is up to him to make it. He has all the parts. Just finish hurd, and release a new distro called "GNU". Or use the Linux kernel temporarily and call it "Linux/GNU". But until I can download a workable version from ftp.gnu.org, there is no such thing as the GNU System.

    --
    A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    1. Re:Guh-noo-Linnucks by nevets · · Score: 1

      First I want to say that I mostly agree with you. I really like your statement of "Linux/GNU", and I try to tell RMS that the next time I see him. Although he may state that the GNU products were there before Linux.

      What I got on discussing this with RMS before, is that every distro includes GNU products. He told me "I did NOT have invent Linux, that is completely Linus Torvalds. But I invented the products that run on top of it, and that every one uses with it" It would be hard to find those that use Linux without using GNU. I would argue that, I'm sure some embedded Linux may do without. But the majority uses it.

      The reason GNU was ported to Linux is because of the availability of the source code. And that is primarily because of the GPL. I don't believe Linux would be as big as it is today without it. So I would like to give RMS some credit, and help him push the GNU agenda. But like I said, I think I prefer your "Linux/GNU" too. That way you don't get confused and think that Linux is a GNU product, because it ain't! (sorry... "because it is not!")

      Steven Rostedt

      --
      Steven Rostedt
      -- Nevermind
    2. Re:Guh-noo-Linnucks by emerson · · Score: 2

      >Where are we, 1995?
      >Enter the first ur-distro. Probably only three or four floppy disks given to a neighbor.

      Heh. I submit my late 1994 Yggdrasil CD to the court as exhibit one. And that was just the one I chose, of the 3-4 CD-based semi-commercial distros available at that point.

      By '95, Slackware was already on top of the second wave of distros, Red Hat was working on RH2.0, and Yggdrasil and its ilk were slipping into history.

      Going more and more off-topic, here, but just wanted to clear up some history.


      --

    3. Re:Guh-noo-Linnucks by Arandir · · Score: 2

      Boy, was I off by a few years! I just pulled out a 11/23 copy of CUJ. Under Austin Code Works, they were selling "InfoMagic Unix" containing three free unices, Linux, 386BSD and NetBSD. Yggdrasil was listed as Linux/GNU/X. I'm not sure if this was Yggdrasil's name or Austin's. Bunches of GNU and BSD code were available, in roughly equal proportions. But there no "GNU System".

      Ooh! A few pages later on there's an add for LSL Linux 0.99. A 30 disk distro! Boy, was I way off :-( Includes X11R5, UUCP, Perl, emacs, joe, 4 shells, etc.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    4. Re:Guh-noo-Linnucks by jasonp1014 · · Score: 1

      Although I use and appreciate GNU software I don't generally agree with the
      Fascist Software Foudation's contradictory tenents and general attitude, and this post makes some good points I agree with. (Congrats, on the UNG web site too. Check it out.)

      First of all, Richard Stallman is legendary coder that has made a huge contribution to Linux and software as a whole. He has contributed *greatly*. I totally give him that.
      And Open Source/Free Software/whatever you want to call it is a great thing. Who would disagree?
      But the point is that RMS has no business trying to force his own label onto anything that isn't his!

      True, Linux couldn't be possible with contributions from GNU, but the Linux kernel is the center of it all that brings it all together. And there are plenty of other factors too, already mentioned, that made it what it is.

      And as for GNU, GNU's Not UNIX? The hell it isn't. It's a Unix clone man, give me a break! If GNU's not Unix, then Linux certainly isn't GNU.
      He/FSF/GNU already has an OS! It's called Hurd, and it's been slow in developing (at least compared to Linux) and it is at the feeble stage of a 0.3 release.

      If RMS want's to own the name of an OS then he should finish the one that he started! Why can't he be happy knowing what a great conribution he's already made? He's certainly has enough credit and recognition in the hacker/linux community.
      Dictating to people how things should be named, and what common ordinary words mean just makes him look bad.

      If you want to be part of a cause for freedom, join a *real* cause like Freedom for Tibet, or something involving, you know...like real live people. I don't just get how anyone can honestly get so wrapped up in this ideal, abstract "It is my life's mission to to free the source code" bogusness.

    5. Re:Guh-noo-Linnucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only essential contribution to Linux from the FSF is gcc. Don't kid yourself.

    6. Re:Guh-noo-Linnucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's like saying the only thing we get from air is oxygen. What a stupid fuck you are. Go back to writing VB apps.

  32. The reason the Bazaar failed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the reason the convention was a failure in attedence is RMS's and ESR's inability to accept the fact that the GNU community needs one thing more then political or technical advancement... this greatly needed thing is the Open Source Natilie Portman and Open Source Drew Carry project.

  33. Re:FIRST by Roundeye · · Score: 2
    I find the "why don't use elaborate scheme X to get rid of first posts" posts 50x more annoying than the first posts.

    --
    "Cause there's 40 different shades of black, so many fortresses and ways to attack, so why you complainin'?"
  34. e-Business by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

    A lot of people actually came up from eBusiness expo, which was very nice. Tom Turner from the FSF was down at the eBusiness handing out GNU papers to people, so hopefully that accounted for some traffic. We tried to hang some GNOME/FSF banners in the main hallway over the stairs to the lowest level, but we had to take them down due to "union regulations." Blah.

    1. Re:e-Business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had registered for this months before like someone else mentioned above me. I felt kinda uneasy putting through the request to attend an event called "The Bazaar" and pushed the words "Open Source" on the request form I gave to the corporate droids. I got the badge in plenty of time, though remembered I didn't have it when I was, oh, 45 miles from NYC. (side note, I drove 3 hours to NYC for this event) Walking into Javitz I just entered my info, (wasn't in the database--DOH! stupid me!) printed a new badge and walked into the main floor. I thought WOW! look at this. Then as I walked around and around, I began to wonder where's the Linux stuff? It wasn't until walked out of a different exit that I saw the small banner upstairs.

      I walked into the expo area and thought, hmmm... is this it? Now I got there about 11ish Thursday and there was not a lot of traffic. Some of the booths didn't even have the people there. I think one person was still booting up their demo machine. I'm still trying to figure out those magic tricks. Props to the Andover booth!

      Went back down to the eBusiness floor to check out the rest. I had wanted to grab a SAMBA book but the rent-a-security-guard-with-an-attitude wouldn't let me back onto the floor, since it was 2:04PM. I'll echo the sentiments of the others in respect to scarce advertisement and coverage. As to the time of year or location, they were okay for a corporate slacker like me.

      Now if only I can shake loose that Alpha server from our division in the Northwest, I'll be able to try out one of the CDs I managed to get.

  35. Testing Open-Source Awareness by DavidShields · · Score: 1

    It was indeed fun. I also got to be on TV. Hemos had told some reporter about me. When I spoke with the reporter on the morning of the interview, I decided to test his awareness of open-source issues, and had the following exchange:

    Dave: Do you know of Richard Stallman?

    Reporter: Yes.

    Dave: Eric Raymond?

    Reporter: No. But I did read the GPL for the first time last night. It's funny though, it reads like a religious manifesto.

    Dave: Welcome aboard!

    I wound up spending a few minutes under the lights later in the day, just after Hemos, and just before someone else from IBM.

    dave

  36. Ditto by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I live close to NYC might have attended if I was aware of it.

  37. Becareful of what books to have him sign. by nevets · · Score: 1

    At LinuxWorldExpo back in March. I watch several people come up to him and ask him to sign their book. RMS would look down at it and say "Not an O'Reilly! Find another book and I'll sign that". For that five minutes I was looking at the things in the FSF booth, I saw four people come up and ask him, and he gave the same answer each time.

    I'm not sure what O'Reilly did, but I think it had to do something with Sendmail. Anyone know the details?

    Steven Rostedt

    --
    Steven Rostedt
    -- Nevermind
    1. Re:Becareful of what books to have him sign. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, for one thing; they sell non-free documentation.

