Celebrate Hardware Freedom Day 2013 22
Blug_fred writes "The Digital Freedom Foundation is proud to announce the first celebration of Hardware Freedom Day on Saturday April 20th, 2013. While registration has opened about a month ago and early registrants will receive free banners, posters and swags as long as they register before Friday 15th, anyone who registers is of course welcome to celebrate the Day! So get your hackerspace into order, your team members ready and showcase your best 'Get Into Hacking workshop' to entice your neighbours to start. Still not lucky enough to be part of a hackerspace structure? Then use that day to meet people who will be willing to join you in the project!"
420 day (Score:1)
Will anyone remember to go?
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One more reason to celebrate 4/20! (Score:2)
Yeah!
very different organization from the FSF (Score:3)
Whereas Richard Stallman famously asks people not to buy him parrots as gifts, Digital Freedom Foundation president Frederic Muller mentions in his bio [digitalfre...dation.org] that he owns a cockatoo, a Alexandrine Parakeet, three iguanas and five turtles.
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This is hilarious
http://gizmodo.com/5853729/please-do-not-buy-richard-stallman-a-parrot-and-other-rules [gizmodo.com]
Richard Stallman is leader of the free software movement and father of GNU. Naturally, he's in demand as a speaker. And so NATURALLY he has a completely ride-the-orangutan insane tour rider.
"Ridge the orangutan" insane is such a great phrase.
From the link
https://secure.mysociety.org/admin/lists/pipermail/developers-public/2011-October/007701.html [mysociety.org]
Andrew, I read all of Richard Stallman's email that you forwarded.
Don't book him. His rider is hilarious.
RMS winning friends and influencing people as usual.
From Finland (Score:2)
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I'm a big fan of ThinkPenguin, which is one of the only companies supporting free software, but really, do I care about the freedom? Or do I care about my hardware working?
In some cases, these might be the same. If you don't have full control over your hardware the same way that HW manufacturers and the NDA-signing, proprietary-interface-equipped OS and SW manufacturers do, your machine can be exploited and rooted in a way that would be very difficult to remove. If you get owned like this guy [usahitman.com], how do you clean up the mess so that you can trust your HW afterwards? (Who knows what your firmware is doing right now in your machine.)
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I have often found that 'hardware problems' can be solved by loading decent software. In some cases the software is working around hardware problems, in others it's just a matter of having less bugs and not causing 'hardware problems'.
Community Workshops & Hackerspaces are amazing (Score:2)
I just want let people know, if you have a local community workshop or hacker space, I strongly encourage you to check it out. I am lucky to have two in my area, one of the 8 TechShops around the US and a smaller, more community driven workshop (Maker-Works).
I found both to be amazing resources as far as tools, classes and community support are concerned.
I am one of those very introverted people, I do not go out much at all socially and really avoid going out in general if I can. I am also pretty geeky, pro
Horray hardware freedom day, er... (Score:1)
It's just we need to change the meaning of the word "freedom" because we certainly aren't going to get this intrusive copyright/trusted computing thing to come off the track any time soon
Freedom where freedom to choose equals this EFCI mainboard or that EFCI mainboard.
Freedom to choose MPEG-LA over MPEG-LA
Freedom to use only your real name
Freedom to not have usenet
Freedom to have an ISP filtering ports
Freedom to have all your communications copied and exploited under the guise of "state secrets"
Freedom to h
I thought 4/20 was mind freedom day (Score:2)
Sure (Score:1)
Freedom, freedom, freedom, oy! Freedom, freedom, freedom, oy!