That's pretty much it. Please come back, Uber and Lyft!
Showing posts with label Austin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austin. Show all posts
Monday, May 9, 2016
The Parable of MudFootball and RideSharing in Austin, Texas
Once upon a time, we were all having the most fun ever, in Austin, Texas, playing mudfootball!
Everyone got to play. We took turns. No one got hurt. It was great. It was a happy time. Everybody wins in mudfootball!
But a couple of kids didn't like some of the rules of mudfootball, so they suggested changing them. We all listened to their new proposed rules, and put it to a vote.
Some players (like me) were cool with the new proposed rules, but after the vote, it turned out that the majority preferred the existing rules.
So a few of the kids got mad and left :-( But more than just that, they were sort of bratty, and they took their football with them.
Now, the rest of us are kind of sad and muddy and want to play more mudfootball but the ball went away. Oh well...
Hopefully the mad kids change their mind and come back and play! Otherwise, I guess we'll have to go find a new football to play with?
:-Dustin
p.s. I really, really, really hope Uber and Lyft remain in Austin! The City of Austin requires:
(1) fingerprint based background checks,
(2) no dropoffs/pickups in active lanes of traffic, and
(3) placards marking a car as an Uber/Lyft vehicle.
That's pretty much it. Please come back, Uber and Lyft!
That's pretty much it. Please come back, Uber and Lyft!
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Keep OpenStack Weird
The OpenStack Summit in Austin has already kicked off, and this time, Ubuntu is the official lanyard sponsor at OpenStack Summit Austin.
The sponsorship contract for the OpenStack Summit explicitly states that only the official lanyard sponsor may distribute lanyards. Whilst we understand the reason that clause is there, we don't agree with it. It just doesn't seem very "open" nor in the spirit of OpenStack.
Freedom of choice is an important aspect of all open source communities and one that we certainly champion, so attendees should be free to wear whatever branded lanyard they want with pride at the OpenStack Summit in Austin and we at Canonical will celebrate it. My hometown here, Austin, prides itself on diversity, where we like to Keep Austin Weird!
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
My SxSW Interactive 2014 Recap
Overview: a Mega Conference
SxSW is basically 3 enormous, loosely related, overlapping conferences -- Interactive, Film, Music -- drawing 250,000+ people to downtown Austin, Texas, over the course of 2 weeks. Literally thousands of events, both official and unofficial, run 20 hours per day, from 7am until 3am the next morning. The event draws the earliest adopting techies, geeks, film buffs, music aficionados, angel investors, venture capitalists, musicians, recording studios, actors, agents, celebrities, and vendors of every imaginable kind. With a keen eye, I also spotted one or two hipsters. And throngs of Glassholes.The largest keynote venues (plural) hold over several thousand people, and fill to capacity, with both closed circuit and Internet streamed broadcasts on display in multiple overflow ballrooms. Technical sessions, presentations, and panels are spread across 30 different venues around downtown Austin (e.g. The Austin Convention Center, The Hilton, The Marriott, The Driskill, City Hall, The Chamber of Commerce, Palmer Event Center, the Omni, the Intercontinental etc.). Tracks are roughly contained in a given venue. While shuttles are available for moving between venues, the weather in Austin in March is gorgeous and everything is roughly walkable.
While massive corporate "super sponsors" drive the overall event (Miller, Chevrolet, AT&T, Deloitte, American Express), a huge portion of the interactive side of the house is focused on start ups and
smaller businesses. This was a very familiar crowd, savvy and familiar with free software and open standards. These are thousands of the hackers that are building the next 40 new apps you're going to install on your phone or for which you'll soon have to generate a new web login password.
SxSW has been used to launch or spread countless social media platforms, including: Wordpress, Twitter, Foursquare, etc. Early adopters now flock to SxSW in droves, to learn about new hardware and software gadgets before their Silicon Valley friends do. Or, depending on your means, perhaps invest in said opportunities.
