Jonathan Oxer
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Blog > Linux Australia President's update
>> Linux Australia President's update
Fri, Apr 29th 9:48am 2005: Linux
[Pasted from the email I sent to the linux-aus list]
Hello World,
When the new Committee had our first face-to-face meeting in Sydney in February we resolved to make some procedural changes that would make the operation of the organisation more transparent. I hoped that with those changes it wouldn't be necessary to do regular "From The President" updates since everyone would know what was going on already, but talking to a bunch of people at LCA has shown that many of the things LA does are still rather behind-the-scenes so I thought I'd take this opportunity to do a brief status report. I know that personally I had no idea of the true extent of LA activity until I joined the Committee, and I suspect many other members aren't aware of many of these initiatives either.
Turns out the list of things LA is involved with is quite long (grab yourself a coffee and a biscuit, you'll need it!) so I'll just touch on each item briefly. People involved with each specific item should feel free to elaborate, and if you're at all interested in any of these areas please say so.
linux.conf.au 2005
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As expected, LCA totally rocked! Steven Hanley and his team pulled off an awesome conference that fully lived up to the expectations built up by previous years. They maintained the high standard in relation to top notch speakers and threw in a couple of fantastic twists, including a 1GB memory stick given away in every session, an IBM X40 laptop given away each day, hot-air balloon flights for any speakers who felt so inclined, video recording and streaming from all sessions, and a very well run wireless network that covered the entire venue. The showbags were packed with more schwag than anyone expected and generally a great time was had by all.
Rusty did his traditional and very entertaining T-shirt auction at the conference dinner with over $2000 raised for Sids And Kids, and was himself made the inaugural winner of the annual "Rusty Wrench" award, dreamed up by Jeff Waugh to honour those who make outstanding contributions to the FOSS community. Eben Moglen received a standing ovation for his "footnote" presentation on intellectual property, Tridge demonstrated how to implement a BitKeeper client in a single line of shell without any prior knowledge of the protocol, Mark Shuttleworth made us all jealous with tales of his trip to the space station, and Rasmus worked tirelessly to deliver an entire day of PHP wisdom before easily winning a beer-chugging competition (much to jdub's amusement, who commented "ah, *now* I understand PHP!").
I'd like to publicly thank Steven and the rest of his team (lca2005.linux.org.au/people.php) for all the time and effort they put in over the last 14+ months to deliver such a great conference experience.
I could write a whole report just on LCA, but there has been plenty of coverage in the media already so I won't go on now. Feedback and comments from those who attended is welcome: please share photo gallery URLs and stories with the list, or you can direct specific feedback to feedback@lca2005.linux.org.au.
linux.conf.au 2006
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mike Beattie is the man with the mission, and he's working hard to get everything ready for LCA in Dunedin next year. He's rounded up a bunch of volunteers and booked the venue, and next month representatives of LA and several previous LCAs will meet his team in Dunedin for the annual Ghosts Of Conferences Past session where he'll learn the painful reality of the hot water he's got himself into ;-)
There's not much up yet, but keep an eye on lca2006.linux.org.au to see how things are coming along. Personally I'm itching to get there and with LCA being held later than usual this year we now have an unusually short gap until Dunedin. January 2006 is not that far away, so I hope you've got your skates on Mike!
Community Code
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Community Code is an initiative to allow those receiving Newstart unemployment benefits to work on FOSS projects and have the time they spend counted toward their Mutual Obligation benefit, while also building up experience and references that can be used when applying for jobs.
Matthew Palmer did a well-received lightning talk at LCA explaining what it's all about, with his talk receiving media coverage in The Australian and other places. A very motivated team of FOSS developers has been working to put the scheme into place for a little while but in order to fulfil the requirements of the Federal "Community Work" placements for the Newstart allowance it needed a legal identity and insurance cover. Linux Australia is providing that structure with the Community Code group forming a sub-committee under LA, allowing them to make use of our insurance cover and other benefits.
It's early days yet but this looks like a great scheme and I'm really excited to see where it goes. Check out www.communitycode.org for more info.
Grant Scheme
~~~~~~~~~~~~
The LA Grant Scheme has been around for a while now but it's been fairly inefficient so far in giving away money. The concept of the scheme is for LA to provide funding for specific projects related to furthering the interests of the local FOSS community. That sounds fine in theory, but in practice it's remarkably hard to decide who is a worthy recipient of the funds and at what level to set the requirements.
