Monthly Archives: September 2007

I wonder if Nicholas Negroponte, or any of the other people involved with the OLPC, have ever read E.F. Schumacher’s Small Is Beautiful, as one of the central ideas in the book epitomises the approach to design that is represented in this little laptop.

Schumacher argues that trying to aid the economy of a third-world nation by implanting all of the latest, greatest, and most expensive technologies directly into an economy that is not capable of sustaining this kind of development long term is doomed to failure. Instead he advocates the use of intermediate technologies: technologies that apply modern knowledge to design systems suitable for a country’s current state of development and use minimal capital – in this way they help to push a country further up the ladder of development (to borrow a phrase from Jeffrey Sachs) in a sustainable manner.

I’m no economist, and my current grasp of the material in this book is limited – despite its very readable nature – but it seems to me this is exactly what the OLPC delivers: modern technology in a form designed from the ground up to be applicable and useful in the particular set of circumstances developing nations find themselves in.

What’s even more relevant to the discussion of the OLPC and Small Is Beautiful is that Schumacher talks about three factors which are vital with respect to the sustainability of development: education, organisation and discipline. The OLPC’s explicit goal of furthering education in developing nations is noble and I believe (this is based purely on belief, I have no real evidence to back this up) that it can make a significant impact due to the way it provides access to such a wealth of material, and the way in which it encourages and enables co-operation – all of which is of course founded in the free/open source ideas that formed the basis for much of its development.

This book, and several others that I have read lately, all fall under my loose definition of free culture: to me it goes beyond licensing and extends to a whole way of living and thinking – am I the only one that thinks like this? I’ll blog more about the other books I’ve read lately that are along a similar track.

The third interview in the series of feature previews for F8 has just gone up on the wiki:

http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Interviews/ColinWalters

This time it’s with Colin Walters and he talks about the work that’s gone on to integrate a lot of the Gnome Online Desktop work, particularly Bigboard. This includes the new GDM session that is created after installing the online-desktop package – Online Desktop – where a browser is launched immediately and the top panel is replaced by Bigboard. As always there is also a cool screencast showing some of the coolest features…

Digg it up!

If you enjoy reading the interview, viewing the screencast, playing with Online Desktop stuff or whatever else, then drop over to Digg and help get the word out about this cool feature!

http://digg.com/linux_unix/Fedora_8_and_Online_Desktop

Huge thanks to Colin for taking the time to answer my questions!

I’ve just put up the second in the series of “feature previews” of F8, which you can find at:

http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Interviews/MartinSourada

As you can probably guess from this post’s title, it’s about the Nodoka theme which made its debut as Fedora’s default in F8 Test 2, and the interview is with Martin Sourada. If you read this interview and enjoy it, or if you just want to help Fedora get a bit of attention :p feel free to drop by Digg.com and give us your vote:

http://digg.com/linux_unix/Fedora_s_new_theme_Nodoka

If anybody would like to make sure that their feature gets some coverage in this series and I haven’t already been in touch with you, drop me a comment and I’ll make sure I get you added to my list. I’m already putting a hit list together…

In slightly related news, I’m starting university on Sunday which should be cool but will no doubt keep me incredibly busy for a few weeks at least! I’ll still do my best to keep getting more interviews up though…bad news is that I went to the doc’s today to be told that it looks like the surgery I had a few weeks ago isn’t healing up as it should be: I’m back on antibiotics and who knows where it will end *sigh* – hopefully it won’t mean anytime off uni/too much time off.

It’s for my simple mind…

So my theme still has a lot of work that needs doing to it, to be ready for public consumption that is. The likely hood of me ever completing this work is low however, but I would like to release it, so…

…here it is. My theme. It’s under a CC-BY-SA 3.0 license. Maybe the GPL would have been better? I’ll consider relicensing it if anybody tells me this as I’ve never released anything like this before!

Would be great if I saw somebody using it; would be even cooler if somebody downloaded it and tidied it up a bit :D Feedback and updates are welcome! I did get a lot of help from one particular website, but I can no longer find a link to it. If you recognise some of the code I used as yours please let me know and I’ll credit you or whatever you desire!

Thank you Red Hat Magazine for pointing me to this fantastic looking site – now I’m hungry!

To help build up the coming Fedora 8 release, and to try and grab a bit of extra mind share, the marketing team and I are going to produce a series of “feature previews”. The idea is that we’ll grab a quick interview with the developer behind each feature listed for Fedora 8, put together some screenshots and screencasts of it in action, and possibly provide details of how to try it for yourself.

The first feature to go live has gone up on the wiki today: Bluetooth. The improvement Re: the end-user’s experience is massive, and has made using Bluetooth on a GNU/Linux system a dream D Finally, after two years I’ve taken off all the photos and videos that had been living on my phone – and it only took me about 15 minutes, including transfer time!

A huge thanks to Bastien Nocera for giving the time to answer my questions…

Just finished digitising this book. It’s available under a verbatim license and is an interesting read. Get it as either PDF or ODT.