All posts by Bradley M. Kuhn

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Help Send Conservancy to Embedded Linux Conference Europe

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/21/lf-elc-eu.html

[ This blog
was crossposted
on Software Freedom Conservancy’s website
. ]

Last month, Conservancy made a public commitment to attend Linux-related
events to get feedback from developers about our work generally, and
Conservancy’s GPL Compliance Program for Linux Developers specifically. As
always, even before that, we were regularly submitting talks to nearly any
event with Linux in its name. As a small charity, we always request travel
funding from the organizers, who are often quite gracious. As I mentioned in
my blog posts about LCA 2016
and GUADEC 2016, the organizers
covered my travel funding there, and recently both Karen and I both received
travel funding to speak at LCA 2017
and DebConf 2016, as well as many
other events this year.

Recently, I submitted talks for the CFPs of Linux
Foundation’s Embedded
Linux Conference Europe (ELC EU)
and the Prpl
Foundation’s OpenWRT Summit. The
latter was accepted, and the folks at the Prpl Foundation graciously
offered to fund my flight costs to speak at the OpenWRT Summit! I’ve
never spoken at an OpenWRT event before and I’m looking forward to the
opportunity getting to know the OpenWRT and LEDE communities better by
speaking at that event, and am excited to discuss Conservancy’s work with
them.

OpenWRT Summit, while co-located, is a wholly separate event from LF’s ELC
EU. Unfortunately, I was not so lucky in my talk submissions there: my
talk proposal has been waitlisted since July. I was hopeful after a talk
cancellation in mid-August. (I know because the speaker who canceled
suggested that I request his slot for my waitlisted talk.)
Unfortunately, the LF staff informed me that they understandably filled
his open slot with a sponsored session that came in.

The good news is that my OpenWRT Summit flight is booked, and my friend
(and Conservancy Board Member Emeritus)
Loïc Dachary
(who lives in Berlin) has agreed to let me crash with
him for that week. So, I’ll be in town for the entirety of ELC EU with
almost no direct travel costs to Conservancy! The bad news is that it
seems my ELC EU talk remains waitlisted. Therefore, I don’t have a
confirmed registration for the rest of ELC EU (beyond OpenWRT Summit).

While it seems like a perfect and cost-effective opportunity to be able to
attend both events, that seems harder than I thought! Once I confirmed my
OpenWRT Summit travel arrangements, I asked for the hobbyist discount to
register for ELC EU, but LF staff informed me yesterday that the hobbyist
(as well as the other discounts) are sold out. The moral of the story is
that logistics are just plain tough and time-consuming when you work for a
charity with an extremely limited travel budget. ☻

Yet, it seems a shame to waste the opportunity of being in town with so
many Linux developers and not being able to see or talk to them, so
Conservancy is asking for some help from you to fund the $680 of my registration
costs for ELC EU. That’s just about
six new Conservancy supporter
signups
, so I hope we can get six new Supporters before Linux
Foundation’s ELC EU conference begins on October 10th. Either way, I look
forward to seeing those developers who attend the co-located OpenWRT
Summit! And, if the logistics work out — perhaps I’ll see you at ELC
EU as well!

Two Blog Posts Disguised as Mailing List Posts

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/02/ksummit-discuss.html

There are plenty of mailing list threads to read, and I don’t actually
recommend the one that I’m talking about. I think it went on too long, was
far too “ad hominem” rather than real policy. Somewhere
beneath the surface there was a policy discussion being shouted down; if
you look close, you can find find it underneath.

As he always does, Jon Corbet did an excellent
job finding
the real policy details in the “GPL defence” ksummit-discuss
thread
, and telling us all about it. I am very hard on tech
journalism, but when it comes to reporting on Linux specifically, Jon and
his colleagues at lwn.net have been, for nearly two decades, always been
real, detailed, and balanced (and not in the Fox News way)
tech journalism.

