IEC Open Source Mela

Two great talks to wrap up

Wednesday Mar 26, 2008

Two great talks wrapped up the mela today:

  • "Digital Colonization and Open Source Technologies" by Dr. Jaijit Bhattacharya
  • "Why free and open source software?" by Prof. Andrew Lynn

Both the talks offered a whole new perspective to think about free and open source software. The talks focused on using open source software to reach out to more people. Dr. Jaijit's talk covered patents and intellectual property with lot of interesting anecdotes. Prof. Andrew talked about why open source is just great. These presentations generated a lot of audience questions too.

This was followed by Open Source TV and "lucky-dip". Two lucky winners walked away with iPod Shuffle. Enjoy the closing moments of open source mela right here:

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IEC open source mela - Welcome to Day 2

Wednesday Mar 26, 2008

Welcome to day 2 of open source mela. Day 2 started with a presentation from Joe George on "What every Sun employee should know about open source?". The presentation covered basics of open source and also addressed common myths about open source. Building and interacting with communities were also part of the presentation. The audience had lot of questions on legal/copyright aspects.

Some pictures from day 2:

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The winning open source captions

Wednesday Mar 26, 2008

Here are the winning open source captions:

  • "Source-related" (contributed by Gopalakrishnan Sankaran): Freedom Matters, May the source be you, Let the source be you, May the source be yours, Let the source be yours
  • Contributed by Amol Chiplunkar: "Open Source Mela, IEC 2008... a chance to find your lost siblings"
  • Contributed by Saurabh Vyas:
    • Come all! Join the bandwagon of open source and add in your bit for this participation age!!
    • OpenSource Mela - Calling all the hackers of the IEC: experience, explore & share

List of prize winners:

  1. Gopal Krishnan Sankaran
  2. Venkatraman C S
  3. Rohan Ranade
List of consolation prize winners:
  1. Srinivas K G
  2. Saurabh Vyas
  3. Amol Chiplunkar

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Open source mela prize winners

Tuesday Mar 25, 2008

The prize distribution ceremony at the end of day 1 was a gala event. Watch this space for the names of winners. But you can enjoy the photos for now :-)

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Creativity at work

Tuesday Mar 25, 2008

If you have been wondering who got so creative with the open source mela posters and e-mails, meet the creative engineers of IEC - Pallavi Madhusudhan & Manu Samuel. It's not an easy task to design these posters or come up with e-mails soliciting participation. These posters have to convey the essence of open source, and at the same time must be catchy too. They had to fit this task in between their regular work and deliver them at short notice. Thank you so much, Pallavi and Manu!

Take a look at one of the posters they designed. This poster invites contributions for the mad-ads contest.


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Day 1: The second half

Tuesday Mar 25, 2008

The second half of Day 1 is currently underway. Usually, enthusiasm dies down post-lunch. But just the opposite seems to be happening in IEC. Highlights from the second half of the day:

  • Gamers queueing up to play Quake III Arena
  • Big crowd to learn more about Sun SPOT
  • Sessions filled up with just standing space for late-comers
  • High level of participation in contests and quizzes

It's a packed schedule on both the days for IEC engineers.

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IEC Gaming Mela

Tuesday Mar 25, 2008

The fun part of the open source mela is gaming. See this video of IEC engineers enjoying the multi-player Quake III Arena.

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Open source mela (Moments of Day 1)

Tuesday Mar 25, 2008

This blog captures just 33% of the excitement! A bird's eye view of what happened so far. There are at least three parallel sessions going on at any point of time, so I am trying to report from what I attended. This is just 33% of the excitement.

Day 1 of the open source mela started at 10am today. KNR gave a presentation on the open source efforts going on in IEC. He talked about the "open source culture" and the importance of thinking and being in the open. The hall started filling in as soon as KNR started to talk. This was followed by Harish's talk on open source technologies.

At 11am, there was an interesting talk by SaiSatish Vedam on "Architectures, Code, and Law". Sai talked about copyrights, controlled environments, and coding. In a proprietary software environment, there is an inherent copyright associated with the code we create (and the comments on the source code). The software industry is at a crossroads in terms of our understanding of the legal aspects of coding. This is not so straightforward unlike other industries. A lot of real-life examples helped the audience relate to what Sai talked about. Open source software comes to the software industry's rescue in these cases. In the ground floor conference room, Suvendu Ray talked about Sun's open source initiative and gave tips on how to participate in the open source programs. Incidentally, Suvendu is also one of the "think tanks" of Sun's open source agenda in IEC.