    2. Re:Becareful of what books to have him sign. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They expect to be paid for their work, of course. This is anathema to Richard. He expects them to work their asses off and then give away the result. Sorry, Richard, but you can't run a publishing house that way.

    3. Re:Becareful of what books to have him sign. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just proved how completely clueless you are. My dog sends his thanks for making him feel so clever.

    4. Re:Becareful of what books to have him sign. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right, non-free documentation is evil. RMS also refuses to listen to the radio because the weather report is not GPL'd. He won't even buy a non-bootleg Grateful Dead album.

    5. Re:Becareful of what books to have him sign. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He also refused to listen to music, or go to movies, or read books--all because he knows these aren't free.

    6. Re:Becareful of what books to have him sign. by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      Neither of those are true.

    7. Re:Becareful of what books to have him sign. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does it really take a smiley to convey humour?

    8. Re:Becareful of what books to have him sign. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the middle ages, it was considered common courtesy to announce that you were about to utter a satirical comment, then you uttered your witticism, and then you reminded your listener that what they just heard was humour.

      I don't think such a ploy should be employed against Stallmanistas though, 'cuz it's so much fun watching them deny the ridiculous.

    9. Re:Becareful of what books to have him sign. by andyo · · Score: 1
      We're gradually easing into open-content (whatever you want to call it) books at O'Reilly. It's not quite official yet, but we'll have a public discussion soon on the O'Reilly Web site about the rewards and difficulties of making books open. Now that I've done a couple, I realize there's a shitload of issues to work out.

      Nice to see my company defended by others; I don't feel like getting into the debate in a heavy-handed way. We sometimes move too slow; we don't always choose the best direction. The GNU publishing model is wonderful, and it may well win out. But different models can co-exist too.

  38. Re:In defence of Gore by Tom+Christiansen · · Score: 3
    And the embarassing ignorance shown by Declan McCullagh and Wired in trying to ridicule Gore for his pronounciation of "router"! Yes, the correct prounciation is "raut-er" if you're talking about a wood-working tool! But cisco makes machines which selects routes (a new meaning, not in standard dictionaries), so surely the pronounciation he used is completely valid. (I've heard many versions of the American classic "Route 66" and all pronounced it "root 66." Now where are the songs about routers?)
    In many places in this country, "route" and "root" do not rhyme. In such places, "route" rhymes with "out", "root" rhymes with "foot" -- at least when it means the base of a tree. It tends to rhyme with "boot" only when you're rooting for the other team, and with "foot" when rooting in the ground. And to finish the series, "rut" rhymes with "hut", and "rout" (as in a disorderly retreat) with "out". Oh, and such places tend use the same vowel in "roof", "hoof", and "soot" as they do in "put" and "foot".

    Let's not be ridiculingly prescriptivist here. It's not a matter of right or wrong. This is just the way it is. It may not be a prestige accent from Nyoo Yawk, but it's a legitimate American accent from the heartland, one that's been around a long, long time. And considering that it conserves more different pronunciations than do places in the country where these many r- words have merged together due to more frequent wear and tear there, it's probably an older one, too.

  39. Ah, the Andover party.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Actually, ESR dancing while surrounded by gorgeous techno-talking women was cute. And no, unlike the above, this was NOT a fantasy.

    1. Re:Ah, the Andover party.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ESR is a great dancer, I'll have to give that. Too bad I missed the stand-up comedy act at the FSF party the day before. =/

      Starfox

    2. Re:Ah, the Andover party.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *yawn*

  40. The Timing Sucked! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Here's an easy recipe for a "trade show" disaster:

    1. Place the show close to any major holiday
    2. There is no step two
    I mean geez! What were they thinking putting this show in the last half of December? Were they on crack?
  41. Err, no, it is SF fandom slang by Eric+Green · · Score: 1
    "mundane", in SF fandom, is the word applied to those who are not members of science fiction fandom.

    Yes, it was originally elitist in nature (sort of like the "fans are Slans" statement back in the 50's -- go look up the Slan books, which are ridiculous Nietsche style hero race books), but the original meaning is long gone today. Much as the original meaning of the word "gay" (to be happy) is long gone today, replaced with today's meaning of the word "gay" (to be homosexual).

    -E

    --
    Send mail here if you want to reach me.
    1. Re:Err, no, it is SF fandom slang by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      Interesting! Thank you for enlightening me.

  42. Poor attendence maybe related to timing by nic · · Score: 1

    I had initially registered for the event, but then realized that it was to be a Tuesday-Thursday event close to Christmas in New York City. This means that airfare would cost a fortune (no Saturday or Sunday stay over) and hotels, which are always expensive in NYC, would be even more so, due to the holiday shopping crowds.

    I decided that I could not afford to spend $1000-US or more and take time off of work to attend a conference on free software. While I write free software (Postilion), I cannot afford to spend like this to attend a conference about it.

    Good thing I didn't go - my credentials didn't show up until the day of the conference.

    -nic

    --
    All opinions expressed are mine, if you want them it'll cost you.
    1. Re:Poor attendence maybe related to timing by worldcitizen · · Score: 1
      I live in NY but my company is in Y2K 'watch' mode that means no conference attendance days (or vacation days, which I would have happily spent for this) can be taken in December/January :(

      I do hope we'll have something similar at a better time

  43. Parasitic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Basically, they're a bit parasitic to the community. They really profit off of the community, claim to be really into the movement, but their philosophy is quite opposed to it. For instance, I know a couple of O'Reilly authors who wanted to have free versions of their books on-line, and O'Reilly to publish for-pay version; O'Reilly venomously opposed the idea. When they hold free software events, they make it a policy to explicitly not invite some of the original community members (Stallman was not invited to the Summit, for instance).

    I don't think the FSF would mind all this if O'Reilly was just a publishing house. However, O'Reilly tries to paint themselves as really big free software/open source supporters, while in reality acting to maximize profit, sometimes sabotaging the movement. This hypocracy pisses me off, and presumably, the FSF as weal.

    1. Re:Parasitic by Arandir · · Score: 2

      "Basically, they're a bit parasitic to the community."

      What have you given back to the community? A slashdot posting?!? 99% of the community has never written software, submitted a bug report, written documentation, or even mailed a polite thank you note to any developer. But you call ORA the parasite for providing documentation and funding? I don't know where you GNU fanatics buy your dictionaries, but someone needs to sue that bookseller for fraud!

      "When they hold free software events, they make it a policy to explicitly not invite some of the original community members (Stallman was not invited to the Summit, for instance)."

      RMS is the only one they refuse to invite. And they have good reason not to. He continually refuses to adhere to decorum and rules of order. He is in the habit of ignoring the time limits on talks, ignoring the topic at hand (the topic which attendees paid to hear), and verbally assaulting reporters who use the word "Linux" in his presence.


      "However, O'Reilly tries to paint themselves as really big free software/open source supporters, while in reality acting to maximize profit, sometimes sabotaging the movement. This hypocracy pisses me off, and presumably, the FSF as weal."

      And what is wrong with trying to maximize one's profit? Isn't that what YOU do every day at work? If that is RMS's big concern, then he should come right out and declare money to be immoral and be done with it, instead of beating around the bush saying how it's okay for Free Software to be commercial.

      And precisely how has ORA sabotaged the Open Source movement? Was it by not following the FSF dictates to the letter? If anything, they have helped Open Source by letting it be known that RMS does not hold a monopoly on software ideology.

      In case you have forgotten, RMS was not opposed to non-free documentation, and even encouraged selling documentation as a means to finance free software, until ORA started publishing books about GNU software. Then, and only then, did he decide that ORA was evil.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    2. Re:Parasitic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stallman has been invited. Trust me. He chooses not to come. He's fighting a fake war with O'Reilly. It's pure bullshit.

    3. Re:Parasitic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doesn't O'Reilly publish some of the GNU manuals for them? Or was that Usenix?

