July 2009 Posts

Conferences
Have to say that, everything that didn’t involved air travel (I’ll go ALL into that later) was awesome on this trip. Had a good time and learned some useful things at OSCON, enjoyed good company and had a good time exploring San Jose and the Bay Area in general. OSCON was good this year but not as good as in years’ past. This may be due to the new location, which doesn’t seem as conducive as the Oregon Convention Center did to a conference like this. The OCC was round, and all the meeting rooms were clustered in a central area - there was never more than a short walk between panels. But the San Jose Convention Center is more of a traditional box design, with a single LONG hallway. This means that if you’re in J3 and have to go to B2, good luck, because it’s a 15 minute walk. For a conference like OSCON, this kind of sucks and absolutely kills the “community” feel of it. Also, like many things, it suffers from diminishing returns. Because a lot of this is stuff I’ve seen before, every year that I come, I have to work harder and harder to find something new. Three years ago, I was doing well to decide what not to learn about. So this may be my last OSCON for a few years, though I’m thinking of attending Velocity (held down the road at the Fairmont) next year. I did attend some interesting side panels, including one on home automation. I have some ideas that I’m sure will drive Sarah crazy.
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Randomness
The computer on my desk has one TERABYTE of space, and it’s almost half full - ten years ago I didn’t even had a gigabyte of space in my main machine. I carry a computer … in my pocket … that I can use to surf the web anywhere. No wires. And I can use my pocket computer to show pictures of our vacation half a world away to a friend over a dinner of seafood. We’re hundreds of miles from the coast. And I can use this same device to call around the world at any time. In a few months, I’m going to get on an airplane and fly from my home in Alabama to London. I’m going to FLY. Through the air. And I’m going to be there in a little over 10 hours. A hundred years ago to get from London to New York took like two weeks via steamship, and then you had to travel by train and horse carriage. It could take a month or more to travel that distance, but I’m gonna do it in 10 hours. When I was a kid, our TV got 3 channels on an old 19” TV that took minutes to warm up. My TV today has close to 500 channels, all of them perfectly clear and some of them in beautiful high-definition. Oh yeah, and it’s 42” wide, less than the width of a ream of paper, and turns on almost instantly. I never go to a bank anymore. My paycheck is electronically deposited to a bank that has one physical location … in Texas, more than five hundred miles away. And if for some reason, I do have to deposit a check, I can scan them in at my house and send them by computer to be instantly deposited. People, welcome to the future. We’re here. And it’s just going to get cooler.
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Randomness
I grew up in the 80s, against the backdrop of Michael Jackson’s music. I remember my parents listening to Thriller, Billie Jean, and Beat It. In many ways, Michael Jackson defined music in the 80s.
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