Atlanta Linux Fest 2009
The second annual Atlanta Linux Fest took place this past Saturday, the 19th September 2009. IBM was gracious enough to provide the facility, and Canonical and eApps also provided major sponsorship. The show was a success by all measures, well exceeding the organizers’ expectations. The official attendance numbers have not been published, but I have heard numbers between 600 and 700 — not bad for a show only in its second year and that fell on a very rainy day!
At Nick’s request, I had convinced Tarus to give a talk, and I pretty much unilaterally decided that OpenNMS would also be an exhibitor. We scored an absolutely prime spot in the exhibit area and drew in lots of traffic. Our good friends Mita and Robbie at Presentation Rentals (which sponsors ANSMTUG monthly) got us a great deal on a big monitor on which we ran our loop. My amazing wife volunteered to help out with the booth, her first time ever “wearing the shirt” though she’d hung out with us last October at a show in London. We always like to have as many community members representing as we have OpenNMS Group employees, so I recruited local friends Bobby and Robert to help man the booth. I’m confident that each of them fully earned a 100% commission on the free software he sold that day.

A plethora of Papa John's pizza pies, constituting lunch at Atlanta Linux Fest 2009
This show was the project’s first in Atlanta, and as happens in every new city, people came out of the woodwork who use OpenNMS to keep the IT infrastructure running smoothly at local companies that we previously had no idea were part of our user community. It turns out that Georgia Tech, which hosted last year’s Dev-Jam, is a user, as is Georgia Power. Less widely known users that we learned about include the company that provides the data underlying Google Maps‘ and other providers’ integrated roadway traffic services. I hope that some of these people will join the Order of the Blue Polo, especially since both my wife and Bobby were modeling the shirt in question. It’s fitting, and a testament to the show organizers’ excellent taste, that lunch came from a company represented in the OBP.
It was such a busy day for us that nobody had time to snap any pictures of our booth! We were fortunate enough to have, in the booth adjacent to ours, shutterbug Jane Ullah, who captured three of us loafing during a lull in the show traffic. If some images emerge that paint us in a less idle light, I’ll update this post to include them