Random Thoughts..
Saturday, February 07, 2004
Khetro Broadsheet 01: January 2004
Khetro Broadsheet 01: January 2004
At first sight
Khetro is an initiative for generating an open space for cross-disciplinary dialogue and implementation of innovative ideas aimed at exploration, exchange and implementation in the domain of community culture, old and new media and ecological existence.
The editorial team of Sukanya Sanyal, Silanjan Bhattacharyya and Ranu Ghosh deserve appreciation for the effort which has gone into the first issue of the Broadsheet (released at the Kolkata Book Fair 2004). Priced at a very nominal INR 5 (and perhaps this is also an indicative one), the Broadsheet aims to address issues on ecological experience, poetics and politics of free code, daily life of intellectual property law, net(work) culture, media etc. The Broadsheet has been edited in collaboration with Mrityunjoy Chatterjee of Sarai-CSDS who has also conceived the understated design of the issue.
The Broadsheet states unequivocally that
'any part may be reproduced in any form without the written permission of the publishers for educational and non-commercial use. The contributors and publishers, however, would be very happy to be informed.'This comes as a stunning antithesis to the prevailing culture of the publishing domain and one hopes that such a spirit will prevail through the subsequent issues. One also hopes that with the publication of the Khetro Broadsheet 02 (slated to be around May 2004), the publishers will allow downloads of this copy from an easily accessible URL. Given the nature of the work that is Khetro's praxis, a community level media of interaction would also be in accordance with the cause.
Alternate modes of communication are often loaded with subtle semantic nodes that lead onto further exploratory niches. The Broadsheet is not an exception to this rule. Pushing the envelope from the normal and accepted, tokens and symbolic codes aggressively suggest a pathway towards inquiry and creative inputs. On behalf of Khetro, Nilanjan Bhattacharaya puts forth that
'This broadsheet is a collaborative initiative to enter into a shared creative journey, inviting passengers from diverse domains of society, to mark a convergent sphere of interaction and dialog.'
This issue contains (albeit such a listing would not be possible):
[1] Ecological Existence: The way a city is born and the way it lives By Silanjan Bhattacharyya where he explores the 'controversial' issue of demarcating and defining urban areas as ecosystems.
[2] Poetics and Politics of Free Code: a compilation of thought streams on the Free and Open Source movement through links and the concept of 'freedom'.
[3] Daily Life of an Intellectual Property Law: an extract from Intellectual Property and the Knowledge/Culture Commons project of ALF, Bangalore and Sarai-CSDS, Delhi
[4] Net(work) Culture/Media: a small insight into 'Net Culture' and spin-offs
[5] The ABC of Tactical Media: By David Garcia and Geert Lovink
[6] New Media, old Public: By Anjan Ghosh on new emerging media and the process of marginalisation.
Monday, February 02, 2004
GNU/Linux Awareness Workshop
The Computer Science and Engineering Department of Jadavpur University (www.jadavpur.edu) organised a 2 day workshop on GNU/Linux Awareness on the 5th and 6th of January, 2004 at the Amitava Dey Memorial Hall. The workshop was aimed at creating a base level awareness about GNU/Linux, Free Software and the tools based on the Linux kernel. Integrating with hands-on sessions, the workshop had as its primary objective an appreciation of the GNU suite among various members of faculty.
This was a first-of-its-kind event organised in the university. Given the fact that it was organised at a very short notice with a large section of the faculty remaining busy with examination schedules, there was some apprehension about the level of participation. The first day saw over 20 participants turning up for the session(s).
Day 1
The progam began at 1030 hours with an address by Prof. Manoj Mitra, Dean, Faculty of Engineering and Technology.
Dr P K Das [1]chaired the meeting
Session 1
In his keynote address on "Free Software Concepts and GNU/Linux ", Dr A R Thakur [2] talked about the various domains which would see a change when a proper choice of Free Software was made. Elaborating on the business side implementations of GNU/Linux, Dr Thakur tempered his talk with real-life experiences from the field of Bio-informatics that faculty members could immediately relate to. Drawing liberally from Eric Raymond's 'Cathedral and the Bazaar', he elaborated on the macro-economic aspects of Free Software deployment in India. His address clearly drove home the point just how far GNU/Linux has matured over the years. Going beyond its original niche of universities and global hacker communities, GNU/Linux has been embraced with enthusiasm, supported and contributed to by a major section of the global IT majors e.g. IBM, Sun, Oracle, HP/Compaq, Dell, Sybase, SAP AG and Novell just to name a few.
The Free Software Foundation of India [3]was represented by Sankarshan Mukhopadhyay [4]. Talking about the concepts and connotations of 'Free' in the 'Free Software Foundation', he used analogous components of 'muft' and 'mukt' to elaborate on the 4 freedoms. This lead on to a discussion of the GNU-GPL. Using actual case studies to outline the future and possibilities using Free Software in different social sectors like education, mass literacy, health, e-governance and overall technological empowerment of people, he mentioned of some the on-going projects across India employing FLOSS technologies to develop and implement solutions that deliver their fullest potential.
Indranil Das Gupta [5]representing the Kolkata GNU/Linux User Group [6]presented a case study on Low Cost Computing using FLOSS. He talked about the successful implementation of a Linux Terminal Server Project (LTSP)[7] done at the Sociology Dept of Jadavpur University. His talk went into detail regarding some of the checks and measures essential for choosing the hardware and while evaluating tenders for LTSP systems from vendor/system integrators. Moving to the exact cost-matrix of the total implementation, he pointed out how using off-the-shelf commodity components, each such fully multi-media and Internet ready nodes can be setup at the maximum cost of ~ Rs. 12,500 only. An enticing mention was made of the fact that a LTSP network could be used for much more than providing a better computer-to-student ratio. That when used in tandem with OpenMosix, it can become an effective parallel processing cluster, utilizing the idle cpu-cycles and redundant memory as a step towards grid computing. He ended his talking by drawing the audience's attention to the fact that the system has not had a single failure or downtime since its commissioning 3 months back.
