Category Archives: atlanta

Fun Saturday Night: Atlanta Thrashers vs Carolina Hurricanes Hockey!

Atlanta Thrashers vs Carolina Hurricanes Hockey Feb 28 09Atlanta Thrashers vs Carolina Hurricanes Hockey Feb 28 09

I always forget how fun hockey is till I go to a game. Saturday night, the wife and I went to a Thrashers/Hurricanes game here in Atlanta. There was plenty of pushing, but no good rumbles.

As you can tell from the pictures, most of the crowd hadn’t shown up by the start of the game. This seems to be a problem with all Atlanta professional sports teams. The only time I ever saw a pre-game packed house was when the Atlanta Braves were good back in the mid-90s. By the 2nd period, there were only a handful of empty seats. People try to be blame it on the traffic, which makes no sense. Everyone knows traffic is bad, why not leave earlier?

Oh well. The game itself was enjoyable as the Thrashers scored 4 goals in the 3rd period to win 5-3.

Yes, yes, as it was pointed out to me, the Thrashers are pretty awful, but it was still fun!

Countdown to Atlanta Linux Fest 2008

Atlanta Linux Fest 2008

This Saturday, from 11am to 6pm, the Ubuntu Georgia LoCo will be sponsoring the Atlanta Linux Fest (ALF).

ALF will be a non-distro specific event, part install fest, part demos.

Let me provide some background on how ALF came into being. Around six weeks ago, Joshua Chase, who runs the Georgia LoCo, Jim Popovich, and I were lounging around our favorite cigar store. We were trying to come up plans for a fun event.

Now, the Georgia LoCo holds real life meetings every month or so. We’ve held install fests for Ubuntu 7.10 and 8.04 at Emory University. Forty to fifty people have shown up for both.

But we wanted something more interesting. Considering none of us had any experience organizing such a thing, we thought we should start small.

A linux fest seemed like a good way to test the waters. Atlanta Linux Fest was born.

Jim works at IBM and they have large amounts of office space and conference venues around Atlanta. He secured us a location pretty quickly. Since we didn’t need money for space, there was no reason to look for sponsorship.

Next, we needed to figure out why people would want to attend. The install fest part is easy to understand. Potential new Linux users could get help with installation, current users could get help with any problems they were having. But we wanted attendees to get something more out of ALF. Powerpoint presentations can be mind numbing. So we have decided to do live demos instead. Then we started asking people what they would like to show others.

In the meantime, we needed to find ways to market the event. Since this isn’t an Ubuntu only event, we wanted to get other distributions involved. Jorge Castro suggested I talk to Joe ‘Zonker’ Brockmeier, the openSUSE community manager, and contact Paul Frields, the Fedora Project Leader. Paul got me in touch with David Nalley, who is a Fedora Ambassador, and had attended a previous Ubuntu install fest. David will be demoing Fedora 10 at ALF.

Zonker in turn introduced me to Ilan Rabinovitch, the chairperson of the famous SCALE. Both of them provided great advice on how to get the word out there, especially using existing news outlets. I didn’t realize how easy it is to get published on Linux Today, Linux.com, and Linux PR, simply by filling out web forms on the respective sites!

David passed on my information to Dave Yates, host of the lottalinuxlinks.com podcast, and he interviewed me about ALF. Jon Reagan, the hardest working member of the Georgia LoCo, got ALF mentioned on the Linux Action Show. Jon and Carter Sills did a marvelous job posting about ALF to lots of Linux-related forums.

After all that, we also settled on a set of demos:

  • Dual booting (Carter)
  • Fedora 10 (David Nalley)
  • Virtualization (Joshua)
  • Privacy and Encryption with SSH and GPG (David Tomaschik)
  • IBM Symphony (Jim)
  • Gaming (Bill, aka compiledkernel)

We will also stream video (and record for posterity) from ALF. Keep an eye on the website for more details if you can’t attend. With the ever increasing use of Twitter and Identi.ca, we’ll try to use those tools to keep everyone up to date once it kicks off (twitter.com/atllinuxfest and identi.ca/atlantalinuxfest).

You can’t hold an event like this and have no swag. Thanks to Zonker and openSUSE for shipping us goodies to hand out.

It slipped my mind that we could get a conference pack from ShipIt. I hurriedly put in an order, hoping that it would arrive in time. It did. In 3 days. Don’t believe me? Check out the tracking number.

Dan Trevino and members of Florida LoCo will also be joining us to celebrate Software Freedom Day. Several folks from the Alabama LoCo will be attending as well.

After doing these few things, ALF has gotten to be a considerably larger than we expected.

And we are excited!

Hope you all can attend.

Cheap Fun with the Atlanta Thrashers

It had been a while since I’d been to a hockey game. Decided it was time to take in a Thrashers game at Philips Arena. Got a couple of $10 seats way up in the nosebleed section. Surprisingly, the view wasn’t bad at all. Hey, at least we could see the puck flying around, so I can’t complain.

Atlanta Thrashers 12/14/07

Frankly, it would have been more fun if the Thrashers didn’t get shut out by Toronto.

At least there was sumo hockey!

Sumo Hockey

JapanFest 2007

We went to JapanFest Saturday. Lots of vendors hawking their wares, a few food vendors, but we missed the good stuff and some of the lines were too long.

All the pictures can be seen here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/boredandblogging/tags/japanfest/

JapanFest

Toto Washlet Toilet Poster

Samurai

Furries vs Klingons

Found at BoingBoing:

Furries vs Klingons

Georgia US Gutsy Release Party 10/20/07

While preparation for the Gutsy installfest has begun, the Georgia US Team will be holding a Gutsy release party in the metro Atlanta area in a few weeks:

Meehan’s has wifi, so bring along your laptops.

Just like the installfest, Joshua Chase did a great job finding a place to hold the release party.

So, if you are in the Atlanta metro area and would like to be notified of the details as the date gets closer, please join the mailing list, keep an eye on the wiki, or drop by #ubuntu-georgia on irc.freenode.net.

RoboCup 2007 Atlanta

The RoboCup 2007 competition is being held this week at the Georgia Tech campus in Atlanta.

What is RoboCup? From the main site:

RoboCup is an international joint project to promote AI, robotics, and related field. It is an attempt to foster AI and intelligent robotics research by providing a standard problem where wide range of technologies can be integrated and examined. RoboCup chose to use soccer game as a central topic of research, aiming at innovations to be applied for socially significant problems and industries. The ultimate goal of the RoboCup project is ‘By 2050, develop a team of fully autonomous humanoid robots that can win against the human world champion team in soccer.’

Nearly 1700 students and faculty from 300 teams and 117 countries will be competing in events ranging from four-legged and humanoid robotic soccer games to search-and-rescue competitions. Here are some images from RoboCup 2006:

 

Robocup 01_14_06Humanoid2.735

Humanoid5Robocup 0004

More pictures from RoboCup 2006 can be found here. There is a Flickr pool for pictures from RoboCup 2007 here.

Finals for the various competitions will be July 7th and 8th. Stop by if you are in the area.

Atlanta gets Wifi

Web Worker Daily has a post about the city of Atlanta hooking up with Earthlink to provide a city-wide wifi service. Check out the Earthlink press release here. It probably won’t be cheap, but its better than nothing.

Atlanta Lions Club