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Travel and UDS Maverick Day 1

Saturday morning I woke up early to get to the airport on time and caught my flight out of San Francisco. The flight was slightly tense since I had to gate check my carry on (argh!) and further ash cloud problems were cancelling several flights out of the US that morning. I landed in Chicago to learn that my flight to Brussels had a 2 hour delay. In the end this didn’t end up being a big deal, I had a really tight connection in O’Hare planned so I wasn’t particularly looking forward to it anyway.

For some reason I couldn’t fall asleep at all on the flight to Brussels, so I got to zone out to terrible on flight movies, listened to some podcasts and played on my Nintendo DS for 8.5 hours. Finally around noon on Sunday Brussels time our plane landed and we were off!

I bought a local prepaid BASE SIM at the airport for 15 euros, 10 of which immediately went to data, the rest I’m saving for the unlikely emergencies when I may need voice. And quickly met up with some other Ubuntu folks, to catch a cab to the Hotel (turns out there was a shuttle we could have taken, oops). Once at the hotel I immediately bumped into Laura Czajkowski and Martin Owens.

Penelope Stowe’s flight arrived a couple hours after mine and Laura and I enjoyed a nice (if pricey!) hotel bar late lunch and enjoyed a couple Belle-Vue Kriek Extras (yum!). After food we headed back to Laura and Pen’s room to watch the latest episode of Doctor who, along with enjoying our Krieks, some gummy penguins and I got to enjoy my first Curly Wurly candy bar. It was around 6:30PM when I left their room to go to my own – and boy was I exhausted from not having slept the night before. I forced myself to stay up until 8PM before finally crashing, but it wasn’t easy!

Monday morning UDS began! The day started off with an Introduction by Jono Bacon.

Then a keynote by Mark Shuttleworth (video), where Mark discussed the “chasm” that Ubuntu still needs to cross to make it to the mainstream and talked a lot about Ubuntu on netbooks and other internet-ready devices where screen real estate, which he posted about in his blog today: Unity, and Ubuntu Light. He also announced that he wants us to shoot for a 10/10/10 release date of Maverick, because 101010 in is binary for 42, and there is a trend among us Ubuntu folks of having read The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy (guilty here!).

From there we headed off to sessions.

Community Roundtable

I started out the session day in the Community Team Roundtable where we reviewed the plans for the week and discussed potential sessions, I’m looking forward to seeing the Community Learning Project Materials workflow session some Ground Control sessions scheduled.

Configuration management tools and conffiles

This was a really fascinating look at the current state of config file management via dpkg and the conflicts that come up during upgrades when using a config management tool like Puppet. A couple comments about config file management itself were made (dpkg’s config options leave much to be desired – it might be nice to have a better/smarter tool for merging config file versions between versions), but the core of this discussion focused on how and if a team should work with Debian to look into a way to selectively (you can already have dpkg not prompt for any config file changes, but not per package) take config file management away from dpkg itself for certain packages and tell the system that something like Puppet is handling it. I really do hope this happens.

At lunch I got to hang out with Bert Desmet, a local Fedora Ambassador who is attending the summit for a couple days. And we got a picture! …even if Martin Owens is giving him bunny ears (that’s how we treat Fedora folk. Wait, no it’s not! GUYS!!)

After lunch there was a series of Plenaries, starting with Ivanka Majic presenting for The Design Team (video) where she discussed some of their user testing of Ubuntu 10.04 which they’ll be posting on the design blog soon. Next up was Thiago Macieira presenting on QT Roadmap / Overview (video) and then Rick Spencer on Application Developers and Maverick (video).

Team Project Planning Workshop

This session ended up being a really great one that focused on the use of Launchpad blueprints in community projects. I’ll be honest – I don’t really use them. We were able to discuss how to make them better (and boy did I have a lot of ideas based on my own reluctance!). The idea ended up being to mostly do away with our traditional wiki-based RoadMaps and instead go with the launchpad-based blueprints so team members could more easily subscribe and keep up with changes – plus regular burndown charts which track progress can be generated easily from them. The end result of the brainstorming was looking into some launchpad-end changes, and some folks assigned to writing documentation for doing blueprints so it’s easier.