Since there was still an hour to the lunch break, the organisers decided to move on to the next session immediately. And so, Dr. Pradip K Das [1] started on his presentation on the Fundamentals of GNU/Linux. His lecture moved through the principles of modern operating systems and UI standards. Using very simple terms and weaving in and out of a central theme, Prof Das, created a detailed software matrix which compared the Free Software Technology stack against proprietary ones. Moving beyond an excellent application-for-application matching, Prof Das explained that the domains where GNU/Linux currently caters to range from the Desktop to scaling all the way to Enterprise systems, that virtually every industry today is using the Operating System across all levels. A pithy presentation its was well-received by the audience, who came forward with quite a few questions of their own.
Session 2
After the lunch break, Prof Chandan Majumdar [8] spoke on "Networking and Security using Linux". Highlighting the networking and kernel specifics of GNU/Linux, Prof Majumdar took the audience through the actual architecture of the OS. Shorn of any rhetorics, he pulled up real-life examples of use and experience with the OS in the department during execution of various projects. He explained how open-source of GNU/Linux helped them to create custom kernels with near-realtime properties and capable of running off flash RAM devices. Highlighting the security aspects of the OS, he explained how the user permission model allowed for a highly fine-tuned access control over computing resources like files etc, particularly in networked environments. On the topic of computer viruses - the bane of the existence of users of a certain very popular OS, he elaborated that while it is technically possible to author viruses on GNU/Linux, the extent of damage possible by such is seriously limited due to the inherent multi-user, multi-level permission level available on GNU/Linux. Using the whiteboard to highlight key points, Prof Majumdar took the audience through an unbiased appraisal of the pros and cons of GNU/Linux. While he pointed out that stability and performance as key reasons for the global surge in mainstream use of the OS, he put it down to lack of extensive driver support for commodity hardware (as compared to a certain well-known OS) and absence of good quality documentation as challenges facing the Free Operating System.
After a round of tea and snacks, Prof Majumder's talk was followed by Prof S Neogy who chose to elaborate on GNU/Linux commands. Through a session titled GNU/Linux commands and OpenOffice, she explained with examples the most common and indispencible commands, with particular attention to bash shell. Introducing the bash shell and scripting basics to an audience for some of whom this was the first brush with the bash, she providided lucid explanation of the different commands. The participants were seen busy noting down her slides.
After moving the basic commands Prof Neogy moved on to the Opensource Office package -- OpenOffice [9]. The participants were provided with explanations of the structure and functioning of the constituent packages like - Writer, Calc, Draw, Impress etc. The initial discussion on the suite completed, a complete hands-on tutorial was reserved for Day 2
This was followed by a mini open-house discussion where the audience raised questions and these were answered by the speakers present. However, mention must be made of Prof P K Das and Prof Nandini Mukherjee [10]who livened up the talks and discussions with their valued comments and interjections.
Day 2
Session 1
This was designed to be a full fledged hands-on demonstration session on topics discussed on the Day 1. Using pre-designed course material and examples from text books, Prof Mukherjee and Prof Neogy interacted with the participants to provide functional knowledge of the bash shell along with introduction to the OpenOffice suite. A steady stream of questions, joy at writing out the first shell script meant that it was a highly enjoyable session for both the faculty members and the participants.
Session 2
The Bangla Localisation Project of GNU/Linux is stylised as The Ankur Bangla Project [11]. This session was a demonstration of the recently released AnkurBangla LiveDesktop v1.0. Based on the concept of a LiveCD, the AnkurBangla LiveDesktop (Technology Preview) showcases the maturity of the project and also traces the roadmap for the project. On behalf of Ankur [11], Indranil Das Gupta [5] and Sankarshan Mukhopadhyay [4] talked about the Challenges and Possibilities of Bangla L10n. A lively Q&A session also evolved on the various technological aspects of the project as well as developer teams and processes
The workshop also had an Open House Session where participants directly interacted with the various speakers to clarify doubts, put forward questions and offer insights into the programme.
Prof N Mukherjee conducted the Vote of Thanks and expressed a wish to conduct such workshop on a larger scale. She thanked all the participants and the speakers for attending the workshop at such short notice and talked about the need hold more such meetings, formal and informal to ensure that GNU/Linux awareness can be emphatically carried out.
Notes and Links:
[1] Dr Pradip K Das, Dept of Computer Science and Engineering, pkdass at ieee dot org
[2] Dr Ashok R Thakur, Pro-VC West Bengal University of Technology, arthakur at cubmb dot ernet dot in
[3] Free Software Foundation of India: www.fsf.org.in
[4] Sankarshan Mukhopadhyay, sankarshan at bengalinux dot org
[5] Indranil Das Gupta, Co-ordinator ILUG-Kolkata, indradg at ilug-cal dot org
[6] Indian GNU/Linux Users Group-Kolkata: www.ilug-cal.org
[7] Linux Terminal Server Project: www.ltsp.org
[8] Prof Chandan Majumder, Dept of Computer Science and Engineering, chandanm at vsnl dot com
[9] www.openoffice.org
[10] Prof Nandini Mukherjee, Dept of Computer Science and Engineering, nmukherjee at vsnl dot com
[11] Ankur Bangla Project - www.bengalinux.org