Repository

March 17, 2008 at 11:37 pm (Uncategorized)

The repository is in a mess right now. Havent been able to devote time to it this week. Have to add a Fedora repo. Have to update the Packman repo. Need to provide several One-Click install links. Many other small small things too…. will do it pakka se…..

Permalink 1 Comment

ELECTIONS

March 17, 2008 at 11:16 pm (Uncategorized)

I always believed Goenka was a better candidate than Rakshit. I also know that Goenka is a bigger threat than Rakshit to Shreyank. Having said that, i am obviously a Shreyank supporter. He is a good friend of mine. Over the past year i have spent a lot of time with him as an active LUG member. His attitude just blows me off. Works tirelessly and is so dedicated. I will never forget and always regret that he never got his due share in the success of CodeCracker. He would stay awake all night and watch at the screen and the Mysql database, as 2-3 submissions would trickle down from the ladies hostels. He was integral part of the systems testing.  He also does all the background TPR work. Above all he is a simple and honest man.  So is Goenka. Honestly speaking, whoever wins now, will be just fine. Both are good men. But Shreyank’s win will boost the already vigorated LUG. Those are my reasons for supporting him.

Permalink 4 Comments

(nitdgp.lug && dgp.lug)

March 17, 2008 at 11:09 pm (Uncategorized)

14th March saw the arrival of dgplug members at NIT Durgapur. After a lot of running around college authorities in vain, we finally arranged the Application lab in the IT Department. Many thanx to our HOD Sir. Prof S. Choudhary without whose help it would all be a big mess. IT dept is the best, proved again!!

Anyways, Mr. Kushal Das arrived along with 5 more members of dgplug. All were students were of BC Roy Engg. College, Durgapur. They came on time, and things began more or less on time too. KD took out his laptop full of open source and distro related stickers. He then gave us so many stickers and tatoos. It was a pleasant surprise. We had some problems trying to configure his laptop with the lab’s net connection, but it eventually worked.

They first began by talking about the activities of dgplug. Then on our request he spoke about Google summer of Code and the LinuxChix project. The dgp co-ordinator of LinuxChix project was also present. Among the six people present, two were Fedora ambassadors. There were two summer of code participants among them too.

We were introduced to the IRC channel freenode.net. We met some open-source developers there. KD spoke about proprietary formats like doc and why we should not use them. He also urged us to begin contributing upstream. He spoke about the popular FOSS conventions held in India.

At the end he taught us a thing or two about patch and diff and then reporting bugs.

We then proceeded to CityCentre for Lunch. We had a nice meal and then saw them off. We look forward to a productive and fun filled association with dgplug in the future.

Now for the grudges i still have. The biggest and everlasting grudge would be that it was not video taped. I had arranged for a few Nokia N72s , but as soon as it began it completely bounced off my head. Not even a single picture was taken by us… what a shame :-( . KD did have a cool Nikkon SLR, and he did take a few snaps in during lunch.

Hearing all the things he said, i so wished i could turn back time, go to standard 11 and start over. I turned 22 day before yesterday, and it felt kinda bad. Not to be a part of this thing.

I distributed all the cool Firefox stickers… dint get any myslef :-(

Anyways, good things are happening. It feels nice. I hope our college will be at the forefront of FOSS in India soon.

Click here, here, here ,here to read how they felt .

Permalink 3 Comments

An amazing blog on why Linux does not spread

March 10, 2008 at 8:56 am (Uncategorized)

Taken from http://blog.anamazingmind.com/2008/02/why-linux-doesnt-spread-curse-of-being.html

Saturday, 16 February 2008

Why Linux Doesn’t Spread – the Curse of Being Free

Linux isn’t very popular on the desktop. It’s a far third behind OS X, which is a very far second behind Windows. Most people cite pre-installed operating systems as the reason. But as a student of psychology, I see something most people don’t. There’s one big factor in why Linux isn’t popular on the desktop. Linux is free. I know this sounds like complete dog’s bollocks, but hear me out before judging my sanity.

We can all remember the story of Tom Sawyer. At one point, Tom had to whitewash a fence. When one of his friends happened along, Tom tried to persuade and bribe the friend to help him. Needless to say, it didn’t work.