Heuristic evaluation and bug tagging

This was a session put on by the design team, and while my interests don’t typically lean toward user experience, after the Plenary by Ivanka Plenary I found myself interested in how the team worked. This session focused on discussions they’d had with the Mozilla team about having a common “language” to discuss usability issues and using similar tags on bugs to describe certain things. One thing I was really pleased to see was discussion about error messages sent to users. While I certainly appreciate the frequently easily Googleable, tech-nature of error messages that programs give, this is certainly not universal, and most of the newcomers to Linux these days will be put off by them. In all, a great session.

After that I decided to take a walk. This Hotel is in the middle of a beautiful Belgian forest and I had quite the nice walk down a couple of the trails on the property.


Last night was spent in the hotel bar enjoying some beers (I ended up with a mug of Stella Artois thanks to Benjamin Humphrey) and good conversation with Amber Graner, and several others throughout the evening. I turned in around midnight, my body still isn’t adjusted to the time zone difference but I am feeling much better this morning than I was yesterday morning!

Now off to grab some breakfast and start day 2 :)

Nexus One, Ubuntu and leaving for Belgium

Sunday was a pretty low-key day, which I really needed after all the release parties and events. MJ and I headed over to Kate O’Briens for lunch, turns out they have this *great* Corned Beef Quesadilla (yes, really).

Kate O'Briens

I then moved the SIM from my G1 to my new Nexus One. I had been reluctant to do it because a physical keyboard is something that was so high on my requirements list when I got my G1, and it continues to be. I am still not convinced by the on-screen keyboard of the Nexus One, but the phone itself is so much faster than the G1 and after playing with the N1 some I couldn’t resist switching the SIM. We’ll see how I do with the on-screen keyboard, at least it’s better than the G1 (slightly larger screen means bigger keyboard, seems slightly more responsive too).

This week I’ve spent cycling back to cleaning up a bunch of little Ubuntu things before UDS. The Community Council announced the new membership boards earlier this week and I’ll be serving another two years on the Americas Board (I abstained from voting on the Americas board, so thanks to my fellow CC members who once again have supported me in this position!). Today I posted the latest Ubuntu US article, an interview conducted by Amber Graner, LoCos, Leaders, and Lessons Learned: Florida Team. Today the elections for Ubuntu Women Leader began and I added myself as a candidate. My todo list still has some Debian work on it, as well as a pile of home sysadmin stuff (I really need to get better backups going!) but things are at an alright stopping point for my trip to Brussels.

Trip to Brussels! I’m very fortunate to be sponsored for this event, with Canonical handling arrangements for flights, hotels and meals. At this time tomorrow I’ll be flying over the Atlantic for the second time in my life, and visiting mainland Europe for the first time. I’ve got most of my stuff ready to be packed on the table in front of me – clothes, gadgets, adapters, euros, bottle of Advil (for the mornings after all those Belgian ales, you see!). I sort of wish I had extended my trip a couple days to see the sights in the city, since the place we’re staying at is actually in La Hulpe at Dolce La Hulpe Hotel and Resort, which is outside the city. But it will give me a nice taste of Europe so when we come back for a real vacation it’ll really be something.

Now I think I’ll start packing my piles of stuff and triple-check my list so I don’t forget anything. My flight leaves tomorrow morning local time stops on O’Hare in the early evening where there is only 40 minutes between touchdown and takeoff, that’s going to be fun. Sunday morning I’ll be landing in Brussels. Here’s hoping I can catch some sleep on the plane! If not, I’ve spent the early portion of my evening loading up my mp3 player with music and podcasts.

Ubuntu Women World Play Day Competition

Last month Melissa Draper announced the Ubuntu Women World Play Day Competition.

