And so another year of Free Software Melbourne comes to an end. This year has 
been an interesting one. 

Firstly for Free software at a glance.

Most Distros have kept on improving in their quality and stability as they are 
deep into their maturity nowadays, and that is only a good thing. In one of our 
meetups mid-year someone came along (I'm sorry I forgot their name!) and asked 
"So I'm running Linux Mint, how do I get to experience the 'real linux?'". It 
is a funny question as from the outside GNU/Linux has the appearance of being 
this huge technical challenge that gets you closer to your machine. Yes, you do 
get closer to your machine but it isn't a large technical challenge any more 
and for that we should be grateful. To borrow the cliche of Apple - for the 
most part "it just works!". Now stop mentioning the terminal unless you really 
need it. ;)

I will mention three packages that have had a particularly good year, all of 
them in the arts side of things. Blender, Krita and Godot. 

In the last decade Blender has gone from an interesting little 3D packaging to 
experiment with to a world leader in 3D rendering technology. The community 
kept it alive and now it is thriving. There have now been feature films made 
using this technology and the number of studios and users is exploding. This is 
a true testament to what free software can do and how it can help people a long 
way outside of the technical side.

Krita which started out as a one programmer project for digital painting is now 
getting major funding for additional features plus an entire community surround 
it. You can now easily find tutorials, lessons and even printed books on how to 
use this package. I think the folks over at Adobe are starting to worry about 
this contender and there is no way they can counter it... well unless they 
liberate the code to Photoshop under the GPL.

Godot is a video games engine/platform for 2D and 3D games and it has started 
to get a lot of traction, unfortunately in proprietary games but at least the 
technology base under it is free software. It has gone from a clunky little 
experiment to the darling of the indie games world with complex 3D shaders and 
ever increasing performance gains. I guess the price of $0 upfront and a Free 
code base does encourage people to gravitate to it over the other proprietary 
solutions.

On the hardware front, we are seeing the first steps back into the world of 
Free software phones. After the dream of the Ubuntu phone faded, the whole idea 
has been on the back burner for a few years now. Hardware costs have fallen 
dramatically and processor speeds/memory are now more than enough to all a free 
software OS to have a chance again.

The PinePhone64 and the Librem 5 are two that are looking to bring the dream 
back to life. Hardware is starting to appear in users/developers hands and it 
will be a while until we can consider these things ready as daily runners but 
these things looks like they will go the long yards.  

The big news this year however was not in software but the departure of Richard 
Stallman from the Free Software Foundation and his position at MIT. The 
situation was complicated and filled with all sorts of emotional issues that 
sit far outside of the Free software. It came as an unexpected blow to the 
community but we are resilient, we are more than just a fan club for one guy, 
we are a movement. I will not comment any further on this but I will take the 
sentiment of Stallman himself - even without him there, support the FSF and 
make it clear that they need to defend the rights of users. Freedom is 
important.

Now onto Free Software Melbourne.

This year we had a little experiment, instead of monthly meetings, we went for 
every second month for meetings. It was a bit more relaxing but the committee 
has decided it was maybe a little too relaxed. Next year we will be moving back 
to a monthly meetup schedule.

This is every 3rd Thursday of every month excluding September in which we will 
have the 16th - Software Freedom Day. So put the following dates in your 
calendar. We will still make announcements for this and do check on our email 
list as these are subject to change.

Thursday 16th January
Thursday 20th February
Thursday 19th March
Thursday 16th April
Thursday 21st May
Thursday 17th June
Thursday 16th July
Thursday 20th August
Saturday 19th September
Thursday 15th October
Thursday 19th November
December Dinner to be decided

The March meetup is a very important date. That will be the 10th anniversary of 
Free Software Melbourne. From two people meeting in a library, we have had a 
long and exciting history and we are only going to keep going from here.

There are plans in the pipeline for a couple of advocacy/activist campaigns 
over the next year, we won't so much be boycotting things - don't want to step 
on the Liberal parties toes - but we will be very informative to people. These 
won't just impact Australia but they will be things that are relevant globally. 
Stay Tuned.

There is a lot of work to be done but there is a lot of fun along the way, 
please join us in this journey.

Michael Verrenkamp

-- 
Committee Member Free Software Australia/Melbourne
Advocating for freedom in computer software.
www.freesoftware.org.au
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