The party last night at Oscon worked out great! We expected about 75 people and got 300! The restaurant had to scramble to bring on enough food and drinks. As promised it was fun and there were tons of great people to meet. Even R0ml remarked that all expectations were exceeded.
During the day yesterday we went to Tim O’Reilly’s executive briefing. It brought mostly the expected fare from technologists in open source and SaaS companies, with one interesting exception: the ‘chat’ of Tim and Eben Moglen. Eben used this event to re-invigorate the debate about software freedom by attacking Tim O’Reilly, who he claims has wasted his time cozying up with the new powerhouse companies of the Web 2.0 generation and getting rich, while failing to use his influence for the bigger issue of software / knowledge freedom.
Eben called it an “invitation to join a conversation” but never seemed to be interested to have any conversation. Tim probed Eben about the SaaS loophole in GPL3, but Eben turned it back on Tim, who demonstrated that picking a fight with a brilliant lawyer is pointless - he threw his hands up in the air and asked the audience to step in.
Did Eben succeed in restarting the conversation? My take is that he didn’t, I never figured out what he wants. Sure his mission is important, but does that mean we should no longer meet and talk about web services, Web 2.0, business models, etc.? Is this like Al Gore coming to Oscon to berate us that we are not at work finding solutions for global warming? From blog entries by other attendees like Zack Urlocker, Chris Marino, Robert Kaye and Joe ‘Zonker’ Brockmeier, it seems he did not make many new friends for his cause.
Interestingly, Tim O’Reilly will always promote new technology directions with great passion, and always turns out to have significant commercial investments in these technologies, whether through his conferences, books or board seats. Does he invest in what he believes in, or does he believe in what he invests in? Until he clarifies that, he is quite vulnerable to attacks like Eben Moglen’s.
This morning Andi gave presentations about Rich Internet Applications and Security of Web Applications. Both were well attended and well received. Cal will post their notes and source code to DevZone as soon as he gets a chance.
Now I am attending a session by Chris DiBona about the use of open source at Google. As Harold Goldberg points out, the attendees to Oscon are all busy typing on their laptops while attending conference sessions - an interesting way of being social, similar to the kids hanging out together at the malls with their iPods blasting in their ears. I am telling him that this is the generation that is all great at multi-tasking.
P.S. (7/27/2007), more coverage about the Moglen - O’Reilly exchange in The Register,