Dan Maharry

Alas, Poor (Indian) Penguin

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[Originally published in the Times of India]

India. Second most populated country in the world. Like Australia, one of those countries so physically big, people often forget it's actually part of a continent and not one in itself. In the late nineties, it was also one of the silent partners in the dotcom boom, with an estimated 60% of the development work originated in the States being outsourced to firms in the subcontinent. Vast numbers of school-goers there chose (and still choose) to study I.T.-related topics with the lure of America and the West in one eye and a programming manual under the other. With the lack of unions, almost limitless potential staff and cheap labour costs on top of that, several of the big firms - Compaq, Microsoft, Unisys and Bell Labs, to name a few - also set up R&D shops out there.

Naturally, while essentials are fundamentally cheaper to purchase out there, most things electrical are just as costly as they are in the West if not more so. Hardware is shared between families and friends if they can afford even a basic machine and pirate software is rife. Windows 2000 Advanced Server for a couple of pounds anyone? Not good, but not surprising. Enter Linux and the open source software; the ideal solution to an economy based on very little. Linux user groups exist all over India and in Bangalore, the I.T. capital of India, there were as many companies that use Linux as Windows. The biggest tech show in the country, IT.COM, even had its own Linux pavilion and yet by the end of the nineties, there were still no major Indian events with the aim of promoting the development and use of this incredibly potent area of software. March 2000 saw that changed for the better.

Backed by Wrox Press, BangLinux 2000 was held at the Indian Institute of Science and Taj West Hotel, Bangalore to an overflowing community of developers, businessmen and enthusiasts. Such luminaries as Richard Stallman (Free Software Foundation), Nat Friedman (Gnome), Rasmus Lerdorf (PHP), Alan Cox and Jens Axboe (kernel developers) lent their time for free to the proceedings. Even the Indian government lent their support to the project with the Karnatakan state minister for I.T. making an appearance to open the proceedings. Attendees were treated to glimpses of the future of their world by the people creating it.

Attendees and speakers alike felt and appreciated the special atmosphere of this unique event. Organized somewhat at random on a shoestring budget by a couple of people on site and a few more in the UK, it was a massive success in every department save the budget which, because of the low entrance fees, made quite painful reading if you were the one holding it. One thing everyone agreed on though was that they would return to India for BangLinux 2001 if it happened.

And so it did. With a presence established by the conference and a new Indian printing deal to maintain, Wrox opened offices in Bangalore and Bombay in Summer 2000. Those in Bangalore scrapped their original plan of creating a Dr. Dobbs-alike magazine for Indian codeheads in favour of revitalizing BangLinux. Wise move.

Over the course of four months, Wrox devised their most ambitious conference proceedings to date, with almost the whole speaker roster entirely sourced from India itself. Two tracks, three days, and over forty sessions for the masses. With no competition once again, the corporations supported the operation, with the likes of Compaq, SCO and RedHat sponsoring the event and the Free Software Foundation, Gnome, KDE, PHP, Perl, and more all represented by speakers. Old hands like Rasmus Lerdorf and Ganesh Prasad (Java) were joined by new faces like Michael Meeks, Martin Konold, Ramarao Kanneganti, and Damian Conway. Even an earthquake rated at 8.7 on the Richter scale a month earlier did not deter attendees from the conference, leaving their families in Ahmedabad to continue the clean-up operations.

With a precedent set already, a lot more attention was paid the conference, helped by a comprehensive PR campaign in the Times of India and other regional newspapers. In total, six camera crews (including CNN) and two dozen different publications swamped the meet making it challenging to keep things running smoothly, or indeed to find a moment to collect either your thoughts or your lunch.

BangLinux 2001 was a quantum leap ahead of its predecessor, and this time it broke even as well, but while a success in every count, Wrox did not decide to pursue a third run in 2002 having withdrawn from conference organization to concentrate once again on its core book business. With both Linux and Java both now mature products the bursting of the dotcom bubble and the September 11 attacks, it may appear lucky that they did. Still - 2003 maybe?

There were Gods (organizers), Angels (helpers), Prophets (speakers), The Unwashed Masses (the unwashed masses), and Devils (Press). Oh yes, and penguins too. An I.T. minister came to open it whilst CNN watched and 700 people stood over their shoulder waiting for the latest info we could give them on the world of Open Source software. There were laptop problems, power cuts, impromptu sessions, an military-grade airplane simulator, cheers whenever a Windows machine broke down and a bunch of very tired foreigners. We guessed the contents of Linux 2.5 four months before it began, looked at Perl 6 which still doesn't exist except in the mind of Larry Wall, and India's answer to computers for the impoverished - the Simputer. We ate curry too.