The 4th floor yoga room and cafeteria were abuzz with activity. Participants tried their luck on "how much do you know about Sun" quizzes and got a chance to talk to the engineers working on today's bleeding edge technologies.

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Open source mela begins today

Tuesday Mar 25, 2008

The open source mela begins today. The IEC Times carried a news article this morning.

 

Prof. Andrew Lynn on open source

Tuesday Mar 25, 2008

Prof. Andrew Lynn of JNU, a very active crusader of open source will be in IEC to talk about "Why is open source important?".

As per Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz, "No amount of fear can stop the rise of free media, or free software (they are the same, after all). The community is vastly more innovative and powerful than a single company. And you will never turn back the clock on elementary school students and developing economies and aid agencies and fledgling universities - or the Fortune 500 - that have found value in the wisdom of the open source community. Open standards and open source software are literally changing the face of the planet - creating opportunity wherever the network can reach." 

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Open source review process

Tuesday Mar 25, 2008

Bhavna Singh is providing in-house process expertise for open source.

When a product is planning to go open source, there are a lot of things to take care of. License restrictions and infringements are just two of them. How would you like if somone provides the required help to walk you through the whole process? Bhavna Singh provides this much needed expertise for IEC product teams. Hear Bhavna talk about open source review process.

Open source is the ideal development and business model for today's massively connected Participation Age economy. Why? Because it offers freedom to every user and developer by encouraging genuinely collaborative innovation. Open source software can lower customer barriers to: access, switching costs, and greater value achieved in an environment that allows for increased participation and competition. Companies gain compensation for their innovations by building on the contributions of others. Click here for more information.

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Campus Ambassadors and Sun SPOT kits

Monday Mar 24, 2008

I got a chance to talk to Ganesh Hiregoudar, Program Manager for CA (Campus Ambassador) program about Sun SPOT kits. For starters, this wikipedia entry on Sun SPOTs might help.

More on Sun SPOTs and CAs:

  • Currently, all CAs in India have Sun SPOT kits
  • A few Sun SPOT kits are used for open source initiative programs and IEC lab "green" initiative
  • Demos using Sun SPOT kits were showcased in Sun Tech Days, including Robocar.
  • CA tech leads have created a module on Sun SPOTs for training
  • Discussion held with IIT professors on leveraging Sun SPOT kits for student projects

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You are the next open source hero!

Monday Mar 24, 2008

Seen in the IEC lobby:

A poster inviting Sun engineers to attend open source mela!

Open source projects are primarily community driven, although companies may make commercial products from these projects. Open source projects encourage everyone in the community to contribute their knowledge and expertise and, in turn, everyone in the community benefits. For example, when the community contributes enhancement requests or submits bug reports, fixes or enhancements are implemented to improve the tools, and everyone benefits. Example: Because NetBeans is open source, you can influence what happens to the IDE and the direction for NetBeans' future growth. Click here for more information.

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Zoram Thanga speaks

Monday Mar 24, 2008

Zoram Thanga has been with Sun for seven years, and is currently an engineer in the Solaris Cluster Development Group. Zoram has a master's degree in Physics from IIT Kanpur and a master's degree in CS from IIT Kharagpur. He likes to play instrumental rock guitar in his spare time.

Hear Zoram talk about Open High Availability Cluster (OHAC), the open-source code base of Solaris Cluster. Solaris Cluster includes the core clustering framework, a suite of HA agents for various applications, an automated test framework, and a disaster recovery extension. Zoram will talk on:

  • Introduction to OpenHA cluster
  • How to get involved in OHAC?
  • Online resources for more information

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Using NetBeans to build applications

Monday Mar 24, 2008

An interesting talk on NetBeans awaits those who are planning to attend the open source mela. This talk on NetBeans (intended primarily for engineers) by Rohan Ranade covers:

  • NetBeans platform and architecture aspects
  • Using NetBeans to build applications

This talk will be followed by a demo on checking out source code, compiling source code, and writing enhancements.

Rohan has been working on the NetBeans platform for the last 1.5 years primarily on the XML editing aspects. Rohan is a self-made NetBeans evangelist.

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