“A pivotal issue within computing cultures of today is the overemphasis on boys and men as the primary consumers of technology. Children learn by example and since the majority of media images consist of boys playing computer type games and girls playing with stereotypical princess type dolls; this contributes to the lack of involvement in science and technology by our young women.

It hurts us all to have this subconscious of pigeonholing of our children, and to help counter this for Ubuntu’s community, we would love to have a collection of examples of young girls (toddlers through to 12 years old) playing with — and loving, and being encouraged to pursue — Ubuntu. This would allow parents of girls to demonstrate that it really is ok to be intrigued by the shiny screens, blinking lights, tappity-tap of keyboards, and faint whirs of computer fans.”

I’m pretty excited about this competition, a picture is worth a thousand words! Plus the team is offering three exciting prizes donated by companies sponsoring the project and contest, Melissa discusses the prizes in a recent blog post:

This means that the competition can now offer 3 prizes! Not only that, after contacting Canonical CEO Jane Silber, we can confirm that she would be honoured to choose the second netbook prize!

The prizes are now as follows:

Community Choice: A Terra A20 netbook with Ubuntu 10.04 LTS

Jane’s Choice: A Dell 10n with Ubuntu Moblin Remix

Random Draw: A prize pack of random goodies from The Ubuntu Shop and a gold USB necklace from ZaReason

All winning entries also come with a subscription to their choice of either Ubuntu User Magazine or Linux Pro Magazine.

We now have only a week left for submissions, so if you didn’t know about it and wish to submit a picture, now is your chance!

The team has developed 4 easy steps:

1. Take Photos!

Take a photo of your girl (toddler-12yrs) using Ubuntu/Kubuntu/etc!

Natural candid photos are best.

(Photos you already have are also ok!)

2. Sign the Model Release Waiver form!

We are collecting these because we are dealing with photos of children.

Print the form out fill it in, and sign it.

Then either scan or take a clear photo of it.

3. Email us!

Attach both photo(s) and a signed form to an email.

Send the email to ubuntuwomen.competition@gmail.com before 2359UTC May 14th.

4. Wait for voting!

Voting will open on or after May 15th, announcement will be made on May 28th.

Good luck everyone! We’ve had some great submissions so far and I’m really looking forward to seeing more come in.

While I’m on the topic of Ubuntu Women, if you want an update on all the work the project is doing check out the logs (and slides!) Amber Graner’s great Ubuntu Open Week Session on the Ubuntu Women project.

Bay Area Lucid Release Parties and Bay Area Geeknic #1

What an exciting few days!

Thursday night over 60 (maybe more, the RSVP list was longer and it was difficult to count!) Ubuntu fans poured into Thirsty Bear for a Lucid release party! This turnout was unexpectedly large (maybe reserve the room upstairs next time?) and wonderfully exciting! I was able to meet a whole bunch of interesting people, catch up with others, and a few people from out of town even dropped by to mingle and take part in some Ubuntu partying.

Mark Terranova posted several photos in the West Coast Ubuntu Flickr Group:

100_4431

I forgot to bring my camera, but luckily Sameer Verma had one that he passed around and got lots of great shots, which he posted here: Facebook.com: Sameer Verma’s Photos – Ubuntu Lucid release party

And I shamelessly borrowed a few for this post (thanks Sameer!):



It was also really fun to be able to give out some Ubuntu California T-Shirts (Jono is sporting one in the photo above) to some of our more active team members. Thanks again to Neal Bussett down in SoCal for sending the boxes of shirts up north, I’ll be shipping out several in the coming weeks.

Friday evening was the Diablo Valley Linux Users Group Lucid release party – plus celebration of Grant Bowman‘s birthday (and apparently celebrating the ascension to the throne of Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands? Grant wore orange). So I took a BART train out to Walnut Creek and walked down to Caffe La Scala to meet up with a few people for the DVLUG release itself. Compared to the night before it was very, very low key, but it was nice meeting up with some folks over in the East Bay and La Scala makes a mean white mocha. From there we headed over to meet up with some more folks at The Cheesecake Factory, where this photo was taken out front by Mark:

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Dinner was great, the food, the company, the atmosphere. Once it was wrapped up I was even fortunate enough to get a ride home back to SF so I didn’t need to wait for a train (thanks again Daniel!).

