Bridging the Open-Closed Divide

because there are too many people that don't know anything about FOSS (like what that stands for)

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    • For These Three Men It Is A Serious Discussion December 1, 2009
      Shared by Douglas woah there. Submitted by: laurenpettigrew via Submission Page
      (author unknown)
    • Eko: A Traffic Light Augmented by Progress Bars December 1, 2009
      Shared by Jordan T-H this is one of the most brilliant ideas I've even borne witness to The Ecological and Economical Traffic Light Concept [relogik.com] by Damjan Stankovic is a Red Dot Design 2009 Award winner and consists of a simple yet, potentially highly practical visualization concept for everyday traffic lights that could reduce pollution and pr […]
      (author unknown)
    • A Modest Proposal: "How to Fix Capitalism" November 22, 2009
      "How to Fix Capitalism" is an insanely ambitious post that ranges over, well, just about everything concerned with business and all it touches. The following proposals give some hint of its deep wisdom:# Abolish patents. They have not been proven to speed progress: the evidence seems to be to the contrary. They definitely increase costs, are an ine […]
      noreply@blogger.com (glyn moody)
    • Radar Absorbing Turbines Prevent Aircraft Confusion November 27, 2009
      Shared by Douglas sweet. The U.S. Military has recently expressed concern about Maryland offshore wind projects because radar could identify spinning turbine blades as low-flying aircraft, potentially disrupting its training missions in the area.  Turns out the UK Military is blocking wind projects for similar reasons.  If only there were a cool, high-tech s […]
      (author unknown)
    • Amazon Offers Three Free MP3s of Your Choosing [Dealhacker] November 27, 2009
      Shared by HeyGabe Nice! Amazon is running a brief promotion (ends November 30th) offering $3 worth of MP3s from Amazon MP3 for free. Just head to this page, follow the directions, and enjoy your free credit. Jason mentioned this in today's deals of the day, but we all know how important music can be to getting work done, so take advantage. [Amazon via U […]
      (author unknown)
    • Get a 25-inch 1080p monitor for $149.99 shipped November 26, 2009
      Shared by Douglas hmm, this may be too good to pass up. Lowest...price...ever on a 25-incher. Amazingly, it's new, not refurbished, and you don't have to muck around with any rebates. It even has two HDMI inputs!
      (author unknown)
    • Subscribed to tronath4n November 25, 2009
      I subscribed to tronath4n’s channel on YouTube.
      (author unknown)
    • Subscribed to dcostalis November 25, 2009
      I subscribed to dcostalis’s channel on YouTube.
      (author unknown)
    • Subscribed to geekazine November 25, 2009
      I subscribed to geekazine’s channel on YouTube.
      (author unknown)
    • Subscribed to amrzeft November 25, 2009
      I subscribed to amrzeft’s channel on YouTube.
      (author unknown)
    • Subscribed to abrahammw November 25, 2009
      I subscribed to abrahammw’s channel on YouTube.
      (author unknown)
    • Subscribed to NeuseRiverNetworks November 25, 2009
      I subscribed to NeuseRiverNetworks’s channel on YouTube.
      (author unknown)
    • Subscribed to therealcaro November 25, 2009
      I subscribed to therealcaro’s channel on YouTube.
      (author unknown)
    • Some Triangle Futures — maybe — just if November 24, 2009
      After taking a vacation from blogging for the first time in over five years, I have more than enough to be writing about, but I thought I’d start out by posting a reply I just sent to Rick Smith of Metro Magazine who was asking about the future of the Triangle for communications, infotech and biotech and anything else than comes to mind. My answers: There is […]
      Paul
    • Lifepress – an Open Source Multi-User Lifestreaming Platform Written in Django November 23, 2009
      I discovered a new open source Lifestreaming platform written in Django that comes to us from Krzysztof Klinikowski of Poland. He describes it as Lifestreaming Platform, multilanguage and multiuser. Written in Django, using modern technologies, microformats friendly. Clean and beautiful. Here is a screenshot of a user profile (click to visit) This is an alph […]
      Mark Krynsky
    • The Bizarre Cathedral - 60 November 24, 2009
      Shared by Douglas I really hate it when people take this attitude about things. Latest from the Bizarre Cathedral. read more
      (author unknown)
    • The Really Traditional Socratic Method November 22, 2009
      You ask people hard questions. Then they kill you. Copyright © 2009 This feed is for personal, non-commercial use only. The use of this feed on other websites breaches copyright. If this content is not in your news reader, it makes the page you are viewing an infringement of the copyright. (Digital Fingerprint: )
      Eugene Volokh
    • Wind Power Could be Stored as Ice November 21, 2009
      A perfect way of storing electricity generated by wind turbines has been elusive so far.  Ideas like super-sized batteries, compressed air and hydroelectric storage have all been floated.  One company though thinks the answer could be as simple as making ice. Calmac has come up with a storage system called IceBank that uses the energy generated at off-peak n […]
      Megan Treacy
    • Polar Bear Robots Replace Dead Bears at St. Louis Zoo November 24, 2009
      Shared by Douglas um, how about just not having Polar Bears? thanks St. Louis. Officials at the St. Louis Zoo are preparing for their holiday Wild Lights exhibit by installing electronic polar bear proxies in place of the deceased polar bears who died in their captivity. The gesture is rife with social commentary, given the fact that polar bears have become […]
      (author unknown)
    • DRM-free top-flight horror novels November 20, 2009
      Brett from small-press horror publisher Chizine sez, "ChiZine Publications (CZP) is an independent publisher of weird, surreal, subtle, and disturbing dark literary fiction hand-picked by Brett Alexander Savory and Sandra Kasturi, Bram Stoker Award-winning editors of ChiZine: Treatments of Light and Shade in Words. You've seen us mentioned recently […]
      Cory Doctorow

