/srv/irclogs.ubuntu.com/2011/11/29/#ubuntu-locoteams.txt

bkerensapaultag: You moving to Debian full time?00:00
bkerensa:D00:00
paultagbkerensa: yeah, I'm gone :)00:00
paultagbkerensa: I'm going to start NM before the end of the year00:01
paultagor early january00:01
bkerensapaultag: Well then you should come to the first ever Ubuntu Local Jam/Debian Bug Squashing Party ;)00:01
bkerensaheh00:01
paultagbkerensa: it's not first ever :)00:01
paultagwe had an Ubuntu Upstream Jam00:01
paultagand we've had a few ubuntu / debian hackathons at MIT00:01
paultagthere are enough DDs in boston to make that super easy to pull off00:02
bkerensamaybe vorlon made a typo :P00:02
paultag:)00:02
paultagbkerensa: but yeah, I'm stoked.00:03
bkerensapaultag: Well its sad to see you leave... You provided more guidance to our loco then anyone else on the council00:03
bkerensa;)00:03
paultagbkerensa: I'll be around here or there, but I'm dropping roles00:04
greg-gpaultag: not yet :) I will be looking into the locolint stuff more in depth later, I'm not feeling the best (headache and such) right now, so minimizing comptuer time00:12
paultaggreg-g: totally. rock on :)00:13
paultaggreg-g: just trying to make the transition unsuck00:13
greg-gpaultag: thanks man00:13
paultaggreg-g: get some rest, we'll be around :)00:14
greg-gpaultag: where should I find you in IRC-land in the future (if not here)?00:14
paultag(the royal we)00:14
paultaggreg-g: as `paultag' on here or oftc, but I'll idle here for at least the cycle, if not more00:14
* greg-g nods00:14
paultagso if you don't find me, I'm screen'd00:14
paultagor email :)00:14
greg-gword00:14
paultagparagraph00:14
paultagok, great00:14
paultagget sleep, greg-g :)00:14
paultagrock on, congrats00:14
mhall119paultag: it seems once again I'm going to have to say you were right01:11
mhall119at least, a little bit right01:11
mhall119you were a little bit wrong too, which makes it easier :)01:12
paultagmhall119: well alright :)01:25
paultagmhall119: how so, if I might ask :)01:25
paultag(forgive me if I lag out, wifi is flaky)01:30
mhall119mine too, I blame U101:36
mhall119anyway, I've been working my way through outlining my whole "capitalism in the open source community" essay01:36
paultagah, very flaky subject :)01:36
mhall119and there's very little application of capital going on01:36
paultaghumm.01:37
paultagmhall119: well tell me, what did you find?01:37
mhall119trying to map what we have to a real-world market system, the closest I can get is a Jeffersonian yoeman-farmer/agrarian economy01:37
paultaghurmm.01:38
paultagmhall119: what's the closest brand of communism you could match with how you were profiling f/oss communities?01:39
mhall119I'm not as familiar with communist economic models01:40
mhall119I was leaning towards a gift economy, but we're really not01:40
paultagyeah, I always had a hard time finding a good fit01:40
paultagit's just sort of.. odd. Once you factor in the complete lack of scarcity, it's tough to find any economic model01:41
mhall119so basically we have project owners == land owners, and contributors == laborers, but I haven't found anything in f/loss that has the caracteristics of an investor/businessman01:41
paultagmhall119: I'm not sure I totally buy the land owner argument01:42
mhall119paultag: not really, ESR's essay does a good job of showing that the commodity of value in f/loss is recognition, not code01:42
paultagbecause at any point you can take the farm and copy it somewhere else without any real drain01:42
paultagmhall119: yeah, I mean, sure.01:42
paultagbut at the same time, it's more about talent then recognition01:42
paultagimho01:42
mhall119in which case, a fork of a project doesn't give you all the value of reputation of the original project01:42
paultagsure, the ole' survival of the fittest model01:43
mhall119again, the common commodity isn't the code itself01:43
paultagthe beryl / compiz fork / merge is a good example01:43
mhall119like you said, there's no scarcity of code, so it has little value as a commodity01:43
paultagright01:43
paultaglike I said, it's all very darkly :)01:44
mhall119but there is a scarcity (or at least non-infinite) amount of recognition to go around01:44
mhall119my only problem with that is, recognition isn't exactly a commodity, not all recognition is equal01:44
paultagI'm not super sold with that argument01:45
mhall119which?01:45
paultagbut I'll take it for now01:45
paultagthat we trade and deal in recognition01:45
paultagit's a sort of... by-product01:45
mhall119did you read ESR's essay I linked you to a while back?01:45
paultagmhall119: yeah, his argument was that, I seem to recall01:45
mhall119he makes a strong case, IMO01:45
paultaghe does01:45
paultagbut I don't buy it totally01:46
paultagI don't know. It's all very murky01:46
paultagI'm not so sure we have a good way to model this stuff01:46
mhall119but I think I can take that and, applying traditional market principles, explain some of the things we see in our community01:46
paultagmhall119: yeah, sure.01:47
paultagthe only thing is you can't "spend" your 'cred01:47
mhall119we'll see, it's all just a hypothesis at this point01:47
