On site at FOSS Vermont

THE NOD
Bryant Patten clearly knows how to throw a conference, and I personally want to thank him for doing just that. Thus, this nod to Bryant is sincere, heartfelt and will likely loose all credibility as this note progresses.

Moreover, Bryant did explicitly and courageously traveled north many hours in treacherous conditions to attend the VAGUE gathering at Signalz in February. While at this meeting he was well prepared with a flyer and indeed spoke eloquently on FOSSEDVT. Bryant made this point to me and I must agree with it. If there is anyone responsible for the lack of this being memorialized in VAGUE listserve traffic, this fault may fall on my shoulders, as I volunteered to stand in for Josh, our usual reporter at these meets.

Resara (http://www.resara.com) gets the nod for letting me use an EEEPro to write this report. Ever scurry around your house, taking care to wrap up the new boom headphone, spare laptop cord and actually forget the computer? It sucks to get old. Anyway I personally want to thank Warren and Brendan for all of their help to me particularly, and the Open Source Education community in general. They are steadfast in their support. So beyond a mere nod, the following is a shameless, naked, and transparent plug for this plucky pair. Call them at 888-357-9195 or 603-357-9195 or Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] or [EMAIL PROTECTED], when you do, tell them Flint sends his Kindest Regards.

That said, on to the meeting, held in the labyrinth basement lake level of the Lake Morley Resort. The austere snow and ice trappings of this dormant summer establishment kind of made me feel inside, like Jack of Kubrick's "Shining", a madman terrorizing a somnambulant reality. So besides being excellent, this facility clearly deserves an appropriate nod for pure style.

Eh, then I registered.

THE CHACHKAS
All Attendees got a gift bag. Gift bags must be a booming cottage industry, and Mr. Patten and crew procured wisely. My gift bag included:
 1.Neck Noose Name Tag Holder with a pen already attached.
 2.2 Gig Memory Stick (USB 2) hidden in the Name Tag Holder!
 3.A nifty clipboard with blue lined paper ready to go
 4.A Goofy calculator
 5.A Weird curled Plastic thing with no apparent purpose
 6.A Certificate of Attendance
 7.A CD with Windows versions of many open source programs in binary on
   it.

Sadly, the perpetual dream of good free network access was once again deferred. Brendan, a good man with Resara, and I tried to put one system online so that I could send my report in via SCP. Neither Ping, SCP nor SSH worked from the wifi connection of the EEEPro that Resara let me try out. This could be due to two things:
 1.All outbound ports on this network save 80 & 443 are masked
 2.Some kind of web based authentication needed to take place

Brendan and I thought the former, then towards the end of the conference, I saw a sign on the registration desk for something like a nocat (http://swik.net/nocat) gateway. If it was the latter, I would suggest stating this verbally at the opening, as many folks (take Brendan and me) are not so literate at 08:30 AM.

I need to stress this point in planning any Linux or Open Source gathering. Free, fast, easy, uncomplicated network access, be it wired or wireless is an absolute must have, not on the word of some banquet manager, but tested, documented supported and declared ready as a responsibility of the conference organizer. Nothing scares away geeks quicker than crappy network access.

An important side bar to network access is the lack of attention to the need to stream these types of conferences. If there was forward inspection of the network facilities, how hard would it be to arrange for streaming of the major events? Ubuntu in Boston had Polycom "Spider Phones" that appeared to do IP streaming natively. That said, these are Uber Geeks, and I could be wrong with how simple they made it seem. The good news was that there appears to be some attempt to iPod some of the content, stay tuned on this one.

THE FOOD
The food was fantastic. Now in deference to Trask, it may not be the stuff of legend that the NELS conference in Bath is, but it was very close.

Breakfast was comprised of a buffet of Cheese, Fresh Fruit, Coffee, Sweet Rolls served at the keynote. Very cool. The Fresh Fruit made me flash to Kaylee in the "Serenity" episode of the Firefly series (http://imdb.com/title/tt0579535/plotsummary) when the strawberries were deployed...oh my...

Lunch consisted of a buffet served in a nice dining room overlooking Lake Morley. Quite delicious, the highlights included; Salmon, cold cuts, hot and cold drinks and yummy deserts for the taking.

A snack was placed in the main area around 2:30, it was comprised of hot and cold drinks, excellent brownies and other light cake things. The coffee was good all around.

No doubt some of you would have me to consider the substance of this conference. Here I would merely point out that I did not chafe for creature comforts.

THE PRESENTATIONS
While not apparently planned this way, due to late arrivals, the keynote was in fact delivered by "The hardest working man in Open Source Education" Mr. David Trask. As I have shared a presentation stage in the past with him, I can tell you that being gracefully "late" and letting him cut loose in a solo rap is a very good thing for all involved.

DAVID TRASK

Dave was in his element, and his presentation was popular and his presentation style populist, folksy and available. He talked about his "Digital Natives" - his students, and the folks at his school and made us all envious of both his skill and energy. Dave used all the right words, some I knew and some I did not. I took notes and blushed inwardly when he pointed to me as a technical resource. Dave should be in the nod section, but he has his own conference coming up, and I reserve my nod of this event.

Keep in mind here that I can only talk about the stuff that I attended. There was much I missed; particularly telling was the conflict I felt between attending LTSP for Technicians and David Tisdell's presentation on Open Source music.

Bjorn "BJ" Bhrendt I chose LTSP for Technicians because I figured that this would be a very technical session, I wanted to know how technical this thing could get. I was actually pleased. Bjorn Bhrendt did an excellent presentation where he virtualized an Edubuntu server and client under VM ware. While I would have preferred Xen or VirtualBox, we did share some Ubuntu bash techniques. Bjorn's perspective was extra interesting because at the school where he teaches , he is afflicted with Active Directory and chafes under it. BJ has found in Hardy and other places a whole new way to make groups of computers talk in this Active Directory context. His unpretentious search for more and better places this presentation in a fine light. When I interrupted his lecture to suggest that he explain what a Media Access Control (MAC) address was, he asked by show of hands if everyone knew what this was. Apparently everyone knew. Cool session. Gonna load hardy on a virtual now.

