Words, words and words

A cup of good coffee can make one relax and be eloquent. So today, it was proven that  “a lot can happen over coffee” when a mate revealed that the last year an enlightened manager had noted in the annual appraisal that this person was “pragmatic and impractical“. Go figure !!

Notes collation … again

  • The post from Jono surprisingly echoes the thoughts crossing my mind when I was sitting through Alolita’s talk at GNUnify2008. Two things are annoying – [1] too deep and mechanical analysis of successful communities in order to learn the process or methods that make these communities successful and [2] not putting enough emphasis on the “social bonds” that glue the community together. For all the bling and fancy stuff, a community grows organically because of friendly out-going people who swap ideas, share stories. Friendship won’t really replace good community practice, but just methods and tools won’t create a community – either of creation or of consumption.
  • Pravin Satpute has a post on how to test Open Type Fonts. He’s been working on fonts and collation for a while and this would be a blog worth tracking. One of the cribs I have with the post is related to the point 2 where it is expected of the end-user to create the test file. I guess this is something that can also be supplied as a Test Case Document.
  • This is what I took a stab at during my talk(?) at GNUnify2008. And was ever so surprised to find that the students use a combination of IM and Google Docs to swap notes.
  • Congratulations are in order for Arindam, Subhodip and Ria for getting campus offers. Just don’t cut down on your contributions to the respective projects.

Douglas R Hofstadter collection is what happened yesterday.

Field report from GNUnify 2008

As promised earlier, here’s a quick round-up of the event.
I spent the entire two days on 8th and 9th (of February, 2008) at GNUnify 2008. I did not have any specific talks to attend and went more to find out for myself about all the good stuff that I have heard till date about this event. Sayamindu had come down (he had a talk on OLPC) and so on Day 1 of the event we started a bit late and gate crashed into Brian Behlendorf’s talk related to 10 things about Open Source. A fairly straight forward talk introducing Open Source to the hall full of students it also had the old dogs indulging in some back seat fun.

Came out of the talk during the break and bumped into Harshad who informed that the install fests (which included Fedora – Runa had passed along Werewolf CD media earlier) were going on in full swing and there was more crowd than earlier years.

From there on went to listen to what Alolita wanted to tell the students about “Building a Successful Open Source Community“. She took the age old fable about blind men and the elephant to compare the community with an elephant. Taking examples from the Ubuntu and MySQL communities, she concluded that these communities seem to “get it” as to what it takes to create vibrancy and uptake. The short version: the community is like a large elephant and it is up to the individual contributors to strive to become a mahout. It was a bit of a let down for me since I did expect some focus on “content” communities rather than only “software communities”. There is an existing corpus of work on “software communities” which have explored possibly all possible points of view, and, talking about creating a community of content and putting emphasis on authoring might have been more pertinent. The post talk Q&A pushed forward interesting insights from Saifi (TWINCLING Society).

Took a sneak peek into Amit Karpe’s talk about getting Edubuntu on the HCL laptop (MyLeap) – there was a fair crowd attending it so chose to wander about looking into various other talks and meeting up with friends and general goofing around like egging Aditya to balance his flowers.

Lunch over we trotted into Niyam’s talk on “Design“. Niyam was unaware that his picture was snapped and it appeared on the front page of DNA newspaper. Exhorting the students to strive to make the world more chic and sexy, Niyam took us through the “user’s perspective” in software design.

Skipped Prakash Advani’s Linux on the Desktop talk to see folks fiddle around with the XO. Sayamindu’s “it is not a laptop project but an education project” talk got off to a start with the usual questions of “do you have the laptop with you” and hence the talk was peppered with discussions about contribution, usage model and the inevitable curiousity about the hardware.

At the end of the day it was the usual chilling out session at the campus canteen.
Arun Khan and Valsa Williams catching up after Day1Alolita, Karunakar and Amit Karpe

On Day 2 Runa also came along with us and co-incidentally we ended up attending “What Being Open Source Really Means“. Moved on to Anant’s talk on Mozilla Prism – an alpha technology (as he said) but fairly cool to contribute to and enhance. Friji was playing around with the XO before her talk explaining how to setup an internet radio station. After all this we moved on to the LCIN BoF Session which had nearly all the girls from the volunteer team sitting through the presentation and offering to take up tasks – awesome coolness. Barkha came down all the way from Mumbai to be part of this and she took down notes and stuff before heading home – 10+ hours of travel for attending an hour’s worth of session. Some pictures from the event:

The GNUnify PosterVijay (chief photographer)Barkha smiles at a good BoFKenneth Gonsalves talks on Django

Here’s a happy volunteer with LinuxChix and GNOME Swag. Some observations remain – the event did seem to have somewhat overpowering presence from the only sponsor (the newspaper insert mentioned the Moblin initiative more than anything else and there was more to the event), the talks selected could be aimed more at ensuring that students get coached into contributing – this year they did not seem that way. However, no praise is enough for the untiring volunteers who were all eager and helpful to ensure that not a single speaker felt uneasy.