Saturday was the first Bay Area Geeknic! We tossed this one together within just a few weeks and didn’t publicize it as well as we could have – figured this would be a trial one to events we’d have throughout the coming months, get a feel for what worked and what didn’t, get some idea of how we could do better next time. In reality? It turned out to be quite a successful event, I counted about 30 attendees at the height of it, we weren’t wanting for any necessities (and there was a grocery store pretty close when we did need to run out for a few things), there was plenty of food, beautiful weather, awesome geeky conversations, volleyball, frisbees! All I actually learned from this is that I need to wear sunscreen in the sun, I got a little toasted.




I put more of my photos over in a Flickr set: May 1st 2010 Bay Area Geeknic

And there are also Mark Terranova’s Geeknic Photos

It really was amazing how well everything came together for this. I can’t wait for the next one! Which we’re already planning (ok, we’re also planning a third, in July!).

Unfortunately today I’m missing the SF-LUG release event where Grant is presenting on the new release (just like he did at Felton LUG yesterday!) in favor of boring things like running errands and getting prepared for the trip to Brussels for UDS next week. OK, I’m pretty excited for Brussels so even getting prepared for the trip isn’t that boring. Passport? Check. Power converters? Check…

Ubuntu 10.04 LTS, Lucid Lynx, Released!

After much anticipation, the latest Long Term Service (LTS) release of Ubuntu was announced this afternoon:

Ubuntu 10.04 LTS released

Lynx

As with each new release, this once again is seeking to be the biggest yet – and if IRC is any indicator that certainly will be the case: the #ubuntu channel on freenode soared to over 2100 users at the peak, the previous record was 1865, and #ubuntu-release-party went over 1500, it’s previous record being 1177. Three cheers for the IRC Ops team for handling the influx with such tact and grace, it’s not an easy job!

And of course congratulations to everyone who made the release itself possible! Well done folks!!!

…but there is no rest for the awesome. Next weekend many community members and developers alike are off to Brussels for the Ubuntu Developer Summit – Maverick Meerkat, where we all get to put our heads together for the 10.10 release later this year.

Phillies v. Giants

When I lived up in Maine I went to a Portland Sea Dogs game once while in High School. In 2006 I went to a Readings Phillies game. On Monday night I went to my first Major League game! The Phillies were in town to play the Giants.

And we lost. No wait, San Francisco won. The Phillies lost. I don’t know who I was supposed to be cheering for, but given that Nita was all decked out in Phillies gear I guess I was supposed to be cheering for the Phillies! To my surprise there were a lot of Phillies fans there, and the Giants fans were gracious hosts, one even offering his seat to Nita on MUNI.

The game was fun, the crowd was excited, and logistically things worked out beautifully. We were able to take MUNI down to the ballpark (ok, so it is walkable from where we live, but public transit is quicker), people got in quickly, we snagged some hot dogs, chicken fingers and I got my hands on a beer. MJ got us great seats behind the Phillies dugout and we hunkered down for 9 innings (look, I used a baseball word!) of entertainment. In spite of not being a baseball fan in general, there really is something about being in a crowd of excited people all focused on a field that is a totally different kind of fun than I’m used to. I may have to start walking down to games from time to time – especially since it turns out there are cheap seats to be had.


Palm trees outside AT&T Park

As the game wrapped up we headed to MUNI to catch a train back, and then hop on another to head down to The Castro for some dinner – but the diner we wanted to go to had closed early! So we decided to bring Nita to In-N-Out for a taste of west coast fast food burgers and shakes. By the time we finished dinner it was just after midnight and we wandered over to the cable cars and caught a ride home on the last one of the night – but not before getting to watch them turn it around. Cable cars are so cute and fun!

