Home Blog Page 9576

Free Software Foundation Europe aiming for more coordination between developers

Author: JT Smith

On May 6th 2001, the first general assembly of the Free
Software Foundation Europe took place at the Villa Vogelsang in Essen,
Germany. It was the first meeting of the members of the recently
founded sister organisation of the FSF (Boston,USA). Representatives
from France, Germany and Sweden agreed on future areas of engagement
for the FSFE.

"Coordinating Free Software based organisations and establishing local
            chapters throughout Europe is one of our primary long-term goals." says
            Georg C. F. Greve, President of the FSF Europe. "So is beginning our 
            work
            as a competence center for Free Software, aimed primarily at 
            journalists
            and politicians who will be able to find authoritative information 
            about
            Free Software from the Foundation."

            Most Free Software is released under the license of the Free Software
            Foundation, the GNU General Public License. One of the first
            projects will be to harmonize it better with local European laws in
            order to keep up with current changes and developments.

            The Foundation will also further Free Software in the educational
            sector where it will seek to coordinate and strengthen efforts 
            by organizations and individuals dedicated to that task. 

            At the same date, the first general assembly of the FSF Europe -
            Chapter Germany has taken place. 

            "We want the advantages of Free Software to be known to almost 
            everybody
            in Germany. German developers are already playing a major role as
            contributors to the GNU project and Free Software in general."
            says Bernhard Reiter, German chancellor of the FSF Europe.
            "The FSFE will help to leverage these efforts on a european level 
            and make sure that we it will stay legal to develop Free Software for
            all needs."


            About the FSF Europe:

            The Free Software Foundation Europe is the sister organization of the
            Free Software Foundation created 1984 by Richard M. Stallman in the
            United States of America. 

            Main purpose of the FSF Europe is to coordinate Free Software
            initiatives throughout Europe, to provide a Free Software
            competence-center for politicians and journalists and to provide
            infrastructure for Free Software projects and especially the GNU
            Project.

            Further information about the FSF Europe can be found at 

                  http://fsfeurope.org


            Contact:
             Europe
               Georg C. F. Greve 
               Tel: +49-40-23809080
               Fax: +49-40-23809081
             France   
               Frederic Couchet  
               Tel: +33 6 60 68 89 31
             Germany
               Bernhard Reiter 
               Tel: +49-541 - 335 08 - 33
             Italy
               Alessandro Rubini 
               Tel: +39-0382-529.554 (o .424)
               Fax: +39-0382-529.424 
             Sweden  
               Jonas Öberg 
               Tel: +46-21-144831

            Further press contact information is available at

                  http://fsfeurope.org/press/

Dell recalls more notebook batteries

Author: JT Smith

Australian IT: “Computer giant Dell has announced
its second worldwide product recall
in a year after finding that some of
its batteries could catch fire.”

Category:

  • Unix

CD program making Windows users burn

Author: JT Smith

Wired: “A popular program used by people writing and copying CDs is causing a large number of systems running Windows 2000 to crash.”

MS cracks down on MSDN subs, threatens ‘random audits’

Author: JT Smith

The Register: “Microsoft is cracking down on commercial use of software obtained via MSDN
(Microsoft Developer Network) subscriptions, and intends to conduct random audits
of subscribers. Depressingly, this seems to have happened just after it was drawn
to The Register’s attention that an MSDN sub could be a pretty cheap way of
keeping a small business (like us) equipped with the latest.”

Tip of the week: Be lazy with alias

Author: JT Smith

An anonymous reader writes: “One of the virtues of programming put forth by Larry Wall of Perl fame is laziness. I’m all for that. Doing the same work with less effort or more work with equal effort is a good thing…With an alias you can do something as simple as abbreviating a command or an ugly way to fix a spelling error. Read the full tip at LinuxLookup.

O’Reilly Open Source convention

Author: JT Smith

O’Reilly.com: “We are pleased to announce the 3rd
annual O’Reilly Open Source
Convention, July 23-27, 2001, at the
waterfront Sheraton Hotel and Marina
in San Diego, California. This year’s
expanded convention includes over 250
sessions in 14 tracks on key open
source technologies such as Perl,
Apache, XML, Python, PHP, MySQL,
Linux, and many more.”

