| << Back The truth about my life | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tue, 08 Mar 2005Miguel mentioned the Stop Energy thing on Sunday which started to change my life slowly. Just try to avoid that, it works! So on Friday and Saturday, with Parkyeri people, I was at the Free Software and Open Source Days at Bilgi University of Istanbul. Well known faces of Free SoftwareTM Community were around. We had a lot of fun, took pictures, did little bits of hacking and discussed on patents and so on. But bad news today: EU adopts a common position on patentability of computer-implemented inventions -- which may prevent further development of free software by making it illegal! What the f*ck?! Anyways, I'm not going to write about that shit, many other people will do it much better than me. At the mini-conference, we had famous guests:
Erçin and Arda have a lot of pictures for your viewing pleasure, while I have only a few (until Miguel publishes his huge archive of touristic places in Istanbul):
Miguel's presentation pointed out some crucial concepts like Mono, GNOME and Free Software which was great. We had a quick and delicious dinner, we went over to Baltalimanı where GNOME-Turk team meeting took place. With Peter and Miguel, we had an in-depth discussion of ethnical, economical, political and social problems of mid-east people from very different aspects, with the touch of the history. I really enjoyed that a lot. Later the night, some of us were at Roxy for a beer, or five With Sezgin, Miguel and Miguel's cameras and lenses and other power toys, we went over to see what Istanbul hides behind the streets on Sunday morning. We were on Galata tower, then we went to Ayasofia, Blue Mosque, Basilica Cistern, and although it was closed, to the Nuruosmaniye entrance of The Grand Bazaar. Awesome. We crossed the Bosphorus and jumped over to the Asian side of the city, and enjoyed a short walk on the Baghdad Street. That was already too much for me, but what I can tell is the monkey called Miguel de Icaza Amozorrutia just didn't stop. On Monday morning, we ran to the airport so our 32 year old famous hacker could fly over to Lebanon, Beirut to meet Robert Fisk, the author of Pity the Nation: The Abduction of Lebanon. According to the news the situation is a bit fragile, but he showed up on IRC a couple of hours ago, so I think everything is OK so far. To put in his words, "he has 32 years of experience in surviving" and he's probably going to stick with survivors. Anyway, I don't think it's all that serious More to come soon, |
About meI'm Enver ALTIN, a software developer at Cellenity. Calendar
Categories/ (355)
articles/ (1) books/ (7) coffee/ (1) debian/ (1) events/ (7) factsoflife/ (13) general/ (8) gnome/ (16) humor/ (21) lkd/ (8) management/ (1) mobile/ (1) mono/ (4) music/ (8) personal/ (35) politics/ (27) postgresql/ (4) programming/ (12) projects/ (2) quotes/ (1) technology/ (7) tips/ (6) travel/ (1) work/ (13) Archives2008-Aug
2008-Jul 2008-Jun 2008-May 2008-Apr 2008-Mar 2008-Feb 2007-Nov 2007-Oct 2007-Sep 2007-Aug 2007-Jul 2007-Jun 2007-May 2007-Apr 2007-Mar 2007-Feb 2007-Jan 2006-Dec 2006-Nov 2006-Oct 2006-Sep 2006-Aug 2006-Jul 2006-Jun 2006-May 2006-Mar 2006-Feb 2006-Jan 2005-Dec 2005-Nov 2005-Oct 2005-Sep 2005-Aug 2005-Jul 2005-Jun 2005-May 2005-Apr 2005-Mar 2005-Feb 2005-Jan 2004-Dec 2004-Nov 2004-Oct 2004-Sep 2004-Aug 2004-Jul LinksPopular
Talk slides
License![]() This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 License. MiscellaneousThis site is built on the wonders of Pyblosxom, supposed to be W3C XHTML 1.0 and CSS 1.0 compliant, always handcoded using Vim. The server that hosts this site is powered by Debian GNU/Linux..O.
..O OOO |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||