[Linux-aus] LUGs
Russell Stuart
russell-linuxaus at stuart.id.au
Fri Jul 7 14:59:19 AEST 2023
On 7/7/23 13:52, Craige McWhirter via linux-aus wrote:
> Last time I was in Sydney there were more niche meetups than you could
> possibly attend and the SLUG team like many LUGS have struggled for
> about a decade with the questions "Where do we fit in? What do we do?"
> - as has Linux Australia itself.
I suspect you are right that the professionalisation of open source is
partially responsible for driving down LUG membership. But I don't think
it relates to LA.
Speaking for myself, the answer to "Where do we fit in? What do we do?"
for Linux Australia has always been fairly clear. LA fosters Open Source
in the antipodes by funding conferences.
LA does other things involving open source like providing infrastructure
(bank account, insurance) to open source projects, some funding and
helping LUGS. However that only happens as a consequence of auspicing
successful conferences. So while important, those things aren't the
answer to "Where does LA fit in"?
It's true the conferences have gone through a rough trot in the past
couple of years, but I doubt professionalisation of open source was the
reason. That rough trot was caused primarily by COVID. Perhaps less
desire for in-person meetups now a lot can be done online is also a
cause, but it's evident a lot of people still like (need?) to meet
personally and chat to a like minded friendly face occasionally - and
besides open source has always done most of its work online.
There has been a changing of the guard. The Linux kernel is mostly done
now, as in there isn't a lot of new activity happening there. Wireguard
is nice, it's interesting to watch eBPF and io_uring evolve to allow the
kernel to execute user space programs in some limited form - but it's
nothing like the pace it once was. Instead we have Rust, AI, exploring
approaches to virtualisation (docker/LXC, k8s, qemu), and most
interestingly to me figuring out how to make ourselves both private and
secure (Passkey, confidential computing).
As always, a lot of the plumbing under the hood in these fields is being
done as open source projects. As an example, Meta's generous release of
LLaMA has allowed open source tinkers to produce numerous novel toys
(like running it on a Raspberry PI) which the big corps were not
interested in doing. As a result, open source will probably develop AI
models and code the rest of us use - just like it did with compilers,
OS's and desktops.
I'm hoping those new areas of activity will start running their own
Australian and NZ conferences. When they do, they can come to LA for
funding, infrastructure, and a place to get in contact with a pool of
people who have done it before.
I also fervently hope the "Linux" in our name doesn't dissuade them. We
have been focused on "Open Source" as opposed to just "Linux" for
decades now. It's likely everyone reading this knows that of course -
but I'm not sure the young graduates attending the specialist meetups
are aware of it.
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