July 26, 2006
A Five day Flashmob programming party is underway in Portland in conjunction with OSCON.
When - Monday, July 24th to Friday, July 28th - Drop by anytime: 7AM until Midnight or later
Where - Equator Cafe, 510 SE Morrison, Portland OR (15 blocks south of OSCON 2006) (Google Maps directions from Convention Center)
What - Be a part of a programming flashmob experiment in conjunction with OSCON 2006. The Equator Cafe is hosting a five day open source programming flashmob and we have chosen the GPL'd Democracy TV (http://www.getdemocracy.org) as our project.
The event will be filmed and compiled into a short video to be broadcast on Democracy TV at the end of the week. Folks at the codejam and other Democracy developers will be on IRC at #dtv on irc.freenode.net
The source code, wiki, and bug tracker for Democracy can be found here. Democracy Player can be downloaded for Linux, Mac, and Windows here.
TechCrunch says Limelight Networks, the content delivery technology behind such Web 2.0 leaders as MySpace, Facebook and XBoxLive, has received a new round of funding. Limelight is also widely believed to be the content delivery provider for YouTube.
They are the number two content delivery network, behind Akamai, the service provider for Apple’s iTunes. Panther Express, another content delivery network, also received funding this week.
O'Reilly's Open Source Convention 2006 (OSCON) runs July 24-28, 2006, in Portland, Oregon. Hundreds of sessions, tutorials, activities, and events, are scheduled for this year's OSCON. The $1200 conference is throughly blogged. Here's the Schedule.
OSCAMP is a grassroots cooperative effort with O'Reilly. It seeks to organize the fringe of activity that has grown up around OSCON during the last several years and is incorporated into the main conference at the Oregon Convention Center.
FOSCON is the free and fun gathering of Ruby on Rails fans held in the evening and hosted by Portland-based Free Geek, about a mile away.
FOSCON is sponsored by CD Baby: a CD store with new independent music and Planet Argon, a Ruby on Rails Development firm. The speakers will be discussing a wide range of topics of interest to the Ruby community.
The Ruby programming language allows for extensive metaprogramming. This results in a syntax that many of its users find to be very readable. Rails is primarily distributed through RubyGems, which is the official packaging format and distribution channel for Ruby libraries and applications.
Ruby on Rails was extracted by David Hansson from his work on Basecamp for 37signals (podcast). It was first released to the public in July 2004.
Join hosts Chris DiBona (of Google) and Leo Laporte (This Week in Tech), as they talk with the most interesting and important people in the Open Source and Free Software community.
Their FLOSS Weekly Podcasts are all about Free Libre Open Source Software. Here's a podcast with Perl developer Randal Schwartz.



