June 30, 2007
General
Comments Off on Shuffle to the Gym
Jayne and I bought a shuffle at the weekend in the encouragement to start our new regime of getting more exercise during the week. Previously that week I forked out some cash on getting a pair of nice Asics. Nothing is going to stop me now.
Day 1: I have a cold.
June 30, 2007
General
Comments Off on The Inner-workings of OpenSolaris
As Jim Walker blogged, Bonnie gave a talk recently at FROSUG – worth listening to if you want to hear the various bits and pieces that are going on behind the scene within Bonnie’s team. I’m listening to it right now, so I’ll upload an mp3 when I’m done.
Update: The MP3 is here. Hrm, we should probably have these sorts of things going onto dlc.sun.com somewhere.
June 27, 2007
General
Comments Off on Indiana at OpenSolaris Ireland User Group
Tim put me down for an IEOSUG talk when I get back home in July. So on Thursday July 12th, drop along and hear about what Project Indiana is, ask some questions and how you can get involved! Given that I only have 4 days in the country, I’ll probably have a Guinness in my hand – I’ll try to make sure I have a few to hand around too.
June 25, 2007
General
Comments Off on Ian Murdock on Open Source on the Air
Thanks to James for interviewing Ian on the latest issue of Open Source on the Air – some good discussion about Indiana, among other things.
June 20, 2007
General
Comments Off on New Zealand Open Source Awards
As Jeff mentioned, absolutely awesome to see the New Zealand Open Source Awards (and also, more recently, to see the wonderful Pia as a judge). It’s a great initiative within New Zealand, and I hope it’s a big success. If nothing else, it’s going to be a monster party in Wellington on the night of the awards with the various open source rock stars out in force!
June 20, 2007
General
Comments Off on OpenSolaris, PPC and the Community
Someone pointed me to the recent set of threads (Kill PPC port) on ppc-discuss, which is nothing more than an extension what has been happening at times within the wider community. I can appreciate the deep frustration and tension from both sides of the line, but I think some basic diplomacy and patience is needed. This is new ground we’re all breaking and it will take time.
Don’t forget for a second that we’re all working together on this one. We’re a community, and disappointingly, we’re not looking like one at times. We need to have a mutual respect and trust for each other at the core, otherwise I fear that all credibility will be lost.
So I’d call out to everyone to get to know your community, both the independent and Sun employed contributors. It will help a massive amount. Subscribe to their blogs, Flickr or Twitter feeds and find out what makes them tick, because only then will you begin to appreciate who they are and where they are coming from.
Be the community.
June 19, 2007
General
Comments Off on Top Dudes
Very sexy performance from the RedMonk boys, and absolutely well deserved for leading the industry on this one.
June 16, 2007
General
Comments Off on Not That I didn’t Believe Him For a Second
ZOMG! It’s true! The various photos from the event beg for a bit of lolgeeks action. Who’s keen?
June 15, 2007
General
Comments Off on Cote and the Java Posse
Interesting episode of the Java Posse with Cote. Always personally fascinated to hear about people’s perceptions about Sun, and various other tidbits in this one.
June 15, 2007
General
Comments Off on And Then We Were Two
Awesome blog from Jim about the progress being made in OpenSolaris.
Personally I’ve had a lot of fun in the last year, being involved in the OpenSolaris Weekly News, creation of Planet OpenSolaris, being elected onto the OpenSolaris Governing Board, and more recently being involved in Project Indiana (which incidently has nothing to do with JDS patches). I’ve met some of the most wonderful people too. That said, it’s also been frustrating at times as well, though my motivation for wanting to see OpenSolaris being an inclusive and healthy community project is as strong as ever. As the community grows, we’re going to have to be more positive, more respectful, and more welcoming than we have been before. Roll on another year.