Archive for March, 2006

Will the real Open Source please stand up?

An interesting debate is going on among a few prominent bloggers, most of whom I know personally, around the concept of Open Source and the risk it runs of being watered down by clueless companies trying to bend and exploit it for their own ends.

It all started with feather (the ASF marketing blog) quoting my friend and colleague Gianugo:

I think I’ve been through enough winters to understand that the world is a competitive pool full of sharks and deal with it, but still I’m disturbed by the number of people trying to exploit the Open Source wave with little to no clue.

Then Sylvain chimed in with:

There’s been a number of companies jumping in the Open Source bandwagon lately, using it merely as a marketing tool to find new creative ways of locking in customers.

Later Matt puts forward his disagreement:

I do think that the “real” open source community tends to view itself through an elitist frame sometimes, and fetishes over what’s being kept back rather than what is being given away. The upshot of even the lamest of open source companies is that a huge amount of code (much more than if the “real” community were left to its own devices - just take a look at the growth in Sourceforge since the mudbloods invaded) is now free. This is a positive thing, whatever the negatives (and I’ve written similarly to Gianugo’s comments before.

Finally, we have Matthew who does not want to take sides:

A bit like quantum physics (if you’ll pardon the glossing over) - the more people look at Open Source (with their varied backgrounds and goals), the more Open Source itself will change to become - well, who knows. Being successful in this marketplace will also mean being able to adapt quickly to the changes within Open Source and within the software business as a whole.

Personally, I too think that community is more important than code and that Darwinian selection will weed out certain companies, or at least their Open Source strategies, in the end. However, I’m not so sure we need to clarify what Open Source really stands for and that we risk being confused with “the suckers out there”. Regardless of the field we’re playing in, we’re bound to find opportunistic players, but we shouldn’t be afraid of being perceived to be one and the same with them, just as Rijkaard shouldn’t be afraid of being lumped together with Mourinho (I guess Matt will agree with me here. By the way, as I’m writing this the match is still 0-0 but Barcelona seems to be able to score sooner or later).

Most of all, I agree with Matthew: “it’s the customer who will, in the end, define what commercial Open Source turns out to be.”

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Strange AdSense ads

In the last few hours I noticed something strange with the AdSense ads that appear on this site. While before most ads were about blogging and RSS, recently I’ve seen a bunch of ads that seem to be triggered by keywords like “speed reading”, “memory improvement”, “online surveys”, “IQ testing” and stuff like that. The point is: I never used those keywords here (now I have, so I have just probably perturbed the phenomenon by talking about it, in a sort of feedback loop).

I had the suspect those ads were paying more per click than the previous ones, but the first results don’t seem to confirm my suspicion. My sample, however, is still very small, so it might just be that nobody is clicking those ads yet (and please don’t, unless you’re really interested in the products advertised).

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Google Personalized Search

Just saw this while doing a Google search (and being logged in to Google):

Google Personalized Search.png

I hadn’t noticed this before and saw no mention of it while browsing the usual suspects, so I thought it useful to post about it here. There’s also a page about this on Google’s Help Center:

Personalized Search orders your search results based on your past searches, as well as the search results and news headlines you’ve clicked on. You can view all these items in your Search History and remove any items you’d like.

I wonder what effect this is going to have on SEO practices.

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Real life Simpsons video

Here’s an amazing video of real people playing the Simpson’s intro. I wonder how much work went into making it.

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Open call for MSN AdCenter accounts

Jenstar: “If you are wanting an AdCenter account, yet haven’t received an invite yet, they are having a three hour open call period today where you will be guaranteed a shiny new account.”

Later…

MSN adCenter does not currently support the web browser you are using. Please sign in using Internet Explorer 6.

I shouldn’t complain, I think. You want Microsoft ads? Better use IE. Oh well, I think I’ll keep my AdSense ads for now.

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Be careful what you ask for …

Snow in Gressoney.png… you might just get it. Snow in this case. We’ve been begging for snow in the Alps through most of the winter and now we’re getting way too much of it. This morning it was snowing heavily, which would have not been that much of a problem, but the slopes were also covered by 20cm of fresh, wet snow. Difficult enough for me and totally impractical for my daughter, her cousin, and the other people with me, who are beginners.

Luckily, it stopped in the afternoon and we also caught some glimpses of the sun peeking through the clouds, so tomorrow might be a great day.

Re: Maps, satellite photos and Grand Theft Stupid

Mathew Ingram: “The interface, as David points out, is ridiculous - a cheesy, video-game style rendering of a car’s cockpit, which you can switch from a regular car to a race car (complete with fire extinguisher). Quirky and fun? Maybe. I would add ‘stupid and useless’ to that list as well though.”

