Eric Evans at Cassandra Summit

Eric has had a very busy conference season this summer. Here is his talk on virtual nodes at the Cassandra C* Summit held in June in San Francisco.

I’ve been told it was the highest rated talk for the whole conference, but I can’t seem to find a reference. My only issue with the talk is in the intro graphics: it’s “openNms” and not “openMns”. (grin)

Dev-Jam 2013: Day Three

We are now more than halfway through Dev-Jam and the energy level remains high.

Well, at least it looks like everyone is working, as a non-coder I’m not sure exactly what is going on but folks seem to be having a lot of fun. (grin)

I’ve been coming here for many years now, but I never managed to visit the Weisman Art Museum on campus. It is a very distinctive building.

Richard and I decided to go, and it is pretty cool. The building is designed to let in a lot of natural light without any of it directly hitting the pieces. They have lots of paintings, plus some photographs, sculptures and pottery. I especially liked this piece:

but I couldn’t help thinking “four elements surrounding a fifth … a Fifth Element”.

Wednesday is traditionally cookout day, but as we grow it is becoming a lot more work to man the grill.

Between the hamburgers, local sausages and leftover Brasa we had tons of food.

Last year Mike and DJ made homemade Jeni’s ice cream. Now, that was a lot of work, so this year we just outsourced it to Izzy’s, which, while not Jeni’s was still pretty awesome.

And what better way to end the evening than with a little Army of Darkness.

2013 Southeast Linuxfest and HeroesCon

This is a very delayed post of this year’s Southeast Linuxfest (SELF) that happened the weekend of 7-9 June. Suffice it to say that my life of late has been overtaken by events.

SELF is one of my favorite shows, and since this year (like last) it was in Charlotte, I really didn’t have an excuse not to go since it is an easy drive from home. I submitted a paper and was surprised to be asked to do the keynote. I take keynotes very seriously, so it meant a little extra work but I was looking forward to it (I still resent that Jono Bacon got a ten minute keynote spot at OSCON a few years back and spent it telling everyone to come to his main talk instead of being the awe-inspiring dynamic speaker he can be – I would rock that opportunity).

Also, since the company is doing very well this year, I decided to hire MC Frontalot to perform in the hope that it would convince people on the fence to come to the conference, and also because it gives me an excuse to hang out with him.

Thus I found out that on the same weekend and just down the street, the annual HeroesCon comic book convention was going on. This was the same weekend as the North Carolina State Republican Party convention (so we decided to call the scene at the Convention Center “Republicans vs. Zombies”) and the street faire “Taste of Charlotte“.

Busy busy busy.

As we were looking for lunch on Friday at the street faire, I got a cool pic of Frontalot in front of the NASCAR museum:

I also found out that he was in the third issue of The Walking Dead comic book series. He knows Tony Moore, one of the original creators, and he shows up as a fairly recognizable zombie:

The keynote went pretty well, so I thought, and I’ve been told it will be posted in the future (these things take some time to edit). After my talk a bunch of people came up to me, which is pretty common. Usually, about half want to say “hi” and the other half want to tell me where I went wrong. I actually enjoy talking both types. We talked until it was close to the time for the next talk to happen, and then we went out into the main lobby area of the show. One person asked if I remembered him, and while I am terrible with names I honestly didn’t recognize his face, but this was due to the fact that I hadn’t seen him in nearly 30 years. James and I had gone to high school together, and it was fun to run into him at SELF so that we could spend some time catching up.

I’ve been to enough of these conferences now that I know a number of folks, and it was nice to see Kevin Otte fighting the good fight in trying to get people to switch to IPv6 (due primarily to his efforts, I am running it at both the office and at home).

The only real downside involved the venue. The Blake Hotel has undergone something like a $10 million renovation, and while I thought my room was nice, the conference part had some issues. I don’t pretend to speak for the organizers, but I was frustrated by the fact that at the 11th hour they changed the venue for the after party to be 21 and older (a lot of the attendees are college age) and while the sound guy they recommended was professional, I found out later that they gouged me on the price, charging about four times what it should have cost. I hope that SELF decides not to return there.

Despite the age limit, we had a decent turnout for the show and folks seemed to enjoy it. We had the local nerdcore duo, theThoughtCriminals, open so it turned into a “proper” concert, complete with encore.

Despite a few hiccups, especially with Friday morning registration, I would judge the conference a success, especially seeing the great attendance for the Sunday morning sessions (they tend to be a little sparse, especially first thing in the morning). I look forward to next year’s show.

OpenNMS Dev Jam 2013 Sells Out

I know that it’ll sound a little self congratulatory and somewhat artificial, but for the first time our annual developers conference, Dev-Jam, has sold out.

This will be the eighth conference in nine years. The first one was in 2005 when I invited anyone interested to come to Pittsboro, crash at the farm, and spend the week hacking on OpenNMS. In addition to the three founders, we had four other people show up for the week (and most of them have been to every one).

This year 30 people will descend on the campus of the University of Minnesota for a week of coding and camaraderie. While the University can support more, it becomes a lot harder to manage the more people show up, and besides, I only bought 30 tickets to the Twins game, so 30 it is.

Southeast Linuxfest – It Keeps Getting Better

The Southeast Linuxfest (SELF) is one week away, so be sure to mark you calendars and register (it’s free, but consider becoming a Supporter to insure that these types of shows will continue).

I am also happy to announce that Charlotte’s own nerdcore duo, Mikal kHill & Sulfur, aka The ThoughtCriminals, are also going to be performing as a special guest of MC Frontalot. It promises to be a fantastic weekend and I hope to see you there, and be sure to check out Mikal kHill’s website for the geekiest tumblr I’ve ever seen (although I must admit I thought tumblr was just for pr0n).

OpenNMS at VMWare World

Just a quick post to encourage any of my three readers who are also VMWare users to vote for my presentation that I submitted during the Call for Papers.

Entitled “5390 Monitoring VMWare with OpenNMS” my goal is to show off all of the cool stuff coming in 1.12 for integrating with vSphere and getting all that crunchy VMWare goodness into OpenNMS.

Vote early and often, and I approved this message.

UPDATE:

Thank you for your interest in speaking at VMworld 2013. Our Content Committee took great care in reviewing each and every session proposal. Unfortunately, we are not able to accept your session proposal

Thanks everyone who voted.

MC Frontalot to Perform at Southeast Linuxfest

Hot on the heels of last year’s amazing Ohio Linuxfest, we at The OpenNMS Group are excited to be able to bring the musical stylings of MC Frontalot to this year’s Southeast Linuxfest to be held 7-9 June in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Front has been confirmed to perform Saturday night, and I want to stress that this will be his only Carolinas appearance on June 8th. So if you are jonesing to see the man who coined the term “nerdcore rap” up close and personal, be sure to save the date and register for the conference. I repeat, there will only be one place to see MC Frontalot on June 8th, and that will be at SELF.

Hope to see you there, and bring some ducats for the merch table so he can buy food.

OUCE 2013 Videos Now Online

The OpenNMS Foundation gang has put up a large number of videos from this year’s OpenNMS Users Conference – more than 16 hours worth of OpenNMS goodness.

Check out the popular talk on OpenNMS and Drools-based event correlation:

or how to fail with OpenNMS:

or watch Tobi Oetiker give an introduction to RRDtool:

Hats of to the team for getting these up and putting on a great conference.