In our current budget we have $2000 / month allocated to the Grant Scheme but we've fallen way short of disbursing the budgeted amount. I feel this is a scheme which has fantastic potential but at the moment is not being utilised as well as it could be, and perhaps we need to open up discussion about what the scheme is intended to achieve and what the guidelines should be for acceptable recipients. More info can be found at www.linux.org.au/projects/grants and if you know of a cause that could benefit from LA funding please speak up.
Planet Linux Australia
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
linux.conf.au 2004 head honcho and past LA Committee member Michael Davies recently put together a Planet blog aggregator which includes feeds from many Australian FOSS developers, and it's a great way to keep track of what's going on in the local developer community. If you want to know what people are up to I highly recommend you head on over to http://planet.linux.org.au and take a look.
Open Source Forums
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
LA Vice-President Pia Waugh (congrats on the wedding Pia and Jeff!) has been busily rounding up speakers and delegates for a series of very successful Open Source Forums which focus on specific topics of interest to the business community.
The first forum examined the issue of software patents, and was followed up by a forum regarding Linux on the desktop. Pia is very enthusiastic (is she ever anything else?) about continuing the forums with other topics such as open-source business methods. If you'd like to see an Open Source Forum come to your city make sure you get in touch with Pia (pia@linux.org.au) and check the project status at www.linux.org.au/projects/forums/.
The Open Source Forums are a great way for LA to make contact with businesses and make them aware of the issues that face the FOSS community.
"Free" Trade Agreement
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Oh my, where to begin with this one? Rusty Russell has put in a huge amount of work wading through the changes wrought by the AU-US FTA, and has spent more time learning lawyer-speak than any self-respecting programmer should have to. However, this is an issue that won't just go away if we stick our heads in the sand so it's critical that we understand how it will impact our community and what, if anything, we can do about it.
As FOSS developers we should already be well attuned to the importance of personal freedom, and legal changes that threaten to reduce our freedom to develop software should be recognised as a challenge to the very basis of our community. This is an area which I personally know far less about than I should and I'm sure many other developers feel overwhelmed by it as well. LA has an information page at www.linux.org.au/projects/fta/ which provides a good introduction to the issues and includes a number of suggestions for specific things you can do to help fight for your freedom.
This is an area which really gets under my skin. The idea that I could be legally prevented from sitting down at my computer and writing whatever code comes into my head seems to me very much like an erosion of the right to free speech. If I'm not copying someone else's code or writing software to do something illegal, why should I be stopped from writing it? Why should I have to spend thousands of dollars to do a patent search to find out if I'm even allowed to write a piece of code? Rather than foster innovation as they were intended to do, patents are having the opposite effect within the software industry and are crippling our ability to be creative.
Software patents and associated IP nastiness is very bad news for the entire software industry, and I strongly encourage you to learn more about the issues and get involved in the ways suggested on the information page.
Media Training
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As FOSS moves further into the mainstream the development community is coming under more media scrutiny than ever. To help high-profile members of our community do a good job of representing us to the press LA has funded a couple of media training courses for a number of interested people including LCA organisers, some LA committee members, and various FOSS developers. The latest training day was run last Wednesday during LCA and was a great success.
We're now considering running more media training courses to allow other FOSS developers to take part, and are also considering running advocacy courses as well. If you're interested in taking part in a future media training or advocacy course please start jumping up and down now. Oh, and maybe send an email to the list as well ;-)
AGM [!]Success
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I don't want to go into this in detail right now, but something we need to do some work on in coming months is an examination of the election process that was followed at the last AGM. The objective of moving to an online process was to allow greater community participation but due to a couple of teething problems such as lack of a reminder at the start of the voting period there were very few votes cast.
My personal feeling is that we should continue with an online election process after making some procedural changes to ensure everyone is clearly informed each step of the way, and there were some good suggestions made at LCA about ways to get the best of both approaches: the personal contact possible through having the AGM and election at LCA, combined with the accessibility of an online election process. I'll seek feedback on this in the coming months but it's not a burning issue right at this moment. Getting it sorted out before the next AGM is important, but we've got a lot of time left yet and other burning issues to concentrate on.
State Reps
~~~~~~~~~~
Each state has been assigned an LA Committee member who is responsible for maintaining contact with LUGS and representing them to the rest of the Committee. Since there was a bit of doubling-up of locations the assignments don't all follow the state of origin of each member. Details of the state-reps program are on the LA website at www.linux.org.au/australia/lug-comms.php but the names are out of date so if someone with sufficient access (ie: not me!) to make changes to the site could make the necessary changes to the list I'd appreciate it.
