T-DOSE (III): Conclusion

Blog post by nielx on Sun, 2007-10-14 12:23

A few hours ago I had my Haiku talk on the Dutch Open Source event T-DOSE, and I'm still glowing all over. The attendence was above all my expectations, around 25 people were in the room. And despite of the last minute all night changes I had to make, the speech went fluently. Someone made a few pictures, which I hope to be able to post soon, and more importantly, I'm on tv! I'm on Sunday around 11 AM, so have a look!

I'd sincerely like to thank the T-DOSE organisers, Jeroen Baten and Jean-Paul Saman, for making this event possible. Read on for more!

The presentation was divided up into two parts. My initial presentation was designed for a far less techie-audience, and it was solely based around the concept of the Haiku Brand. I argued that Haiku is an extremely tempting operating system because of a combination of factors. There's the product, which is the actual code and the binaries resulting from that. I argued that many of the unique selling points of BeOS had been reimplemented in other Operating Systems, and often in a better way. That lead me to the philosophy. Keep it simple, keep it flexible, and stay focused. Based around that philosophy there is a small, dedicated community that is keeping those ideals alive.

That combination of the product, the philosophy and the community, leads to the Haiku Brand. A brand appeals to people, just like Nike does, or MacDonald's.

The second part of my talk was the part I drafted up this night, and it was about some of the technical aspects of the product (for my geek audience). After a general introduction on the different layers, I focused on three things I found important. First of all, the messaging architecture, which enables the multi-threaded nature of the Operating System. Secondly, I outlined the OpenBFS file system, and the magical things that attributes are. Finally, I briefly touched on add-ons and replicants. All in all, I'd like to thank François Revol and Michael Phipps/Axel Dörfler for the pointers they have in the slides of theNUMERICA and the Haik Tech Talk presentations. They provided a good base.

It wasn't all perfect though. The notebook on which I performed my trick had a vmware image of Haiku. And at home, naturally, everything except Vision worked flawlessly. Naturally I avoided Vision, but Haiku managed to freeze twice on me. Oh, and by the way, it did not freeze at all during a private demonstration afterwards.

Nevertheless, I thoroughly enjoyed my talk, and in general I think the audience did as well, and I hope you will too if you manage to look at the video.

AttachmentSize
Haiku - T-DOSE presentation - 14-10-2007.pdf526.37 KB

Comments

Re: T-DOSE (III): Conclusion

Well done, Niels...(with an impressive vocabulary and ease of speech in English, BTW !)

Re: T-DOSE (III): Conclusion

Very nicely done, Niels. And thanks for keeping us in the loop on your experience! Thanks for spreading the Haiku word! :-)

Re: T-DOSE (III): Conclusion

I'm happy to hear all went well with your presentation. Apart of the deadlocks, that is... ;)
The internet broadcast didn't work for me. The Linux-VLC link showed "no video". I installed dread Quicktime to try the other option but that just made my system unresponsive for a few minutes, so I deinstalled it again...
Is there a recording, mayhaps?

What was the reaction of the audience? Besides cynical laughs while deadlocking. :)

Re: T-DOSE (III): Conclusion

The presentation.pdf is nice.
Good Job :-)

stargater

Pictures!

Hello Niels,

Here are the pictures I shot at T-DOSE. I only made a *REAL* small amount of pictures, because it turned out I didn't bring full batteries with me and because I was constantly busy doing other stuff. Too bad I didn't shoot any pictures in the lobby :-/

Anyway, here it goes:

I first went to OpenEmbedded, the first talk on the Sunday morning:

http://junk.g-rave.nl/t-dose/t-dose-1.jpg

The two folks sitting in front of me are classmates of mine. What a coincidence :-)

Then the Haiku talk; I only shot two pictures; I had to focus on the presentation itself as well (which was great)!

http://junk.g-rave.nl/t-dose/t-dose-2.jpg
http://junk.g-rave.nl/t-dose/t-dose-3.jpg

I also made a picture of the LogFS dude:

http://junk.g-rave.nl/t-dose/t-dose-4.jpg

Re: T-DOSE (III): Conclusion

The stream's been archived by now; links to it -using either Quicktime or VLC- can be found on this page:

http://citytv.nl/page/DesignCapital/DesignC.html#T-Dose%20Open%20Source%...

Re: T-DOSE (III): Conclusion

There seems to be a mixup on that recording page. I click on Niels' presentation and am confronted with some lady talking about a cms and stuff...
I mailed the guys at CityTV.nl to correct the link. Hope they correct it quickly.

Re: T-DOSE (III): Conclusion

Just got an email from Hein Kuiper of CityTV. There was a mixup with the VLC-Link that has been fixed now.
You can watch it under rtsp://stream.citytv.nl/qtmedia/Media/T-Dose141007-2.mov

Re: T-DOSE (III): Conclusion

Nudity in Dutch Film.. That's a great thesis!!! :D ROFL.... :)

Great Speech by the way, very impressive.

Re: T-DOSE (III): Conclusion

I just finished watching the recording. WOW!
That was a phantastic presentation! Crashing Haiku was a bit of a downer, but you professionally took it in stride. A shame really, my vmimage is amazingly solid; running Vision also works...
The audience was also great. Very interested with lots of questions where at other occasions there have hardly been any.
So, well done indeed! I'll book you any time! :)