Expo Floor
The tradeshow does require an expo badge, but in my experience, its pretty easy to come by an expo badge freely. The expo floor includes 300+ booths, wide and varied, covering technology, gadgets, startups, film, music, and more. Nearly 75,000 unique badges entered the tradeshow floor.I saw at least 4 different public cloud vendors (Rackspace, SoftLayer, DigitalOcean, and Codero) with sizable displays. I spent a good bit of time with Codero. They're a new(ish) public cloud offering, built on Ubuntu and CloudStack, based in Austin and Kansas City. I also spoke with a couple of data analytics start ups, and talked a bit about Ubuntu and Juju.
I was surprised to see Ghostery on exhibit (I'm a big fan, actually, use it everywhere!). NASA had a spectacular booth. I a few booths displaying their wares on Unity desktops (woot).
There were several RaspberryPi demos too. The most amusing start up was from Japan, called LogLog, "When it comes to #2, we're #1". Seriously.
I wore an Ubuntu t-shirt each day, and several people stopped to ask me where the Ubuntu booth was. It's probably worth considering a booth next year. I can see where both a Juju GUI and a few Ubuntu Touch devices would generate some great traffic and press at SxSW. This is definitely the crowd of next generation app developers and back end social media developers building the new web. It would behoove us to help ensure they're doing all of that on Ubuntu!
Session Highlights
I missed Friday and Saturday, but I did attend sessions Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday.There was a very strong, pervasive theme throughout much of the conference, across many, many tracks about security, privacy of individual data, openness of critical systems and infrastructure, and
generally speaking, freedom. I don't suppose I was expecting this. There were numerous mentions of open source, Linux, and even Ubuntu in various capacities as being better options that the status quo, for many of the social and technical issues under discussion. Perhaps I gravitated toward those sessions (okay, yeah, I did). Still, it was quite reassuring that there were so many people, unknown to many of us, touting our beloved free and open standards and software as "the answer".
The other theme I picked up on, is how "connected" our media and entertainment devices and mechanisms are becoming. Netflix is designing TV series (House of Cards) based on empirical data that they collect, about what people like to watch. Smart TVs will soon deliver richer experiences about the sports and programming we watch, with real-time, selectable feeds and layers of additional content. Your handheld devices are becoming part of the entertainment experience.
Here are a few highlights, mostly from names that you might recognize.
Edward Snowden
[Note that I am not passing judgement here, just reporting what was said during that session.]Perhaps the most anticipated (and reported upon) keynote was the remotely delivered panel session with infamous NSA leaker Edward Snowden, via Google Hangout. The largest part of the conference center was packed to capacity, and local feeds broadcast the session to much of the rest of the conference. I suppose some of you saw the coverage on Slashdot. Snowden's choppy, Google+ hangout picture featured the US Constitution displayed behind him.
He said that the NSA collected so much information that they didn't even know what to do with it, how to process it. Collecting it proved to be the easy part. Processing it was orders of magnitude more difficult. He suggests that developers need to think security and encryption first, and protect user data from the start (and the SxSW tech savvy crowd are the ones to do it). He said that encryption is not fundamentally broken, and it generally works very well. That the NSA spent for less time trying to break systems, than to just monitor all of the easy targets. He said that he felt like he did his job, by blowing the whistle, in that "he took an oath to defend and uphold the constitution, and what he observed was abuse and violation of it on a massive scale."
Adam Savage
Adam Savage (co-host of Mythbusters) delivered the best canned presentation of the entire event (for me). He discussed Art and Science, how they're fundamentally the same thing, but we as a society, lately, haven't been treating them as such, and they're tending to drift apart. He talked about code as art, as well.
Shaquille O'Neal
Believe it or not, Shaq delivered a hilarious panel session, talking about wearable technology. He described himself as the "world's biggest geek" -- literally. He said that he used to be afraid oftechnology (in high school), until he was tutored by one of the geekiest kids in school. He then fell in love with technology (at 17), and has been an early adopter ever since. He says he has both Android and iPhone devices, talked extensively about the Fitbit (the co-host was from Qualcomm), and other wearable technologies, particularly as they relate to sports, health, and fitness.