Donation Processing
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mark Tearle and Anthony Towns have been working on a project to allow LA to accept donations on behalf of Australian FOSS projects and developers. LA is already holding funds on behalf of Debian and Samba, and many FOSS projects have no legal structure within Australia or the facilities to accept donations online so Mark and Anthony have put in place a system to allow LA to accept donations on their behalf and disburse the funds as the project directs. The system is still in early stages but if you are interested in having LA accept donations on behalf of your project please check out the details at www.linux.org.au/projects/donations/
LPI
~~~
At LCA this year we had the honour of a visit from Mark Miller of Linux Professional Institute. LPI is a community-driven organisation that provides multi-level professional certification for Linux developers and sysadmins worldwide, and LA has partnered with LPI as their local representative. Last year LA paid for a number of Aussies to be certified as proctors, allowing them to oversee the testing process and making LPI exams more easily accessible to local developers and sysadmins.
As Linux moves further into the mainstream we are going to see increased demand for certified practitioners as organisations look to hire Linux experts. No matter what the sceptical among us may think of the ability of certification to demonstrate actual skill or knowledge, the reality is that certification is relied on very heavily by recruitment agencies and non-technical employers since they have no other way to separate the real experts from the wannabees. Having some form of Linux certification will become increasingly important in coming years and from what I've seen the LPI examination process is very well done, providing a real test of ability rather than just a rubber-stamp approval of memorised answers like some other certifications. The examination content has been developed in collaboration with the FOSS community and is a real test even for experienced sysadmins. A large part of the reason for Mark's visit was to recruit local developers interested in providing input into the next round of revisions of the examination material, making sure the exams really do accurately represent what the community thinks should be tested.
You can find out more about LPI at www.lpi.org, and if you're interested in taking an exam, becoming a proctor, or just finding out more about it please make yourself heard.
Task Tracker
~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Linux Australia task tracker has been running for a little while now at www.linux.org.au/tasks. There are categories for a bunch of things such as Grant Proposals, LCA2006, LPI Certification, and Accounts, so it's a great way to see what things the organisation is up to. As we go on more issues will be added to the task tracker and it will start to provide a more comprehensive overview of LA operations. The system allows users to attach comments to specific tasks so please register yourself and get involved if there's anything there that grabs your
attention.
There are other topics I could talk about as well but I think I need to rest my fingers for a while! If any of the topics above has caught your attention *please* say so on the list. I'd love to see this update spark discussions about every single topic I've raised, and if there are any other areas you think LA should become involved in I'd welcome your input on that as well.
[Pasted from the email I sent to the linux-aus list]
Hello World,
When the new Committee had our first face-to-face meeting in Sydney in February we resolved to make some procedural changes that would make the operation of the organisation more transparent. I hoped that with those changes it wouldn't be necessary to do regular "From The President" updates since everyone would know what was going on already, but talking to a bunch of people at LCA has shown that many of the things LA does are still rather behind-the-scenes so I thought I'd take this opportunity to do a brief status report. I know that personally I had no idea of the true extent of LA activity until I joined the Committee, and I suspect many other members aren't aware of many of these initiatives either.
Turns out the list of things LA is involved with is quite long (grab yourself a coffee and a biscuit, you'll need it!) so I'll just touch on each item briefly. People involved with each specific item should feel free to elaborate, and if you're at all interested in any of these areas please say so.
linux.conf.au 2005
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As expected, LCA totally rocked! Steven Hanley and his team pulled off an awesome conference that fully lived up to the expectations built up by previous years. They maintained the high standard in relation to top notch speakers and threw in a couple of fantastic twists, including a 1GB memory stick given away in every session, an IBM X40 laptop given away each day, hot-air balloon flights for any speakers who felt so inclined, video recording and streaming from all sessions, and a very well run wireless network that covered the entire venue. The showbags were packed with more schwag than anyone expected and generally a great time was had by all.
Rusty did his traditional and very entertaining T-shirt auction at the conference dinner with over $2000 raised for Sids And Kids, and was himself made the inaugural winner of the annual "Rusty Wrench" award, dreamed up by Jeff Waugh to honour those who make outstanding contributions to the FOSS community. Eben Moglen received a standing ovation for his "footnote" presentation on intellectual property, Tridge demonstrated how to implement a BitKeeper client in a single line of shell without any prior knowledge of the protocol, Mark Shuttleworth made us all jealous with tales of his trip to the space station, and Rasmus worked tirelessly to deliver an entire day of PHP wisdom before easily winning a beer-chugging competition (much to jdub's amusement, who commented "ah, *now* I understand PHP!").
I'd like to publicly thank Steven and the rest of his team (lca2005.linux.org.au/people.php) for all the time and effort they put in over the last 14+ months to deliver such a great conference experience.