Category:

  • Open Source

OpenBSD GNU/Linux binary emulation how-to

Author: JT Smith

BSDToday: A quick write-up of an OpenBSD How-To regarding the running of GNU/Linux binaries under emulation.

Category:

  • Unix

Italians publish a reply to Mundie

Author: JT Smith

Michel Morelli writes: “The story is an Italian (and in Italian language) editorial at ziobudda, in reply to Mr. Mundie’s accusations about GPL and Open Source. From the original text:

“Ho pensato molto alle parole del Sig. Craig Mundie (Microsoft) nei

riguardi dell’OpenSource e di Linux (e’ oramai noto che in molti ambienti Linux e l’OpenSource vanno di pari passo e molte volte sono anche assimilati

come cosa unica tanto da essere raccolti nella dizione GNU/Linux). Alla fine ho deciso di rispondere a modo mio alle frasi di questo stratega Microsoft e

nel farlo ho coinvolto un amico con cui ho elaborato questo scritto. Prima di procedere vorrei avvisarvi che quello che leggerete è solo il pensiero di uno

dei tanti utilizzatori dell’OpenSource e per tanto non è detto che rispecchi l’opinione più diffusa del mondo OpenSource italiano. Come tale risponderò al

Sig. Craig Mundie.”

Category:

  • Linux

Maddog responds to Mundie speech

Author: JT Smith

Anders Feder writes: “Jon ‘maddog’ Hall of Linux International seems to have joined the choir of well-written responses to the ‘Mundie-attack’ in an e-mail to Maureen O’Gara of Client Server News. Now, what say you Redmond?”

Category:

  • Open Source

Getting ‘familiar’ with Open Source handheld developer Alexander Guy

Author: JT Smith

By Julie Bresnick

Open Source people
Alexander Guy started and
continues to work on the
Familiar Project
, an Open Source effort to put together a truly useful
handheld environment, from his converted 1930s garage apartment less than a mile
from the hospital in which he was born. It makes him feel a little “white
bread,” as he puts it, but surely the implications of not moving away from home
are significantly altered when home is as charming a beach town as Santa Barbara. Guy, save the six
months at 9 years old that his mother arranged for him to experience Lyon,
France, has lived in Santa Barbara all of his 22 years.

As far as is discernible after a brief meeting and several probing
emails, this small-town consistency has failed to impair Guy’s
worldliness. Santa Barbara, about two hours north of Los Angeles on the Pacific Coast Highway, may be a one-horse town but this kid bought leather pants at age 15, eats Sushi, alternates between rock star haircuts with Madonna-like frequency, and keeps big-city hours. He reflects on his rebellious adolescence with references to Randian philosophy and with the benefit of hindsight that normally takes another 15 years to foment. All this comes from a kid who “eventually” graduated from high school with a 1.0 GPA and never went to college. None of which, it is safe to say, was the
result of being lazy or stupid.

Young enough to be considered part of the Internet generation, perhaps this
pattern is proof of the potential of the Web, where he likes to
check in regularly to see what’s going on in the world. It is also where you
can find the Familiar Project’s first release, “call it Familiar Linux,” a
distribution for handhelds currently available for the iPAQ.

Guy started his computing career in kindergarten, when he sat down at an Apple II+ and got impatient with the apparent inanity of the educational program running
on it.

“As the teacher would go out of site/ear-shot I’d start hammering on
random keys, trying to get a response. Eventually I got to the
combination of Control and C, and ended up getting a: ]. It took me a while to
realize what I had done, and how to reproduce it, but after that I was hooked.
I’d broken through the application, and gotten into the AppleBASIC
interpreter that’s stored in ROM, which I never realized existed. At that point,
the machine was pretty much all mine.”

By 11, he was building 386 boxes for friends of the family and
some of his parents’ business associates, which provided exposure to
cutting-edge machines that he couldn’t afford to buy for himself (he had an 8088 and
an Apple III.) Last year he bought an iPAQ and
a serial cable, grew tired of the “stale-bits” that people were using and
started the Familiar project.