We sadly had to drop Nita off at the airport to go home on Tuesday night, I miss her already! This night was such an awesome wrap up to a fun weekend.

Visiting Alcatraz

I didn’t realize Alcatraz was in the bay just outside of San Francisco until I visited for the first time back in 2008. Wow, that’s not too far off either! Since then I’ve wanted to go, so when Nita was in town visiting this past weekend and suggested it I jumped right on board. We snagged some tickets on AlcatrazCruises.com for a 2:20PM trip out on Sunday. We grabbed some lunch at Mijita (yum, fish tacos and a Mexican coke!) in Ferry Building and took a nice walk outside the pier. After that we hopped on a streetcar and headed down to Pier 33 to board, and while in line got one of those silly in-front-of-picture photos of the three of us:

MJ, Nita and Lyz

Then it was on to the boat!

Amusingly, the last time I visited a prison museum it was with MJ and Nita. Just like the last time we visited such a place we had amazing weather, even when we were out on the bay the chill was quite tolerable, and most of the day I was quite comfortable carrying my jacket.

The first part of the tour has you walking up to the top of the island to pick up the audio tours and enter the prison. The audio tour was was well done and took us all around the inside of the prison, from the blocks to the library to the kitchen, describing escape attempts and telling other stories from when the prison was in operation.

One particularly amusing portion of the trip out to the island was when one of the park staff showed a crowd of us the locking mechanism on the cell doors, and I got a video of it!

Following that, MJ asked him if he could see the mechanism (all mechanical, no electric!) up close, so he opened up one of the ground level boxes to give us a peek:

Pretty neat! But as the tour guides and welcome video were keen to point out, a prison is not all of the history or wonder of the island. Indeed, there were some beautiful gardens and amazing views of the city as well, we had a really nice walk around the grounds after the audio tour was finished.

I have more pictures posted over in a flickr gallery:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/pleia2/sets/72157623829012261/

We then took the ferry back to San Francisco. We dropped by Pier 39 to see the sea lions and drop by a couple shops. From there we headed to #9 Fishermen’s Grotto for dinner and were able to watch the sun set over the water – brilliant! Once it was dark we walked up the street and did a bit of touristy shopping, eventually ending up at Ghirardelli Square where we enjoyed some giant sundaes. Yum! By then it was getting pretty late and we headed over to show Nita the cable cars, and take one home!

I love cable cars. Love love love them. In spite of the $5 price tag for a one way ticket, need to take them more often. Oh, and I must visit the San Francisco Cable Car Museum when I have a free weekend day. Taking one home was an awesome end to such an excellent day :)

Upcoming busy weekend: Ubuntu Lucid release parties and a Geeknic!

I managed to pack my schedule around the Release of Ubuntu Lucid, 10.04.

I'm going to the Ubuntu Release Party

The first event I’ll be attending is down at Thirsty Bear Brewing Company in San Francisco on Howard near 3rd.

Date: Thursday, April 29, 2010
Time: 7:30-10:30 PM
Sign-up: Here

Come and join the Ubuntu California LoCo Team in celebrating the Ubuntu 10.04 Lucid Lynx release. The party is simple: good people, good drinks, and a good place to hang out. Join us!

At the time of writing we already have 26 confirmed guests!

The following evening I’ll be heading over to Walnut Creek to celebrate with DVLUG at Caffe La Scala

Date: Friday, April 30, 2010
Time: 6-??? PM

No sign-up is required for this event as it will be a bit more informal. I’m really looking forward to kicking back with some fellow California LoCo members and chatting about the new release.

The California team is really rocking for this release, having several events across the state – I can’t even attend all the ones I’d like to! Check out more here:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/CaliforniaTeam/Projects/LucidRelease

Bay Area GeeknicsBut I couldn’t let my weekend be exclusively Ubuntu. At the last Berkeley Jam Mark Terranova suggested a series of Geeknics over the summer across the bay area. How can I turn away a Geeknic proposal, after all our Philly Geeknic was the first official “Geeknic” in the world last year! It really is a delight to bring the event to my new home. So planning began and we settled upon the details for our first bay area Geeknic.