UPDATE: Patricia Clausnitzer has kindly translated the above page into Belarusian and made it available here. Thanks Patricia.

To be followed by a blog post

The gift received by Sayamindu

A week in perspective

  • Meeting a friend today who will be in town. Sayamindu has a really good talk lined up for the Day 1 of the event so don’t be disappointed with the bland title and do attend if you want to get to a real-deal developer in the Project. If you are coming to the event, I’d say make some time to talk with him. It would have been nice to have him talk at Fosskriti as well doing his bit for GNOME 🙂
  • Arun has posted a bit about the event at his place and there is some GNOME hotness being drummed up.
  • It is a bit odd to post about the week on a Thursday but hey it has been fairly productive. Finally went through all the technology papers which had been piling up for a while, did a bit of non-technology reading and in general ensured that the ToDo list is in far better shape than it was from 3 weeks back.
  • If you haven’t already done so, do check out the OLPC presentation (~14 MB PDF) and the one talking about Translating for the XO using Pootle.
  • I still need to work on mails that have been sitting not-so-quietly in Drafts. So, if you are expecting a reply, bear with me a for a little duration and I’ll eventually get back to you.
  • Michael writes about the IBM Lotus Workplace code in OO.o CVS.
  • The Education Project for OO.o has a blog.

How to figure out why Pidgin crashes on connection to Yahoo! ?

I use pidgin-2.3.1-1.fc8 and if I have my Y! configured it crashes while trying to connect. Strangely enough, the same settings seem to work for others and I can actually use someone else’s Pidgin to setup my Y! account – strangeness. I read through the how to debug page on Pidgin – no luck. Anyone has a clue as to how I can figure out why this happens ? I like Kopete, but it does have that minor annoyance of a new line after every sentence I type and hit [Enter].

Fruits, colors and breakfastRegular PatternsThe moon this dawn are a few recent photographs.

I had a chance to check the Asus Eee PC yesterday, and wasn’t too impressed.

Drafts turn into lists

  • OpenOffice.org allows 3rd party independent extensions around it. It is not blogged about or written about enough – but it does exist. It is fairly trivial to begin writing extensions anyway and an easy extension could be to create localized versions of templates like resumes, business letter etc which the users of an office-suite-which-cannot-be-named are pretty much used to. There’s a load of documentation here and on the wiki. My favorite wicked cool extension of the week is eVoice which is an easy-to-use extension to embed voice comments in your slides. It provides the capabilities of recording and adding audio commentaries to your slide shows. Every comment will be associated with a single slide and embedded inside the Impress document in Speex format to keep file size small. Comments will also be automatically reproduced during presentation.
  • Gabriel Gurley released a textbook “A Conceptual Guide to OpenOffice.org 2 for Windows and Linux” under the Creative Commons Share-Alike 3.0 and the GNU Free Documentation License. It is available for download or purchase off this link. The book is pretty well written covering the basic tasks from an user perspective. Should come in handy for those who are trying mass deployments of the office suite and come up against user queries and training issues. The book could be well served by translations as well, do get in touch with the author.
  • From this link, you would be able to obtain a list of kickstart files related to creating an Indic LiveCD. Pretty good work by him to come up with the small sweetness. Do try them out for your language and use the #fedora-india channel or the fedora-india mailing list to provide feedback. With the falling prices of USB Keys, it makes sense to lug around a localized live image.
  • Good to see that the GNOME Membership Committee queue is being worked upon, now if only the Accounts queue got some love. It is a bit of a downer to be in touch with so many folks who are waiting to get their accounts in place so that they can contribute.
  • The OLPC effort in India does require some massive doses of mashup love. Besides the usual activity of localisation of the User Interface, I do not see anyone coming around to start thinking about activities that can be created around OLPC that will make it truly useful and more importantly, get a community going. In India at least the project requires a community leader who can lead “from within” and gets it enough to talk with educators and developers at the same time to develop an activity library. There are large number of ideas being discussed daily on the olpc-library list and it is somewhat distressing that when it comes to India the only thing being iterated on mailing lists is “If they don’t have bread, let them have a laptop”. That sucks. Sayamindu has been pretty much involved in ensuring that L10n and i18n bits work on the XO, it is time to move the interest from the XO to the project that is OLPC.
  • Shaun Connolly touches upon “The Future of Open Source” in a Cloud-Computing world. Question – whether it is a cloud or a real hardware for the user – does the method/process for collaborative contribution really change ?