George Takei
George Takei is 76 years old, but has the technical aptitude of a 24 year old computer whiz. He bridges at least 3 generations, and is on a quest to bring technology, and especially social media to older people. I've been a subscriber to his feeds on Facebook/Twitter/G+, and he's really sharp witted, funny, and topical. He discussed his tough life growing up (in an American concentration camp for Japanese Americans during WWII), coming to terms with his sexuality, entering showbiz, Star Trek, his (brief) political career, and now his icon status in social media. Brilliant, brilliant man. Entertaining and enlightening session.Daniel Suarez
Daniel Suarez is an author of (now) four cyberpunk technical thrillers. I reviewed his first book (Daemon) back in 2008 on my blog (and a few more). His publicist reached out to me, put us in touch, and we've been in communication ever since. He sat on a panel with Bruce Sterling and Warren Ellis, hosted by Joi Ito (MIT Media lab, early investor in Twitter, Flickr, Kickstarter). Daniel invited me out for dinner and drinks afterward with he and his wife, and we had a great time. He's a huge fan of Ubuntu. He says that he wrote all of his last book (Influx) on an Ubuntu laptop (woot). In his previous book (Kill Decision), Ubuntu made a brief cameo on the main character's computer (albeit compromised by a zero-day attack).The Darknet
I did attend a few sessions by lesser known individuals. Not much remarkable, but there was one "interesting" presentation, introducing people to "the dark net". The presenter covered a bunch of
technologies that (probably) you and I use every day, but framed it as "the dark net", and explained how anyone from malicious people to Wikileaks use IRC, PGP, tor, proxies, stunnels, bitcoin, wikis, sftp, ssh, and so forth to conduct shady business. He only had a very small time slot, and had to tear through a lot of material quickly, but I found it sad that so many of these fundamental technologies were conflated and in some people's minds, I'm sure made synonymous with human trafficking, drugs, corporate espionage, and stolen credit card numbers :-(
Aaron Swartz documentary
I did manage to catch one documentary while at SxSW... The Internet's Own Boy: The Aaron Swartz documentary. Aaron's story clearly resonates with the aforementioned themes of freedomness and openness on the Internet. While I didn't know Aaron personally, I was of course very much aware of his work on RSS, Reddit, SOPA/PIPA, etc. I feel like I've known many, many people like him -- brilliant programmers, freedom fighters -- especially around free software. His suicide (and this documentary) hits pretty hard. There are hundreds of clips of him, from 3 years old until his death at 26, showing his aptitude for technology, sheer brilliance and limitless potential. He did setup a laptop in a closet at MIT and downloaded hundreds of gigabytes of copyrighted JSTOR documents, and was about to stand trial on over a dozen felony counts. The documentary argues that he was to be "made an example of". Heartfelt interviews with Lawrence Lessig, Cory Doctorow, Sir Tim Berners-Lee, as well as Aaron's friends and family paint extremely powerful portraits of a brilliant, conflicted genius. The film was extremely well done. I had a pit in my stomach the rest of the day.
Cheers,
:-Dustin
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Gazzang Bang and the SXSW Startup Pub Crawl
The Gazzang office at 502 Baylor Street in Austin, Texas is one of the destinations of the 2012 SXSW Startup Pub Crawl, on Thursday, March 8th.
Join us between 4 and 10 pm for an open house, drum circle, and some awesome live music from the Lost Pines bluegrass band! Please RSVP here. Come talk to us over free beer and food about Cloud security, data privacy, encryption, eCryptfs, key management, Linux, and Ubuntu. Meet the entire cast of the Sh*t IT Security Guys Say short film. And tap into the vibrant tech start-up culture that's rocking downtown Austin by day, juxtaposed against the awesome live music culture that rocks downtown Austin by night.
View Larger Map
Come get your bang on!
:-Dustin
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Austin's Natty Release Party
Ubuntu's 11.04 Natty Narwhal release is just around the corner, so it's time for another Austin Release Party!
Let's celebrate alliteration and the Natty Narhwal at North by Northwest restaurant and brewery with some locally brewed frosty beverages on Thursday, April 28th from 6pm.