I could write a whole report just on LCA, but there has been plenty of coverage in the media already so I won't go on now. Feedback and comments from those who attended is welcome: please share photo gallery URLs and stories with the list, or you can direct specific feedback to feedback@lca2005.linux.org.au.
linux.conf.au 2006
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mike Beattie is the man with the mission, and he's working hard to get everything ready for LCA in Dunedin next year. He's rounded up a bunch of volunteers and booked the venue, and next month representatives of LA and several previous LCAs will meet his team in Dunedin for the annual Ghosts Of Conferences Past session where he'll learn the painful reality of the hot water he's got himself into ;-)
There's not much up yet, but keep an eye on lca2006.linux.org.au to see how things are coming along. Personally I'm itching to get there and with LCA being held later than usual this year we now have an unusually short gap until Dunedin. January 2006 is not that far away, so I hope you've got your skates on Mike!
Community Code
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Community Code is an initiative to allow those receiving Newstart unemployment benefits to work on FOSS projects and have the time they spend counted toward their Mutual Obligation benefit, while also building up experience and references that can be used when applying for jobs.
Matthew Palmer did a well-received lightning talk at LCA explaining what it's all about, with his talk receiving media coverage in The Australian and other places. A very motivated team of FOSS developers has been working to put the scheme into place for a little while but in order to fulfil the requirements of the Federal "Community Work" placements for the Newstart allowance it needed a legal identity and insurance cover. Linux Australia is providing that structure with the Community Code group forming a sub-committee under LA, allowing them to make use of our insurance cover and other benefits.
It's early days yet but this looks like a great scheme and I'm really excited to see where it goes. Check out www.communitycode.org for more info.
Grant Scheme
~~~~~~~~~~~~
The LA Grant Scheme has been around for a while now but it's been fairly inefficient so far in giving away money. The concept of the scheme is for LA to provide funding for specific projects related to furthering the interests of the local FOSS community. That sounds fine in theory, but in practice it's remarkably hard to decide who is a worthy recipient of the funds and at what level to set the requirements.
In our current budget we have $2000 / month allocated to the Grant Scheme but we've fallen way short of disbursing the budgeted amount. I feel this is a scheme which has fantastic potential but at the moment is not being utilised as well as it could be, and perhaps we need to open up discussion about what the scheme is intended to achieve and what the guidelines should be for acceptable recipients. More info can be found at www.linux.org.au/projects/grants and if you know of a cause that could benefit from LA funding please speak up.
Planet Linux Australia
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
linux.conf.au 2004 head honcho and past LA Committee member Michael Davies recently put together a Planet blog aggregator which includes feeds from many Australian FOSS developers, and it's a great way to keep track of what's going on in the local developer community. If you want to know what people are up to I highly recommend you head on over to http://planet.linux.org.au and take a look.
Open Source Forums
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
LA Vice-President Pia Waugh (congrats on the wedding Pia and Jeff!) has been busily rounding up speakers and delegates for a series of very successful Open Source Forums which focus on specific topics of interest to the business community.
The first forum examined the issue of software patents, and was followed up by a forum regarding Linux on the desktop. Pia is very enthusiastic (is she ever anything else?) about continuing the forums with other topics such as open-source business methods. If you'd like to see an Open Source Forum come to your city make sure you get in touch with Pia (pia@linux.org.au) and check the project status at www.linux.org.au/projects/forums/.
The Open Source Forums are a great way for LA to make contact with businesses and make them aware of the issues that face the FOSS community.
"Free" Trade Agreement
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Oh my, where to begin with this one? Rusty Russell has put in a huge amount of work wading through the changes wrought by the AU-US FTA, and has spent more time learning lawyer-speak than any self-respecting programmer should have to. However, this is an issue that won't just go away if we stick our heads in the sand so it's critical that we understand how it will impact our community and what, if anything, we can do about it.
As FOSS developers we should already be well attuned to the importance of personal freedom, and legal changes that threaten to reduce our freedom to develop software should be recognised as a challenge to the very basis of our community. This is an area which I personally know far less about than I should and I'm sure many other developers feel overwhelmed by it as well. LA has an information page at www.linux.org.au/projects/fta/ which provides a good introduction to the issues and includes a number of suggestions for specific things you can do to help fight for your freedom.
This is an area which really gets under my skin. The idea that I could be legally prevented from sitting down at my computer and writing whatever code comes into my head seems to me very much like an erosion of the right to free speech. If I'm not copying someone else's code or writing software to do something illegal, why should I be stopped from writing it? Why should I have to spend thousands of dollars to do a patent search to find out if I'm even allowed to write a piece of code? Rather than foster innovation as they were intended to do, patents are having the opposite effect within the software industry and are crippling our ability to be creative.
