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Displaying posts with tag: Open Source (reset)
O'Reilly MySQL Conference Community Awards 2011: The winners are...

This year was the first year the public could nominate candidates for these awards. We got in many nominations and this really helped the panel to get an overview of everything that is noteworthy in the MySQL ecosystem right now. Thank you to everyone who participated by sending in nominations.

In the first category the panel received and debated over a dozen suggestions. There are so many great people in this community, it is easy to think of people who truly deserve to be awarded. There were however two persons who clearly stood out with a track record of years and years of broad and really key contributions to the MySQL community. These two persons also clearly stood out both in number of nominations and number of votes. Therefore, the...

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Catch us at OSScamp in Lucknow on March 26-27, 2011

OSScamp Lucknow is being organised at Babu Banarasi Das Group of Instititions, Lucknow on March 26-27, 2011. Organised by students of the college and supported by the open source community in Lucknow, the event is shaping up really well with 25 sessions from the FOSSverse and over 300 participants. The camp is being organized by the local community, for the students, developers and anyone, who is interested in open source in the region.

Continuing our support for the open source community, OSSCube is participating at OSScamp Lucknow. Our Manager (Community & Relations) - Kinshuk, will participate at the camp and lead multiple sessions across the two days.

What is very exciting for us is the participation of different communities at this camp. The camp will see representation from the Wikimedia …

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The First Day of the Rest of My Life

I always remember the saying that tomorrow is the first day of the rest of your life.  It refers to taking each day as it comes and making the best of it, and not concerning yourself with what you can no longer change - the past. This has new resonance for me today as tomorrow I start on a new job, as Webmaster for SkySQL Ab.

For the last five and a half years I've worked for MySQL in all its forms.  Initially MySQL AB, then the Database Group in Sun Microsystems, and finally the Open Source business unit in Oracle. (For anyone still at Oracle, forgive me if I get the names wrong, I don't think I ever fully worked out what our group's official name was).  For most of that time I've loved every minute of it, working with great people on a great product and bringing it to the world (or at least the World Wide Web in my case).

Now I get to work with some great people, …

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Maximizing Monetization with a Modules Marketplace



For Open Source projects whose software architecture allows it, inviting developers to extend the core product through add-on modules and plug-ins is a great way to raise interest and awareness and thus kickstart or foster an adoption/contribution cycle. In such a setting, Open Source vendors and their business partners should consider building and maintaining an online marketplace or exchange for add-ons, which will serve as a highly effective distribution and sales channel.

Distribution and Sales Channel

Such a modules marketplace allows business partners and community developers to showcase their work, maximize its visibility and earn money by selling custom modules to end-users.

Typically, you’d find all or some of the following offerings in …

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MySQL replication for demanding users

I have been working with MySQL replication for quite a while. I have dealt with simple replication setups and I have experimented with complex ones. Five years ago I wrote an article about advanced MySQL replication, which was mostly a dream on what you could do with imagination and skill, but the matter from that article is still not even remotely ready for production. Yet, since that article, I have been approached by dozens of people who wanted to know how to make the multiple master dream become reality. To all of them, I had to say, "sorry, this is just a proof of concept.Come back in a few years, it may become possible". It still isn't.
Despite its latest great technological advance, MySQL native replication is is very poor of topologies. What you can do with MySQL native replication is master-to-slave (which also includes relayed …

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Zmanda Cloud Backup adds Tokyo as its latest cloud storage location

We are adding support for Asia Pacific (Tokyo) Region in Zmanda Cloud Backup (ZCB). This is the fifth worldwide location supported by ZCB.

This support provides faster uploads for ZCB users in Japan. Throughput will be significantly higher because of less hops along the way and very high bandwidth connections typically available in Japan. Overall processing will be faster because of lower latency (expected to be single digit millisecond latency for most end users in Japan).

Cloud Backup to Three Continents Now Includes Japan

This support enables users to ensure that their data does not leave Japan, e.g. if required for compliance reasons.

In summary, users in Japan now have an effective and scalable solution to backup …

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Load balancing SIP across Asterisk with BIG-IP

Topology Participating hosts

* 1x BIG-IP VE
* 1x Debian Squeeze “Provisioning Server” serving DHCP, TFTP & DNS
* 3x Nortel/Avaya 1120E hard phones flashed to SIP1120e04.01.13.00
* 2x Debian Squeeze + digium asterisk packages:

$ grep asterisk /etc/apt/sources.list
deb http://packages.asterisk.org/deb squeeze main
deb-src http://packages.asterisk.org/deb squeeze main

DUNDi

*CLI> module reload pbx_dundi.so
*CLI> dundi show peers
*CLI> dundi show mappings
*CLI> dundi lookup 4012@extensions bypass
*CLI> dundi set debug on

SIP

*CLI> sip show peers

dialplan

*CLI> dialplan show RegisteredDevices

Work in progress

Yesterday, I installed a trixbox virtual machine using the …

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Footnotes for Drupal 7 released, announcing handover to new maintainer

I finally did the migration to Drupal 7 for the Footnotes module this weekend. See Release notes and project page for more information.

With this release I also announced my intent to hand over the module to a new maintainer. Since I'm now increasingly active with affairs in the MySQL community, both hacking as well as other community tasks, it is prudent to not let old projects dangle without attention but to formally hand them over to fresh minds.

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Data Cleaner 2

Dear Kettle friends,

Some time ago while I visited the nice folks from Human Inference in Arnhem, I ran into Kasper Sørensen, the lead developer of DataCleaner.

DataCleaner is an open source data quality tool released (like Kettle) under the LGPL license.  It is essentially to blame for the lack of a profiling tool inside of Kettle.  That is because having DataCleaner available to our users was enough to push the priority of having our own data profiling tool far enough down.

Kasper worked on DataCleaner pretty much in his spare time in the past.  Now that Human Inference took over the project I was expecting more frequent updates and that’s what we …

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Overview and archeological exploration of the MepSQL Bakery

This is the final part in a series of posts about the MepSQL build system known as MepSQL Bakery. MepSQL is a (yet another) fork of the MySQL database server, with the server based on the MySQLatFacebook code and the build system based on the MariaDB build system.

In this final post I wish to draw a high level picture of the complete process of building TAR, DEB and (eventually) RPM packages from the source code. There's not much more technical details to add to the previous posts, instead I'm going to make some, shall we say "archeological", observations which imho are interesting given how the build system has evolved when being passed from one project to another. Perhaps more importantly, I will …

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