This is an interesting piece of news considering the announcement from SCALE this morning. SCALE 5x will be hosting the first Open Source Health Care Summit. Maybe we should invite the Kaiser IT folks to attend?:)
Another popular community event is SCALE 5x, the 2007 Southern California Linux Expo. Our call for papers is open through November if you are interested in speaking. SCALE will be held on Feb 10-11, 2007 at the LAX Westin.
Novell will be exhibiting and presenting at SCALE 4x. For a free exhibit hall pass use the promo code "free". Otherwise for 30% off use newsp when registering for a full access pass.
SCALE will be holding a workshop on using ODF and open-standards in government. If you want to see happen in California or in some other state contact your representatives as ask them to attend.
The site indicates you should call MBNA at 1-800-932-2775 and tell them you want a LinuxFund Card. If you mention the promo code YJGU they probably get some sort of sign up bonus to.
Because according to the LinuxFund site fund their goal was improving F/LOSS in general and *not* just Linux. They supported work on the BSDs, various open-source libraries, community organizations, etc.
-Isn't Fedora supported pretty well by Red Hat?
-Debian currently has around $50K it hasn't touch according to the Project Leader report in April.
-Gentoo... I'm not sure.
Anyways, I think the money would be better used to pay for individual software projects and not for an overall distrobution.
Have you looked at Barkeep ?
We will be live streaming some of the sessions, as well as posting videos after the fact. I'll see what we can do about making them downloadable.
Thanks. Hope you can join us!
Didn't their CTO just go on record recently saying the unlimited plans weren't going anywhere? http://www.engadget.com/2011/09/27/sprints-unlimited-data-plans-arent-going-anywhere-cto-confirm/
TrollTech the company that develops QT will be at SCALE 5x this February 10-11 in Los Angeles.
TrollTech the company behind QT will be exhibiting at SCALE 5x this February in Los Angeles.
This is an interesting piece of news considering the announcement from SCALE this morning. SCALE 5x will be hosting the first Open Source Health Care Summit. Maybe we should invite the Kaiser IT folks to attend? :)
Another popular community event is SCALE 5x, the 2007 Southern California Linux Expo. Our call for papers is open through November if you are interested in speaking. SCALE will be held on Feb 10-11, 2007 at the LAX Westin.
Dibona spoke on this topic at SCALE last week. Slides and audio will be up shortly. Keep an eye out on the SCALE website
Google's Dan Kegel will be speaking at SCALE 4x on the subject of Linux on the Desktop. Google will also be exhibiting at the show.
For a 35% discount on a full access pass use the promo code: NEWSP For a free expo floor pass use the promo code: FREE
Fedora will have a booth at SCALE 4x.
Han Reiser will giving a presentation on the Reiser4 File System at SCALE 4x.
Novell will be exhibiting and presenting at SCALE 4x. For a free exhibit hall pass use the promo code "free". Otherwise for 30% off use newsp when registering for a full access pass.
The announcement about the ODF Workshop is here
SCALE will be holding a workshop on using ODF and open-standards in government. If you want to see happen in California or in some other state contact your representatives as ask them to attend.
NetBSD will be exhibit at SCALE 4x
The X.org team will be running a booth at SCALE 4x, the 2006 Southern California Linux Expo.
Matt Asay the author of this article will speak at SCALE 4x this year. SCALE will be held in Los Angeles on Feb 11-12, 2006.
The site indicates you should call MBNA at 1-800-932-2775 and tell them you want a LinuxFund Card. If you mention the promo code YJGU they probably get some sort of sign up bonus to.
Because according to the LinuxFund site fund their goal was improving F/LOSS in general and *not* just Linux. They supported work on the BSDs, various open-source libraries, community organizations, etc.
They've actually supported work on BSD projects in the past. Its called LinuxFund but the goal was improving F/LOSS in general.
LinuxFund only recieves a small percentage of the transactions you make. MBNA tells me its somewhere between .5 and 1%.
-Isn't Fedora supported pretty well by Red Hat? -Debian currently has around $50K it hasn't touch according to the Project Leader report in April. -Gentoo... I'm not sure. Anyways, I think the money would be better used to pay for individual software projects and not for an overall distrobution.
Since LinuxFund isnt a 501c3 and the IRS doesn't recognize them as a non-profit they likely were not required to do this.