paultagyou can flaunt it and use it01:47
paultagbut there's no "drain"01:47
mhall119paultag: you can though, and you do without knowing it01:47
mhall119and you can drain it01:47
paultagwhich I guess is why we see a lot of jerkoffs01:47
paultagmhall119: yeah, but not by using it01:47
paultagif there is such a thing01:47
mhall119think of the people who used to get others to work for them, but can't anymore, because they shot their reputation01:48
mhall119or, think of people you know who do good work, but are asking for others to do work for them so often that their requests for work start gaining less and less response01:49
paultaghumm01:49
mhall119an example, if I put out an alpha version of a diving log, how many people would be interested in such a program?01:50
paultagyeah yeah yeah, linus :)01:50
mhall119now, imagine if Linux was throwing one of those out every week01:50
mhall119how long before people stopped rushing to contribute to them?01:50
paultagmhall119: but see, I'm not totally convinced that that can't be modeled with marxist theory01:51
mhall119maybe, which of his books should I read to get a better understanding of his theories?01:51
paultagmhall119: well, for this. Humm.01:51
mhall119I have the communist manifesto, I'm thinking I should get das kapital too01:52
paultagmhall119: Dask Kapital is dense01:52
mhall119then, of course, I need to read keynes and that austrian guy too01:52
paultagerm, Das01:52
paultagmhall119: try the Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 184401:53
mhall119on sec01:53
paultagmhall119: his theory of alienation / estrangement of labor is huge in this, I think01:53
paultagI think it's part of the reason why I can code so much and not feel stressed by it01:54
mhall119bah, google books fails me on that one01:54
paultagmhall119: there's a wiki page on this, I'm sure01:54
paultagone sec01:54
paultagmhall119: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marx's_theory_of_alienation <- I think this affects F/OSS communites 01:54
mhall119oh, 1966, probably still under copyright01:55
paultagAlienation from the product he produces01:55
paultagThe labour becomes impersonal01:55
paultagAlienation from the human race01:55
paultagAlienation from other human beings01:55
paultagHis argument is working for someone else to produce goods that you have no "say" in (that is to say, works that are estranged from you)01:56
paultagthe worker is subject to those 4 things01:56
paultagas described on the wiki :)01:56
paultagby doing F/OSS work we become more human01:57
paultagboom. truth bomb01:58
mhall119that only works if you are doing f/loss work for different reasons01:59
mhall119it's not because the code is f/loss01:59
paultagtrue01:59
paultagif you foss for fun :)01:59
paultagif you do it for work, it's just as bad as normal work01:59
paultagerm, not normal. nonfree01:59
mhall119hmmm, you know, I think I can use that02:00
paultagmhall119: that's just one very small (and almost tangent) note - there's a lot of good stuff in marx02:00
mhall119if you do f/oss work for the recognition you get, not the joy of making it....02:01
paultaga lot of original / translated marx is very dense, so the sparknotes might be just as good02:01
paultagmhall119: ah, yes. True.02:01
mhall119ah tomoboy, what did I do before we met?02:03
mhall119I'm going to have to structure this into a series of blog posts, just my notes are too long for just one02:04
paultagyeah02:05
mhall119paultag: unrelated, but when I'm ready to get my Qimo packages into Debian, would you be able to help me get them right and sponsor them?02:05
paultagmhall119: sure, I'd be glad to help in any way I can02:05
mhall119thanks man02:06
paultagmhall119: I can review it to archive-quality and you can shoot it off for real sponsorship02:06
mhall119you better not /quit this channel02:06
paultagthen sync it back :)02:06
paultagmhall119: nah, I wont02:06
mhall119I'm not sure I'll be ready before the debian import freeze on 12.04, we'll see02:07
paultagmhall119: file a RC bug ;)02:07
paultagmhall119: and DIF is fine, you can sync during alphas02:07
paultagmhall119: you just have to request it :)02:07
paultagafter DIF *02:07
mhall119my packages don't currently work, haven't for a couple cycles now02:08
paultagmhall119: well, get it in ship-shape and we can get it playing nicely :)02:08
mhall119I need to finish stripping out my xubuntu-desktop dependencies02:08
paultag:)02:08
dholbachgood morning08:08
=== huats_ is now known as huats
nigelb4708:53
nigelbbah08:53
=== kinoucho` is now known as kinouchou
* paultag kicks feet up14:35
czajkowski>:(14:45
* paultag waves to czajkowski over his piƱa colada14:45
paultagaloha :)14:46
czajkowskithere are words for you mister! 14:47
paultagczajkowski: like "lovie-dovie" and "awesome"?14:47
czajkowskiI never use the word awesome!14:47
paultagczajkowski: "totally bogus!"14:47
paultagor as we say: "to-bo"14:47
paultagmore of a toe then a too/two14:48
czajkowskinutter14:48
=== Ronnie1 is now known as Ronnie
=== WaVeR` is now known as WaVeR

Generated by irclog2html.py 2.7 by Marius Gedminas - find it at mg.pov.lt!