12 Dec 06:23
SLUG meeting notes for Mon 10 Dec (Linus Torvalds video)
Hi list, "We came, we saw, we watched." The Dec 2007 meeting of SLUG (Seacoast/UNH/Durham) was held Mon 10 Dec. About a dozen people were there. Rob "Old Faithful" Anderson ran the show. On 31 Jan 1996, some guy named Linus Torvalds came to UNH, and spoke about something called Linux. Someone had the foresight to record a video of the event, and Rob was able to borrow a copy, and screened it to the group. This was largely a historical exercise, but a very interesting one. It was fascinating to see how far we've come, what's changed, and what's stayed the same. One thing I (re)discovered: Linus is not just an excellent programmer, he's gifted with a keen insight into the Real World. A lot of his predictions and pronouncements in 1996 demonstrate that he'd already thought about a lot of the issues the community is dealing with over ten years later. I suspect if Linus's skills had stopped with software, we'd be a lot worse off today. The '96 event was "sponsored" by UNH, Digital Equipment Corporation (/me doffs hat), ACM (IEEE Association of Computing Machinery), NNEUUG (Northern New England UNIX Users Group), and GNHLUG. Dave Marston was the MC, and maddog... was maddog. :) The copyright holder of the video requested that no copies be made, and we are honoring that request. Planned upcoming SLUG meetings: Jan 2008 - Rockbox - Open Source MP3 player firmware. Replace the OEM firmware on MP3 players from Apple, SanDisk, and various others. Adds features, unlocks your music, and enables whole new things. Want to play Doom on your iPod? Now you can. Feb 2007 - Enlightenment GUI tools. Back in the late 90's, Enlightenment (or E!) was the original "bling" window manager. It turns out that not only is E! not dead, it's evolved into something more. The Enlightenment Foundation Libraries provide some interesting capabilities, and has applications to not just X11, but also small, frame-buffer-only devices (cell phones, etc.). Rob seems pretty impressed by it, and promises an interesting demo. Happy hacking, everyone. -- Ben
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