Last week, I had gone to GNUnify, a conference organized by
Symbiosis(SICSR), Pune. I had spoken on webservices together with
Gopalv and Premshree.
An interesting event we organized was a Birds of a Feather (BoF)
meeting on "Why you should be a FOSS programmer" that we had with the
students there. My first observation during the BoF was that most of
the students had no idea what FOSS is. One of them actually thought
that FOSS was a programming language. Most of them had been
absolutely brain washed by MS propaganda or maybe they had been
brainwashed by their teachers. Not may of them had used any of the P
languages (Perl, PHP, Python). I asked them this question - "will you
like to work for Yahoo!, Google or Amazon or will you like to work for
another IT sweat shop? If you want to work with the big names, then
you have to know the P languages". Gopalv, Premshree, Pankaj and
Philip spoke about their respective projects, how they had gotten into
free software and how it had helped them in getting jobs. Gopalv
pointed out how our education system is flawed when it comes to exams
and assignments. In a class, you have to beat the others to be called
a achiever. In the real world, you have to work with others to come
up with something good. Working with FOSS allows you to collaborate
with others and have a taste of how things work in the real world.
Our main aim in organizing this BoF was to get even 2 students
interested in FOSS. Sadly, I am sure we failed to do that .
However, we told the students about the mailing lists and irc channels
that they could use to find help. I hope some of them eventually turn
up there.
Danese was one of the speakers in this conference and she gave a good
presentation on how to get into open source. Answering the audience
questions on how to make money with Open Source, she said that Open
Source allows you to make money by offering services, and India
understands the service model well. This rankled me quite a bit.
There aer ways to make money by selling FOSS products too - MySQL and
SugarCRM being the prime examples. However, in India, you don't have
any companies which make products. Lots of companies outsource their
development work here, but except Tally (a closed source accounting
software), I don;t know of any Indian companies making products. I am
not sure why this is the way things are - one reason might be that
product development is inherently a risky business. On the other
hand, the payoff from a product is quite high.
I also met a bunch of people whom I knew only in the online world. We
went to this amazing restaurant called "Horn OK Please". Even though
we had to wait a bit to get the tables, it was really worth it. If
you are in Pune, try out that restaurant.
All in all, I will say that this experience was really good. The
students did excellent work in organizing the event, though I would
have been happier if they participated in the event instead of just
being a volunteer in it.