1.
Attendance and Action Summary
Present: Phill Camp, Chris Cartledge, Barry
Cornelius, Mike Fraser, Brian Kelly, Randy Metcalfe, John
Norman, Sebastian Rahtz, Andrew Savory
Apologies: Julian Bream, Paul Browning, Paul
David, Nicole Harris, Bill Olivier, Alan Robiette, Ronnie Scott, Stephen Tanner, George Vernon
Chair: John Norman
Action Summary:
- OSS Watch manager to confirm ongoing committee
membership of those members who have served two-years or
more.
2. Welcome and introductions
The Chair welcomed all present and thanked Brian Kelly of
UKOLN for hosting this meeting of the advisory committee.
3. Minutes from previous meeting
The minutes from
the meeting of 24 February 2005 were reviewed and accepted.
4. Matters arising
Actions from the 24 February 2005 meeting:
- further comments on the JISC open source policy need to be received by
Alan asap - done
The Chair thanked the committee for contributing to the final
version of the JISC policy. He noted that the policy had been
approved by the appropriate JISC committees and would be
published by the JISC executive shortly. [NB. The
JISC
Open Source Policy is now published.]
5. Committee membership and Chair election
The committee unanimously re-elected John Norman for a
second year as Chair of the OSS Watch advisory committee. John
thanked those present for their continued confidence.
The Chair noted that the committee membership had
increased by one since the last meeting with the addition of
Bill Olivier, Development Director (Systems and Technology),
JISC.
In reviewing the terms of reference for the committee it
was noted that membership in the OSS Watch advisory
committee will be for two years in the first
instance. As this advisory committee meeting marked the end of
the first two years, the OSS Watch manager was asked to seek
agreement from all committee members who had completed their
initial two-year stint to confirm their willingness to continue
on the committee.
Action: OSS Watch manager to confirm
ongoing committee membership of those members who have served
two-years or more.
6. Manager's Report
On 1 September 2005, Randy Metcalfe took over from
Sebastian Rahtz as Manager of OSS Watch. Sebastian takes on
the new role of Service Director. The Manager's report was
thus divided neatly into activities that had taken place
since the last committee meeting, reported on by Sebastian,
and current and proposed activities for the near future,
reported on by Randy.
Discussion of the reports was integrated into their
presentation. Actions have been noted.
6.1. OSS Watch activities February-July 2005
Sebastian offered a report of OSS Watch's activity between
February and July 2005 under the following headings:
- briefing papers
- general communications
- presentations
- conferences and workshops
- software distribution
- FE roadshows (on which more anon)
He noted that the themes involved in OSS Watch's work over
this period included:
- building communities
- open source policies
- document rigour
- wiki development
The staff complement consisted of:
- Sebastian Rahtz
- Manager (0.4FTE)
- Randy Metcalfe
- Communications Manager (1.0FTE)
- Rowan Wilson
- Research officer (0.5FTE)
- Stuart Yeates
- Research officer (0.5FTE)
- Barry Cornelius
- Development Officer (0.5 FTE)
- Judy McAuliffe
- Administration
- Hannah Dunnington
- Events Management (0.3FTE)
- Elena Blanco
- Documentation editor and author (freelance)
Salary from delayed start of Barry Cornelius pays for commissioned
work from Elena Blanco.
In April-May 2005 Randy Metcalfe served as acting OSS
Watch Manager. During those months Sebastian was based in East
Timor where he was writing a book on the Text Encoding
Initiative. Before returning, however, Sebastian undertook a
lecture tour of Australian universities on behalf of OSS
Watch.