Software patents and associated IP nastiness is very bad news for the entire software industry, and I strongly encourage you to learn more about the issues and get involved in the ways suggested on the information page.
Media Training
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As FOSS moves further into the mainstream the development community is coming under more media scrutiny than ever. To help high-profile members of our community do a good job of representing us to the press LA has funded a couple of media training courses for a number of interested people including LCA organisers, some LA committee members, and various FOSS developers. The latest training day was run last Wednesday during LCA and was a great success.
We're now considering running more media training courses to allow other FOSS developers to take part, and are also considering running advocacy courses as well. If you're interested in taking part in a future media training or advocacy course please start jumping up and down now. Oh, and maybe send an email to the list as well ;-)
AGM [!]Success
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I don't want to go into this in detail right now, but something we need to do some work on in coming months is an examination of the election process that was followed at the last AGM. The objective of moving to an online process was to allow greater community participation but due to a couple of teething problems such as lack of a reminder at the start of the voting period there were very few votes cast.
My personal feeling is that we should continue with an online election process after making some procedural changes to ensure everyone is clearly informed each step of the way, and there were some good suggestions made at LCA about ways to get the best of both approaches: the personal contact possible through having the AGM and election at LCA, combined with the accessibility of an online election process. I'll seek feedback on this in the coming months but it's not a burning issue right at this moment. Getting it sorted out before the next AGM is important, but we've got a lot of time left yet and other burning issues to concentrate on.
State Reps
~~~~~~~~~~
Each state has been assigned an LA Committee member who is responsible for maintaining contact with LUGS and representing them to the rest of the Committee. Since there was a bit of doubling-up of locations the assignments don't all follow the state of origin of each member. Details of the state-reps program are on the LA website at www.linux.org.au/australia/lug-comms.php but the names are out of date so if someone with sufficient access (ie: not me!) to make changes to the site could make the necessary changes to the list I'd appreciate it.
Donation Processing
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mark Tearle and Anthony Towns have been working on a project to allow LA to accept donations on behalf of Australian FOSS projects and developers. LA is already holding funds on behalf of Debian and Samba, and many FOSS projects have no legal structure within Australia or the facilities to accept donations online so Mark and Anthony have put in place a system to allow LA to accept donations on their behalf and disburse the funds as the project directs. The system is still in early stages but if you are interested in having LA accept donations on behalf of your project please check out the details at www.linux.org.au/projects/donations/
LPI
~~~
At LCA this year we had the honour of a visit from Mark Miller of Linux Professional Institute. LPI is a community-driven organisation that provides multi-level professional certification for Linux developers and sysadmins worldwide, and LA has partnered with LPI as their local representative. Last year LA paid for a number of Aussies to be certified as proctors, allowing them to oversee the testing process and making LPI exams more easily accessible to local developers and sysadmins.
As Linux moves further into the mainstream we are going to see increased demand for certified practitioners as organisations look to hire Linux experts. No matter what the sceptical among us may think of the ability of certification to demonstrate actual skill or knowledge, the reality is that certification is relied on very heavily by recruitment agencies and non-technical employers since they have no other way to separate the real experts from the wannabees. Having some form of Linux certification will become increasingly important in coming years and from what I've seen the LPI examination process is very well done, providing a real test of ability rather than just a rubber-stamp approval of memorised answers like some other certifications. The examination content has been developed in collaboration with the FOSS community and is a real test even for experienced sysadmins. A large part of the reason for Mark's visit was to recruit local developers interested in providing input into the next round of revisions of the examination material, making sure the exams really do accurately represent what the community thinks should be tested.
You can find out more about LPI at www.lpi.org, and if you're interested in taking an exam, becoming a proctor, or just finding out more about it please make yourself heard.
Task Tracker
~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Linux Australia task tracker has been running for a little while now at www.linux.org.au/tasks. There are categories for a bunch of things such as Grant Proposals, LCA2006, LPI Certification, and Accounts, so it's a great way to see what things the organisation is up to. As we go on more issues will be added to the task tracker and it will start to provide a more comprehensive overview of LA operations. The system allows users to attach comments to specific tasks so please register yourself and get involved if there's anything there that grabs your
attention.
There are other topics I could talk about as well but I think I need to rest my fingers for a while! If any of the topics above has caught your attention *please* say so on the list. I'd love to see this update spark discussions about every single topic I've raised, and if there are any other areas you think LA should become involved in I'd welcome your input on that as well.
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