Location: Heather Farms Park, Walnut Creek
Date:Saturday, May 1, 2010
Time: 12:30 til 5:30pm

Once you are in the park, follow the penguin signs.

If you need a ride from BART email INFO GIDGETKITCHEN ORG ahead of time or call Mark at (510) 228-4646

Free to attend, bring a dish – it would be nice to let people know ahead of time what you are bringing. Either post on the wiki or on the the Facebook Page.

The park has picnic tables, a few extra chairs would be bonus.

We have 2 extra tables

There are built-in grills. We’ll have at least one extra.

We have one sun canopy and a few large umbrellas to protect anybody from bursting in to flames or getting sunburned. We welcome any other sun protection that you may be able to bring.

Heather Farms is a great location. Many things to do there. Nice gardens nearby, birds to feed, etc. We can also throw a frisbee or use the redball to play a game of kickball.

Sunday? I’ll be preparing for my trip to Brussels, Belgium for the Maverick Ubuntu Developers Summit the following weekend! I’ve wanted to visit Belgium ever since my love of Belgian beer took hold almost a decade ago, and while I won’t have much time for tourism since I’ll be too busy working with the awesome Ubuntu folks at the summit, this is a great opportunity to get a taste of the city and the beer! My only regret is that MJ can’t join me, we’ll have to have a proper European vacation together sometime in the near future :)

Lessons from Open Source Business Conference and the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit


Conference guides for OSBC and Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit

Last month I attended the Open Source Business Conference. Lucky for me it was located at The Palace Hotel, right down the street from where I live! As I mentioned previously, I was able to gain entry by volunteering at the local groups table. I was fortunate enough to be able to attend all the talks in addition to manning the table. Several of the keynotes were quite good, but my favorite talk of the conference came from Ravi Simhambhatla, the CIO of Virgin America, who spoke about the wealth of F/OSS tools that were being used within VA. I think sometimes in my day to day work as a sysadmin and my volunteer work encouraging adoption of Ubuntu I feel as if it’s an up-hill battle to convince people that F/OSS tools are not just free (as in monetary value) but are quite often better than proprietary options, so seeing Simhambhatla so enthusiastically talk about the huge improvements across the board by switching from proprietary to F/OSS tools was quite inspirational. The CEO of EnterpriseDB, Ed Boyajian, gave an interesting talk about how F/OSS hasn’t really made its mark on the enterprise database market and what can be done to change that – including exploring the distinction between MySQL (is, and always has been, focused at webapps) and PostgreSQL (the more enterprise-ready database). I also saw Tim O’Reilly speak for the first time, and heard a great keynote from Jim Whitehurst of Red Hat on the value of F/OSS which must not strictly be put on a static monetary value for a task, but instead focus upon the flexibility that F/OSS provides allowing you to accomplish that task, and more, with a smaller budget (a subtle, but important, difference when discussing IT budgets!).


Sign on top of The Palace Hotel

Last week I attended the Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit down in Japantown, an easy ride on the 38L bus – and not a bad walk home on the last day when it was still daylight upon leaving I wasn’t in the mood for a bus. The summit itself was quite an event with a lot of very impressive folks there. In addition to meeting a lot of local business people who are deploying and developing in F/OSS, I was able to meet Red Hat kernel developer Valorie Aurora and CEO of ZaReason Cathy Malmrose, but I spent most of my time with Landon Jurgens of General Electric (some of their small devices use Linux!) who I know through the New York LoCo team and met last year at the Karmic Release event that I drove to Seneca Falls for. I also met up with Miia Ranta, still in the area from Finland, and whose boyfriend was kind enough to give me a lift home after the first day. I also got to chat briefly with Pete Graner of Canonical and Jono Bacon and I touched base long enough on Friday to throw together some ideas for a Lucid release event at The Thirsty Bear this week.