6.1.1. Workpackages
The OSS Watch Project plan has the following
workpackages whose status is found in the following table:
| Briefing material |
Ongoing |
| Conferences |
Ongoing |
| Evaluation |
Summer 2005: scheduled for September 2005 |
| International Conference |
February/March 2006 |
| Project support |
Ongoing |
| Reports to JISC |
Ongoing |
| Collaboration |
Ongoing |
| FE roadshows |
Activity ended in July 2005 |
| Demonstration Software |
Ongoing |
| Survey |
Autumn 2005 |
| Website |
Ongoing |
| Workshops |
Ongoing |
6.1.2. Briefing Material
The following list shows titles of the briefing notes published since February
- Creative Commons and Open Content
- Linux in a Windows World - review
- A guide to participating in an open source software
community
- Open source email clients
- Open source and the web admin
- Software Patents
- UK Patent Office Technical Contribution Workshop -
report
- A Guide to
Open Source Software for Australian Government Agencies -
review
- Open source and the web browser
- Knoppix Hacks - review
- Open Source Development - An
Introduction to Ownership and Licensing
Issues
- FOSDEM - report
During this past six months OSS Watch has introduced new
measures to ensure document rigour. All OSS Watch technical
writing continues to be prepared in validated XML, and checked
by two members of staff. However, a formal process has been
introduced for the review of our published documentation in
order to ensure its continued accuracy and relevance. All
documents are now reviewed on a 6-monthly basis and archived
or rewritten if required.
A small number of articles were published about OSS Watch.
Media coverage of OSS Watch appeared in the following:
- Egov Monitor, 23 June 2005
- Letter to the editor, Financial Times, 8 June 2005
- RSC Northern Ireland newsletter, June 2005
- Open source software alternatives help universities
focus on what works, Innovations Report, 29
April 2005
- A Path Through The Intellectual Property Rights
Swamp, Managing Information, 28 April 2005
- A Path Through The Intellectual Property Rights
Swamp, JISC website, 19 April 2005
6.1.3. Conferences
On 4 July 2005, OSS Watch held a national conference on the
them of
Building Open Source Communities. The
following presentations were made:
-
What is an open source software community?
Sebastian Rahtz, Manager, OSS Watch
-
Licences, Features, and Community: The Path to
Sustainability Jim Farmer, Community Liaison, Sakai Educational Partners
Program
-
Co-located agile development Helen Sharp, The Open University
-
Serving Maths: Experiences from a JISC Distributed
e-Learning Project Gustav Delius, University of York
-
Life and times in the Apache community
Andrew Savory, Director, Luminas
-
MoodleMoot: Meeting Real People from a Virtual
Community Sean Keogh, UK Moodle Partner
6.1.4. Collaborations
OSS Watch has been involved in a signficant number of
collaborations over the past six months.
- Queen Mary University - half-day workshop on licensing
- Australian Government Management Information Office - half-day discussion
- JISC Mirror Service - steering group
- Digital Curation Centre - document consultation
- Bodington VLE project - ongoing building communities and licensing consultation
- UKOLN - planning stages of joint Creative Commons workshops
- JISC IPR Consultation workshops - invited participation
- JISC Click project - consultation
- British Computer Society - Open Source Special
Interest Group
- Oxford University Computing Services - Linux
desktops
- Open Source Skills Committee - developing skills
framework, with Open Forum Europe, UKUUG, OpenAdvantage,
Sun, HP and others
- Moodle - meeting with Martin Dougiamas and participation in MoodleMoot 2005
- LAMS - business models
- Educause - OSS Watch invited to blog on their site
- OMII - consultation on OMII future plans
- CCLRC - licence discussions and planning IPR workshops
- SIGOSSEE - German translations of OSS Watch briefing documents
- GNU EPrints - building communities consultation
- JISC eLearning programme - ongoing consultation
As mentioned, while Sebastian was in Australia he
undertook a series of presentations and consultations for OSS
Watch.
Stuart Yeates has been a regular blogger on the Educause
site since May 1st, and has clocked up 118 entries, making him
one of their key providers of information on the state of open
source in education in Europe.
6.1.5. Survey
As an early preparation for the repeat of OSS Watch's
national survey on open source deployment, an informal study
was conducted of Linux desktop deployment across the colleges
and departments at the University of Oxford. Questions
included
- What distros are used at Oxford?
- What releases of distros are used?
- How did they choose a distribution?
- What is the most used distribution?
- Who uses the Linux desktop?
- Who has root access?
- How are machines patched?
- When do machines get OS releases?
- What software is installed?
- What discipline-oriented software?
- Can other software be installed?
- Can the desktop run a webserver?
- Can the user access MS Windows?
The results indicate more widespread use of Linux desktops
than anticipated but with inconsistent deployment policies.