A few moments later, as Tom was unhappily whitewashing the fence, another friend stumbled along to jeer at Tom’s misfortune. This time Tom decided on a cunning plan. He ignored the friend, and seemed very absorbed in the whitewashing. Soon the friend became intrigued, because what could be more interesting than talking to a friend? Shortly thereafter, he started begging Tom to let him whitewash a bit of the fence. Tom wouldn’t give in.

The friend offered Tom some of his most valuable possessions if Tom would just let him whitewash a little bit. Tom reluctantly agreed, secretly jumping with joy on the inside. More friends happened along, coming to laugh at Tom for having to whitewash a fence. Tom simply did his act, and they all stayed to help whitewash, and paid for the privilege!

The above story illustrates a basic human nature. We don’t value things we can get easily. Yet we’d climb mountains, cross rivers and travel across deserts just to reach something we can’t easily get our hands on.

The computer world

The same thing applies in the world of computers. Humans are naturally suspicious of that which comes too easily. Imagine you were promoting an expensive brand of champagne. If you were running around forcing free samples into people’s hands, they would be very wary. But if you set up a stand where you would offer small samples for $10 each (“Special promotional price! Normally costs three times as much!”), people would see your champagne as posh and valuable.

It’s still the same champagne. Yet your presentation radically changes people’s perception of it.

Which brings me to Linux. There’s one problem with Linux getting to new users. It’s free.

That’s right. Linux being free is a problem in reaching new customers.

Why Windows pwnz Linux – an imaginary case study

Let me show you an example where Windows is better than Linux (I don’t mean better as in actually better :p).

Ignore for a moment all the crap about Windows being pre-installed and such. Let’s say you have a computer-newbie friend, called Compy McNewb, who’s just bought a new computer and is getting ready to install an OS.

He’s got two computer-savvy friends. You, who urges him to use Linux. And another friend, who urges him to use Windows.

Which one will Compy pick? Let’s go through the reasoning.

  • Linux is being offered for free. Good.
  • He can get a pirated copy of Windows from his friend. Also for free. Good.
  • But Windows is sold for over three hundred dollars, while Linux is offered for free.

Here’s what Compy McNewb sees. He can get both OS’s for free. But one of them is worth over three hundred dollars, while the other one is worth nothing.

“That’s not true!” I hear you scream. “Linux is worth a lot! It’s just being offered for free!” I know it’s not true that Linux is worth less than Windows. It’s far more valuable to the end user in terms of getting things done.

But that’s not what Average Joe Computer Newbie sees. He sees a free product versus a three-hundred-dollar product he can get free. It’s all about the perception!

In the 1970’s, a record label in Britain was selling albums containing cover versions of contemporary songs. Although the records sold for less than a pound a copy, hardly anyone bought them and the record company was suffering.

A whizz-kid joined the board and announced he wanted to more than double the price of the records. The other executives were shocked, but eventually agreed to his plan. Within a few weeks, the records were flying off the shelves.

When the records didn’t cost much, people didn’t value them. The record company was saved by redefining people’s perception of their product.

Taking Action

So here I am, wondering how to turn the tables around.

And I’ve got an idea. In the past, I tried to convert people to Linux (specifically Ubuntu). None of them really stuck. Back then I focused on all those great aspects of Linux. Being purely factual and objective.

But I have since learned people don’t act rationally. They act based on irrational emotions – like in the above examples. So here’s the question. Could I turn the perception around? What if I presented Linux in a way that makes people drool? Make it look more expensive than Windows, more cool than a Mac, more posh than a ten-million-dollar villa in the Caribbean?

Here’s my plan:

I’m going to present Ubuntu as a very expensive posh OS. I’ll mention it sells for upward of five hundred dollars in the States. I’ll say I managed to get an illegal copy off a Polish guy I know over the internet.

Only THEN will I mention all the positives. Multiple desktops, bullet-proof security, stunning visual effects. Somehow all of it makes sense in the context of a super-expensive elitist OS. I’ll see how many people I can convert when advertising Linux this way.

I’ll post exactly a week from now, reporting back on how my Linux Preaching v2.0 went. Hi yo, Silver, AWAAAAY!

