Small Mosaic


Categories:

books
career
codinghorrors
comics
events
geekstuff
justdont
languages
languages/bash
linkshot
magazines
meta
misctech
movies
nottech
operatingsystems
operatingsystems/linux
operatingsystems/linux/debian
operatingsystems/solaris
paranoidadmin
perl
ruby
security
security/apache
security/tools
serversmells
sites
specifications
sysadmin
tools
tools/commandline
tools/firefox
tools/gui
tools/network
tools/online
tools/online/greasemonkey
unixdaemon

Archives:

August 200810
July 20089
April 20084
March 20081
February 20081
January 200815
August 20072
June 20079
May 20076
April 20078
March 200731
February 20073
January 200721
December 20061
November 20064
October 20066
September 200632
August 200617
July 200614
June 20069
May 200613
March 200611
February 200616
January 200611
December 20051
November 20056
October 200519
September 200525
August 200516
July 200516
June 200513
May 20052
April 200519
March 200531
February 200520
January 200531
December 200421
November 200430
October 200432
September 200418
August 20047
July 200414
June 20045

Sat, 15 Oct 2005

Jeff Waugh - Great Speaker, Better Guy
Last night was the first ever week night GLLUG. We were lucky enough to have Jeff Waugh come and speak to us as part of his BadgerBadgerBadger tour (although he didn't do the dance :)). He presented some of the recent innovations and newer projects in the Gnome ecosphere before moving on to an overview of Ubuntu and its infrastructure.

I only know the basics about Ubuntu (I had a play with the warthog release) but from the presentation last night it was easy to see that it's not just the software which is important. Shuttleworth knows business and you can see this in the distros polish and features. A good example is the OEM installer stuff. This shows Ubuntu isn't an old style distro, it's an attempt to scale the enterprise and get Linux everywhere.

After the talk we headed down to a local pub to meet up with some more Ubuntu (and some Debian people) to become the Ubuntu London release party.

I don't usually get much feedback from people after GLLUGs (hint hint) but the few emails I've had from the usual people have all been very positive about the talk, which I was expecting as it was pretty interesting and very entertaining, and about the speaker. I'd never met Jeff before last night so I wasn't sure what to expect. He was friendly, affable, and really active in meeting people and getting them involved. One of the feedback emails summed it up best, "Jeff's very charismatic. If he's doing ISV relations I can see Ubuntu appearing in a lot more places."

We had about thirty-forty people in the room for the talk, and considering it was both a Friday night and I'd only advertised a week ago, it went really well. The biggest difference in recent GLLUGs has been the makeup of the audience. I'm not as dedicated a Linux user as the people who organised the older meetings, which means I can advertise the event in other locations and, hopefully, pull in a more diverse crowd.

As the host you end up running around a lot and not getting to speak to many people, event hosting's still new and shiny to me so I might be doing a little too much panicing, and the limited time with each person is always a shame. The audience last night was every bit as interesting as any speaker line up I've seen. In addition to the speaker we had Matthew Garrett, Phil Hands, Simon Willison, Gervase Markham and Mark Shuttleworth in a room. And I bet some of the other people I didn't get to meet were every bit as interesting.

Like this post? - Digg Me! | Add to del.icio.us! | reddit this!

Posted: 2005/10/15 11:02 | /events | Permanent link to this entry | This entry + same date


books career codinghorrors events geekstuff justdont languages/bash linkshot magazines meta misctech movies nottech operatingsystems/linux operatingsystems/linux/debian operatingsystems/solaris perl ruby security security/apache security/tools serversmells sites specifications sysadmin tools/commandline tools/firefox tools/gui tools/network tools/online tools/online/greasemonkey unixdaemon

Copyright © 2000-2005 Dean Wilson XML feed logo