


LinuxTag Show Report 55
BSDTag writes "LinuxTag, Europe's largest Linux show was held in July in Karlsruhe Kongresszentrum, Germany. Nicholas Blachford was there for 3 of those days and he wrote about his experience on OSNews, and provided 6 pages of pictures of the event."
Not a very impressive review (Score:5, Informative)
By the way, there was at least one other party, from the local Linux User Group, on the second day. I couldn't attend because I was too sleepy.
The major highlight in my eyes were the GNOME and KDE talks. The GNOME talk was absolutely hilarious, mostly because the demonstrations crashed all the time. There were at least four spontaneously crashing applications in the presentation, the presenter did not even start two things he wanted to show because "they are broken right now" and the multimedia streaming framework "does not compile right now in CVS". So if you ever tried to compile GNOME from the sources: it's not your fault. In comparison, KDE looked like a finished and polished product, although the guy was also using the CVS version and had one problem where one application misbehaved so he restarted it. Anyway, this is a breeze of fresh air in the usual climate of corporate demos where they only show the stuff they know to work reliably. The Linux and Open Source people just proved that they don't do this to bullshit people, they do it for the fun of it!
By the way: the KDE and GNOME guys used the event to drink some beer together, and they are planning a soccer game (the Debian guys want to be the third team so it can be a tournament). All the talk about animosities is apparently completely unfounded.
BTW: the entrance fee to LinuxTag was free if you placed a reservation on their web page, and 10 Euros otherwise. So everyone and their kid brother were there, all the talks were packed with people. It was quite an impressive sight. I did the scalable network programming talk, which is a topic that normally wouldn't attract a large audience, and even that talk had over 200 attendees. I found the whole athmosphere there very nice and look forward to the next LinuxTag.
Re:Linux on the desktop (Score:4, Interesting)
Even out of box, KDE doesn't look or feel much like windows any more an any distro except RHAT's perverted-kde. Mandrake looks especially elegant. But that's because regardless of any other perceived faults, no one denies that the french have style.
Re:Not a very impressive review (Score:5, Insightful)
I am sure that this would have been your reaction if it had been a microsoft demo that crashed.
Re:Not a very impressive review (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not a very impressive review (Score:2, Flamebait)
Which leaves me wondering what Microsoft show when they have corporate demos?
Re:Not a very impressive review (Score:1)
Re:Not a very impressive review (Score:3, Informative)
Those talks being "Commercial Involvement in
Re:Not a very impressive review (Score:2)
My slides (Score:2)
Re:My slides (Score:2)
Attention GNU thieves! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Attention GNU thieves! (Score:2)
The HP stand looked good (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The HP stand looked good (Score:2, Funny)
also, what was the hp hacking thing?
Anyone notice (Score:1)
Re:Anyone notice (Score:1)
I thought the 'review' was pretty intersting, as someone who missed out on going last year the pictures give a good idea of what goes on.
Still, could have done with some commentary on the talks I suppose.
PHP and Friends @ LinuxTag (Score:4, Informative)
ObJoke (Score:1, Funny)
The SCO stall was packed full I guess? :-)
Author has a sense of humour (Score:4, Funny)
From the article:
MySQL had a small stand where they no doubt people queried them using a structured language.
Oh, and 'm not a native English speaker but isn't this bad english?
Re:Author has a sense of humour (Score:2)
MySQL had a small stand where no doubt people asked questions in a structured query language that was not 100% ANSI SQL compatible while the true believers in PostgreSQL stood by hurling fecal matter and shouting through bullhorns that MySQL was a vastly inferior product.
Gimmie! (Score:1)
LinuxTag 2004 (Score:2)
Re:LinuxTag 2004 (Score:3, Funny)
There is no such thing as a bad place to drink in Germany.
Soekris hardware (Score:1, Informative)
Smart Tags in the article (or is it me?) (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Smart Tags in the article (or is it me?) (Score:2, Informative)
If you use any other browser than IE you'll be fine.
Re:Smart Tags in the article (or is it me?) (Score:2)
It's OSNews. BetaNews does it too. If it were SmartTags, the HTML would actually contain a lot of XML markup using namespaces that include "urn:schemas-microsoft-com" as the root (and the page itself would probably be XHTML to make things easier).
Interesting reference to the churches (Score:3, Interesting)
Three years ago I discovered that our local charity had just spent badly needed funding on installing Novell on the server (actually a good choice in the circumstances) and NT4 on all their workstations. They felt they had no choice because all their workers needed access to the finance system. Although they got education discount for Windows, it was still a significant slice of budget.
It's now 3 years later. Is it possible to run mainstream integrated accounts suites like Peachtree, Sage or MYOB on Linux? Because, if so, that could be the killer app for small charities and churches. OO/SO is now beginning to get really good application integration (I really think I can recommend SO6.1 to businesses when it's released).
What I want to know is... (Score:1)
The girls (Score:3, Interesting)
There are plenty of girls and women in Europe, who are not kept locked away in the bedroom and kitchen. No matter what you do, there are always some, no matter if it is skydiving, diving, or computer parties (ok, computer parties might have the lowest amount of women).
Teach american women to be more independent
When LinuxTag is over (Score:2)