Content-wise I have to admit, the first day was the best for me with all the great talks (now posted online), the number of people there (overlap of collab summit with a kernel summit event)… and with Chris DaBona giving everyone in the audience at the end of the day a Nexus One (glee, shiny new phone!). Day one also wrapped up with a lovely evening of sushi, open bar and networking at Yoshi’s where I met Jesse Zbikowski – a fellow California LoCo team member who had planned some previous Ubuntu release parties in the area and wanted to meet up for some collaborating on an event post-release of Lucid (it’s looking like we may end up at Noisebridge for an Installfest in late May).


Badges for Open Source Business Conference and Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit

The following two days at the summit a few things were continually impressed upon me, carrying over from what I’ve learned at OSBC:

1. In several areas, F/OSS has Made It Big.

Many companies have shifted from having to be convinced of it’s usefulness to questions of how they go about managing these new tools. Whether it be navigating the plethora of available applications (a topic my boss has blogged about too) or working with development teams who wish to incorporate F/OSS with varying licenses into code that they deploy internally and ship to customers, it’s a challenge. A fascinating talk by a Bradley M. Kuhn about GPLv3 which discussed some of it’s ratification process drove home both these points, there were some big companies with some strong feelings about the direction the GPL was going and during the resulting license reflects some of the pressures that were upon upon the Free Software Foundation. It’s worth saying that in spite of Kuhn’s opinion that it was too “watered down” for his tastes, being more of a practicalist I believe these changes were primarily good.

2. Most of us are cloud critters, and our open philosophies have a place.

I use Google hosted domains for my email, Google docs for collaborative editing, Facebook and Twitter for social networking. Woo awesome new cloud world! Unfortunately I don’t pay for any of these services and completely at their discretion my accounts could be deleted and all data poured into these things lost. Even worse for some companies and people, the data that we pour into these services may be used in ways with which we had not intended, even shared unintentionally (or intentionally!) with 3rd parties. At the OSBC Tim O’Reilly spoke of open data which is a piece of this puzzle (example: no one can come near to matching the data of Google Maps and given Google’s resources for this endeavor I don’t see a competitor arising any time soon, sorry Open Street Map!). The other piece of this puzzle is open cloud services. Enter the AGPL, seeking open web applications in addition to regular open applications that the GPL covers. Shouldn’t we seek to develop and use open services so we can run our own Twitter (hi Status.net!) just like we did with our desktop applications? I haven’t formed a coherent opinion here, primarily due to the collaborative nature that most of these services require. I still use Twitter instead of identi.ca because there are more people on Twitter (and let’s be honest, more regular people use Twitter, identi.ca has a lot of techies). And a F/OSS Facebook? Practically everyone I know is already on Facebook – including distant family I don’t have contact with by any other means. Short of a service that provides full integration of these things – letting me use Facebook AND F/OSS option, Twitter AND identica (possible already, but clunky at best when replies are factored in) I don’t even see myself switching, let alone gathering up others to champion web software freedom. Even then, can’t such integration I want come from really good, flexible APIs and data portability that adheres to open standards? Google already provides this for many of it’s services (I wouldn’t have switched to their hosted domains email service if I couldn’t snag email backups via POP, Google docs would be less useful if I couldn’t export to ODT and several other formats at my descretion) and Facebook’s move to XMPP for IM simply rocks. That may be enough for me.

The cloud thing was really driven home when the last session I attended at the collaboration summit focused on the “Desktop” and ended up being a series of presentations about how the desktop can better interface with cloud services, and what projects within Gnome, KDE, Mozilla and Ubuntu are doing cloud-wise.

3. Mobile devices! Mobile devices! Mobile devices!

Linux is pouring into the consumer mobile devices market – mobile phones, ebook readers, tablets… Google’s gift of a Nexus one at LFCS was not just a kind gesture, they want more and more people using these and doing development on the Android platform, and the audience there was a prime target. MeeGo, a community-developed Linux-based mobile platform for phones had a huge presence at LFCS. Embedded devices are also increasingly using Linux, people are using Linux all the time without even knowing it. Since mobile devices are one of the faster growing markets it’s huge progress that Linux has made such strong inroads here (personal anecdote: a year ago I didn’t have a smart phone, now I have 2 and am pondering an android-based e-book reader as I walk past huge billboards advertising the iPad).