Please forward this invitation on to your LoCo, LUG, and your favorite Ubuntu-loving geeks :-)
:-Dustin
Monday, April 4, 2011
Austin Blind Cafe
Kim and I experienced something truly unique, and entirely perspective-changing a couple of weeks ago...
Accepting an invitation from our friends Christian and Julia, we attended the first presentation of the Blind Cafe in Austin.
I had heard of something similar in London, where several of my colleagues attended a "team building" dinner some time ago. But as far as I'm aware, this was a first for Austin.
We attended with a big group, I think there were 10 of us in our party (of which Kim and I only really knew one other couple). We spent a few minutes in anxious anticipation in the hallway, and received a few instructions from our hosts.
Eventually, we were led through two ante-chambers of darkness by our blind guide, toward our seats in a banquet room, completely and absolutely devoid of all light! You could open your eyes as wide as you could, and strain as hard as you wanted, but you would see absolutely nothing :-) It took quite a while to get used to it, even after the immediate nervousness subsided.
Kim managed to put her hand directly into someone's salad as we made our way to our seats -- oops :-) She sat on the end of a table, and had the security of a wall to her right. I sat on her left, with the rest of our new friends to my left and across the table.
Eating in blindness was a distinct, unique experience. Most of my friends and family know how much I hate salad, but here I had a huge salad sitting right in front of me :-) Under normal circumstances, I might have been able to pick through and eat the "good" parts. But here, I couldn't :-) And I couldn't really tell how much I had left to eat. I think that was the longest salad of my entire life!
Now the salad plate was already served for us when we sat down, but we had to help ourselves to the main course -- rice and curry. We immediately dropped the rice serving utensil on the ground, never to be found again. And so we improvised, with each of us sort of grabbing a handful of sticky rice, cupping it against our forks. The curry was a little easier to serve, as thankfully we didn't drop that spoon. The food was good, if a little bland for my tastes. Everyone was served the same thing, which sort of necessitates a lowest common denominator of accessibility, so the food was vegan and not very spicy. Dessert, though was absolutely delicious! Vegan cuisine is exceptionally good at chocolate and dessert :-) Mmm.
Okay, food aside, the experience was second to none. It was particularly disarming in that most of our conversations were with people whom we had never really met (friends of Christian's and Julia's). This was really interesting, talking and listening, without the aides of reading or displaying body language.
After dinner and still in the dark, we were treated to an excellent concert, mostly led by the organizer/producer of the Blind Cafe, Rosh. He has sort of a John Mayer style, with a great voice and an acoustic guitar. The additional acoustic instrumentation -- a pair of violins, a cello, and a viola, really filled out the ensemble. As a musician myself, it was engrossing to listen, and only listen, to the music in the room around us. With no visual distractions, the music just seemed to pour through me.
At the end of the evening, Kim said that she really didn't want to leave. She was having a great time, and was still in the process of absorbing the experience. The organizers lit one, lone candle in the middle of the room before we left. The revelation of the room around us was mesmerizing, finally being able to "see" how the room was arrange, how big the space was, how far (or near) the next table was, and where that damn rice spoon went! :-)
Listen, if you ever get a chance to attend a presentation of the Blind Cafe in your town, don't hesitate -- do it! Proceeds benefited charity and help with blindness awareness, and you'll enjoy an experience that will perhaps change your perspective entirely. It seems that the event has been held in Portland OR, Boulder CO, and Austin TX so far, and there are events on the calendar for Cincinnati OH and Seattle WA.
:-Dustin
Accepting an invitation from our friends Christian and Julia, we attended the first presentation of the Blind Cafe in Austin.
I had heard of something similar in London, where several of my colleagues attended a "team building" dinner some time ago. But as far as I'm aware, this was a first for Austin.
We attended with a big group, I think there were 10 of us in our party (of which Kim and I only really knew one other couple). We spent a few minutes in anxious anticipation in the hallway, and received a few instructions from our hosts.