Archive for April, 2009

Short blog before GeekDinner: MICROS and PhotoCampMilwaukee

Posted by douglasawh on April 28, 2009

Sorry it’s been a while.  I owe you all an OpenCamp recap.  Don’t hold your breath.  It may happen, but I’m already focusing on September’s Software Freedom Day, OE’s in other cities and other exciting things.

I feel like I’ve written about the MICROS Point-of-Sale before, but I’ve still not found any good resources on learning about the system.  Does anybody have any?

I’ll be at PhotoCampMilwaukee this Saturday (May 2nd) defending freedom and Creative Commons.  Any good articles I should read to educate myself about the issue (as it pertains to photography specifically) before the event?  If you’re from MKE and want to talk Linux, hockey (after the Canes beat the Devils tonight) or anything else on Saturday, hit me up!

I hope to see many of you at the Madison Geek Dinner in 29 minutes! Time to jump in the car!

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the realities of FOSS

Posted by douglasawh on April 17, 2009

It’s interesting how often FOSS is a good answer at the type of company I work (let’s not get into that).  Just yesterday, my team discussed how we couldn’t distribute Firefox because of the logo (the truth to that is debated, so if someone can clear that up, that would be appreciated).  I suggested Iceweasel of course.  The was met with the typical “open source hippie” backlash I’ve come to deal with.  Mostly, it’s ignorance and not true backlash, but it’s still irritating.  We’re putting Wubi on all our laptops because of Windows viruses and we’ve even giving people what are essentially netbooks with Linux in some cases to avoid licensing costs.

But today it really hit me.  Verizon won’t allow us to distribute the driver for a wireless card.  Seriously?  We’re paying to use your service and we can’t even pre-install the ability to pay you?  What are companies thinking?  I understand companies are just trying to protect themselves against hideous US law, but that doesn’t make it any better.  If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem.  As a rule, I don’t like proprietary software, but I understand selling software *if you are a software company*.  Verizon is not a software company.  There is zero reason for this driver not to be FOSSed.  Sure, don’t use the GPL.  I’m cool with that.  Use MIT or BSD or MPL or whatever.  Just give us the code.

So, it is probably in vain that I attempt to find a FOSS replacement for this driver.  Writing drivers for closed-spec hardware has got to be one of the hardest things to do (I’m not a programmer, but based on how poor driver support often is for Linux, I’m going to stand by this).

There is so much to discuss at OpenCamp tomorrow in Madison, but maybe this is one of them…

If you have ideas, please add them to the workshop idea page.  BTW, if you are finding this on the web, NYC is also having an Open Everything event tomorrow.  However, registration is closed for them.  We will be accepting walk-ins.

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OpenCamp needs a projector

Posted by douglasawh on April 6, 2009

GO TAR HEELS!

