[SATLUG] [Fwd: San Antonio Open Source Research]
Justizin
justizin at siggraph.org
Wed Nov 29 08:55:29 CST 2006
Whup, did I forget to mention SWRi?
SouthWest Research Institute made extensive use of Free and
Open-Source Software last I checked. I interviewed here once to
develop and maintain a set of perl scripts for interacting with the
IMAGE satellite[0], after my grandfather, who was once the head of
engineering, pointed me in their direction.
Sadly, like many organizations of the old economy, they pay people who
can't afford college degrees very little, reinforcing the status quo.
I was told by my interviewer that she did not understand much of what
went on, but made twice as much as the people who do, even when they
are twice her age.
You might take an angle on how few educated people are born in and
live out their lives in San Antonio, and how many are driven away by
the low quality of higher education combined with a business climate
that is unfriendly to self-educated individuals.
I can tell you that I was offered over $100k to accept a position
working with UNIX systems at least once a month this year, but never
in San Antonio. ;)
You could even mention that the ever-undead lightrail project between
San Antonio and Austin, if completed per its' original schedule, could
have made South Texas into an influence as strong as the SF Bay Area,
SEATAC, and Research Triangle Park, NC - all areas where you will find
more F/OSS today.
On 11/21/06, Justizin <justizin at siggraph.org> wrote:
> Howdy Bruce, Michael, all..
>
> On 11/21/06, Bruce Dubbs <bruce.dubbs at gmail.com> wrote:
> > Can anyone help out Michael? He is not a member of the list, so email
> > him directly if you can.
> >
> > -- Bruce
> >
>
> No problem.. :)
>
> >
> > -------- Original Message --------
> > Subject: San Antonio Open Source Research
> > Date: Mon, 20 Nov 2006 12:11:53 -0600
> > From: Mpstark <mpstark at gmail.com>
> > To: president at satlug.org, director1 at satlug.org, director2 at satlug.org,
> > director3 at satlug.org, treasurer at satlug.org
> >
> > Hello!
> >
> > My name is Michael Starkweather and I attend MacArthur High School up in the
> > North East Independent School District (NEISD). My English teacher, Mr.
> > Draves, has seen fit to assign a short research project about any topic in
> > San Antonio. After reviewing my interests and recent forays into the Linux
> > world, I came up with the brilliant idea to write mine about Open Source San
> > Antonio. However, there is a problem with this topic: not much information
> > is published about it at all. Frankly, I need your help.
>
> Neat, a cousin of mine went to Mac. I'm sure I won't be the only
> person glad to help.
>
> > As a San Antonio based Linux group, I would assume you would have more
> > information and contacts then a seventeen-year-old high school student. Any
> > information about this topic is relevant and I really would appreciate your
> > help finding information. Acceptable sources are just about anything --
> > books, papers, interviews (can be conducted by me), websites, and probably a
> > few more. As well as sources, references to people would be great as they,
> > as well, could provide these things.
>
> Actually, when I was seventeen I was paid to harass SATLUG - you ought
> to come to a meeting.
>
> In San Antonio, there is not as much open-source as you see in Silicon
> Valley, Europe, or South America, by far, but there are some
> significant consumers of F/OSS:
>
> * The US Military, esp the USAF, relies heavily on F/OSS, although
> as far as I know Windows is still the "official" OS, and it is a
> policy violation to install GNU/Linux, or was at one time. Some other
> folks on the list can talk to you about this in more detail.
> * UT Health & Science Center, as most institutions of higher
> education in the world, relies heavily on Free and Open-Source
> software such as GNU/Linux to run a great deal of their network, as I
> understand it.
> * Rackspace, founded by some local Trinity drop-outs, is well known
> the world over and, though there has been a marked change in direction
> in recent years, has always, afaik, had a great concentration of F/OSS
> customers as well as relying primarily on F/OSS for internal systems.
> When I left, we were fighting a lot about using Windows in the
> IS/Engineering floor, so you might talk to Tom Weeks or Travis H. (?)
> about that.
> * Lightwave, a proprietary software company, as I understand it,
> relies on Free / Open-Source software for much of their business.
>
> I'm not sure how prevalent F/OSS is in the government in San Antonio -
> I know it is quite popular in Austin, including the TX State
> government, and I could probably get you an interview with someone
> there if you are interested.
>
> Also, crawl your school's office and try to get in touch with someone
> from the district IT department. Administrators will probably blow
> you off, but if you can find out when they are around and catch them
> in an empty lab, I bet they'd be glad to talk for five minutes, or at
> least dismissively confirm that they don't use F/OSS or want to talk
> about it.
>
> > I am especially looking for information about the benefits of switching to
> > Linux with application to San Antonio.
>
> One angle to push might be that GNU/Linux is an internationally
> developed product, a true gem of international trade, and in fact the
> ubuntu namesake has slipped into international politics of late as a
> motto of globalization. Many foreign countries refuse to use
> Microsoft products because they feel that our government could have
> some influence over MS, and thus open-source products may actually
> open doors for a business interaction.
>
> > You have no idea how much this will help,
> > Michael Starkweather (Mpstark)
>
> --
> Justizin, Independent Interactivity Architect
> ACM SIGGRAPH SysMgr, Reporter
> http://www.siggraph.org/
>
[0] http://image.gsfc.nasa.gov/
--
Justizin, Independent Interactivity Architect
ACM SIGGRAPH SysMgr, Reporter
http://www.siggraph.org/
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