Jun 26 2009

Linux Tag Report

Posted by Dan

Hello everyone, greetings from Linux Tag in Berlin. I’ve been in Germany all week and I wanted to post updates each day, but to be honest it’s been far too hectic for that. Nevertheless, I figured I should take the chance to fill you in a bit while I sit propped in bed at the hotel. I’ve just returned from a Fedora party tonight in a nearby restaurant, it’s part of the FUDcon event they’ve been having in conjunction with Linux Tag this week. There was free pizza and lots of beers, unfortunately the beers weren’t free but I can’t complain. The Fedora guys throw a hell of a party. We were also hanging out with Ade Bradshaw of LugRadio fame and generally having a lot of laughs. Good times indeed.

Since arriving in Berlin on Tuesday night I’ve had the good fortune to meet many nice folks and record a few interviews for the show. On the first day of Linux Tag we managed to get a long interview with Max Spevak and Paul Frields from Fedora. It was very informative and funny I think. Then we interviewed Máirín Duffy from the design team, she works on all that funky artwork you see in Fedora. I even ended up installing Fedora 11 on my laptop at the event, while sat in a corner of the press room. Extreme distro testing once again. I’m writing this on Fedora 11 at the moment and it seems to be going well. Still a few things to sort out but I’ll be posting a full review next week when I get home and can get things back on track. Later on I interviewed Joe “Zonker” Brockmeier the OpenSuse community manager and had a good chat with him about events in the OpenSuse world.

We also met some podcast listeners while in Berlin and that was amazing. It’s always fun to meet people who listen to the show and get to know them. We even went for dinner and drinks with Ryan (yareckon). An American who recently moved to Berlin, and a really nice guy to boot. We were interviewed by zahnersatz, who’s starting a new Linux podcast in German, something that’s missing at the moment I’ve been told by a few people. So I wish him all the best and when I have details I’ll be sure to share them with you. Finally we interviewed Jan Wilderboer from Red Hat just before the FUDPUB party. He’s an open source evengelist at the company and a really interesting guy as well. Always distinctive wearing his red fedora hat, company issue apparently. All of these interviews will appear in episode 99 of Linux Outlaws, so listen out for them.

There’s so much stuff to try and remember from the last few days that I’m sure I missed some out. To sum up, Linux Tag 2009 has been fantastic. I’m really glad I came and I would encourage anyone else to check it out in future. Hopefully I’ll make it back next year, fingers crossed. So many people we’ve met and they’ve all been very welcoming. I feel a bit like the ignorant Englishman at times not speaking any other languages, but people have been understanding. It’s humbling to see people switch language mid sentence. I’ve always told myself I’ll learn at least one other language one day. I’m sure I have the capacity, I guess I just need the application now.

Tomorrow we’ll nip into the event hall again, catch up with the guys at FUDcon probably and do the final rounds, before hitting the autobahn and making our way back to Bonn. I’ll write my usual weekly update on my own blog then, there was just so much stuff to talk about from Linux Tag it warranted it’s own post.

Bye for now,

Dan


Oct 13 2007

A Week of Distributions

Posted by Dan

Hey folks, my first blog post here. I thought it was time I posted something so here it is :)

As you will know by now the new version of Ubuntu is due out in the next week, that big banner on the sidebar may have given it away. So I plan to spend the next week trying out a new Linux distribution each day to see how I get on before eventually moving to Ubuntu 7.10. I’ve tried a few different distributions in the past but since moving to Ubuntu about a year ago, I have be honest, I haven’t tried much else, certainly not outside of VMware. I guess I got comfortable and just didn’t bother. Since I will be upgrading my system to the new Ubuntu anyway, now seems like a good time to take a little tour of the Linux world and see what’s happening. I can’t promise it will be comprehensive with so many distributions out there though, I can’t try them all in a week so I’ve made a hit list of the major ones I want to try out:

PCLinuxOS 2007 - Never tried this but heard about it quite a lot.

OpenSuSE 10.3 - As much as I hate the Microsoft/Novell deal I have used SuSE in the past and it was my first ever Linux distribution so I owe it another chance.

Mandriva 2008 - Another distribution that has been an old friend to me, the new 2008 version is fresh out this week so I figured I’d try it.

Slackware 12 - I’ve never used Slackware but it has a strong following and has been around a long time. Can’t wait to see what it’s like.

Fedora 7 - This disc has been sat on my desk for ages, I’ve used Fedora and Red Hat many times in the past, the last version I used was Fedora 5 so it’s been a while.

Debian Etch - Lastly I will try out Debian, the distribution which has spawned so many others including Ubuntu of course. I’ve used it on the odd server but never on my desktop, it has a reputation as the purists OS, awkward to use but powerful. We’ll see.

So that’s about it, I missed a few obvious ones I know. Gentoo is not in there basically because I’m not a sadist and I don’t want to compile everything. I have used Sabayon before which is supposed to be the easy to use version of Gentoo but I didn’t bother with it in this experiment as I figured I have enough on my plate.

So that’s it, I’ve backed up my /home partition with rsync and I’m almost ready to go, just got some md5 sums to check and some discs to burn and then I’m off. Wish me luck, I will report back… I hope ;)