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OSUOSL Introduces Open Source Digital Voting Project to Portland Dev Community

OSUOSL Introduces Open Source Digital Voting Project to Portland Dev Community
2/12/09

On February 18th the Oregon State University Open Source Lab is welcoming the Open Source Digital Voting Foundation to the Portland community. The OSDV Foundation is a Silicon Valley based public benefits corporation whose mission is to work to restore trust in how America votes through the design, development, and demonstration of open source digital voting technology. The OSDV Foundation is now raising public awareness, and expanding efforts including a planned development center in Portland, Oregon.

The agenda for the evening: Gregory Miller, Chief Development Officer and E. John Sebes, Chief Technology Officer will talk about the project, its motivation, founding, and development efforts to date; the technology road map and major projects; development philosophies and approaches to design and development; opportunities for involvement.

If you're in the Portland, Oregon area please drop by and find out more about this project:

What: TrustTheVote! Intro in Portland, Oregon
When: Feb 18, 2009, 6:00 - 7:30 p.m.,
Where: CubeSpace, 622 SE Grand Ave, Portland

More info on the project: http://www.osdv.org

OSUOSL Hosts OpenMRS Development

OSUOSL Hosts OpenMRS Development
1/12/09

OpenMRS is an open source electronic medical record system framework. Led by the Regenstrief Institute and Partners In Health, OpenMRS has been implemented in several countries including South Africa, Kenya, Rwanda, Lesotho, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Uganda, and Tanzania.

The Oregon State University Open Source Lab is providing hosting for the OpenMRS Development Website including a Trac instance at http://dev.openmrs.org and the OpenMRS subversion repository. We are happy to provide services to OpenMRS and support their efforts in bringing usable medical information systems to developing countries where HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis are a major problem.

"We've been growing the OpenMRS community for over four years now, largely building up our online community presence in our spare time. Fortunately, we grew beyond the point where this hosting approach made sense for us.  In our conversations with the top open source projects, Oregon State University's Open Source Lab was repeatedly introduced as a perfect transition strategy for an organization like ours.  I've found them to be the perfect balance of fun and easy to work with as well as professional when it counts.  We are confident in their ability to manage our mission critical code repository and online web presence.  I couldn't recommend them highly enough!" -- Paul Biondich, co-founder, OpenMRS

OSUOSL One of Nation's "Really Cool" Networking Labs

OSUOSL One of Nation's "Really Cool" Networking Labs
1/10/09

The Oregon State University Open Source Lab was recently featured in a Network World online story about really cool university computer network labs. This is a great honor for us, and we are glad to be in such good company. Some of the highlights of the OSUOSL included in the list were our hosting of projects such as the Linux Kernel, Drupal, the Linux Foundation, our development work on the Oregon Virtual School District, and our annual Government Open Source Conference.

The Network World article is located at http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/121508-university-networking-labs.html?page=4

For a full press release, please see http://oregonstate.edu/dept/ncs/newsarch/2009/Jan09/opensourcelab.html

New Open Source Government Communities Come Together at GOSCON

New Open Source Government Communities Come Together at GOSCON
10/08/08

On October 22, 2008 government and private industry experts will debate the issues and opportunities presented by collaborative software development models at the Government Open Source Conference (GOSCON) in Portland, Ore. The distinguished panelists have direct experience with successful public/private consortiums based on the open source software model in which developers as well as business and technical users collaborate to create new applications while sharing both the costs and the benefits.

"The advantages to moving to an open source model for government software would not just be lower costs and better knowledge sharing across the public sector; it might also take us closer to the level of access, transparency and flexibility that the public is starting to demand from its governments, said Brian Belhendorf, CollabNet founder and Mozilla board director. "Software development is at its core a collaborative process -- collaborative between developers, even those working on different projects, and collaborative between developers and users. The ‘big deal' about the Open Source model is that it recognizes this fact and makes it possible to move away from treating every project as an isolated endeavor. I look forward to being a part of this conversation."

The "Open Government Collaboratives" panel will be led by Oregon Department of Transportation Chief Information Officer Benjamin Berry and Newport News, Virginia IT Director Andy Stein. The duo brings years of experience in early adoption of open source software and models in government environments. Their goal is to draw the audience -- primarily state, local and national goverment IT management -- into the session and extract a reference model for additional communities on the spot.

GOSCON is organized by the OSL. The conference is part of its mission to education and support community.

rpm.org and yum move to OSUOSL

rpm.org and yum move to OSUOSL
9/29/08

The Oregon State University Open Source Lab is proud to be the new home for two very important OSS projects. We are now hosting the main web sites, ticket trackers, code repositories, and mailing lists for RPM and yum.

RPM is the package management system used by many Linux distributions including RedHat Enterprise, Fedora, SUSE, CentOS, Mandriva, and many others. The RPM format is also part of the Linux Standards Base.

Yum is a package installer/remover for RPM-based systems, and does all the work to calculate dependencies for packages that you want to install or remove. Yum is the default package manager for RedHat Enterprise, Fedora and CentOS Linux distributions. In addition to yum, the OSUOSL is also hosting development sites for yum-utils, a collection of utilities and scripts built around yum, and createrepo, the program which creates metadata used in package repositories (supported by yum, apt-rpm, red-carpet, smart, up2date, and yast).

The sites for RPM and yum can be found at http://rpm.org and http://yum.baseurl.org, respectively.