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Tuesday October 24, 2006
San Diego SPEC Meeting
I really enjoy fall in Minnesota, but I have to admit in
San Diego "it's beautiful every day"! Sun, IBM, BEA, Intel and AMD
are all participating in the
SPEC meeting here.
The discussions have been cordial, professional and we've
actually managed to get consensus on whatever it is that
we're doing (which, of course, I can't tell you due to
confidentiality ).
Check out my
moblog for mugshots
of all the attendees.
SPEC Java subcomittee lunch in San Diego including
Eric Dittert (Intel), Dave Dagastine (Sun), Tom Marble (Sun), Azeem
Jiva (AMD), Stefan Särne (BEA). Not shown: Alan Adamson (IBM), Evgeniya Maenkova (Intel).
As a special bonus last evening I was able to join one of my former
engineer colleagues (I was a Systems Engineer before joining R&D)
Meredithe and her family for dinner. When Jim arrived we had some
discussion about menu options and very quickly I found myself
preparing a beef stir-fry in their kitchen with Meredithe and Jim
as my sous chefs. Apparently it turned out OK (even Scott
-- who is now taller than his parents -- finished his plate).
We shared photos of our families as it's
been 6 years or so since we took a family trip to San Diego.
Mallory is a strikingly attractive young woman in the
business honors program at the University of Connecticut.
After dinner we enjoyed Jim's home made audiophile sound
system (think tube amplifiers, power conditioners, linear
speakers, etc. etc.) and talked about the value of business managers
understanding the technology behind the projects they direct.
It's a fun time to be a geek!
Posted by tmarble
( Oct 24 2006, 04:23:39 PM CDT )
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Thursday October 19, 2006
Confiture Maison
Je suis ravi de vous faire connaître le nouveau
blog de mon amie Vanessa: Confiture Maison

Ce week-end dernier j'ai aidé Vanessa à choisir
un site pour blogger.
En amont il y avait la question classique:
comment traiter les photos?
J'ai tout d'abord pensé à une solution logiciel libre, mais
finalement opté pour Picasa.
Je suis un peu méfiant de Google, mais le bouton "Blog This!"
était trop tentant pour l'ignorer. En plus j'ai
entendu de bonnes critiques. Il faut dire que j'était
assez impressionné par la facilité de l'installation et
d'utilisation.
Le bouton "Blog This!" necessite le site Blogger; ce que nous avons fait.
Choisir un nom de blog n'était pas évident. Vanessa souhaitait
"MeltingPot"... un nom pas mal qui rappel à la fois la cuisine,
la diversité culturelle américaine, et puis le fait qu'elle
a des origines françaises et vietnamiennes. Finalement, elle
a choisi Confiture Maison qui marche également bien
et qui donne envie de découvrir ces recettes délicieuses!
Et regardez comme Vanessa n'a pas perdu du temps...
Elle a déjà réussi à paraître dans le
Blog Actu.
Tout cela donne faim! Bonne continuation Vanessa!
Posted by tmarble
( Oct 19 2006, 01:08:02 PM CDT )
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Wednesday October 18, 2006
IANAL and That's OK!
One of the neat people that I met last week at ApacheCon
was
Cliff Schmidt, Vice President of Legal Affairs for the
Apache Software Foundation.
I only got to attend one of Cliff's talks last week, but it
was a lot of fun. The session was very interactive and he
only got to cover a sampling of interesting issues surrounding
Copyright and Patent law -- we didn't get to Trademarks and
trade secrets. And I missed the open source "license junkie" talks
Cliff and I had a chance to catch up at the airport before
leaving the conference. I was fascinated to learn that Cliff
is not a lawyer and yet he is having loads of fun and cannot
hardly keep up with the demand for his own consulting business
(Symbioss Strategy [Cliff do you have a website?]). He
confirmed what I've suspected for a long time: there is
value in crossing the beams between law and technology.
This makes sense. Most all creative work is
becoming knowledge work. And as technology has a huge impact
on society it follows that understanding how to apply and
leverage Intellectual Property law to empower creative work
is and will be in great demand.
And it doesn't necessarily require being a lawyer.
Cliff (nor I) would ever purport to giving legal advice.
However it is becoming apparent that there are no "boilerplate"
answers for tough questions of how to handle IP issues in
technology. This isn't to say that productivity gains are
impossible. In fact one of the most influential voices
in this area is
Lawrence Lessig
of the
Creative Commons
project.
Lessig has done the world an enormous service in conveying
difficult legal and technical issues in his book
Free Culture.
And Creative Commons has pioneered a novel approach to combining
a human readable deed to accompany
legalese in designing
the set of
"Some Rights Reserved" Creative Commons Licenses.
One of my co-workers and mentors is
Carla Schroer.
Carla has been very
influential in her role in legal affairs
for Java since the Java™ platform was created.
I have really enjoyed learning from Carla about how Sun has handled
IP issues in technology -- and specifically Java --
through our work on the
DLJ and also our work
to open source Java.
Carla is not a lawyer, and you may not have heard about her, but
I cannot imagine how the Java
Software organization could possibly address the complex issues
around compatibility, licensing and branding without her guidance.
Another one of my co-workers,
Simon Phipps, you probably
already know. But did you know that while Simon is not a lawyer he is
a confirmed legal geek and license junkie? For sampling of
his writings please check out
The Zen of Free,
Free and Open Source
Licensing, and
The
Jurisdiction Paradox.
Of course I couldn't talk about my favorite examples of
IANAL
without mentioning
Pamela
Jones. I have never met PJ, but her
top ranked legal
blog provides a continuous flow of education on technology and IP issues.
Some of my friends have suggested that I go to law school.
But, as my
Java Marketing
colleague
Rich Sands mentioned,
"Tom, you just have too much fun with technology to give it up!".
Rich is right. And I've had the opportunity to meet some
very tech savvy lawyers who "get it"... Therefore I shall continue
to focus on technology while keeping on eye on
the right to be creative.
Posted by tmarble
( Oct 18 2006, 03:03:13 PM CDT )
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