Archive for February, 2008

An Interview with Haiku

Monday, February 4th, 2008

BGA: Bruno G. Albuquerque
Kokito: Jorge Mare
Gareth: Gareth Greenaway, SCALE Community Relations Chair

Gareth: So first off, please explain what your roles in the Haiku community are.
BGA: I have been a part of the Haiku community since it started, I guess…
Gareth: When did it start?
Kokito: Aug 18, 2001.
BGA: First, just working as a developer from the outside but eventually I joined the project officially around 6 months after it started more or less.
Gareth: Was that before or after the name switch from OpenBeOS to Haiku?
Kokito: The project started as OpenBeos. The change to Haiku was in 2004.
BGA: I am still a developer in the project (although with real life taking most of my time).
Kokito: I have been involved in the Haiku project since 2006, mainly in the area of marketing. communications. I worked mainly on the (new) website, and organizing events like the Google Tech Talk last year, SCALE (of course!), Kansai Open Source in Japan, etc. The new name was officially announced at the first WalterCon (the Haiku conference), held in Ohio, sometime in August of that year

Gareth: What was the reasoning behind the name change?
BGA: Basically we did that because there could be potential legal problems concerning the use of BeOS as part of our name.
Gareth: Did Palm ever pursue anything regarding the name? Or was the change a precautionary measure?
Kokito: The latter, as far as I know.
BGA: Yes. Palm never really said anything about it.
Kokito: In the end, it was a positive thing, as it helped Haiku develop its own image and identity.
BGA: Sometime ago someone from Access said Haiku was OK, as we were recreating BeOS from scratch. Access currently owns all BeOS trademarks.
Gareth: Has Access done anything with the BeOS trademarks?
Kokito: Not that we are aware of. I mean, other than claim that they own them. :) David “Lefty” Schlesinger was the person from Access I had contact with. Lefty is the Director of Open Source Technologies at Access. He was always very supportive of our project.
Gareth: That seems to be what most company that buy up trademarks do with them :) So what is the goal of the Haiku project? Where does its future lead?

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Interview with Michael Shiloh, of OpenMoko

Sunday, February 3rd, 2008

SCALE: Gareth Greenaway, SCALE Community Relations Chair & Orv Beach, SCALE PR Chair
Michael: Michael Shiloh, OpenMoko

SCALE: Michael, what role do you play in the OpenMoko Development Community?

Michael: I’m the advocate for the community within the company, and the advocate for the company within the community. It’s a bit hard to describe, but I try to make sure information, questions, and issues flow as freely as possible between the two.

SCALE: How involved are you with the development of the OpenMoko software and the development of the hardware that runs the software?

Michael: I wear a number of hats. One is to develop sample applications and demonstration code, both pure software projects, but also projects involving add-on hardware. Since the openness of OpenMoko extends beyond the software (e.g. the availability of expansion pads on the PCB) we want to show people how they can extend the hardware as well. In addition, the fact that the USB port is both device and host means that external USB devices can easily be hooked up. I think this will be an invaluable way to prototype new hardware.

SCALE: That’s a really good feature, the host & device based USB port…that’s huge. There aren’t many people are doing that.

Michael: Yeah, that was actually the single feature that caught my eye when I first heard about the project, and caused me to look into it further. of course I loved what I saw. (more…)

BSD Certification Exams Available at SCALE

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

The BSD Certification Group (BSDCG) will offer the BSDA certification exam to attendees of SCALE 2008.

The exam will be paper based and in English. Exam information is available from the Certification page of the BSDCG website. Exam candidates should be proficient in the BSDA Certification Requirements and the Command Reference, both of which are available for free download from this page of the website.

Exam candidates must bring valid photo identification matching the name they used when they registered for their BSDCG ID. Those who participated in the 2007 BSDA beta program are eligible for a 50% price discount.

The exam will be offered on Saturday, February 9 at 11:00 and 15:30 in the National room.

Due to limited seating at the event, the number of candidates per session is limited to 40 and pre-registration is required.

Participants have to register for a BSDCG ID first here. Note that it may take up to 24 hours to receive a BSDCG ID. Once you have an ID, you can choose an exam location and pay for the exam. Prices are in USD, ($75 or $37.50) and payable through Paypal or credit card.

About the BSD Certification Group

The BSD Certification Group (BSDCG) is a non-profit organization committed to creating and maintaining a global certification standard for system administration on BSD based operating systems. The BSDCG works with the BSD and sysadmin communities in order to provide a practical and relevant certification.

The BSDA certification is designed to be an entry-level certification on BSD Unix systems administration. The successful BSDA candidate is able to complete common administrative and troubleshooting tasks and has a good understanding of general BSD Unix and networking principles. In addition, the successful candidate demonstrates basic skills with these BSD operating systems:

Dragonfly BSD
FreeBSD
NetBSD
OpenBSD

SCALE in Multimedia

Friday, February 1st, 2008

We’ve been trying to document what goes on at SCALE every year. Not just in written documents; we’ve tried audio recordings and some video with mixed success.

This year SBLUG will be assisting us with video recordings of the sessions, the keynotes, and the expo floor (props to Tom King and his crew!)

Ilan, the SCALE Chair, scored an opportunity for us to try out some spiffy new audio recording gear from a startup. That startup is the Trinity Audio Group, and they have a nifty product called the Trinity. Here’s a picture of it:

Trinity audio system.

We’ll have an opportunity to test them out, as Trinity Audio has loaned SCALE two of them to try out for “man in the street” audio recordings!

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It’s Soup…

Friday, February 1st, 2008

We finished assembling the program and sent it off to the printers for proof. By assemble, I mean we gave all the ads, bios, and schedules and other content to Ron Golan, our graphics arts guru. He assembled them, posted a draft PDF online, and we critqued it, all in the SCALE IRC channel. When done, Ilan pushed it onto the printer’s FTP site. We had to send it back to them again due some issue with ads and transparencies, but they turned it around quickly. Here’s more evidence that SCALE has grown: the program last year was 12 pages. This year it’s 20 pages. And props to Ron for putting out an excellent piece of work! We’ve used Dot Graphics in Chatsworth for our printing needs for the last three or four years, and they’ve been very responsive to our requirements and the products have been of good quality. We’ve used them for programs, posters and other signage, and postcards (both printing and mailing). Recommended.