Swinging on a star
Wednesday, June 22nd, 2005For the record, I think Tony is a silly man. I LOVE Hudson Hawk, it is an awesome movie, particularly the song
For the record, I think Tony is a silly man. I LOVE Hudson Hawk, it is an awesome movie, particularly the song
Last week I had the pleasure of being invited as a mentor to a program aimed at encouraging 14yr old girls to come into the wide world of ICT. I of course took the FOSS angle and showed them the awesome opportunities I’ve had available to me over the past few years. I actually felt very proud of our community, and how exciting it can be for newcomers
At any rate my time in Armidale went at thus:
I gave away i386 and powerpc Ubuntu CDs, about 200 all up, and generally got quite a few people excited about FOSS as well as finding about 6 people interested in starting an Armidale LUG. Rock on Armidale! Many thanks to the wonderful people I stayed with, Zonta, Armidale TAFE, the Catholic school and of course the girls.
So I found a little tidbit about Sun chief executive Scott McNealy today, he apparently named his kids after cars, after all he is a car enthusiast. Maybe it’s me, but doesn’t that seem a little weird
With that logic, my kids would be called Wong Fehung, Jet Li, Fong Sai Yuk and all kinds of weird names. Two points for anyone who can pick the enthusiasm
We’ve already had 5 states want to run something for Software Freedom Day. Melbourne, Darwin, Sydney, Perth and from QLD - Townsville, Brisbane and Bundaberg. Rock on! It’ll be a great chance to draw some really positive attention to FOSS in Australia, and hopefully grow the community in a quality fashion so jump on board!!! Some planning ideas have been posted on the forums site, but I’ll get a wiki up for it ASAP.
Also the e-girls thing I’m presenting at next week has a website up finally, so check it out. It’d be fun to replicate this effort around other schools in the country.
Thanks to Leon for this talk overview of my Code vs Culture talk. I will post my outline and slides tonight
The Open Source Forum on anti-circumvention was AWESOME. It didn’t draw the crowds we expected, however I put that down to most people not understanding why it is relevant to them. The DVD story is great to initially explain how it affects you as a user, but those of us who can say “bugger it, I’ll play my DVDs no matter what”, and don’t see that processes such as legitimate reverse-engineering for interoperability are being directly threatened. Anyway, I’ll have the talk slides up on the OSF webpage in a few days and you’ll see what I mean. Vendors have the opportunity to use unclear precedents to create artificial technology monopolies. Copyright owners (and not just the big bad movie companies
are desperately trying to protect their works, and sometimes unwittingly creating situations where, for instance, only Windows users can access their works legitimately, which obviously means they then lose the rest of the market. There are ways we can work together to find a clear line between copyright holders and users/developers rights. While the line isn’t clear, copyright will continue to be used as a tool to restrict interoperability. Anyway, it concerns me greatly - check out the Lexmark and Blizzard cases to see how relevant they really are, and check out the slides when they’re up.
Now for something a little different, Jeff and I are taking a whole TWO days off everything work related to take a brief rest. Honeymoon late July, and then we’ll be sweet. It has been an amazing but tiring and stressful few months.
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