I couldn’t agree more. Sometimes Mike is prone to just hyping too much. And Scoble is hyping as well, which is understandable maybe, since this is a Microsoft product. But this does not guarantee that it’s a valid product. In fact, it sucks like a inverted hurricane.

You might have noticed that I didn’t link to either Scobleizer or TechCrunch. The reason why I didn’t is that I resolved to join the revenge of the M-listers. Sign me up as well! From now on, I’m going to link to a selected group of M-listers only. This group excludes software development guys, at least initially: I want to read more about business, marketing, the media and technology in general, for a while.

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Cunning comment spammers

Got this today in my comment moderation queue:

Good afternoon.

I found your website whilst searching for I-pod information. Perhaps the blog owner or the readers of this blog can help me with a problem I have. Mc Creative Zen Micro (4gb) keeps freezing up. I only bought it last week but it always freezes on boot. Any suggestions before I consider taking it back?

Many thanks,

Wayne.

Looks legitimate, no? A bit disconnected, considering the topic of the original post, but legitimate.

But then I notice that the guy put a link to a cheesy, online slot-machine game in the URL field … hmmmm, try again, Wayne, better luck next time.

Web 2.0 Meets Open Source

oszone-beta.gifI haven’t been talking about The Open Source Zone for a while. To be honest, I haven’t been doing anything about it for a long while. Too busy with other stuff, but anyway the site is still there, running smoothly, with a slowly rising traffic level and a few occasional contributions.

I’d probably need to suck up to a few A-list bloggers to get noticed. Well, actually I’ve tried to in the past, but I’ve been ignored. Maybe I should try again, following Guy’s advice closely. Who knows?

Anyway, I’ve got at least one mention — more like a rave review actually — in Linux Magazine (registration required). Thanks to Matt Tanase for mentioning The Open Source Zone. Too bad Linux Magazine keeps this content behind a registration-required barrier. New technology, same old media.

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…and we’re giving away an iPod too!

If you were still mulling over whether to send a submission for our logo contest, please remember that the deadline is 7 March 2006 23:59:59 (GMT).

As a sign of appreciation towards all those who sent their submissions — some of which are really very good — we’ve added a prize for the first runner-up: a 1GB iPod Nano. We feel good music helps to do good programming, so maybe it goes the same way for graphic design also!

First prize is still a much coveted MacBook Pro. Remember that it’s a fast, fast, fast machine!

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We’re hiring…

We still don’t have a logo (more on this later), but yes, we’re hiring.

We’re looking for developers who would like to work for a small company with a strong orientation towards Open Source, as in wanting to actively participate in Open Source communities and give back as well as take. We like agility, focus, getting real. We like to communicate openly: Open Source is mostly about communicating with your peers, after all. We have strong international ties, so you could find yourself traveling a bit, mostly across Europe, but we can also offer telecommuting arrangements if you like working from home.

We would like you to know most of the buzzwords in the enterprise Java world, like JDBC, JMS, JAXP, Spring, Hibernate, JDO; to know your way around the 1st and the 2nd generation Web, starting with HTTP and HTML and going through XML, XSLT, XPath, XQuery, REST, Web Services; to have a strong background in OOP theory and relational databases.

We’re looking for both junior and senior developers, designers and architects. So we expect you to know by heart most of what I listed above, but even if you’re fresh out of college don’t worry. If you have a good background and are willing to learn, we’re ready to teach.

If you’re interested, send your resume (in text, HTML or PDF formats only; any other format will be rejected immediately) to recruitment@sourcesense.com. We’d love to hear your story.

Updated to ping edgeio.

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Newsvine: The Slowest Wire News on the Web

newsvine.jpgToday, yet another memetracker, but this time with more than a twist, launched: Newsvine. They promise to be “the fastest wire news on the web”. I wanted to look around a bit and evaluate if I could use it as another news source for Evil or Not? or maybe as the news source for it, leaving behind me all the hassles of dealing with the idiosyncrasies of each source’s feed format, minor or major RSS/Atom screwups and, what is most important, having to measure the relevance of every single item.

Unfortunately, the site seems to be running very slowly at the moment. Probably they’re having too much traffic right now, with every blogger and tech news site pointing at them, but still I wonder if they haven’t undersized the infrastructure just a bit. Hope it’s just a temporary problem that can be fixed with a little tuning and maybe some more resources, because the service looks really interesting.

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Largest ever Hubble galaxy portrait

heic0602a.jpgThe European Homepage For The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope - News Archive: “This new Hubble image reveals the gigantic Pinwheel galaxy, one of the best known examples of “grand design spirals”, and its supergiant star-forming regions in unprecedented detail. The image is the largest and most detailed photo of a spiral galaxy ever released from Hubble.”

Wow! Quite a gorgeous desktop background.

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