Open Source and Goa

Am leaving this afternoon for Goa, to speak at two events:

On Saturday, the 20th, I am speaking twice at the GEC Linux Conference (this link may be hard to reach). This is Goa’s first Linux event, and several out-station speakers (including Naba Kumar, Gopi Garge, Mahendra M., Kartik N. and me) will be giving talks there, apart from many Goa-based speakers.

On Monday, the 22nd, I am speaking at the Open for Business [PDF] at the Hotel Mandovi – an event organised by the Open Source Forum of India and the Goa Chamber of Commerce and Industry. Other speakers are Gopi Garge, Dr.Anil Seth, Dr.Gurunandan Bhat, Arvind Yadav and Sandeep Verenkar. If you are a business or government person and are interested in how Open Source could work for you, then attend this totally non-technical, business and government oriented seminar. Contact the GCCI [Phone: +91 (832) 2224223/2422635] if you are interested in attending.

I return to Bangalore on the 23rd evening. Only one day to hit the beaches – which is on Sunday.

PKR is getting married!!!!!!!!!!!!

What a thing to wake up to!

One of my closest friends, Prasanto Kumar Roy, aka PKR, is getting married to Moushumi sometime on the 19-21st of February. What a birthday present to get (my birthday is on the 20th of Feb)!!!!!!

PKR was the guy who tapped me on my shoulder sometime end-1992 and asked me to start writing for PC Quest (the column that eventually became COMversations), which became the basis for my “name and fame” (as you might call it). Now, as editor of DataQuest, he was also responsible for armwrestling me into starting to write again.

While his getting married may or may not be news in your world, it certainly is in mine, and very very happy news!

Congratulations, PKR – you have been through some amazing adventures in your lifetime – this is bound to be the best one!

The Corporate Eyeball trap

Recently, Open Source Definition Author Bruce Perens spoke about some of the threats facing Linux. He specifically pointed at things like software patents, which he rightfully identified as a real danger to any form of innovation and growth in Linux.

However, it isn’t the only one. There is another one – sneakily creeping up on the Open Source world, ready to bite – something I call the “Corporate Eyeball Trap”.

Read the rest of this entry…

Shanu’s Birthday Party

Saturday, the 13th, was double party time – once at office, and once at home.

The office occasion was a thank you party for the hard-working volunteers of Linux Bangalore/2003. Instead of a quick pat on the back during the closing ceremony, we felt that a pat on the tummy was equally warranted.

And so LB/2003 manager Prady contacted them all, and we (the managers and volunteers of LB/2003) assembled at Exocore’s offices, where we had a “Golf Course Pizza Party” (the area between the cubicles at Exocore is a wide swath of dense blue-gray carpet that we call the “Golf Course”). We ordered stacks of pizza from Dominos (who were only too glad to deliver outside their approved delivery area for such a huge order), Coke and Mountain Dew, and proceded to beat the volunteers into near-senselessness with food :) A good time was had by all, and somewhere along the way it turned into a massive CD burning party as well! Also in attendance was semi-starved Phenom band-member Mrinal, who, despite his lithe frame, put away an enormous amount of pizza!

Towards the end of the party, people discovered that it was also Shanu‘s birthday, which resulted in a cake appearing (and disappearing).

Many many thanks to all the volunteers, without whom the event wouldn’t have been possible!

Lots of photos here.

The second party used Shanu’s birthday as an excuse for a get-together by friends who really cared for each other, and instead of partying in a restaurant, we decided to give my lawn at home another workout.

The result was stacks of fabulous food from Catering Inn (the mutton curry was sheer heaven!), lots of inflammable liquids and Catering Inn’s patented Chocolate Mousse.

A late appearance by Mrinal (who just finished a gig with the Galeej Gurus) resulted in photographic evidence that he *can* dance! :) Of course, he was helped along by band-mates JD and Noella :)

Lots of gorgeous looking ladies all around, and I saw lots of guys sucking in their tummies (including me :) . One particular tall and goodlooking hunk was seen desperately trying to keep his sucked in, but every now and then, it slipped and showed. Luckily, he had his gorgeous lady around to divert attention. Ungrateful wretch that he was, he used the diversion to pile more mousse on his plate! :)

To put it bluntly – we had an absolute ball, with a lot of eating, joking, laughing, dancing and drinking happening into the wee hours of the night. Shanu got drunk as a skunk – and happy as a pig. Sony (who was responsible for planning and executing everything) and Jessie (who handled logistics like a champ – as usual) deserve a huge pat on the back for making it a party worth remembering. This party really showed what friends are really about.

Lots of photos here.

UPDATE: Lots more pictures added to the URL above – thanks, Kalyan!

LB/2003: Day 2

Day 2 of Linux Bangalore/2003 was more or less like day 1 – with a few differences.

One – I missed the morning half, thanks to ongoing illness. I can’t believe this – I work all year round for this event, and then go and miss half a day!

Luckily, no one missed me – the team took care of everything as usual.

Dragged myself out of bed by afternoon and headed to the event, only to find that one speaker had walked off for some reason. I turned around, saw Kalyan standing there (who had decided not to speak at the event), drafted him on the spot and he went and gave a talk which went off rather well.