    4. Re:Parasitic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I saw Stallman at Linuxworld. With groupies in tow, he was walking around telling everyone there how the con was all about his stuff. I only saw one con there: the one he was pulling on the press. Liars lose.

    5. Re:Parasitic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who the freak cares about what FSF thinks.. do they pay your rent or put your kid through college or do *you*. The next time you need an organ transplant and can't pay for it give FSF and stallman a call and see how free software can help..haha How many free PCs have stallman and his group donate to the inner city???? hypocrisy? I rest my case... O'Reilly produces execellent books. Their duty is to maximize profits and to grow the company, create more jobs & wealth..etc..etc.. When a company

    6. Re:Parasitic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haven't you figured it out yet: Stallman thinks that maximizing profit is evil. He pretends it always hurts people. He's just a thief in prophet's clothing. Tell the world of the hypocrisy.

    7. Re:Parasitic by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      In general, the FSF tries to be the highest price seller of the things they sell. So it's interesting to know where you got the idea that RMS thinks that maximizing profit is a bad thing.

    8. Re:Parasitic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's pissed at O'Reilly because they won't let the FSF freely copy and sell the books that O'Reilly bases its business off of.

    9. Re:Parasitic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sell?? I thought the FSF wants to give away freebies.. so the capitalist pig emerges after all. The world moves on without FSF and gcc and emacs.

    10. Re:Parasitic by Arandir · · Score: 2

      I have the choice of purchasing The Complete and Official GNU Software Collection for several thousand dollars, or downloading it for free. Same warranties, support and functionality. I suspect that the number of people who purchased that package without any intention of charity of donation approaches 0.025%. This is not to belittle RMS though. He does provide a valuable service through GNU in that you can pay for custom versions or ports of GNU software.

      However, every existing item of Free or Open Source Software that's for sale is also available as a "Free Beer" download. If an item of software is unavailable as a free download, even temporarily, then RMS does not like it and will readily tell you so. If you then have the temerity to use the words "free" or "open" in proximity to such a product, you will reap upon yourselves unending scorn.

      Just ask Troll Tech, Aladdin, Apple, Sun, or a host of other companies. In Sun and Apple's case, they have earned a far greater wrath from GNU advocates than if they had never attempted the open their products to begin with.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    11. Re:Parasitic by Darchmare · · Score: 1

      Parasitic would only fit if they didn't give anything back - O'Reilly makes some of the best documentation out there... Certainly better than the average HOWTO.

      It's a symbiotic relationship.

      Plus - since when does a publisher have to agree with everything spouted by some guy with far left leanings? The open-source community is diverse, with the purists all the way to the pragmatists (I'll admit it - I'm somewhere in that latter group). O'Reilly seems to pop up around that area as well. What's wrong with that?

      - Jeff A. Campbell
      - VelociNews (http://www.velocinews.com)

      --

      - Jeff
    12. Re:Parasitic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What wrong with it is that Richard Stallman doesn't like anybody to make "too much money", which he has stated to be about $35k a year. More than that he deems morally corrupt.

    13. Re:Parasitic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      where is this guy living? in a sandbox??

  44. Good guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know him. He works on my floor at the AI Lab. He's a bit quirky, but he's a really good guy.

    1. Re:Good guy by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      I was at the labs this last weekend and some time before that. Who are you? :-)

    2. Re:Good guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am the Ghost of Christmas Past.

    3. Re:Good guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a java mobile agent. I escaped from MIT's lab a few hours ago

  45. Would have gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would have gone, but it was a bit expensive....

  46. Bad Karma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2
    Those who have followed the saga of the Bazaar may remember previous articles on Slashdot detailing the miscues and flubs.

    I think the main reason for the failure is that the Bazaar was an attempt to leverage the success of Linux, in hopes that it might rub off on other projects. It didn't work because it wasn't billed as a Linux event. There's little doubt that if the Bazaar had been named "the Linux Bazaar" attendance would have been huge, especially with its physical proximity to Wall Street.

    All in all, I think it calls into question the idea that there is an "Open Source" phenomenon per se. Now we all know that there is the "Linux phenomenon", but it is not clear if there is widespread interest in "Open Source" beyond its traditional constituency. So far non-Linux events have not drawn big crowds.

    1. Re:Bad Karma? by Sensei^ · · Score: 1

      A few things:

      1) earthweb didnt seem to promote the event well
      2) there was a transit strike in NYC!
      3) it was finals week for college students
      4) other websites didn't seem to promote the event very well (although they had no obligation too--plus they may have been with a competing company?)
      5) it wasn't billed as a linux convention, but as The Bazaar, which later people quickly scampered to put up linux signs all over.

      1 and 2 are definitely the main reasons for the low turnout.
      To challenge what someone said elsewhere, the bazaar seemed to be originally aimed at the common user not the suit. however, the bazaar was opened up to the Ebusiness goers because the regular traffic was so low--then the suits poured in. However, many people ended up learning about and what Linux is--thats a good thing.

      Despite the low turnout i thought it was a great show and that is my final answer.

      --
      http://www.icalledit.com - Predicting the future, one post at a time
    2. Re:Bad Karma? by dzeez · · Score: 1

      In response to 2, there actuallly was no transit strike, the MTA settled like everyone predicted.
      There was that threat, so yes, that may have contributed, but there was actually no strike so people could physically come by public transportation.

      I think the real problem was promotion, which includes knowledge of the focus of the event.

      But aside from the turnout, I also thought it was great show - I had a good time and felt very encouraged by the strength of the community.

  47. He was right dickhead. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You did not refute anything he said. They have to eat. I guess when they run out of money, we can come to your house and eat your fucking dog.
    Being and freeloader, your dog should be GPLed.

  48. I don't get it by Uruk · · Score: 4

    I really don't understand why so many people seem to take such deep offense at what comes down to a naming issue. Whether or not to call it GNU/Linux or Linux. Personally, I prefer GNU/Linux, but I don't think it honestly matters.

    Consider what the terminology is for. It's supposed to get across what it is that you're dealing with. I think that both names accomplish that. RMS' point about attaching GNU to Linux to accentuate the freedom that comes along with GNU/Linux is something that I think is good and very important, but at the same time, totally superfluous for beginning users and the PHBs out there that are trying to get their minds around the concept of why somebody would give software away in the first place. Calling it just Linux in my mind is also totally functional, (since that's what it is) but I think it denies the theoretical, philosophical, and practical reasons behind why most of the software is what it is and how it got there. But again, this point is totally superfluous to beginners and PHBs.

    People often want to squabble over what percentage of code in the "Linux System" is from GNU. Then some say it doesn't matter how much is from GNU, only the amount that is GPL'd. Others want to extend that from GPL'd to "Free Software". But one thing is for sure in my mind (and since this is an opinion post, it has to be in my mind since I'm not speaking for anybody else) is that even if we were solidly able to nail down what percentage of code was ever written by, sanctioned by, looked at by, or breathed on by RMS, we still wouldn't be able to say, "Ok, at X% we can officially call it GNU/Linux".

    I think some of the naming war goes back to the differences between the "Open Source" camp and the "Free Software" camp. For the record, to disclose my biases, I'm with Bruce Perens when he wrote his article "It's time to talk about Free Software Again" when he resigned from OpenSource Initiative - Open Source was meant as a rebranding, not a replacement. I think that that comes in here in that people want to rebrand GNU/Linux to suit their political motivations, i.e. getting more businesses to adopt linux, or increasing its commercial success. Here's where the sticking point is, because we've got two major camps in the linux community as I see it. The first wants to talk about freedom, and the second wants the software to be popular. People of course can argue about that point, but as far as I can see, the only point of the open source initiative is to push it onto outside people and increase the popularity of GNU/Linux. I'm not against that, but I am against it when it comes to weakening what GNU/Linux means. (And what GNU software means in the larger sense - freedom)

    SO! On one hand, it really doesn't matter what you call it. I'm often a bit lazy in writing style and I'll write Linux even though I mean GNU/Linux. No matter what you call it, as long as you get the functional point across as to what you mean, (and don't call it something like FooOS or "Gnulix") then it really doesn't matter to me personally much (and probably not 90% of other people) but what does kind of tick me off is people saying that the name GNU/Linux is totally illegitimate or silly for any myriad of reasons. I think the name GNU/Linux is totally justified and should be preferred when talking about specifics and not in a conversational sense.

