Non-Commercial announcements
Máirín Duffy will be
presenting
a paper on design in the free software community at the upcoming ACM
SIGCHI conference. That paper has been posted as
a
12-page PDF file, and she is looking for feedback. It's an interesting
read from somebody who has been very effective at getting things done in
that environment. "
Contributors in FLOSS projects, among
whom the majority are volunteers, come to the project with
different and sometimes conflicting visions and goals.
The absence of a central driving vision is challenging to a
designer. It is necessary in design practice to balance the
needs and requirements of different stakeholders, but it can
be substantially more difficult to do so in a FLOSS project
where the very goals of the entire project itself may not be
agreed upon."
Comments (19 posted)
Articles of interest
Florian Mueller
writes
about the dispute between IBM and TurboHercules SAS; TurboHercules is
trying to commercialize an open-source emulator for IBM's mainframe
systems. "
To add insult to injury, the list of patents with which
IBM tries to intimidate the Hercules project even includes two of the 500
patents IBM originally 'pledged' to the open source community. Patent
numbers U.S. 5613086 and U.S. 5220669 appear on page 4 of IBM's 2005
'patent pledge', and also appear as patents #83 and #106 in the letter IBM
sent to TurboHercules. This betrayal of the promise is unbelievable, but I
never believed that IBM was sincere about that pledge in the first
place."
A Scribd link to IBM's patent-threat letter is provided in
the article, but it can be read without Flash on this
page. It's worth noting that TurboHercules has
been involving the lawyers on its side as well.
Comments (15 posted)
Here's
an
eWeek article about the battle of words between IBM and TurboHercules.
"
In response to a query from eWEEK, IBM issued the following
statement: 'IBM sent TurboHercules a non-exhaustive list of patents that
pertain to our mainframe technology. We did not make any explicit
assertions or claims that TurboHercules had violated them. We were merely
responding to TurboHercules' surprise that IBM had intellectual property
rights on a platform we've been developing for more than 40 years. We stand
behind the pledge we made in 2005, and also our rights to protect our
significant investments in mainframe technology.'"
Comments (11 posted)
Opensource.com briefly
looks at iPad alternatives, which provide a less locked-down experience than the new tablet from Apple. Several are not yet for sale—or are theoretical like the Google tablet—but they start to give an idea of what will be coming in the free-software-based tablet world. "
A 2-pound tablet for 300-400€ with a Linux OS designed specifically for a touchscreen with usability in mind. That's the completely open source iFreeTablet developed at the University of Cordoba in Spain. And you get the Flash support and multitasking you can only dream of with that shiny iPad. It's biggest shortcoming is the mere 2.5 hour battery life."
Comments (14 posted)
The H
delves
into the history of emacs and the GPL. "
Emacs has become emblematic of Lisp, Unix and free software, but was originally written by Richard Stallman, with contributions from Guy Steele, Dave Moon, Richard Greenblatt and Charles Frankston, as an extension to the TECO editor on MIT's AI Lab Incompatible Timesharing System (ITS) which ran on PDP-6 and PDP-10 machines, somewhere around 1974."
Comments (17 posted)
TechNewsWorld
takes
a look at an Android powered television. "
The much-anticipated
"Google TV" may be in the works, but a Swedish company has already won the
race to the proverbial finish line with the world's first Android-based
TV. Due to hit stores this fall, People of Lava's Scandinavia is a fully
interactive Internet TV that combines the functionality of an Android
smartphone with that of a high-end, full-HD LED TV set, according to the
company."
Comments (1 posted)
Resources
The March 2010 CE Linux Forum Newsletter covers ELC 2010 Program Highlights
Update, CELF Architecture Group Project Proposals - Evaluation in Progress,
32nd Japan Technical Jamboree Report, ARM Device Tree Work, and
-ffunction-sections Work.
Full Story (comments: none)
Interviews
Linux.com has an
interview with IBM's Dan Frye as a prelude to his upcoming keynote at the
Collaboration Summit. In the interview he talks about how things have changed since IBM joined the Linux community over ten years ago along with some thoughts on where Linux goes from here.
"
Linux plays a significant role in IBM's smarter planet initiative. As the world becomes more instrumented, interconnected and intelligent, Linux will be a fundamental element of most cloud infrastructures in the future because of the same characteristics that have drawn customers to Linux over the last decade. The open nature of Linux and its ability to run on a wide variety of platforms is ideal for spanning an enterprise and virtualizing the aggregated computing resources. This capability makes it an ideal building block for a smarter planet."
Comments (none posted)
Linux.com has
an
interview with Serguei Beloussov, CEO of Parallels.
"
Parallels is joining The Linux Foundation today and speaking at
the Collaboration Summit next week. Why are you investing in these
activities? Beloussov: Since Parallels was founded in 2000, we have
been a strong contributor and supporter of Linux - in fact we did not
support any other platforms until 2005. Parallels enables its partners to
become profitable providers of cloud services. This space - of traditional
hosting and cloud services providers for small businesses - has always been
dominated by Linux and it's not a coincidence. Delivering profitable cloud
service requires a number of capabilities where Linux and Open Source have
traditionally been strong - cost structure, flexibility, scale,
etc."