Permalink 3 Comments

CHMOD JOKE

March 10, 2008 at 8:52 am (Uncategorized)

If you get the joke… you belong to the open source world…..

me: dada

  u there?
  junior to aaya nahi
  bhaag gaya kya?
01:33 Supratik: are yaar
  usko beech raste pe kisi aur ne pakar liya tha..
  itne der tak chata..
 me: jaah
01:34 chmod karke bhejna tha na usko
 Supratik: aur wo abhi mere paas laut aya.. to main usko hall9 bhej diya…
 me: 700
 Supratik: fir kabhi bhej dunga
  hahhahaha
 me: haaah
 Supratik: tu aajkal chmod me bada expert ho gaya hai lagta hai
 me: arey kyun mazaak uda rahein hain
  itna to jhamela kar dye the
01:35 suniye aur ek baat
 Supratik: y

Permalink Leave a Comment

Things i did today(last nite)

March 5, 2008 at 11:13 pm (Uncategorized)

Woke up at 11 am i think. Went to hall1 and had my lunch. Then headed to the IT dept. Baisakhi mam had some work. Went to the LUG server. Had to reinstall the OS. Took a lot of time. SDU meeting at CSE dept at 6:30 PM. SUSE desktop crashed and the projector also dint work with my screen’s resolution… but it went ok. Came back…. hall nite in hall 5. Had to stand in line for 30 minutes i think for getting into the mess. And did i say stand…. i could barely find my footing in the crowd. These and many other reasons, all of which came up today, have convinced me not to eat in the mess. The hall nite was a damp squib. No one attended. I installed different SUSE distros 5- 6 times in a row, coz SUSE 11 wud crash when mounting Windows partitions. Baaki sab normal hi tha………..

Permalink Leave a Comment

Things i did today

March 4, 2008 at 10:48 pm (Uncategorized)

Woke up 2 hours earlier than normal. Baisakhi mam called. She had some work. Went to her office and did it.

Then went to hall1, Sandeep’s room, slept for 3 hours i think. India defeated Australia. I guess the two were related.

Went to my room in the evening and had a bath after many days. Received my first birthday gift this year. Came by post from Silchar.

Went to LH more, called and thanked the sender.

Bought a 100 Rs topup.

Went to see Gandhi in action in the basketball tournament.

Went to the LUG server room to fix a problem i had created.

Came back to hall1 and had a TPR meeting.

Downloaded Mandriva 2008 and openSuSE 11 alpha.

Collected the email ids of 20 companies from their websited…. which is not a very easy  job by the way.

So in hindsight…. it was a busy day….. and i loved it :-)

Permalink Leave a Comment

Hacking Breakthrough

March 3, 2008 at 6:06 am (Uncategorized)

I am always on Linux…. always. I use Linux DC++ too. There is an annoying bug in the app. It does not connect to a hub if you give its name as the connection string but it connects via an ip address. So basically the app can not resolve the name given to the corresponding ip address. But smbd can open window shares on my pc by names… so i thot a hack wud do the trick So i went thru thr LinucDC sourcecode and i made a this system call “nmblookup -S %s|grep 10.0.|grep -v 10.0.255.255|head -n1|cut -d’ ‘  -f1″ . And it woked fine.

Permalink 1 Comment

Chayanika

March 2, 2008 at 10:03 pm (Uncategorized)

Today Chayanika organised Elixier 08. I thoroughly enjoyed it. The singer named Rupankar was great. Excellent voice and modulation. The meagre crowd population was kind of an insult to him i guess.

The paintings were great.

The three songs sung by our college mates in the end were also pretty good. Karn Kaul the guitarist was great.

Permalink Leave a Comment

Recent activities of NIT DGP LUG

March 2, 2008 at 10:01 pm (Uncategorized)

1. We set up a linux repository on the lan. It is not just a repository. You can also install a distro from the server over the network. Here is the link. Here is the link if you are inside NIT DGP.

2. We finally started the Software Development Unit. It is dedicated to working on open source projects. We had the first meeting on 29th February. It was fun. We watched movies and stuff. We will have a website soon.

3. Mr. Kushal Das, an experienced open source developer, will visit us mid March. He shall train the Software Development Unit members and also enlighten us about the projects he is working on.

4. And many other things…. all secret….. but as soon as they are up, will let it out here.

Permalink Leave a Comment

Next page »