Ok, now that I got that out of the way, I have a few things to discuss before I head to bed.  First off, you’re probably going to hear about OpenCamp from me just about every day between now and the 18th.  If you aren’t in the Madison area, start your own!  If you’re in the US, check out http://openeverything.us.  If you’re elsewhere, check out http://openeverything.wik.is.  The Madison event still needs two projectors for two of its session rooms.  We need two more for the other two rooms.

Netbooks: I promised some comments on netbooks.  I doubt I’ll ever get one.  I like Internet on the go.  I had a Blackberry for my last job, and I loved it.  However, the in-between size of netbooks isn’t for me.  Right now, my Dell Inspiron that came with Ubuntu is working just fine for me and I use some HPs from work on occasion too.  I do testing on piece of crap Acer TravelMates.  When the Inspiron dies I’ll have some decisions to make.  I hate the free pass people give Apple, because in a lot of ways they are as bad, if not worse, than Microsoft, but I might get an Apple simply so I can learn something about the OS.  I used to have an iBook and the fact that it was underpowered did not sit well with me.  I’ll probably go with a machine with Linux pre-installed, but I’m not sure if I’d go with ZaReason, System76 or Dell.  Part of me wants to stick with Dell because I’ve had good luck with them and they were good to us in Chapel Hill with Software Freedom Day 2007.  However, I’m always for trying something new, so that may push me in another direction.  I will have had the Dell for two years in June, so it’ll have warranty for another year.  A lot can happen in that time frame. I think it’s worth thinking about now, but I won’t make a decision until the time comes.

WIRED: I wonder if WIRED’s content has changed since the web has gotten more pervasive.  The print edition has articles on all sorts of things that aren’t directly technology related.  An article on board games? seriously?  I’ll be debuting writing for www.sportazine.com in May and my already mostly written first post discusses the geek/tech barrier.  Look, I’m president of a Linux User Group.  That’s serious nerd cred, but there’s a lot of things I don’t understand about geek culture.  There’s also an article on a diamond theif and one on the brain.  Now, I understand that the diamond heist could be related to cyber-security and the brain thing to AI, but we are seriously stretching here.  The diamond heist was the good ol’ steal a key and drill a hole in something variety.  The reason the guys were caught had nothing to do with technology either.  They dumped the evidence in a field and some dude with weasels found it.  Unless you’re stripping branding out of Firefox, I really don’t see what weasels have to do with technology.  Oh, and there was an article about a woman with obsessive-compulsive disorder.  I see how that ties in with the brain article, but should either of them been included?  Now, maybe I’ve missed the boat on what WIRED is supposed to be, but I feel like this is a stretch.  Wikipedia is going to back me up here. It says the magazine “reports on how technology affects culture, the economy, and politics.”  Now, don’t get me wrong, other than the article on Terminator, I read it cover-to-cover.  The board game article was interesting simply because I know nothing about board game culture.  So, this brings me back to my first question.  I’ve never read an article of WIRED before.  I’ve read some of their online content, sure, but never a dead-tree version.  It would be interesting to see if the articles appeal to a more upper-class sensibility these days.  It would make sense.  I know this is an over-generalization, but I see magazines as a niche market for the ties when people are without Internet and/or without computers.  Basically, magazines are for people that fly.  I don’t know, maybe WIRED has always had broad content.  Let me know if you can help connect the dots for me.

Plane Delays Suck: ok, I said traveling was great for sort periods making me get stuff done, but then I got stuck on a plane for an hour while they fixed something. ugh. I could have had Internet for an extra hour!  The pressure to be concise is nice, but I’m not well equipped for travel. One day when I’m making more money, I’ll do first class…although, on the two flights I was on this weekend, the planes weren’t big enough to have a first class.  I’m not short by any stretch, but I’m not tall either.  I can only imagine how horrible flying is for my brother.

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Quick Thoughts from Memphis, TN

Posted by douglasawh on April 5, 2009

I think if I traveled more, I’d get a lot more done.  The short time-frames force you to be productive quickly; to be decisive and succinct.  Sure, having more time can help you develop more complex ideas more fully, but often you don’t need that much time to get things done.

In my next post I want to discuss WIRED magazine as well as netbooks (which I promised raster I would do).
Oh yeah, don’t forget OpenCamp: An Open Everything Event on April 18th.

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