Atlanta Linux Fest 2009
I attended the Atlanta Linux Fest last Saturday. I only got to stay for two talks, but what I saw was great!
From the Ubuntu Kernel talk given by Pete Graner of Canonical, I learned a couple of interesting things about Ubuntu…
Canonical has teams that work on things other than the ubuntu kernel, including integration for OEMs like Dell and HP, maintaining LaunchPad, and distributing install cds. They are able to maintain a 6 month release cycle for Ubuntu by deciding to only fix those bugs that are truly critical and focusing on the goals decided at the Ubuntu Developer Summit.
Ubuntu One allows you to back up any number of systems into the cloud.
The folks at Canonical have created a version of android that runs on Ubuntu Notebook Remix. It sounded like android uses some of its own version of libraries so a unique version of android had to be compiled to use those libs.
I also saw Kirrily Robert give her Standing Out in the Crowd talk. If you missed OSCon 2009 or the Atlanta Linux Fest, you can check out her talk here.
Adele Goldberg
Do you remember the scene in Pirates of Silicon Valley where the team at Xerox PARC must give Steve Jobs a tour of their ground-breaking research? A red-headed woman very reluctantly shows Steve the team’s then bleeding-edge work. Take a minute to watch the clip, if you haven’t seen it (beginning around frame 3.14).
This scene is very loosely based on actual events1, and the woman portrayed can refer to none other than Adele Goldberg.
Dr. Goldberg was one of the researchers responsible for the advancement of object-oriented programming concepts and for the development of the Smalltalk language. Smalltalk, the first fully object-oriented language, was used to prototype the features that we associate with modern GUIs—graphical menus, mouse clicks, browsers and windows. The end result of the PARC team’s research was enabling users with little technical knowledge to make simple changes on a microcomputer, such as changing directories, opening files and pasting text.
The research Goldberg and company were conducting wasn’t only making computing more friendly for users; it was also making computing more usable for programmers. At ParcPlace, which she founded, she helped develop tools for corporate customers who want to use OO concepts in their development.
Adele was president of the ACM from 1984 to 1986. Currently, she is the founder of Neometron, Inc.
References- http://www.pbs.org/nerds/part3.html
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adele_Goldberg_(computer_scientist)
- http://www.ddj.com/184405043
You can hear Adele talk about browsing, selecting text with a mouse and other innovations in computing in this video.
