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Kevin Shockey

Why Open Source Software / Free Software (OSS/FS, FOSS, or FLOSS)? Look at the Numbers! - 0 views

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    Why Open Source Software / Free Software (OSS/FS, FLOSS, or FOSS)? Look at the Numbers!
Kevin Shockey

Why "Free Software" is better than "Open Source" - GNU Project - Free Software Foundati... - 0 views

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    Why "Free Software" is better than "Open Source"
Kevin Shockey

O'Reilly User Group Program: Registration Form - 0 views

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    " Your Account Shopping Cart HomeShopRadar: News & CommentaryAnswersSafari Books OnlineConferencesSchool of TechnologyCommunity Webcasts Events Authors Blogs Forums User Groups Membership Community Guidelines Register Your User Group We invite group leaders to register for the O'Reilly User Group & Professional Association Program. Please note: To avoid duplicate registrations, we require that group leaders, not members, register. Groups registering for the program should have: Membership of 5 or more people Regular newsletter or group web site for shared information You should hear from us within 10 days of submitting this registration form. If you do not, please email usergroups@oreilly.com to make sure your application was received. * Indicates a required field. Contact First Name:* Contact Last Name:* Position:* Group Name:* Shipping Address:* City:* State/Province/Region:* Zip code/Postal code:* Country:* Phone:* (for shipping purposes only) Email Address:* URL:* Meeting Date:* (eg. "2nd Tuesday")   Meeting Time:*   Meeting Location:*   Size of membership:*   Average number of members that attend meetings:*   Group Interests/Topics:* (Digital Photography, Video, Graphic Design, Music, Linux, Perl, Oracle, Mac, Windows, Telecom, etc.)   How did you hear about our program?*   Do you have a print newsletter?* Yes No Do you have an email mailing list?* Yes No Do you have a group library?* Yes No Does your Group participate in tradeshows or conferences?* Yes No If so, which ones?   Does your Group publish book/software reviews?* Yes No Does your Group publish book/software reviews on the web?* Yes No Does your Group produce any special events?* Yes No If so, what and when? Do you want to receive a regular newsletter from the UG program with news and info from O'Reilly and other sources?* Yes No Do you want O'Reilly catalogs for your members?* Yes No If so, how many? Newsletter Format Preference: HTML or Text"
Kevin Shockey

Test Drive New Ideas with Micro Experiments - 0 views

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    "Test Drive New Ideas with Micro Experiments Matthew Cornell Experiments don't have to be grand to be useful-in fact, tracking small things with short turnaround times can be extremely useful. As Quantified Self's Matthew Cornell explains, conducting "micro experiments" is a great way to try a variety of things, from software to exercise. The time and cost investments are low, and you might find a few tools and habits to keep around longterm. As I work to adopt an experimental mindset about life, I've noticed that efforts can vary in scope, duration, and complexity. Because interesting things happen at extremes, I've been exploring the very smallest class of activity-what I call micro experiments. I've found that trying little things like these is a great way to test-drive treating things as experiments. Here are some examples I've tried and their results. Jing: I tried using Jing, a free tool for doing short screencasts, to explain a bug I found in my site. I usually write them up, but because it was complex, it would have taken a lot to explain it. Instead, I created a four-minute screencast, emailed the link to my developer, and measured the results. Conclusion: Worked great! Time to record: 4 minutes. His understanding of the problem: High. Enjoyment level of trying a new tool: Fun. Testing expectations: Left unchecked, I tend to be pessimistic and anxious, which I continue working to improve. Here's a technique I stumbled on that works well in micro experiment form. The idea is to treat your expectations as a model, make your assumptions and predictions explicit, then put them to the test. I applied it to two difficult phone calls I had scheduled, and found that my expectations were way off. In one case, I was asking a fellow writer for a favor (mentioning an ebook I created), and instead of turning me down (my working model), he was happy to help. The other was a sales call to a prospective client, which I expected to go swimmingly. Instead it was a
Kevin Shockey

Main Page - Open Source Software Research - 0 views

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    "SourceForge Research Data Archive (SRDA)"
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