    So, I guess all of that makes me just another fence straddler. :)

    --
    -- Truth goes out the door when rumor comes innuendo. -- Groucho Marx
    1. Re:I don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really don't get it? It's quite simple: G*U/Linux is an insult to the other contributors. I don't use G*U/Solaris, G*U/Irix, G*U/BSD, G*U/NT, or G*U/AIX, and I'll bet damned if I'll bloddy well use G*U/Linux just to pump the ego of a glory hound.

    2. Re:I don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come on, moderators, this is pure flamebait puffed up into a million words. Zap this turkey. Each and every time the GNU/Linux crap crops up, we all descend into useless flamewars. Kill it while it's young.

    3. Re:I don't get it by Uruk · · Score: 1

      Flamebait?

      Dear AC, I was under the impression that the slashdot comments section is for comments relating to different aspects of the article, and responses to other articles.

      "Flamebait" in my book, is doing something like posting something underneath somebody elses article calling it "pure flamebait puffed up into a million words" or "a turkey" or calling the whole topic crap. It provides 0 facts, only completely emotional rhetoric with no backing even in the opinion realm, much less the fact realm.





      --
      -- Truth goes out the door when rumor comes innuendo. -- Groucho Marx
    4. Re:I don't get it by Arandir · · Score: 4

      "I really don't understand why so many people seem to take such deep offense at what comes down to a naming issue."

      I don't take offense at people calling it GNU/Linux. I don't throw tirades at reporters when they call it GNU/Linux. I don't interrupt people in mid-sentence to correct the misuse of GNU/Linux. However, one extremely influential individual takes great exception at the term Linux. Are you saying it's okay for him to state his opinions but I'm off base in stating mine?

      "RMS' point about attaching GNU to Linux to accentuate the freedom that comes along with GNU/Linux..."

      But the freedom he is talking about applies equally well, or more so, to the non-GNU components of Linux. Furthermore, the GNU and FSF websites say a whole lot more about a particular political and economic philosophy than they do about freedom. If Richard really wants to promote Free Software through a distribution's name, he should insist on "Free/Linux" instead. If you read through "Open Sources", you'll find that all of the authors believe in Free Software, but only one adheres to the GNU philosophy. Yet every one of these authors was instrumental in bringing Linux to where it is today.

      "even if we were solidly able to nail down what percentage of code was ever written by, sanctioned by, looked at by, or breathed on by RMS, we still wouldn't be able to say, "Ok, at X% we can officially call it GNU/Linux"."

      RMS clearly defines what he means by "The GNU System", and Linux is certainly not it.

      "I think that that comes in here in that people want to rebrand GNU/Linux to suit their political motivations..."

      Nonsense. No one is renaming Linux other than Richard Stallman! No one. It was called "Linux" from day one. RMS didn't start insisting on the GNU/Linux name long after Linux made a foothold in the hacker camp. Indeed, it is Richard Stallman himself who is rebranding Linux to suit his political motivations!

      "The first wants to talk about freedom, and the second wants the software to be popular."

      I want to talk about freedom. But I am not so ignorant as to equate this freedom with political liberty, free speech or human rights. I don't misidentify it with a philosophy. I don't delude myself into thinking that Solaris will enslave me. Businesses have no problem with the concept of freedom, but they do have problem equating freedom with the "thou shalt not" uttered by RMS.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    5. Re:I don't get it by Eccles · · Score: 1

      RMS' point about attaching GNU to Linux to accentuate the freedom that comes along with GNU/Linux is something that I think is good and very important

      But how does attaching GNU achieve this? GNU is the label for the GNU project, FSF's effort to build a free Unix. If we need a term that means "libre", Linux is just as valid a label for that as GNU. I'm not alone in failing to see how naming it after Stallman's effort emphasizes "free" any more than just calling it Linux. Indeed, the grab for naming rights seems to imply exactly the opposite.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
  49. Maybe I'm missing something by Uruk · · Score: 2

    That cartoon is funny in hindsight, because it was prophetic as you put it, but at the same time, putting myself in the shoes of someone who hasn't read this slashdot article yet, it doesn't make any sense.

    Am I missing anything?

    --
    -- Truth goes out the door when rumor comes innuendo. -- Groucho Marx
  50. Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People are drawn to Linux because it works well and is stable, and is less expensive than Windows. They don't care about the wacko open source religous fundamentalists.

    1. Re:Exactly by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 2

      And that's what we MUST try to change! The fundamental issues of freedom is what our community is all about, all other issues of price, stability et al, are secondary.

    2. Re:Exactly by Requiem · · Score: 1

      Maybe to you and I. However, most people don't give a damn about software freedom. If I asked my sister or my father what "free software" was, they'd assume it meant price. For these people, it's best just to try to bring them the best possible system.

    3. Re:Exactly by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure that they would take the time to ask you what "free software" was, because you probably know more about computers than they know. So take the time and explain it to them, don't just assume that they wouldn't want non-free software. Maybe they will still prefer non-free software, but that would then be their choice, and at least they would then be enlightened about the issues of freedom.

    4. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "To you and I"? Huh? You mean "to you and me", or are you trying to say something more subtle?

    5. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Free software is software that comes without restrictions. GNU does not make free software.

    6. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How true. I've been involved in "Open Source" for many years. I've contributed patches to Linux and to FreeBSD. But when I was asked to setup a computer for my brother-in-law, I just installed Win95 and was done with it. I know he doesn't give a damn one way or the other. He just wants to use IE to browse the web. That's fine by me. It would be a waste of my time and his to attempt anything different.

    7. Re:Exactly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I've been involved in "Open Source" for many years.
      Yup: Free software antedates the FSF, and continues to exist despite their best efforts to infect it.
  51. Well,,,, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the people that call it GNU/Linux never seem to understand why everyone else thinks its stupid. The reason is simple:

    Stallman never cared until it became popular. Now he wants to preface other people's work with his GNU prefix. If the kernel were such a small part of the whole package, where is HURD?

    1. Re:Well,,,, by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      It's here.

  52. Wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so few people care about that (even here people use commercial closed source apps). You sound like a religous nut. People want working software first, commercial or otheerwise. Without commercial vendors, the software industry would be a mess.

    1. Re:Wrong... by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 2

      No, that's not what some people want. Some people, like me, would rather have lower quality tools that was free software, than high quality tools that were non-free. Fortunately, it has turned out that free tools generally become much better than non-free tools, so I don't have to make that trade-off, but I'd be willing to do that if I had to. And I don't have anything against commercial vendors, or people making money from free software. In fact, I encourage them to go out and sell free software, or free software support, or free documentation. You can have both working software, freedom AND make a nice profit.

    2. Re:Wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is certainly your choice. I would rather get important work done than fiddle with inferior software.

      Commercial software has laid an important foundation for development of both open and closed source software. There is room for both, but "converting" people is kind of silly when most people don't care.

    3. Re:Wrong... by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't think I'd ever call it "silly" to educate the public about the importance of freedom. Chances are that if they don't care, they've already lost large parts of it, which makes our job even more important!

    4. Re:Wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suppose you also think that when people try to push their religion on you, they are just trying to educate you. Or do you get offended by people whose dogma is so strong they seem to have no common sense? The FSF and their dogma are just like those screaming people in public parks.