The main reason I made this blog post about it, though, is that I actually
spent as much time on a few of my posts on the list as I would on any blog
post, and I thought readers of my blog might want the content here. So I
link to
two
posts
in the thread that I encourage you to read. I also encourage you to read
these
two
posts
that my boss at my day job, Karen Sandler, made, which I think are very good
as well.

And, to quote the fictional Forrest Gump: That’s all I have to say
about that.

Two Blog Posts Disguised as Mailing List Posts

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/02/ksummit-discuss.html

There are plenty of mailing list threads to read, and I don’t actually
recommend the one that I’m talking about. I think it went on too long, was
far too “ad hominem” rather than real policy. Somewhere
beneath the surface there was a policy discussion being shouted down; if
you look close, you can find find it underneath.

As he always does, Jon Corbet did an excellent
job finding
the real policy details in the “GPL defence” ksummit-discuss
thread
, and telling us all about it. I am very hard on tech
journalism, but when it comes to reporting on Linux specifically, Jon and
his colleagues at lwn.net have been, for nearly two decades, always been
real, detailed, and balanced (and not in the Fox News way)
tech journalism.

The main reason I made this blog post about it, though, is that I actually
spent as much time on a few of my posts on the list as I would on any blog
post, and I thought readers of my blog might want the content here. So I
link to
two
posts
in the thread that I encourage you to read. I also encourage you to read
these
two
posts
that my boss at my day job, Karen Sandler, made, which I think are very good
as well.

And, to quote the fictional Forrest Gump: That’s all I have to say
about that.

Two Blog Posts Disguised as Mailing List Posts

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/02/ksummit-discuss.html

There are plenty of mailing list threads to read, and I don’t actually
recommend the one that I’m talking about. I think it went on too long, was
far too “ad hominem” rather than real policy. Somewhere
beneath the surface there was a policy discussion being shouted down; if
you look close, you can find find it underneath.

As he always does, Jon Corbet did an excellent
job finding
the real policy details in the “GPL defence” ksummit-discuss
thread
, and telling us all about it. I am very hard on tech
journalism, but when it comes to reporting on Linux specifically, Jon and
his colleagues at lwn.net have been, for nearly two decades, always been
real, detailed, and balanced (and not in the Fox News way)
tech journalism.

The main reason I made this blog post about it, though, is that I actually
spent as much time on a few of my posts on the list as I would on any blog
post, and I thought readers of my blog might want the content here. So I
link to
two
posts
in the thread that I encourage you to read. I also encourage you to read
these
two
posts
that my boss at my day job, Karen Sandler, made, which I think are very good
as well.

And, to quote the fictional Forrest Gump: That’s all I have to say
about that.

Two Blog Posts Disguised as Mailing List Posts

Post Syndicated from Bradley M. Kuhn original http://ebb.org/bkuhn/blog/2016/09/02/ksummit-discuss.html

There are plenty of mailing list threads to read, and I don’t actually
recommend the one that I’m talking about. I think it went on too long, was
far too “ad hominem” rather than real policy. Somewhere
beneath the surface there was a policy discussion being shouted down; if
you look close, you can find find it underneath.

As he always does, Jon Corbet did an excellent
job finding
the real policy details in the “GPL defence” ksummit-discuss
thread
, and telling us all about it. I am very hard on tech
journalism, but when it comes to reporting on Linux specifically, Jon and
his colleagues at lwn.net have been, for nearly two decades, always been
real, detailed, and balanced (and not in the Fox News way)
tech journalism.

The main reason I made this blog post about it, though, is that I actually
spent as much time on a few of my posts on the list as I would on any blog
post, and I thought readers of my blog might want the content here. So I
link to
two
posts
in the thread that I encourage you to read. I also encourage you to read
these
two
posts
that my boss at my day job, Karen Sandler, made, which I think are very good
as well.

And, to quote the fictional Forrest Gump: That’s all I have to say
about that.