So what did I practically gain from these conferences? Technology is continually moving a fast pace! Alright, I knew that. After OSBC I felt somewhat out-dated as a sysadmin who still maintains unclustered servers out there and edits some config files by hand, but after some thought I realized that I need a healthy bit of living in the now and living in the future must be maintained – and these conferences are very much future-looking. It certainly gave me a nice dose of future to take back to my day job and help motivate me to keep striving for the next infrastructure improvement or automation.

Union Square SF, dinners, BALUG

I sort of feel like I’m still on vacation. Work has certainly been demanding as usual, but working from home in an exciting city is a very different than doing the same while living in the suburbs anywhere. No longer do I feel confined to my home during the work day – my lunch break gives me time to leave the condo and grab some lunch out! And appointments? No more will I need to take a morning off to run down to the eye doctor/dentist/etc, they’re within walking distance. And events? Even on weeks when I’m “not busy” I have at least one evening event and something on the weekend I’ll walk or take a bus, train or subway to.

Subways? Buses? Public transit? Growing up in Maine and living in suburbs in upstate NY and outside of Philadelphia never quite prepared me for being primarily tied to public-transit, and honestly it was a worry when I moved here. In truth? Once you get the hang of it, public transit here is pretty easy and convenient. Friday evening I had no issue walking down to Caltrain to catch a train to Mountain View to meet MJ for dinner and a movie.


Heart at Geary and Stockton, Union Square SF

A couple weeks ago I found myself pining for the outdoors and did a quick search for park+wifi and learned that Union Square here in SF has free public wifi! So I packed up my mini9 after work and walked down there to IRC and work on some Ubuntu wiki pages while sitting near the grass and flowers in Union Square. How nice!


Castro sign just outside of the Muni station

And even when I don’t have exciting plans, I need to eat. I have mentioned that this city is full of food and always smells like food? There are all kinds of places to explore, and that’s how we ended up in the Castro one late night recently enjoying some sandwiches and a local beer at the Bagdad Cafe. Then we took a street car home. I didn’t even mention street cars above, what fun these things are! SF has collected them from all over the world and put them in service. Cable cars are a blast too, but at $5 a ride per way I only hop on them when I am looking for a bit of fun in my travels.


Union Square from above at night

Last weekend MJ and I enjoyed a sunny lunch in Union Square when I spied people on the roof of the Macy’s across the Square. People on the roof? Wow! It turns out that the Cheesecake Factory has roof seating over looking Union Square, I had to go. So after lunch we headed back home to chill for the rest of the afternoon, and then in the late evening we walked back out there and had a lovely dinner on the roof of Macy’s. Oh, and banana cream cheesesteak. Did I mention that there are zillions of places in this city that are terribly romantic? It’s awesome.


Entrance of Chinatown at Grant St

On Tuesday of this week I packed up my purse and walked down to chinatown for a BALUG meeting. The presenter was Sameer Verma of the San Francisco Bay Area One Laptop Per Child group. The walk was nice, and although the restaurant where the meeting is held isn’t much to look at from the outside, it’s beautiful inside. Upon arrival we’re pointed to a bar area where we get name tags (yay, name tags!) and put in our $13 for dinner, then hang around and chat until the group tables are ready. We then have dinner together, a variety of dishes are served that we all share. The format was very condusive for chatting and some good conversations were had. After dinner we all went upstairs for the presentation in a big dining area where there was a small stage and projector. The presentation itself was exciting, I didn’t know a whole lot about OLPC and it’s quite an interesting project.

This weekend our friend Nita is in town visiting (yay!) and we’ll be taking one of the Alcatraz Cruises and then spending the late afternoon and evening down by Fisherman’s wharf. Woohoo!