    5. Re:Wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Notice how nobody is allowed to speak ill of the Lord Thy Stallman unless they post anonymously? The Slash Fascists will moderate your ass otherwise. And yes, I expect this to be marked insightful. :-)

    6. Re:Wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Commercial software has laid an important foundation for development of both open and closed source software. There is room for both
      Oh my, what has become of your moral compass? Please think a bit: What would Richard say?
    7. Re:Wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Some people, like me, would rather have lower quality tools that was free software, than high quality tools that were non-free.
      That's part of why we use BSD in lieu of GNU: better to live free than to support bondage. Quality is less of a concern (although it is better, actually).
    8. Re:Wrong... by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      Well, BSD (OpenBSD, NetBSD, FreeBSD) is free software, so it's fine to use it. We've used NetBSD extensively in the GNU Project, and still do for some critical servers.

    9. Re:Wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right: BSD is free, but GNU is not. It pisses of the GNUphiles that Microsoft uses things like ftp and TCP from BSD. They just don't get what free means.

    10. Re:Wrong... by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't care about if Microsoft uses code from BSD. They are free to do so. What I do care about is that even though the BSD code is free software, I don't have the freedom to change the TCP-stack in Windows if I find it buggy. And this is why BSD code is free for some people, but it isn't always free.

  53. Please.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it won't boot on my machine. Some kernel.

    1. Re:Please.... by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      Well, don't use it then. Or improve upon it so it can boot on your machine.

    2. Re:Please.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I won't use it. It is not stable or practical. So Stallman has appropriated someone else's work as his own, so that he can insert GNU where it does not belong.

      He is an egomaniac. HE cries about freedom, but insists that people say certain words his way. Sounds like a overgrown child to me.

    3. Re:Please.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Stallman's idea of freedom is abusive. Sure, you can drink my free beer--just as long forever more any beer you make is free, too. We don't call that "free". We call it being two-faced.

      If it were free, it wouldn't have any strings attached. It it were free, it wouldn't matter what someone did with it. It if it were free, it wouldn't matter than Microsoft got to use it, too.

    4. Re:Please.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are just two definitions of free. If you don't like the GNU definition of free -- then go build your own software using some other license.

      Note that I do not like the GNU license -- but I can accept that people will use the license that they like.

    5. Re:Please.... by Tom+Christiansen · · Score: 2
      There may well be two definitions of free. That's irrelevant. When RMS uses the word, he means neither of those definitions. If it were free, there would be no strings attached. He's just co-opted a friendly word and given it a new, RMS-defined meaning to tell a half-truth--what Heinlein referred to as artful lying.

      I could say more about the intentional deception, but you should just laugh instead.

    6. Re:Please.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get off RMS's ass, you jealous prick. When he says free he's talking about his moral belief that software should always allow the user to modify as he sees fit, in other words, the software should be free of any encumbrance which would impede the user's ability to modify the software. RMS feels so strongly about this he put together a license that would prohibit anyone from pulling the rug out from under anyone using software that he developed.

      RMS does not have a problem with anyone making money off software. Nor does he care to "virally" control anyone else's ability to use and modify software. If you don't see any moral dilemma in not having the ability to modify the source of your software, which a lot of people don't, then you have a choice.

      1) Do not use GPL'd software

      I'm tired of you trying to distort what is going on. For someone who tries to sell himself as an intelligent person, you disappoint me with your mindless baiting.

  54. Hey Boy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And featuring Richard Stallman as "Hey Boy".

  55. Did anyone notice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I found it most interesting that we (the bazaar folk) wern't allowed in the e-business expo floor, but our (bazaar) expo floor was teaming with e-biz suits... Using our email garden, and enjoying our free food and drink... Now, of course, i dont think there would have been anything interesting in the e-biz expo, i mean, any e-biz stuff that i want, i WRITE...
    It just seemed to show how the Free Software/OSS community has open arms and welcomes anyone ...

    It was a great opertunity to do some advocacy... i overhead quite a few great conversations about ebiz and what open standards has to offer...

    The Bazaar was a great event, I dont think i saw Steve Blood sit down once, he and the whole crew got some great speakers and conferences put together...

    If there was one word to describe the bazaar it's "Community"

    1. Re:Did anyone notice? by SmileyBen · · Score: 1

      To be fair, we weren't quite 'invading' since I'm a long time Linux user / watcher, and was more than happy to leave the expo behind.

      But you are right - we were welcomed very nicely!

      BTW, are there /any/ pictures of Steve Blood on the net - just that he is the spitting image of the person I went with (to a scary extent) and I have to get a picture to put next to the one of my friend ;-)

  56. On CBS Radio too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I remember listening to HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL on the CBS Radio network. I can't remember what day. Was it Saturday night?

  57. Think about that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They do not care. Why not explain to them programming in "C"? Not everyone cares about religous computer issues Jonas. Some people want to get their work done. Just because you or I care, does not mean they do. How about if I bore you with all of my interests? Thought so.

    1. Re:Think about that... by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      Do you know that they do not care, or do you assume that they do not care? If they really don't care, that's fine. Unfortunate, but there's nothing we can or will do about it. I wouldn't mind if you told me about your interests. If you told me about your religion, for example, I might not agree with it, but at least I would be free to make that judgement myself and not have someone else stand in front of me telling people what I would like to know and what I don't like to know.

    2. Re:Think about that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seeing as how they have a blank look on their face when I talk about a motherboard, I doubt they care about micro issues in software licensing theory.

    3. Re:Think about that... by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      Ah! I understand what you're getting at. But you seem to make the assumption that freedom is an software issue. Part of it is, yes, but there's a greater social issue involved in it too.

    4. Re:Think about that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now you are getting carried away. Software is not worth all of the "social issue" that you are ascribing to it. I write software and don't care whether software is free or not. I use some free, and I definitely pay for others.

      Do you wear clothes made in a sweatshop in Indonesia? What about those social issues? I think comparing someone working 12 hours a day for around 35 cents American to RMS blazing ego means someones priorities are out of whack.

    5. Re:Think about that... by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      I try to be conscious about such issues too, yes. It's not practically possible for me to be as conscious about them as I am about software, but I try. If you wish to discuss this more, feel free to email me (Slashdot is rather inconvenient for long-term discussions).

  58. System Administrator? by stoney · · Score: 1

    > Such things as configuring Samba and writing shell scripts were something I learned under Chris Lehmanns's coordination at school.

    Oh, fuck that. Whats the difference between such a "System Administrator" and an MCSE?

    Not a lot.

    Probably about none.

    1. Re:System Administrator? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      System Administrator is something you do MCSE is a series of laughably easy tests one takes after shelling out thousand's of dollars to take a so called "boot camp" save yourself some money, buy Sybex books, read each book once through, print out the answers to the Transcenders, ( no need to take the tests), read them a couple of times, show up and take your test, wait for your silly pin, think your the shit.

  59. Right on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That pretty much sums it up. That's why I like BSD.

    1. Re:Right on... by Zurk · · Score: 1

      the real problem with that argument is that you end up *paying* M$ or anyone else for the use of your own software if it becomes popular enough -- i mean how many people will pay for Mac OS X who also code BSD and probably wrote important bits of MacOSX/BSD ? At least with the GPL you dont get ripped off legally.

  60. You're missing the point by Uruk · · Score: 2

    You're not using GNU/Solaris or GNU/Irix because the freedom that you get from GNU software on those platforms is not what the platform is about. They're closed UNIX systems that have nothing to do with freedom. By chance, they happen to run GNU software, but the whole point of the software is not freedom, choice, or anything that has anything to do with free software. Those platforms are about money.

    Now, contrasted with Linux, which IS about freedom, free software, and choice, GNU/Linux makes sense.

    And it's not really about glory hounding either. The kernel is an important part of the system, and so it's called GNU/Linux. I wouldn't have gone along, but I dont think stallman would have been way out in left field to ask people to call the whole damn thing "The GNU System" because within the framework of GNU software, that's exactly what it is. There are a lot of things that Stallman is after, (most of which would actually benefit you in the long run if you'd just stop fighting so hard against them) but I don't think glory is one of them.