Eventually, we were led through two ante-chambers of darkness by our blind guide, toward our seats in a banquet room, completely and absolutely devoid of all light! You could open your eyes as wide as you could, and strain as hard as you wanted, but you would see absolutely nothing :-) It took quite a while to get used to it, even after the immediate nervousness subsided.
Kim managed to put her hand directly into someone's salad as we made our way to our seats -- oops :-) She sat on the end of a table, and had the security of a wall to her right. I sat on her left, with the rest of our new friends to my left and across the table.
Eating in blindness was a distinct, unique experience. Most of my friends and family know how much I hate salad, but here I had a huge salad sitting right in front of me :-) Under normal circumstances, I might have been able to pick through and eat the "good" parts. But here, I couldn't :-) And I couldn't really tell how much I had left to eat. I think that was the longest salad of my entire life!
Now the salad plate was already served for us when we sat down, but we had to help ourselves to the main course -- rice and curry. We immediately dropped the rice serving utensil on the ground, never to be found again. And so we improvised, with each of us sort of grabbing a handful of sticky rice, cupping it against our forks. The curry was a little easier to serve, as thankfully we didn't drop that spoon. The food was good, if a little bland for my tastes. Everyone was served the same thing, which sort of necessitates a lowest common denominator of accessibility, so the food was vegan and not very spicy. Dessert, though was absolutely delicious! Vegan cuisine is exceptionally good at chocolate and dessert :-) Mmm.
Okay, food aside, the experience was second to none. It was particularly disarming in that most of our conversations were with people whom we had never really met (friends of Christian's and Julia's). This was really interesting, talking and listening, without the aides of reading or displaying body language.
After dinner and still in the dark, we were treated to an excellent concert, mostly led by the organizer/producer of the Blind Cafe, Rosh. He has sort of a John Mayer style, with a great voice and an acoustic guitar. The additional acoustic instrumentation -- a pair of violins, a cello, and a viola, really filled out the ensemble. As a musician myself, it was engrossing to listen, and only listen, to the music in the room around us. With no visual distractions, the music just seemed to pour through me.
At the end of the evening, Kim said that she really didn't want to leave. She was having a great time, and was still in the process of absorbing the experience. The organizers lit one, lone candle in the middle of the room before we left. The revelation of the room around us was mesmerizing, finally being able to "see" how the room was arrange, how big the space was, how far (or near) the next table was, and where that damn rice spoon went! :-)
Listen, if you ever get a chance to attend a presentation of the Blind Cafe in your town, don't hesitate -- do it! Proceeds benefited charity and help with blindness awareness, and you'll enjoy an experience that will perhaps change your perspective entirely. It seems that the event has been held in Portland OR, Boulder CO, and Austin TX so far, and there are events on the calendar for Cincinnati OH and Seattle WA.
:-Dustin
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Reminder: Austin's Lucid Release Party!

So the inevitable finally happened today... Ubuntu 10.04 LTS has released! Unleash the Lucid Lynx...
Here in Austin, Texas, we're celebrating tomorrow night, Friday, April 30, 2010, at the aptly named Mean Eyed Cat, on West 5th Street.
Come join us for a brewskie and meet some of your fellow Ubuntu and Free Software enthusiasts.
Full details at:
http://blog.dustinkirkland.com/2010/04/austins-lucid-release-party.html
See ya!
:-Dustin
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Austin's Lucid Release Party

Our Ubuntu 10.04 LTS release is just around the corner, so it's time for another Austin Release Party...
We held the Jaunty release party at the Jackalope, and the Karmic release party at Aussie's (in honor of our favorite Koala)... Up next, The Mean Eyed Cat, paying our respects to the Lucid Lynx!
So join us on Friday, April 30th from 6pm at The Mean Eyed Cat, 1621 W Fifth St, Austin, TX 78703.
If you haven't been to the Mean Eyed Cat, you're in for a treat :-) This Johnny Cash-themed bar was actually the setting for a scene in the Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2.
Bring a USB key if you'd like to get a copy of Ubuntu 10.04 LTS, and leave a note in the comments below if you plan on joining us, or I'm going to send this guy after you if you don't...

Cheers,
:-Dustin
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