>> Misremembered the year. That conference was October 2000. I just >> found the bookbag I got as swag from it. > I think you're remembering the Atlanta Linux Showcase. I was at the same event. I also think I know exactly the person you're talking about: Charles Hannum, with whom I had a similar experience on a different topic. ALS '99 was a fun conference. I didn't attend in 2000. I'm going to stick my neck out just a little bit and say that my experience with him was quite different. We talked a little about the differences between Linux and BSD, both userland and kernel space, and the history of NetBSD, including an unfortunate occurrence with Bill Jolitz at a different conference. Charles was cordial with me. That same day, I went to the cafeteria area when I got hungry, and I saw what looked like two kids sitting around a laptop working intently on something. I was curious, so I asked them what they were hacking on. It turned out to be Miguel de Icaza, now a Distinguished Engineer at Microsoft, and Nat Friedman, who I believe is now CTO of GitHub (also owned by Microsoft). They sort of blew me off, but to be fair, they were working on a presentation they were about to deliver. On Sun, Apr 4, 2021, 1:31 AM G. Branden Robinson < g.branden.robinson@gmail.com> wrote: > At 2021-04-03T19:50:51-0700, Adam Thornton wrote: > > > But back to the S/390 port--I went to a Linux conference in Atlanta > > > in the late 90s ('99, I think) to speak about Linux on S390/Z, and I > > > actually went by the NetBSD booth to say, "hey, I can maybe hook you > > > guys up with a development virtual machine," and what I got was an > > > earful about "your so-called portability" from someone who was > > > clearly much more invested in hating Linux than in, you know, > > > saying, "wow, OK, I realize you're not offering me cycles on a > > > super-awesome machine, but, yeah, it's not nothing, cool, here's who > > > you should talk to if you're interested in getting a port going." > > > > > > So I don't think you can lay all the blame on BSD inaction on Linux, > > > is all I'm saying. By '99, I think it was, maybe if NetBSD, which > > > already had its reputation for spectacular portability, hadn't > > > staffed its booth with a jackass still trying to fight the Unix > > > Wars, that story might have turned out differently. > > > > Misremembered the year. That conference was October 2000. I just > > found the bookbag I got as swag from it. > > I think you're remembering the Atlanta Linux Showcase. I was at the > same event. I also think I know exactly the person you're talking > about: Charles Hannum, with whom I had a similar experience on a > different topic. > > Instead of insisting that I was stupid and wrong for using Linux instead > of (NetBSD) in his view, I was stupid and wrong for using software > licensed under the GNU GPL instead of the "BSD" license (which variant > of the latter is not, all these years later, a matter I recall coming > up). I mention this so that Mr. Hannum's reputation on this list risks > no blackening among those who share his hostility to copyleft. ;-) > > ALS was a terrific experience and, for me, lived up to the praise I had > heard about it as a venue for getting engineers talking to each other. > Regrettably enough, the conference was acquired by a firm. It was held > one final time the next year in Atlanta, officially rebranded the > "Annual Linux Showcase", and, as I recall, permanently mothballed > thereafter, with the dot-com bubble-burst as either a direct reason or > as an excuse. > > I have seen other technical conferences over the years steadily morph > from a technical/engineering focus to an orientation around sales and > "strategy", or more bluntly--propaganda. The emphasis is no longer on > technological improvement and evaluation (i.e., how to achieve and > measure "solutions"), but on promotion, rationalization, and boosterism. > > I suppose that one of the reasons this happens is that good conferences > grow, and companies sending delegations find themselves with growing > expense bills for doing so. Engineers are a cost center. When they > come back from the event, they will almost never have anything to "show > for it". At best they'll be excited about something they can > "integrate" or some new idea they can realize after months of > development time. In other words, you _might_ have a competitive > advantage after spending _even more_ money. > > By contrast, sales people can bring you orders you can book the day they > get back, or even before the conference is over, thanks to the magic > power of accrual accounting, a practice which persists even after the > glorious examples of Enron and other gigantic bankruptcies of the 2000s. > > That's the demand side. On the supply side, conferences have > governance; it takes people to solicit papers, book speakers, and put > talks on the schedule and into proceedings. Conference sponsorship is a > neat way of closing the gap between demand and supply on the back end; > be a "gold" or "platinum" level sponsor and obtain influence, likely > through direct seating of representatives on the committees that perform > the foregoing organizational roles. Note the entrenchment and > persistence of precious metals as metaphors for status; we would not > name the tiers after the decreasing scale of photolithographic > processes, for example. Historically, it's been a lot easier to > motivate a guy with a checkbook in the C suite who drives a Lamborghini > Gallardo with the word "platinum" than "5 nm". > > I'm too young to know--did USENIX follow the trajectory of reorienting > its focus from engineering and research to sales? Why does it no longer > occupy the premier place it once did? > > Regards, > Branden >