There were 2 seminars that stood out for me today after Joel Cowen's (Executive producer of The Simpsons) amusing Keynote speech - did you know The Simpsons is rendered on Red Hat?
The first of the noteworthy seminars was Michael Stahnkage on how to manage RHEL updates. He's one of the few speakers who kept it human and maintained an interesting session throughout with a mix of his own experiences, some real world scenarios, and a bit of dry humour to keep the audience awake. I made plenty of notes which I will be taking with me to begin planning an update strategy for my company's Red Hat servers. For my own reference - the slides are here (in Open Office format).
The other session of interest was a business pitch from IBM (IMO, to a room full of the wrong people) on Red Hat as a desktop alternative for the enterprise. The cost savings are incredible particularly when you replace Microsoft Office with Open Office (or Symphony, as IBM call it). It started to drag towards the end but got more interesting when someone asked about the new Office 2007 formats and compatibility with Symphony, just because we got to see some very senior people from IBM squirming and getting very defensive. They also didn't have an answer for any decent Visio alternative on Linux. I thought their strategy was very interesting and an honourable thing to do, but I think the average consumer will be difficult to migrate from Windows to something alien, especially while sharing documents with Windows users is not straightforward, and application compatibility with browsers other than IE is still an important issue.
Bounty!
I have accumulated a lot of free stuff over the last 2 days:
- A Tux foam penguin
- 1GB HP Branded USB key
- Flashing bouncy ball and stress ball
- Red Hat baseball cap
- HP Lip ice sunscreen!
- HP T-shirt (XL - looks like a tent on me)
- r1soft.com T-Shirt (XXL - blimey, how big??)
- zenoss T-Shirt (Medium - which is actually alright!)
- Red Hat bag and USB key which all attendees received
The HP T-Shirt also had a secondary purpose. If you wear one around the Summit there is a chance to win iPods and iPhones (and other Apple goodies), if you get stopped by HP and correctly answer some questions about ICE-Linux - an HP SIM plugin for managing Linux servers. I opted into this and wore my huge T-Shirt, and when I was stopped and answered my question correctly .... I won $50 in Amex vouchers! Nice - free duty free alcohol for me on the way home!
ZenOss was an interesting product as well, it's a monitoring solution based on Cacti and RRD but with some extra features and paid support thrown in (like viewing your servers on a Google Maps mashup). Really I'm not sure if it's worth it - if you already use Cacti and have time to invest in beefing up your existing environment with all the best plugins available (like threshold monitoring, alerting, syslogs), then you will get pretty close to a ZenOss install out of the box. But that said, if you don't have time or want professional and friendly assistance to set up a comprehensive monitoring solution, then ZenOss could be for you.
In general the exhibition part of the Summit was a bit small, but I've found all of the vendors very friendly and they wanted to discuss how I used Open Source (and Red Hat) in my own workplace, avoiding the hard sell of their own products.
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