    --
    -- Truth goes out the door when rumor comes innuendo. -- Groucho Marx
    1. Re:You're missing the point by Arandir · · Score: 2

      "Now, contrasted with Linux, which IS about freedom, free software, and choice, GNU/Linux makes sense."

      FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, and yes, even FreeDOS are about freedom. Should we then call them GNU/FreeBSD, GNU/OpenBSD, GNU/NetBSD, and GNU/FreeDOS?

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
  61. Ahh Yes..another cult member by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't that what all cults say? Stop fighting against us and you will see the light.

    Stallman never cared until Linux became popular. Then he opened his big mouth, and behaves like a child unless you call it what he wants.

    1. Re:Ahh Yes..another cult member by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jeez, blow one parenthetical comment out of proportion why don't you???

      Going for the real hotbuttons, aren't you? :)

    2. Re:Ahh Yes..another cult member by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But study any cult and you will see that they they trick you with subtle comments. The more emphtic the GNU people become, the less subtle they are getting. And watch, it gets worse.

      First, they say the kernel is important, then they devalue the kernel's importance to insert GNU into the mix, and if you fight them, you are resisting free software.

      Read about how cults recruit people and then real the GNU/Linux posts and there is a pattern.

    3. Re:Ahh Yes..another cult member by Uruk · · Score: 2

      Are you ACTUALLY afraid of a GNU cult??? (of course the next comment out of your mouth is "Of course cults do that too - they try to convince you that they're not a cult or they try to play down their evil, hideous ways")

      You're smoking CRACK man. Sure, GNU and cults have things in common, but then again you and Adolf Hitler have things in common in that you're both human.

      People are always looking to smell conspiracy and evil.

      --
      -- Truth goes out the door when rumor comes innuendo. -- Groucho Marx
    4. Re:Ahh Yes..another cult member by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the words of the inimitable Rob Pike regarding the FSF: `They're a cult: don't encourage them.'

    5. Re:Ahh Yes..another cult member by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually,

      What I have in common with Hitler is that we both have silly little mustaches.

      Well, I am proud of you Uruk. You admitted that you have a problem, that your group is a cult. It is a start. Of course, you don't have to explain to me. Now that you have confessed, RMS and friends should be coming by anytime now.

    6. Re:Ahh Yes..another cult member by Arandir · · Score: 2

      Ever read "The True Believer"?

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    7. Re:Ahh Yes..another cult member by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, many Christian churches work this way...

  62. In Ora's defense... by chrisd · · Score: 2
    Tim has been very clear on this, if an author wants his book to be published under a free license, that's fine, but he does tell them it in his experience it will cut into thier royalties.

    I was given this choice and chose free, as I will for my next one.

    Chris DiBona

    --
    Grant Chair, Linux Int.
    VP, SVLUG

    --
    Co-Editor, Open Sources
    Open Source Program Manager, Google, Inc.
    1. Re:In Ora's defense... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that was a great book, by the way. thanks for keeping it free.

  63. But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you don't use Windows. So for your brother or sister, you would not give them Windows. Remember, you are trying to "educate" them.

  64. Re:In defence of Gore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wanna bet you got marked down by someone from Nyoo Yawk, just because you spelt it thus? :-)

  65. Re:In defence of Gore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I moderated him down because I hate Tom. Do I need any other reason?

  66. What's a Paladin? by Frater+219 · · Score: 2

    Originally the Paladins, or Palatine Knights, were a group of 12 knights at the court of Charlemagne. "Paladin" and "Palatine" mean "of the palace", and also refer to the Palatine Hill, the first of the seven hills of ancient Rome.

    Both these Paladins and the AD&D character class were of necessity born to the warrior aristocracy -- not necessarily an image fitting the more meritocratic free-software movement. There used to be flamewars in Dragon magazine, back in the days of original AD&D, over the fact that because paladins had to be aristocrats by birth, they could not rise from the masses.

  67. Freedom is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    about freedom for everyone, not bondage for some. Talk about freedom, but everyone of you GNU heads say "how high?" when Stallman says jump. It is obvious you are free to do whatever Stallman wants.

    1. Re:Freedom is by Jonas+�berg · · Score: 1

      I hope that people in GNU doesn't do this, and indeed, I can't think of anyone that does. We always tend to question what RMS says, because we want to find what the Right Thing is. Most of the time, RMS is right, but there are times when he's not, and we work together to find the Right Thing.

    2. Re:Freedom is by Arandir · · Score: 2

      I received an email the other day from gnu.org (it was not RMS). It was an attempt to set me straight on a few points. What struck me as hilarious, which I did not point out in my reply, was that the arguments were almost word or word identical to those of Richard Stallman as posted on www.gnu.org. Furthermore, the writer kept refering to himself as "we".

      Suffice it to say, I did not get the impression that this writer had original thoughts or questioned what RMS says. Rather, I could almost imagine him asking Richard "how high."

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
  68. Something tell me.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that RMS does not work well with others. He is very inflexible. The whole GNU/Linux thing, and his attitude, makes me never want to meet him, despite his contributions to free software.

  69. Reason for poor attendance: FINALS by Schemer · · Score: 1

    I would have gone to the bazzar in a heartbeat, but it was timed poorly for many college students. The bazzar conflicted badly with finals week.

    --
    A buddhist walks up to a hot dog stand and says ``Make me one with everything.''
    1. Re:Reason for poor attendance: FINALS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree.
      I would have been there in a heartbeat, but both schedules and cost were not in my favor.
      Oh well, next year. wait. finals again. damn.

  70. mySQL and GNU jerks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was at the bazaar and had the pleasure of attending several of the seminars. I went to the mySQL seminar and found it to be really well done, and quite informative. What I didn't like was the jerk in the back, and he knows who he is, wearing the GNU T-Shirt, who stood up and asked why mySQL wasn't completely open and free? He wasn't there to partake in the seminar, learn anything about mySQL, or the like, but just to make himself a nuisance. People, you gotta learn, companies need money to survive. It's their software, they wrote it, and it's damn good software. If you're gonna make money with it, you damn well should pay the licensing fee. Just my .02 warspite@home.com

    1. Re:mySQL and GNU jerks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK. That explains why there's a cost associated with it--to help support the developers and the other company employees in delivering a quality product. But one thing that you didn't explain is why the source isn't "open". Is it possible to have "open source" "not free" software in the world of the Bazaar?

      Also, I recently attended a conference in December, where someone involved in an open source development project, told of his experiences with volunteers, which he said can be difficult to manage and, most importantly, he said he found that there is little "innovation" in open source. Did any one speaking at the Bazaar, mention any thing similar to this?

    2. Re:mySQL and GNU jerks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The source is open, but behind. If 3.23 is the current version, the source available is 3.21. Then again, they're not saying they're Open Source, so I don't know why the hell the GNU guy was in there giving them a hard time.

  71. Duh.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Gee I went to the Bazaar, and I couldn't believe how many Linux supporters there are..

    what did he expect? MS people!

    Jeez. thats like going to a Ford dealership and thinking All I see is Fords therefore EVERBODY MUST DRIVE FORDS..

    I love LINUX, but this kind of specious(?) logic drives me up a wall...

  72. Re:In defence of Gore by Drayke · · Score: 1

    I moderated him down because I hate Tom. Do I need any other reason?

    Well, I was hoping for something more like "I moderated him down because his argument seemed pointless." Would've at least been more like what moderation's supposed to be for - scoring the usefulness of the comment instead of just whether you like the opinion and/or the poster.

    In all truth, though, I don't know that there's much to be done to fix the moderation system. Like it or not, it does seem to improve S/N in a mostly fair and reasonable manner. And granted, there are those who'll abuse it (show me a way to create an abuse-proof situation with any sentient interaction and I'll show you something likely not worth using).

    Finally, in Tom's defense, I've found his to be some of the best-constructed, most sensible arguments on Slashdot, even when I disagree with his views. And that is something that Slashdot is all too sorely lacking.

