[ale] OT -- Questions about how to get funds for open source

Greg Freemyer greg.freemyer at gmail.com
Mon Jan 17 19:12:36 EST 2011


Chuck,

Like Jim, when I gave a free presentation last year, I got a free pass
from the conference. I forgot about that.

As a small business owner, a free pass is often all I get.

Greg

On 1/17/11, Jim Kinney <jim.kinney at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hmm. Maybe it's just me but volunteer my time, sure, put in my cash to get
> me from my place to speaking/demo place, depends on amount and how much I
> like doing the talk.
>
> I do a beer talk at DragonCon. The time and materials I bring have a real
> cost to me. 15 gallons of homebrew has an ingredients price plus time and
> resources. I enjoy actually doing the talk(/show/performance) and feedback
> has been it's well received (and not just for the free beer). The 18%
> Monster beer was $130 for the 3 gallon batch I brought. The Blind Toad Stout
> last year (12%) was $145 for a 5 gallon batch (and a damn fine batch of ale
> it was!). My typical outlay for beer is between $200 and $300 for the 1 hour
> (that goes for 2+ hours) talk.
>
> However in the past the Con provided a free 4-day pass for me and my son to
> get in and spend more $$ buying gaming stuff and attending robot wars and
> other things we like. Last year they did not even provide a one day pass for
> me to get in on the day of my presentation. Will I do it again? It's
> unlikely as I spend way more on beer parts than the cost of x2 4 day tickets
> 4 months in advance.
>
> <snark>DC "leadership" is OK paying real money to has-been actors from
> "Happy Days" and can't toss a free pass to a science track speaker who can
> PACK a 350+ person room every year.</snark>
>
> My wife does volunteer speaking on behalf of NASA/JPL (also shows up at DC).
> She has a fixed distance beyond which she just won't travel. A school wanted
> _her_ so the PTA picked up the tab for gas and a hotel room for her and the
> kids had a blast.
>
> If you're being asked to present outside of a reasonable post-talk drive
> home, ask for a place to sleep from the receiving group and/or OpenSuSE.
> It's fair. It's often more fun to be put up at the home of the organizer
> than a hotel anyway. But it's also VOLUNTEER work and it's OK to say "no"
> when you just can't afford the cash outlay.
>
>
>
> --
> --
> James P. Kinney III
> I would rather stumble along in freedom than walk effortlessly in chains.
>

-- 
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Greg Freemyer
Head of EDD Tape Extraction and Processing team
Litigation Triage Solutions Specialist
http://www.linkedin.com/in/gregfreemyer
CNN/TruTV Aired Forensic Imaging Demo -
   http://insession.blogs.cnn.com/2010/03/23/how-computer-evidence-gets-retrieved/

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