“I had a Netwinder (which
uses a very similar processor), so I started building a new distribution,
based on work done by the Debian folks and the already existing handhelds.org
distribution. The first release was way alpha, and had a bunch of
serious problems. But by the time I released v0.2, we (people started
contributing right away) had a bunch of new functionality, like built in Python, a
new window manager (a modified version of blackbox, the old releases used
twm), and other miscellaneous stuff under the hood.

“Now it’s going great. We’re about to release v0.4, which is really going to be a landmark. We’ve moved entirely over to a network installable packaging format, which is unheard of in the handheld market. Users can now install, uninstall,
and upgrade, different software components over the Internet,
automatically. I think it’s going to make development a bunch easier, and I think it
will result in less duplicated work.”

With Guy as with many believers, his dedication to Open Source is
part of a larger more encompassing belief system. In high school, he carried a
Leatherman Supertool that had two blades built into the handle. The
authorities deemed it a deadly weapon and suspended him.

“I wasn’t doing anything wrong with it, and I had no prior issues
with violence or threats, but they had a ‘zero tolerance’ policy. It was a real
eye opener for me as to how much bullshit exists. The [school had] a
zero tolerance policy but that policy has a clause for mitigating
circumstances. They wouldn’t invoke the clause, even though I wasn’t doing anything
wrong. We ended up taking it to the school board with a lawyer and a bunch of
letters of recommendation and people supporting me. After a month and
a half of being out of school, they let me back in.”

Disappointed by what he’d learned about the nature of things, he
spent the next several years carrying a pretty big chip on his shoulder.

“My rebellion really just came down to getting in people’s faces
about things that I thought sucked. I remember calling one of my bosses at
the time a corporate whore. We used to have a ‘doesn’t suck’ section of
our engineering meetings, where I’d have to go through a list of things
that I thought didn’t suck. At that time I was seeking this Randian purity in
things, trying to find a black-and-white honesty in everything I did.

“I lost track of why I was doing things, and where I was going with
them. I think I was in denial about the complexities of issues, and the shear
hypocrisy that everyone wades through in their daily lives. I think
I’ve hit my lifetime quota on screaming over coding styles.”

It’s an important quota to fill because now he can concentrate on a
solution instead of being angry at the problem. For him, Open Source
is something he can believe in both professionally and spiritually.

“Open Source practices provide a better way to get the job done.
You can wax bureaucratic, and try to figure out how many CPU licenses you need
to buy, or you can get the code, and come up with a solution.”

And the use of it on handhelds does seem to provide the sort of
“black-and-white honesty” that he was looking for before he grew up.

“[On handhelds] you can achieve so much by having the source code
available, and the freedom to modify it the way that you need to. If
you have memory usage concerns of a program, you can modify it. If you
need special optimizations, you can optimize. If you’ve got a problem that
needs debugging, you can take a hands on approach and fix things, rather than
sitting on a support line, trying to convince a vendor that there
really is a problem. These points are totally pragmatic. Regardless of your
feelings on intellectual-property and software freedom, you can’t stick your
head in the sand and say that the above isn’t a good thing.”

It’s appropriate that someone so young be working on bringing Open
Source to the still nascent handheld arena and comforting, too. In general,
it’s hard not to worry about the future of Open Source given its idealist
leanings which resemble other rare surges in the history of
civilization that elevated value above the conventional bottom line and burned out
in the hands of subsequent generations. I’m thinking most obviously, of the
’60s. But for some reason, I am inspired more by the initiative of
self starters like Guy than I was by that of the glassy-eyed chicks I used
to see weaving belts at Grateful Dead shows.

About Alexander Guy

Where he works now: Senior software engineer, at Openwave Systems.

Dream job: Doing research on a farm (or someplace green) trying to be
like da Vinci.

Favorite movie: Blazing Saddles.

Favorite book: Heinlen’s, The Moon is a Harsh Mistress.

Favorite album: KMFDM’s Nihil.

Favorite video game: Hard Hat Mack.