Wednesday, August 15, 2012

OSCON Report

A few weeks ago, I attended OSCON--the O'Reilly Open Source Convention--as part of the Apache CloudStack team. We met in Portland, Oregon, along with over 3,000 other open source enthusiasts.

A few of the highlights:

  • Met fellow open source documentation writers from Eucalyptus, Apache, Rackspace, and LibreOffice. We compared notes on tools, automation, modularity, and information reuse. I learned so much. For example, it looks like converting content from one format to another is an issue for everyone. We need a better forklift!
  • Got a chance for a couple of nice, long talks with experienced hands from the Apache Foundation. They clarified many of my questions about what it means that my project was donated to Apache. Will I have to change tools, move my website, adopt a style guide? (the answers seemed to be no, probably no, and only-a-bit.)
  • "The Next Generation," aka the diversity talk. As a writer, I was naturally friendly to the message that open-source projects need to be welcoming towards all sorts of contributors, including functions besides coding. Writing, marketing, design, project management, event coordination...there are so many abilities needed and so many varied tasks to do.
  • Poker night? Sign me up. My boss practically fell out of his chair in awe after I turned up three aces in my second hand. The bluff began weeks earlier when I professed to have never played poker before. Well, I've never played inside a casino, so it was sort of true... He immediately said I'd be welcome at his table, and I couldn't resist the temptation to make him regret that offer. The luck of the draw did the rest. He won it all back later in the evening. As Citrix employees, neither of us was eligible to win the poker-night prize anyhow, so it was all in good fun.
  • Obtained one plush Gnu.

Again next year, please.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

A Big Day for My Project

lot happened today. My company put out a new software release and announced the project is joining the Apache Foundation - making this release especially visible. Some of us stayed up until the scheduled release time (4:30 am Pacific) to make sure everything went smoothly. In my case, this wasn't required -- I just didn't want to miss the fun, and I was able to contribute some last-minute fixes that will really help the people who use the software.

The following paragraph in a press release brought home to me how much the work I do matters. I am single-handedly responsible for all the product documentation for use by more than 30,000 community members, hundreds of clouds, and $1 billion in revenue. Jeepers! I knew that big-name companies (British Telecom, GoDaddy, Zynga, Intel) use our stuff, but seeing it all added up like that really brings it home.

"The Citrix sponsorship of the ASF is in addition to its announcement today that it will relicense its CloudStack project under the Apache License and submit its CloudStack code to the ASF. CloudStack includes a community of more than 30,000 active community members, thousands of certified apps, and hundreds of production clouds, collectively generating more than $1 billion in cloud revenue from some of the biggest brands in the industry. " - http://www.citrix.com/English/NE/news/news.asp?newsID=2323098

I guess I had better get  back to work. !!