My Events

(Some of) My Favorite People

  • Chris DiBona
    Chris is a just plain great person and stand-up guy. He's also the Open Source program manager at Google.
  • Doc Searls
    Doc is the senior editor at Linux Journal and one of the four authors of The Cluetrain Manifesto, the iconoclastic web site that became the best-selling book.
  • Matt Asay
    Matt is the founder of OSBC, and currently runs business development at Alfresco.
  • r0ml Lefkowitz
    The r0ml is one of the most entertaining and insightful commentators on the state of the IT industry that I know.
  • Stephen Walli
    I first met Stephen when he worked at Microsoft, and I organized a dinner at OSCON between Eric Raymond and a number of the Microsoft Shared Source team. I liked him even then so that should tell you a lot.

« February 2006 | Main | April 2006 »

LinuxWorld Boston Open Source Applications Track

I'm the track chair for the Open Source Applications track at LinuxWorld Boston April 4-6 2006.  This is probably one of the strongest set of sessions I've seen representing some of the best of Open Source applications.  Hopefully you'll find this to be a great track if you're trying to understand how you can utilize Open Source software to run your business.  You'll be hearing the messages directly from the people in charge as well: we've got 10 CEOs, 1 COO, and 1 CTO as speakers in this track.  Anyone who thinks Open Source isn't yet delivering applications for business needs to come to this track and learn otherwise.  In the last two years we've reached a true turning point where Open Source developers are now building real business applications.

I'm also beginning to program conference sessions for LinuxWorld San Francisco in August.  Although submissions are officially closed, I'm still open to hearing input and feedback as to what you want to see and how we can improve the conference program.

I hope to see you at the show.

Session

Date & Time

Speaker

Title

OSA1

Tuesday, April 4, 10:15am

James Smith, Michael Malgeri, IBM

Developing Open Source Business Applications Using Application Wikis

OSA2

Tuesday, April 4, 11:15am

Peter Yared, CEO, ActiveGrid

Leveraging Open Source to Build Web 2.0

OSA3

Tuesday, April 4, 2:30pm

Seth Hallem, CEO, Coverity

Get the Facts on LAMP Applications Quality and Security

OSA4

Tuesday, April 4, 3:30pm

Kathy Pink, COO, Compiere

Open Source ERP & CRM - From Oddity to Main Stream

OSA5

Wednesday, April 5, 10:15am

Jeff Barr, Technology Evangelist, Amazon.com

Opening Up: Sharing Data and Technology as a Growth Strategy

                   

OSA6

Wednesday, April 5, 11:15am

Stephen O’Grady, Moderator (Senior Analysts, Redmonk); Mike Olson (CEO Sleepycat); Marten Mickos (CEO MySQL); Andy Astor (CEO, EnterpriseDB)

Are Open Source Databases Ready for Enterprise Applications?

Keynote

Wednesday, April 5, 1:15pm

Larry Augustin, Moderator; John Roberts (CEO, SugarCRM); Marten Mickos (CEO, MySQL); Marc Fleury (CEO, JBoss); Peter Levine (CEO, XenSource)

The Death of the Enterprise Software Business Model: How Startups are Leveraging Open Source in Sales and Marketing

OSA7

Wednesday, April 5, 2:30pm

Richard Daley, CEO, Pentaho

A Survey of Open Source Business Intelligence Applications

OSA8

Wednesday, April 5, 3:30pm

John Roberts, CEO SugarCRM

Evaluating Open Source versus Proprietary Enterprise Applications

OSA9

Thursday, April 6, 10:15am

Venkat Raghavan, (Program Director, IBM); Dave Horne (Engineering Manager, Novell); Olaf Stullich (Principal Product Manager, Oracle).

Identity Management and Authentication in an Enterprise Applications Environment

OSA10

Thursday, April 6, 11:15am

Open

OSA11

Thursday, April 6, 2:30pm

Scott Dietzen, CTO, Zimbra

Is your email stuck in 1996?

My Companies


  • I am involved with these companies as an investor and board member.
  • Compiere
    Open Source Enteprise Resource Planning (ERP). News
  • Fonality
    Open Source VoIP PBX based on Asterisk. News
  • Hyperic
    Open Sources systems/application management. News
  • Medsphere
    Open Source Electronic Health Record (EHR). News
  • Pentaho
    Open Source Business Intelligence (BI). News
  • SugarCRM
    Open Source Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software. News

My Other Investments


  • I am an investor in and/or advisor to these companies.
  • DeviceVM
    Embedded virtualization for consumer devices. News
  • Eloqua
    On-line lead generation and marketing automation. News
  • Interface21 (Spring)
    Interface21 is the company behind Spring, the Java/J2EE application framework. News
  • ITerating
    Wiki-based directory with reviews of Open Source and commercial software. News
  • MuleSource
    Mule is then world's most widely-used Open Source ESB and integration platform. News
  • Novara Clinical Research
    Novara Clinical Research operates dedicated facilities for conducting Phase II to Phase IV patient studies for the pharmaceutical industry. News
  • Ohloh
    Mapping the open source world by collecting objective information on open source projects. News
  • VirtualLogix
    Real-time virtualization for mobile devices. News
  • Vyatta
    Open Source router and firewall. News
  • WSO2
    Next generation Open Source Web services platform. News
  • Zend
    The PHP company. News

My Exits

My Current Reading List

  • Robert Jordan: Knife of Dreams (The Wheel of Time, Book 11)

    Robert Jordan: Knife of Dreams (The Wheel of Time, Book 11)
    I'm almost embarrassed to admit that I'm still reading Robert Jordan's The Wheel of Time series. When he passed L. Ron Hubbard’s Battlefield Earth decology I could have cried. Maybe WoT will be made into the worst movie of all time? Still, I've been following the saga of Rand al'Thor for more than a decade now, and I want to see how it ends. Rumor is that the next book, Memory of Light, will in fact conclude the saga. To borrow a phrase, "There should have been only one." (**)

  • Neal Stephenson: Quicksilver (The Baroque Cycle, Vol. 1)

    Neal Stephenson: Quicksilver (The Baroque Cycle, Vol. 1)
    My family got me Quicksilver for Christmas. I'm not far into it, but it's clearly a Stephenson book: lots of historical connections, multiple timeline unfolding simultaneously, meticulous historical detail, 100 pages in the plot is still a total mystery, big "thud"factor... Should be a great read.

  • Chris DiBona: Open Sources 2.0

    Chris DiBona: Open Sources 2.0
    Anything edited by Chris DiBona is worth spending the time to read.

  • David Kahn: The Codebreakers : The Comprehensive History of Secret Communication from Ancient Times to the Internet

    David Kahn: The Codebreakers : The Comprehensive History of Secret Communication from Ancient Times to the Internet
    I'm just getting started with this one, but so far it's a fascinating account of the history of cryptology. It's a massive 1200 pages, so it may be a while before I move on to something else.