Men in Skirts

Well, made it to Edinburgh, via a forty hour stopover in Singapore. Picked up a tie and kilt in the Debian tartan. Sadly Edinburgh in midsummer isn’t as warm as Singapore in summer, or even as Brisbane in winter, so there’s good odds my knees are going to be shaking as well as visible all to soon. Oh well, there’s reports that there might be scattered sunshine by Monday — fingers crossed.

The dak BOF’s been delayed until tomorrow (Saturday 3pm, Edinburgh localtime) so Andi and Steve can sit in. Bit weird having something that technical on Debian day, I guess, but hey, whatever. It’s scheduled for a 2hr session, but I’m hoping it’ll be pretty informal and hacky rather than slides and lecturing or whatever. I’m hoping people will arrive with some ideas on what cool things that dak ought to be handling, and we can spend the time actually making dak support as many of those things as possible. Some of the ideas I like are in the BOF proposal. It might also be worth having a look at the video (or audio) of Robert Collins’ talk (“…Release always?”) at the Debian miniconf at linux.conf.au earlier this year, particular related to some of the ideas about setting up separate GNOME or KDE or libstdc++ staging areas for getting major updates ready for unstable rather than mixing them all up in experimental. Anyway, feel free to plan on arriving or leaving anytime during the BOF, unstructured is just another word for freedom!

Yesterday I had a quick chat with Frans about getting debootstrap officially incorporated into the d-i subversion repo, so that it’s officially team maintained, and there’s a convenient central place for hacking on it. Given the recent discussion (while I was flying to debconf, in fact — how inconsiderate!) hopefully that’ll mean we’ll get a couple of cleanups there too.

Oh, also got informed that Eben Moglen will be giving a free lecture in Edinburgh on Tuesday after debconf (the 26th) courtesy of the Scottish Society for Computers and Law. Sounds interesting if you’re into the whole theory of law and the effects of modern technology thereon:

In this lecture, Professor Moglen considers how private legislation is replacing public law as the organising intellectual structure for software and the technology industries, with far-reaching social consequences and theoretical implications.

Not sure if he’ll arrive in time to drop by during DebConf proper or not.

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