    </grouse>

    -Drayke

    --

    -Drayke

    If all the world's a stage, it must have been an easy audition.
  73. West Coast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Does anybody know if they'll have an event like this on the WEST coast?

    Please don't start a "coast vs Coast" war.

    The only thing I have against the east coast is that it is WAY over there, and nowhere near here! ;)

  74. Too Late in the Year by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is really a no-brainer on why the attendance was low. The first reason is that the event occurred too late in the year. Most people's budgets are exhausted by then. Second, it was in NYC. It was too expensive to find a place to stay. Also, it was uncertain about who the conference was for. At my LUG, they told us it was for developers. However, looking at theBazaar.org website, my impression was that it was more for the "suits"--the executive/manager types. Next year keep the costs as low as you can, especially for housing and don't make us come to NYC! It's too dangerous!

    1. Re:Too Late in the Year by SirGeek · · Score: 1

      I too agree that NYC is 'spensive. Why not Boston or Hartford ? If it were in either of those places I would have an easier time getting my company to pay for it and let me go ( I did manage to get them to pay for it this year but as the show was lacking in some areas, it may not be easy to get the funding for next year ). Also, Why did it take so many days to get a story posted when the Bazaar was over last thursday night ? (BTW: Great party at FAO Schwartz !)

  75. Re:In defence of Gore, Prescriptivism(standards) by SandHawk · · Score: 1
    It sounds like we're in violent agreement. I was attacking McCullagh/Wired for their attack on Gore's saying "rooter". I think there are at least two completely legitimate ways to prounounce "router" and Gore chose one of them. That Wired didn't know both pronounciations were okay appalled me.

    Personally, I'm deeply in the descriptive linguistics camp, although becoming less so as I try to convince my three-year-old to use prounciations that other people can understand. Still, his slightly-off pronounciations of some words is very cute, like compoooooter (very long 2nd syllable, missing "y" sound) and "Electra City" (for electricity).

    BTW, I think coming up with unambiguous and obvious ways to convey pronounciation in ascii is a wonderful challenge. ASCII IPA is nice, but fails the obviousness test.

  76. Where was LinuxToday? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not only was the attendance poor, but the news coverage by LinuxToday was abysmal. Daily, I checked the site for news, and found it was a day or two behind the events. The stories also reported the low attendance and made it seem like it just wasn't worth the bother. Hey, are any of the speakers providing their presentation notes/tutorials on the web? If so, where?

    1. Re:Where was LinuxToday? by RC+Pavlicek · · Score: 1

      Hey, are any of the speakers providing their presentation notes/tutorials on the web?

      FWIW, I have the slides from my two Bazaar talks available at http://www.erols.com/pavlicek/bibli ography.html.

  77. How Won the Contest? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Copyleft had a contest. The first place winner won a trip to the bazaar. And, other winners won a Sony Vaio. I looked at the coverage on LinuxToday, and the blurb for each news article on the first day was "enter to win a trip to the Bazaar"! Seems like a lot of people botched this one up.

  78. Oh, I got it :) by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2

    It's a GNU joke. He is to be made the Impaladin, Gnuser of free software and Mooseter of all he surveys :) ever Gazeelepful, uh... *runs away before being arrested as a pundit ;) *

  79. Re:In defence of Gore, Prescriptivism(standards) by Tom+Christiansen · · Score: 2
    It sounds like we're in violent agreement.
    Gosh, I just hate it when that happens. :-)
    I was attacking McCullagh/Wired for their attack on Gore's saying "rooter".
    Whoops, you just blew it again. :-) I don't know what it would mean for Gore to say "rooter". Remember that in my dialect, we say [rUt], so that must be a ['rU *R], presumably someone digging up taters or some such, rhyming--in some sense--with "gooder" ['gU *R]. I suppose you might be meaning ['ru tR] instead, but that's hardly obvious to me. This is the fundamental problem that IPA attempts to address.
    BTW, I think coming up with unambiguous and obvious ways to convey pronounciation in ascii is a wonderful challenge. ASCII IPA is nice, but fails the obviousness test.
    IPA is rough enough, and I agree that ASCII IPA is imperfect, but I don't know how to fix it without bumping into the "rooter" problem you tripped on above. Then again, I've been used to regular IPA for going on twenty years, so it's not a big jump. And it's far better than the pseudo-pronouncing things ("Just say it like you say BLAH") you see most people give on the net.
  80. Classic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have never read that before...It was a riot, and true at the same time. How convienient.

  81. Re:I want first post! by Necroleptic · · Score: 1

    It'll never happen with McDougle's (Definition of a McDougle) sitting around pressing F5 on Slashdot all the time. In order to get a score, don't people/machines need to read this? Can't they scan for them (yes I know you can pose a limit if you want.. mine's at 0)

  82. I am curious.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Was this in reference to your postings here, or your website which has BSD licensed software?

  83. Open Source by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

    That's why we tell them about Open Source, rather than emphasizing Free Software. Those people need to hear about the practical benefits of freedom before they'll appreciate freedom. You can't sell them on the idea by pointing out that they don't have freedom (which is what RMS does). He's right, of course. But there are many people who don't really care.
    -russ

    --
    Don't piss off The Angry Economist
  84. #1 Crowd Killer: Y2K by Jeff+Licquia · · Score: 1

    I wanted to go, but my job placed a ban on all vacation time between December 1 and January 15. I suspect I wasn't alone in this. Running a geek show near Y2K wasn't a terribly wise thing to do.

    I hope they don't kill the event because of the poor turnout; it sounded like a lot of fun.

    1. Re:#1 Crowd Killer: Y2K by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What fuckwads. Y2K is hype. They better be paying you tripletime and a blowjob.

  85. Blowing It by SandHawk · · Score: 1
    Well....

    I know full-well that "root" can be pronounced at least two different ways, but since it didn't matter to my arguments I didn't try to distinquish between them. Wired said: "But [Gore] mispronounced 'routers' as root-ers" and since I can't tell which way they meant, I just stuck with their form. I should have quoted it, attributed it, and marked it with "sic," I supposed.

  86. Converted my boyfriend! by Miss+Congeniality · · Score: 2

    I dragged my boyfriend along with me on Tuesday and I think seeing RMS speak finally convinced him to make room on one of his winDOH! boxes for a dual boot. Aside from the fact that every person we tried to talk to approached my boyfriend rather than me (he was actually the one to point this out..maybe i'll take this over to LinuxChix ;) ) I found it a pretty enjoyable. After reading all the posts, I guess I regret not hitting the Andover party but hey, it's finals season.

    1. Re:Converted my boyfriend! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm, were you dressed like a geek? Girl geeks should try their best to look like the guys--no makeup, no fancy hairstyles, and definitely not the Brittany Spears/Jennifer Lopez look. Also, avoid looking like a booth babe at all costs. You may not look attractive this way, but at least you'll be respected for what you know--and isn't that the geek game?

    2. Re:Converted my boyfriend! by Goner · · Score: 1
      Miss Congeniality wrote:
      After reading all the posts, I guess I regret not hitting the Andover party but hey, it's finals season.

      If it weren't for finals, I would have been at the bazaar getting drunk with Ralph Nader, and challenging the andover crew to try various and sundry illegal substances, all of this after having a long drawn out conversation with RMS about the virtues of xemacs vs. fsf emacs.

      Finally after all but the most hard core had passed out at the bar, or in the street (CmdrTaco) and it was just me, Jay Sulzberger, some random uber-hacker, Bob Young, and Nate Oostendorp; I would take them all on a rousing Vespa scooter tour of Manhattan island ending up at the Cloisters as the sun rose (and Nate suddenly became a bodhisattva). There we would all clamourously shout at the giant structure "Flaaaaaargh!!!!" and smoke a 3 foot bong in honor of Carl Sagan. At which point I would lead them to the M4 bus, ditching the scooters, and we would ride back to our respective destinations silent pondering all of the cool five character smileys we thought of during the scooter tour, smileys that can really express one's inner being. Ya know?