Apart from that minor hiccup, things went smoothly. 35 talks scheduled, and 35 talks happened. We are still on our way to an Open Source event world record :)

More accounts to be found here, here, here, and in many other places.

We also got Slashdotted for a while when a top-level post about the conference shot huge traffic to the LB/2003 site. Hurray for Exocore maintained servers – it didn’t even flinch.

The night saw a mind-bending performance by Layatharanga, a local fusion music group. It was time that the hard-coding ruffians of the Open Source world got some culture, and they sure got it! :) It was amazing!

Tomorrow is the last day, and ends with a performance by Phenom. Let’s keep all fingers crossed that things go smooth!

Stay tuned!

LB/2003: Day 1

And so ends Day 1 of India’s (Asia’s?) biggest Linux and Open Source event.

And what a day it has been. So many things that happened, so many stories to be told.

It actually started last night when one of our star speakers – Harald Welte (the iptables guye) reported from Mumbai that thanks to a delayed incoming flight, he missed his Mumbai-Bangalore connection. Panic all around, since he was scheduled to speak today! Luckily there was a 3 a.m. flight to Bnagalore, so he caught that, was received by Kishore here, and transported to his hotel. That man is inhuman – he travels 36 hours, gets into his hotel at 5am, and SMSs me at 8:30am asking what time he can come to the event! Heck, even *I* was still sleeping! ;-)

IAC, I woke up this morning, all set to give my talk (the first talk of the day). Small problem – I had lost my voice! Desperate gargling restored some of it, but it was still bad. The fever and cough didn’t help either.

Reached venue to find snaking queues out onto the road. We registered more people on day 1 than all of LB/2002. Go figure. And from experience I can tell you that people will be registering all of day 2 and day 3 as well.

Heath throbbing, throat aching – debated whether to speak. Called Gopi and asked whether he could do the talk, he agreed. Then I did something stupid – I went and spoke anyway.

Please remind me never to do that again – I was running a temperature again by the time I started, and halfway through the talk had to do some play-acting to get a paracetamol tablet into my mouth in the guise of looking at the big screen and feigning surprise. But nothing helped, and my talk wasn’t anywhere near effective. Bleh.

Thankfully, Nat Friendman and Miguel de Icaza took up the slack after my talk, and hugely entertained the crowds. Apart from one minor boo-boo by Nat (“This is the second time I am at this event, last time it was still called BangLinux” – which was of course a completely different event, being the closed source commercial equivalent to our community-driven Open Source event), their talk went off like a three ring circus. Seeing Nat and Miguel on stage doing the ping pong brough back nostaligic memories of me and Kishore doing this almost a decade ago, with great success.

I did the morning session in full suit because sometimes press descends on me at such events. No such thing happened, and I went home to change into working clothes (jeans and T-Shirt) and promptly got nabbed by the press. Ah well.

Reports from the various halls were great – apart from one speaker who got cold feet in the last moment and didnt show up, all halls were reporting full capacity, and ecstatic audiences. Shanu’s talk in the morning was bursting at the seams, and he was tickled to death being called “sir”.

Harald’s talks reported maximum capacity crush – the 250 seater hall had 350 people in it – to a point that when he tried to go in for his second talk, he couldn’t get in! ;-)

The afternoon sessions went like clockworks. Punch & Judy…oops… Nat & Miguel regaled crowds again in the afternoon, while we battled network issues. A rogue wifi access point somewhere on the premises was grabbing all notebooks attention – to the point that Harald had to crack into it to disable it, so that our access point was reachable again :) Note to self – Linksys routers ship by default insecure! Second note to self – try and find that blasted thing tomorrow!


The expo is a hit – exhibitors are generally reporting happiness. Interesting scenario – with all halls full (and I mean *FULL*, like no aisle space available either), the expo was *crowded* with people! Last year, during the talks, the corridors were ghost towns, since everyone was in the halls listening to talks. From that you can guess just how many people are attending the event (official total seating capacity of the venue is 1250 seats, not counting aisles).

All in all, the day went surprisingly well (apart from my feeling like hell and muffing my talk) – 29 talks happened on schedule, with one no-show. 35 scheduled for tomorrow, 31 on the day after that, for a total of 96 scheduled talks – I am told that this is some kind of world record.

One thing really that got me was this: since the Government of India, through the Ministry of Communication and Information Technology, is the principal sponsor of the event, we have a stall dead centre for them, in which we have a huge poster of President Kalam and his now world famous speech endorsing open source for India. If you watch the stall, you will see that people passing it invariably stop, read the entire thing, smile proudly, sometimes pumping fists. I even saw one guy standing before it and saluting, and lots of people taking pictures of themselves in front of it. People are obviously extremely proud of President Kalam.

In the evening, we showed the movie “Revolution OS” which was loved by everyone. At one point we had to restart the movie when we realised that Harald was holding 350 people “hostage” in the 250 seater.

After that, a bunch of us rolled to my house where we tiredly ate dinner, and mysteriously lots of beer and Goan Feni appeared. A rollicking time was had by all, except for people who chose to disappear earlier to a pub.

I’ll try and upload some photos tomorrow. Now it is time to crash.