Slithering Souvenirs

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Paul off tomorrow so down to town for a tour with Tim and some souvenirs. As ever, beggar comes up laden with washing basket in one hand, small child in the other and slightly older child clinging to her leg. With no money forthcoming, she proffers the washing basket, takes the lid off and watches (while laughing?) as the three of us jumps five miles sideways as a large golden snake appears from said basket. Shudder. Back to office in afternoon, but no-one wants to work or even download mail. Paul treats us to TGI Fridays before he learns there is a 63% tax markup on imported alcohol. We do sub him a bit.

BangLinux Last Day

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The Event For Penguin LoversShit - should have read email. Turns out missing speaker yesterday emailed me to say he was stuck in Mumbai. Also turns out Linux group and two of the other speakers could have covered it, but who knew? As sod’s law dictates, the one person whose sole purpose in life was to attend that lecture has found me and complains vociferously for half an hour.

Big audience around for futures day. Damien Conway on Perl 6, Michael Meeks on Ximian Gnome 2, Zope stuff, dope stuff and all the funky levels in between. I get a standing ovation for rebooting a Windows computer back into Linux on the main stage and the sessions end with a demo from the Indian Ministry of Defence of OpenGL running full blown aircraft flight simulators. Demo involves five people, ten extra boxes and a full replica joystick from a Lightning fighter jet. Lots of wows from the audience up until the point where the power cuts out for five minutes.

Farewell photos and standup routines for helpers, staff (us) and speakers follow. Those speakers not already gone fly off after last meal at the Gateway hotel, one of those colonial places kept open for formal occasions and a good beer or two. And so it's all done.

More photos from Day 3 on Flickr

BangLinux Day 2

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A Proper SummitKnow every patch of ground between halls 1 and 2 as my sprinting continues between the two making sure lectures start on time. Shoulders are finally healing after six days of muted agony. The Simputer is officially launched at one of the sessions. One guy simply doesn’t turn up for his talk. Grumblings aimed at me but no-one knows where he is, not even his mates. Reschedule but end up running my own Q&A session at the end of the day as a result. Tame cabby turns up again. Not needed tonight but spends fifteen minutes arguing that he should be paid for the fuel he spent getting here anyway. Politely, he gets told exactly where he can put his fuel. Won’t be expecting him to reappear tomorrow.

Everyone jetting off after sessions tomorrow so tonight is the posh thank you meal. After some effort, hotel arranges six Ambassadors (the cars, not the diplomats) to take twenty of us out of town to an open air restaurant called Gulkarnas. In fact, the place is booked out just for us. Kingfisher flows and the food is served on banana leaves while conversation flows between last year’s BangLinux, open source as a business, and whether or not the whole Skynet scenario in The Terminator could actually happen.

More photos from Day 2 on Flickr

BangLinux Day 1

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6am start to go grab speaker shirts at hotel which of course don’t show until 7.30. But everyone is where they should be which is a minor miracle. Scratch that. Neither Red Hat nor Compaq have actually built their stands yet. Neither have the power nor equipment to do it. As they are the platinum sponsors, you wonder how everyone else has managed it very well, thank you.

Indian IT minister comes to light ceremonial lamps with John and a full hall and several TV stations cover proceedings. Suddenly regret organiser shirt as its easier for the press to spot, wanting to be introduced to important (sic) people. Get grabbed by CNN for fifteen minutes while I should be chasing speakers to start their sessions, missing two who come and go without me ever seeing them. One of the guys from CDC Linux has stepped into the US void for a device drivers talk. Of course, he doesn’t really know how to judge how he’s doing so he’s only half way through by the time it should be finishing. Of course, it’s a full house, so what do you do?

Sun continues to shine and no one loses their head. A few egos from the local Linux group are bruised but no permanent casualties. Yesterday’s tame cabby shows up looking for a fare which he gets en route to first speaker meal at Tycoons. Grace casually informs me outside that Rekha has a big crush on me. And I’m expected to do what exactly? Best course of action - absolutely nothing.

More photos from Day 1 on Flickr