DAVE TISDALE

While lurking around a corner in the labyrinth that is the basement of Lake Morely Resort (Video Game anyone?) I was fiercely pleased to confront Dave Tisdale, and used up a Magic Charm to lead him into an empty meeting room there, I was able to immobilize him in a web of deceit and innuendo and while thus feast off of his knowledge...

I began with my favorite Ubuntu Studio lament. The distro is 820 Meg just big enough that there is no way to fit it on a 700 Meg CD.

I talked to him about a project in the area of ecclesiastical service management that my patron showed interest in, and he suggested I look at Rosegarden (http://www.rosegardenmusic.com/). Dave continues kindly to point out that one would need ZynAddSubFX (http://apps.linuxaudio.org/apps/all/zynaddsubfx) in order to voice Rosegarden, and the trend apparently is that everything talks to Jack.

As I am currently working on a project where it turns out Dave's stuff might be developed into what I need for my sponsors long term system needs I scuttled away satisfied and happy. This type of pollinization is exactly what a conference like this should be about.

IAN LYNCH

The good news is that Ian uses Google Docs. The Disney flick, one of three somewhat related films Ian showed at the beginning of this presentation has caused me to consider once more "Thumper's Rule" (http://www.winepros.org/aftertaste/links_info-general.htm#thumper).

In my humble opinion, for a guy my age, he gave out a lot of questionable information. For instance, in his introduction, Ian stated the community owns open source code. In the Q&A at the end of his presentation I had to challenge this assertion and he corrected himself.

The theme of his talk was his current project "The Ingots" (http://www.theingots.org/). I found this presentation difficult for several reasons, some of which I will describe here.:
- His system appears to be Yet Another Moneymaking Scheme of Certification
  And Marginalization (YAMSCAM).  Ian and Bryant seem to be trying to
  figure out a way to make developers, and that is good.  This Ingot method
  is not the way.
- Having two login screens on the front, one for the"in" crowd and one
  for the "out" crowd is really silly.  Why not let group membership
  drive the after login result and not make people feel bad?
- Being shown, certification software with no Secure Sockets Layer
  login invites comment, which I suppressed.
- While the content of this site was interesting in kind of an alpha
  release way, I firmly believe that teaching Open Source is not about
  learning the limits of "fair use".
- The proposed "Certification as reward" system is fundamentally flawed.
  Developers are not like Skinnerian mice, willing to run the predictable
  maze of someone else's idea of the open source process, for a food
  pellet or a silly lapel pin, be it bronze, silver or gold.

My greatest fear is that this program could or would get hold of some young person with the potential to become a developer, and inoculate them from ever trying. The good news is that this really dramatized why you bring developers into an environment like this. If you want to expand the Code you need Developers. Thus your only choice is to Develop Developers.

The Ingots program (http://www.theingots.org) really puts Developers and Certification in an adversarial position. This is not to say that there is no way to resolve this, rather I believe that an organic approach to Developer education and lifelong life cycle support is the next big thing in the world. In our lives as Boomers Star Trek once asked us to "To boldly go where no man has gone before". Are the Ingots the ignoble end to this development dream or can we refractor these good intentions? Certainly not without the input of a Developer of two.

THE POINT

Conspicuous in absence from this conference was the lack of evaluation forms. No evaluation appears to have taken place after this conference. Keep in mind as a paying client, I felt entitled to evaluate this product. Conference evaluations are often held and disclosed in private. While I considered that approach I was sponsored into this conference by a client, so instead you and my patron and get this evaluation.

As a paying participant to an event such as this I have an entirely different attitude about the pluses and minuses than say a speaker or other invited guest does. Actually I like the fact that I am in a position to bend the laws of courtesy and speak plainly rather than cloak my comments in the syrupy sentiments of comity as would be demanded by the role of honored speaker or invited guest.

The following constituencies were represented at this conference. First are the group consumers, in the forms of Teachers, Students, and Administrators. Then come Vendors, in the form of exhibitors and sometimes, presenters. In a lot of ways this is a cross-section of that our society sees as the ultimate achievers. Markets are defined; products and services are supplied at a nominal price to everyone's profit. I felt like a cog in a closed source marketing machine.

My ultimate expectation is to feel like a participant in a process. Unfortunately this conference was like a a science fiction convention with no guest writers. I firmly believe that this is the crux of my colleague Rion D'luz's concern and advanced criticism. So finally my nod goes to the Developers, who would not have eaten too much, who as, selected invitees would have been forced to the role of courtesy, despite their natural disruptive anarchistic tendencies, and we could have gained much from their typically refreshing insights.

THE DEAL
Bryant, paying you to attend this event has placed me in a position that I shall exploit, that of being your customer. This has not been the easiest evaluation that you ever read, and I am fairly certain that while you may wish to respond with flame of your own, you will instead accept my invitation to meet on this subject as I have accepted your invitation to meet subsequent to this fine FOSSVT event. You have arrayed powerful resources that can work towards the good, or in mine and the opinions of many in our community continue into error.

I would ask the VAGUE community to allow us a panel discussion at their next regularly scheduled monthly meeting, Wednesday 16 April. The topic I would propose is "Developing the Developers who develop the Code", or "Coming in from the Cold".

Thanks to all for sticking with me on this tortured and perilous journey through what I suggest is reason.

Kindest Regards,


Paul flint


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Paul Flint
Barre Open Systems Institute
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http://www.bosivt.org
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