Comments (2 posted)
Calls for Presentations
PyCon Australia will take place June 26-27, 2010 in Sydney. The deadline
for proposal submission is the 29th of April. "
We are looking for
proposals for Talks on all aspects of Python programming from novice to
advanced levels; applications and frameworks, or how you have been involved
in introducing Python into your organisation."
Full Story (comments: none)
The sixth international conference of developers and users of free
software "Linux Vacation / Eastern Europe" (LVEE 2010) will take place in
Belarus on July 1-4, 2010. The call for participation is open until June
12, 2010. Abstracts of reports are due by May 24, 2010.
Full Story (comments: none)
The hack.lu 2010 security conference will be held in the Grand-Duchy of
Luxembourg, October 27-29, 2010. The call for papers is open until June 1,
2010.
Full Story (comments: none)
Upcoming Events
OSCON, the O'Reilly Open Source Convention, will be held in Portland,
Oregon July 19-23, 2010. Program chairs Allison Randal and Edd Dumbill
have announced the program, and registration has opened. Early
registration discounts apply until June 2, 2010.
Full Story (comments: none)
Events: April 15, 2010 to June 14, 2010
The following event listing is taken from the
LWN.net Calendar.
| Date(s) | Event | Location |
April 12 April 15 |
MySQL Conference & Expo 2010 |
Santa Clara, CA, USA |
April 14 April 16 |
Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit |
San Francisco, USA |
April 14 April 16 |
Lustre User Group 2010 |
Aptos, California, USA |
| April 16 |
Drizzle Developer Day |
Santa Clara, CA, United States |
April 16 April 17 |
R/Finance 2010 Conference - 2nd Annual |
Chicago, IL, US |
April 23 April 25 |
FOSS Nigeria 2010 |
Kano, Nigeria |
April 23 April 25 |
QuahogCon 2010 |
Providence, RI, USA |
| April 24 |
Festival Latinoamericano de Instalación de Software Libre |
Many, Many |
| April 24 |
Open Knowledge Conference 2010 |
London, UK |
April 24 April 25 |
OSDC.TW 2010 |
Taipei, Taiwan |
April 24 April 25 |
BarCamb 3 |
Cambridge, UK |
April 24 April 25 |
Fosscomm 2010 |
Thessaloniki, Greece |
April 24 April 25 |
LinuxFest Northwest |
Bellingham WA, USA |
April 24 April 26 |
First International Workshop on Free/Open Source Software Technologies |
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia |
April 25 April 29 |
Interop Las Vegas |
Las Vegas, NV, USA |
April 28 April 29 |
Xen Summit North America at AMD |
Sunnyvale, CA, USA |
| April 29 |
Patents and Free and Open Source Software |
Boulder, CO, USA |
May 1 May 2 |
OggCamp |
Liverpool, England |
May 1 May 2 |
Devops Down Under |
Sydney, Australia |
May 1 May 4 |
Linux Audio Conference |
Utrecht, NL |
May 3 May 6 |
Web 2.0 Expo San Francisco |
San Francisco, CA, USA |
May 3 May 7 |
SambaXP 2010 |
Göttingen, Germany |
| May 6 |
NLUUG spring conference: System Administration |
Ede, The Netherlands |
May 7 May 8 |
Professional IT Community Conference |
New Brunswick, NJ, USA |
May 7 May 9 |
Pycon Italy |
Firenze, Italy |
May 10 May 14 |
Ubuntu Developer Summit |
Brussels, Belgium |
May 17 May 21 |
Fourth African Conference on FOSS and the Digital Commons |
Accra, Ghana |
May 18 May 21 |
PostgreSQL Conference for Users and Developers |
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada |
May 24 May 25 |
Netbook Summit |
San Francisco, CA, USA |
May 24 May 26 |
DjangoCon Europe |
Berlin, Germany |
May 24 May 30 |
Plone Symposium East 2010 |
State College, PA, USA |
May 27 May 30 |
Libre Graphics Meeting |
Brussels, Belgium |
June 1 June 4 |
Open Source Bridge |
Portland, Oregon, USA |
June 3 June 4 |
Athens IT Security Conference |
Athens, Greece |
June 7 June 9 |
German Perl Workshop 2010 |
Schorndorf, Germany |
June 7 June 10 |
RailsConf 2010 |
Baltimore, MD, USA |
June 9 June 11 |
PyCon Asia Pacific 2010 |
Singapore, Singapore |
June 9 June 12 |
LinuxTag |
Berlin, Germany |
June 10 June 11 |
Mini-DebConf at LinuxTag 2010 |
Berlin, Germany |
June 12 June 13 |
SouthEast Linux Fest |
Spartanburg, SC, USA |
If your event does not appear here, please
tell us about it.
Page editor: Rebecca Sobol