Polymorph: Zak Greant's Blog

« Older Entries

OOXML: Go To Hell!

Demonstration against OOXML, originally uploaded by Martin Bekkelund.
It is a day after the Go Open conference in Oslo and I am still holed up in a hotel nearby. Blearily stumbling down to breakfast, I was confronted with a mix of lukewarm meatballs, easy listening radio — both of which are common enough to encounter in [...]

(5 Comments »)

Early Coverage of Go Open 2008

Day two of Go Open is just about to get started. Already, there's a good amount of coverage in the Norwegian press on the event. I have made a pitiful attempt to translate the titles of the articles, mostly for the amusement of my Norwegian friends.

Alexander V. Røyne blogged, go open day 2008 1: Chris [...]

(3 Comments »)

Coaching the Next Generation of FOSS Developers

Each year it seems that there are more and more grumblings about how commercial Open Source conferences are moving further and further away from Free Software and Open Source communities. Incongruously, some of the loudest (or at least most noticed) complaining comes from some of the most consistent participants on the conference circuit. I myself [...]

(4 Comments »)

Recommendations for OpenLogic's Open Source Census

Last week, I was excited by, and then disappointed with, OpenLogic's Open Source Census project –  while the project has promise, OpenLogic planned to license the complete data set only to project sponsors (and I didn't feel that they were being very forthright about the matter.)
Stormy Peters, OpenLogic's community manager caught up with me to [...]

Posting my OSI Weekly Reports

A couple of weeks ago, I promised to post weekly reports on my OSI activities. I've done that, but not on my blog — it turns out that I have a blog on the Open Source Initiative website, which I am using for my weekly reports.
To keep up to date, visit http://opensource.org/blog/zak

Tags: eZ, Mozilla, Open [...]

eLiberatica Abstract: Understanding Free Software and Open Source Licensing

Much to my friend Lucian's dismay, I have been sitting (a.k.a. not doing a damn thing) on the abstracts for my upcoming sessions at the Romanian eLiberatica conference.
The first abstract is easy — I will present a slightly modified version of my Age of Literate Machines presentation.
The second session will take a little bit more [...]

(15 Comments »)

Joining the Open Source Initiative as a Board Observer

I just realized that I never formally announced that (as of January 9th, 2008) I have joined the Open Source Initiative as a board observer. This is an unpaid position without voting privileges.
The role of board observer is quite loosely defined; it feels much like being a member of an open source project where you [...]

April Fools Comes Early This Year

April Fools` has just now swept over the Eastern coast of North America and already hoaxes and jokes are spread thick and heavy across the web. Of course, it makes sense that European websites are already posting April Fools' jokes, but I'm not sure if what seems early to me is just an indication that [...]

(1 Comment »)

Open Source Census Results Not Open Source?

Earlier today I wrote about the Open Source Census project, wondering what license the data collected would be distributed under.
After reading the sponsorship page for the project, I believe that OpenLogic intends to restrict distribution of the data gathered, as indicated by the following quote from the page:
Platinum sponsorship is designed for companies that want [...]

(5 Comments »)

Open Source Census

Stormy just pointed a mailing list that I subscribe to at the Open Source census project.
At a glance, the project looks well thought-out — software, documentation, legal agreements, FAQs and so on are all in order.
The only thing that jumps out at me as missing is a notice about what license census data will be [...]

(5 Comments »)

« Older Entries

Polymorph is powered by Wordpress running on Apache, Ubuntu Linux, MySQL and PHP.

The marvelous illustration of the Mad Hatter is by the late, great John Tenniel.
Like many great parts of our culture, it is in the public domain.

Contact: zak@greant.com | Gnu Privacy Guard Key

Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS)