BarCamp Atlanta 2 – The Final Hours
The final hours of BarCamp was a testament to how much everyone wanted share knowledge and learn from each other. Everyone was tired, some hung over, and many just waiting to go home and pass out for a day or two. Either way, here is an overview of the last sessions that I attended.
After lunch I attended Russell Journey and Loren Normans overview of Amazon Web Services. We received a quick overview of Amazon EC2 and then talked about when to make the switch from your standard hosting environment. The consensus seemed to be that you never actually make the switch. EC2 and other services are really built to assist in making your application fully scale when traffic starts to flood in. One example use is to have you website configured to spin up new EC2 instances when a certain load is met. With the correct structure EC2 is a cheap alternative to building out your own infrastructure and can easily handle getting Slashdotted or making the Digg front page. The second part of the speech was a flurry of URL’s to help developers more easily handle instances and cloud services. Here is a list in case you are researching cloud services and management. It also include some of the audiences preferred web hosts
- bluehost.com
- slicehost.com
- ylastic.com- I believe someone said these guys were local.
- rightscale.com
- scalr.net
Next I jumped into a security talk from Shauvik. He was giving an overview of the latest web security, projects, and updates. He went over various FF extensions used for auditing and some tools from OWASP.
Tools:
- FireCat
- Live HTTP Headers
- Wikto
- Nikto
- W3AF
Following the security update I sat in on the Mini Startup Gauntlet session paneled by Lance, Sanjay, and Don. For those who are not familiar with Startup Gauntlet it is a reoccurring event in which you present you startup pitch and the panelist tell you how to make it better. During the mini version there were presentations by Russell Journey, Mike Mealling, and Tejus.
Tejus completed his pitch of SCMPLE and I had to rush out to give one of my presentations which was Attack Detection and Remediation using RIA’s. I will have full posts up on my presentations shortly.
Now it was time for the last session of the day. Actually, it was the second to last but it went so well that most people turned it from a 30 minute session to an hour. Doug hosting the open discussion about tagged Open Source: The who, what, when, where, and why. Since most people in the room could fill in those answers pretty rapidly we attempted to think on a deeper level about open source. By doing this we really expanded the conversation. Here are some example answers that were written on the large white papers surrounding the room.
What: Other than software what are other uses, copyright and media,
- Who: attributes of who? Customers are architects and devs, freelancers, cheapasses, savvy cio’s, “do it yourselfers”
- When: when to use the Open source structure/arch?
- Where: everywhere
- Why: cost savings, community / collab, learning, better and easier to maintain, ready made consulting markets,
- How: more freelance help, google code
- How much: is open source free, jboss was purchased for 360,000,000 , mysql was bought for 1.2B, redhat 30% yr over yr growth for 4 years running,
As you can see, many of these were more questions just to expand the topic. We spent much time analyzing companies that were open source/free, open source enterprise, commercial open source, and other forms of hybrids. Overall my biggest take away was that the word open source has really gotten skewed over time. In the past and even today many people treated open source as if it was synonymous with free. For a period of time that was somewhat accurate. However, some of the largest open source companies today don’t have as much to do with free software as when they started. Overall this was a very compelling end to BarCamp.
Lastly I have to thank everyone who made it happen.
If it weren’t for Mike Mealling and Lance Weatherby this would have never happened. Thank you for a great event.
I must also thank the BarCamp sponsors that make these possible.
- Angus McRae
- Appcelerator
- Microsoft
- Ryma
- ATDC
- GeorgiaTech Venture Lab
- TechLinks
BarCamp Atlanta 2 Links:
SugarCRM Tutorials and Modules
SugarCRM Consulting
Categories
JoshSweeney Twitter
- In the partner marketing session getting some great ideas. #scon12 (@ Partner Breakout Sessions http://t.co/LrkcPh5L #SCon12...
- In the partner marketing session getting some great ideas. #scon12 (@ Partner Breakout Sessions http://t.co/LrkcPh5L #SCon12...
SugarCRMAtlanta Twitter
- SugarCRMAtlanta is back and we plan to bring you all SugarCRM related news in the Southeast. #sugarcrm
- Atlanta SugarCRM Meetup tomorrow. http://opensource.meetup.com/72/calendar/8936307/