      Of course, that didn't happen, and now I am at home recuperating from the little bit of partying I did fit in after finals.

      -Rich

      PS they should've called it the Linuxeroticon '99: the bizarre, that would've gotten a lot more people to come, even during finals.

    3. Re:Converted my boyfriend! by Miss+Congeniality · · Score: 1

      ~~Hmmm, were you dressed like a geek?


      Dressed like a geek? I beg your pardon, a little help please? How does jeans and a sweater rank? I was wearing a 'DEVO' t shirt under the sweater so I guess that's pretty 'geeky'. Sorry, it seems like all Linuxwear fits me like a dress.


      ~~girl geeks should try their best to look like ~~the
      ~~guys--no makeup, no fancy hairstyles,
      ~~and definitely not the Brittany Spears/Jennifer ~~Lopez look.


      ...and men should stop trying to dictate the standards of how women should look. (and women should stop trying to get their boyfriends to switch OS's)
      Okay, i see where you're going here... and being a hysterical and uppity feminist I almost took the bait. Nope, sorry, no makeup here(at least that day)..guess I am just too naturally alluring to ever be taken seriously..after all pretty = vapid;


      ~~Also, avoid looking like a booth babe at all
      ~~costs.


      I didn't see any 'booth babes' at the Bazaar..it was really nice to talk to real people instead of actors. Luckily I made it downstairs to the eBusinesss expo so I could still play 'stump/heckle the actors' :)


      ~~You may not look
      ~~attractive this way,


      It's a curse. (kidding!)


      ~~ but at least you'll be respected for what you
      ~~know--and isn't that the geek game?


      Here's where I should go into a discourse about the way things should be, but that's counter productive. It has been said already, and probably better than I could phrase it in this dim pre-coffee hour for me. No one wants to sit through that anyway.


      What irks me more is that I am so used to being treated in this manner that it took my date to point it out to me. I've put in about three years in various techie/Jr.sysadmin jobs and before that I worked 3 years in a Comic book store(so don't you tell me what a geek girl is supposed to be like! ;) ) . In all these environments I have dealt with all manner of rude & dismissive behavior when trying to assist someone, behavior that was not replicated when this person was assisted by a male.


      What's a forum post from lil'ol me gonna change? Probably nothing...but I am not letting such rude behavior off as easily at LinuxWorld! (and perhaps I'll make a point of femm-ing myself up as much as possible-so look out for the uppity chick that looks like she walked out of a Laura Ashley catalog) I imagine for most treating women this way is as unconscious as my not even noticing it...I didn't even find it was exclusive to males. I wonder how many people would be surprised by how they interact if they saw it from an outside perspective?

  87. LXNY and Education by MrBrklyn · · Score: 1

    As an active member in the Linux community for a while now, I looked at the Bazaar as a success for a number of reasons.

    First of all, this may have been the first time that the NYC Linux and Free Software groups were able to participate
    in a convention of this sort locally. New Yorkers have a different take on open source than in the rest of the country.
    It was surreal for the Open Source expo to be on top of the e-business expo, looking down on the best the business
    world had to offer. I spent most of the three days talking and learning about networking, computer technology,
    and internet business, with a core of the brightest developers available today. I spent time manning our both at
    LXNY with my friend Mike Smith, trying to explain why open source software was the computing technology of
    tomorrow. I got some good old skepticism from business people working in the NYC IT scene, but I think we
    represented the Open Source argument well. Then I spent much time in the Apache Course and the SAMBA
    course, both of which I was immediately able to put to use. I got to here RMS talk. I think after listening to him,
    he deserves much of the criticism he has come to get. Crossing RMS with an Israeli Immigrant whose sole
    interest in software is to gain the freedom to feed his family and establish himself in the land of opportunity
    of ours was a unique duality of perspective.

    On the middle day, I enjoyed spending time with many of my Linux friends at FAO Schwartz. But before
    going, we held our normal meeting at IBM and heard about the development of the Jike Java compiler
    at IBM by the developer. HE was very impressed with Slashdot and has a great story about Rob's use
    of the IBM logo. It was great to see the entire NYC community in action. The expo also allowed for the
    kick off of the new Linux Newbies SIG in NYC, which took place in one of the expo rooms. So the
    show galvanized us to a large degree.

    It also trickled down to my Perl course that I teach at the New School in the Village. Many of the
    students attended and wanted to hear about things as they happened at the Bazaar. Over all, the show
    had great impact.

    And consider this. After 3 draining days of learning, teaching and networking with the best and the brightest
    of the open source movement, I then had the pleasure to spend a half hour at the e-commerce so. When I walked
    in, I was immediately greeted by a tall women with a Television covering her head, dancing and giving away
    tee-shirts. Well .... what can I say. The three days spent with the Linux folks was a bit more useful. Isn't
    that how we should measure success?

    --
    http://www.mrbrklyn.com/amsterdam.html http://www.brooklyn-living.com
    1. Re:LXNY and Education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was kidda funny sitting their and talking abbout the future of the free world, and then to go downstairs and be assulted by HP's Dancing Bears. Your are correct, it was a success because of it's ability to solidify the local Linux resources and to create education and exposure.

  88. I know why I didn't attend.... by the_argent · · Score: 1

    Personally, when I read about the Bazaar, I figured it was way over my head. I'm somewhat of a linux novice. I'm able to get around a command prompt without too much sweat, but the bazaar seemed like a league away from where I was standing. Maybe a little better PR would be in order next time?

  89. OF COURSE THE FSF SELLS STUFF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    RMS has never been against making money -- as long as the money goes to the FSF. Check out this page. Sheesh, the FSF's docs cost more than ORA's, and I can only wonder if they are as good.

    RMS said that he wouldn't object to ORA so much if their documentation wasn't so good. It seems that the very excellence of the various animal books makes it a lot harder to get people interested in documentation projects because ORA has already covered the topic so well.

    Sour grapes.

    Still, in a world that has actors spouting endless nonsense on scientific issues about which they have no clue, I suppose it's only natural that we have a truly amazing hacker blathering about philosophy and economics.

    The trouble is that people actually listen to them. Thats when the fun begins...

    1. Re:OF COURSE THE FSF SELLS STUFF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are correct.. this guy wants to sell the whole store to you.. dayom hypocrite..

  90. Re: RMS is like the Lorax by hmaon · · Score: 1

    When I saw RMS at the Bazaar, he seemed reminiscent of the Lorax. (Dr. Seuss, in case that doesn't ring a bell.) He came across as very idealistic and a nice guy to boot. There was a marked contrast between his ideas and some of the other advocates' emphasis on acceptance of the open source movement by the business world.

    "I am the Lorax, I speak for the software..."

    Something like that. :)

  91. Bad Karma? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The interest in ``Open Source'' tends to decrease the more it deviates from Linux. It is sort of the Inverse Cube Law of Open Source: interest declines as the reciprocal of the cube of its distance from Linux.

  92. sounds good by serialk · · Score: 1

    how many people were there exactly ?

  93. Baby Tux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Someone at the FSF party had a laptop with a bootlogo of babytux in it. Been trying to find it ever since, without any luck. Anyone know where I might be able to get it?

    Starfox

  94. Agreed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree with your statements. Just a minor nitpick. Linux wasn't called Linux from day one.

    It was originally called freenix (or something similar), but was renamed by someone (not Linus) hosting it on an ftp server who though Linux sounded better.

    This all happened well before 1.0 was released, it is documented in Linux history files.

  95. Re:FIRST by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I find the entire fucking "My threshold is set to 1. Please post accordingly" sig more annoying than sigs 50x it's size.

    Well, this'll get moderated down to -1 soon enough, even if it isn't, you'll never see it, oh God all haughty who not only browses at a 1 threshold, but ANNOUNCES IT TO THE ENTIRE FUCKING WORLD.

    -- A pissed off AC w/ high karma.

    My threshold is -1. Please post accordingly -- it's a free world, if I don't want to read it, I'll skip over it.