Send an Open Source Project to COMDEX 144
chromatic writes "O'Reilly & Associates is working with COMDEX to create an Open Source Innovation Area. We've nominated 21 important, interesting, and useful applications. Here's your chance to vote on the six most deserving applications. Steve Mallet has more details in his weblog." There's lots of good choices for applications on the list as well. Chances are that you've used one of them at least once.
"Sorry..." (Score:3, Insightful)
"We're sorry, you need to be logged in to vote for this contest."
Thank you for telling me that after I'd carefully chosen my votes. "To keep track we ask that you please log in to your O'Reilly Network account." wasn't a fair warning, you made it sound optional.
Re:"Choose up to three projects" -- Why so hard :' (Score:3, Insightful)
Using some kind of grading combined with the amount of votes would perhaps solve this problem, but I guess it's too late now..
sourceforge (Score:4, Insightful)
-Seriv
Re:Mozilla (Score:3, Insightful)
With that argument, then... Where is Linux? Where is Apache? Some open source applications should be so known that showing them there would be a waste of space.
If I would to choose just by popularity on that list, I would show KDE, gimp and OpenOffice, they are not new and are fairly known, but are between the more known open source applications of that list and won a lot of times awards like in LinuxJournal.
But, in the other hand, I would like to give some light to not so known applications to a wider audience, things could change. I surely would put there mplayer, but about the others is less clear. Maybe phpMyAdmin and GNUCash to cover different areas.
Also, the proposed projects are not so uniformly dispersed in the open source space. There are 3 projects that manage content in the web, like MoinMoin, Plone and Zope, instead of this I would propose TikiWiki [tikiwiki.org] that have a bit of each one. There are 2 that are just for developers, like SubVersion and Eclipse, and not sure if that will count for the "general public" or whatever goes to that kind of events. And there a some proposed programs that are fairy similar to widely know ones in the windows world, like Evolution and XMMS, that the general public will think that are Outlook and winamp and will not ask, and could give the false impression that open source is just copying other program features and not creating things completely new.
Where is Samba? (Score:2, Insightful)
keep on looking (Score:3, Insightful)
same with Xmms, 'wow it looks like just winamplinux has a winamp clone, how cute.'
MoinMoin? twiki blows this project away, you lost me on this nomination.
spamassassin? wont mcafee already have spamassassin there in the form of spamkiller? but seriously
how about showing off snort? or swan interopering with some real world hardware
how about setting up five little machines running qmail and blast a million delivered mail messages between the machines per hour and have a big led bank sign as a counter? then add and import thousands of users dynamically using ldap.