6.1.6. JISC
A Senior Management Briefing paper was prepared in
July 2005 for the JISC Communications Team and it is expected that
this will be published in October or November 2005, with associated guidance
materials on licensing.
OSS Watch continued its close work with many JISC projects
engaged in open source software development.
6.1.7. Presentations
During the past six months OSS Watch has made a
substantial number of presentations, by invitation:
- 7-8 July 2005, JISC Development Joint-Programmes meeting
- 6-8 July 2005, Institutional Web Management Workshop 2005: Whose Web Is It Anyway?, Manchester
- 29 June 2005, 29 June 2005, TASI seminar: Effective Use of Digital Images in Education Resources, Bristol
- 21-24 June 2005, EUNIS 2005 - Leadership and Strategy in a Cyber-Infrastructure World, Manchester
- 23 June 2005, Oxford IT Support Staff Conference, Oxford
- 23 June 2005, RSC East Midlands e-learning Fair, Derby
- 16 June 2005, RSC Yorkshire & Humberside
elearning conference
- 15 June 2005, RSC London and Eastern, The Open Source Software Roadshow, London
- 26 May 2005, Open source perspectives from the UK, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia
- 24 May 2005, Open Source Software in Education Workshop, Macquarie University E-Learning Centre of Excellence (MELCOE), Australia
- 23 May 2005, Open source perspectives from the UK, Curtin University, Perth, Australia
- 19 May 2005, Introduction to open source software, Software Libre conference, Universidade Nacional de Timor Leste, Dili, East Timor
- 28-29 April 2005, AURIL (Association of University
Research & Industry Links) Spring Conference, Edinburgh
- 12 April 2005, JISC Conference, Birmingham
- 5-6 April 2005, JISC e-Learning Programme Meeting:
Framework and Tools and Distributed e-Learning Strands,
Birmingham
- 1 April 2005, Open Source Open Minds, The Netherlands
- April 2005, NILTA National Technical Conference
- 22 March 2005, JISC IPR Consultation Workshop: Rights in Digital Environments
- 16 March 2005, Models of Success, RSC Wales, Cardiff
- 15 March 2005, OSS Watch - RSC Roadshow, hosted by RSC North West
- 15 March 2005, RSC West Midlands Annual Conference,
Wolverhampton
- 14-15 March 2005, Coimbra Group workshops on eLearning Quality in eLearning and Open source/Open standards, Edinburgh
- 11 March 2005, RSC London Moodle Regional User Group
- 3 March 2005, JISC IPR Consultation Workshop: Rights in Digital Environments
- 26-27 February 2005, Free and Open Source Developers' European Meeting (FOSDEM), Brussels
- 24 February 2005, OSS Watch Advisory Committee meeting
- 23 February 2005, OSS Watch - RSC Roadshow, hosted by RSC East
Midlands
6.1.8. Software Distribution
OSS Watch remasters the Knoppix LiveCD with additional
relevant software such as Moodle, Bodington and Reload. OSS
Watch also distributes TheOpenCD to raise awareness of open
source software suitable for a Windows operating system.
- Customized releases of Knoppix 3.6 for
OSS Watch general release (Moodle, Reload, etc) -
2000 copies distributed
- Bodington Knoppix - 200 copies
distributed
- Text Encoding Initiative Members meeting (XML
tools)
- TheOpenCD 2.0 - more than 500 copies distributed
6.1.9. Web matters
- Web page redesign
- Wiki developed (using MoinMoin)
- New navigation routes introduced
6.1.9.1. Stakeholder-based navigation
The initial transformation of the OSS Watch website was to
move to stakeholder-based navigation. A series of
meta-navigational documents were written giving alternate
routes to OSS Watch content.
6.1.9.2. Licensing
The OSS Watch plan specified that all documents
produced should be released using the GNU Free Documentation
License (GFDL). After due consideration a decision was taken
to change to a Creative Commons UK licence for OSS Watch documentation:
- agreed by the Advisory Committee in February 2005
- agreement sought and received
from the University of Oxford Research Services Office
- confirmation of move obtained from JISC
programme manager
- relicensing plan implemented for the OSS
Watch site in August 2005
The main licence used is Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike, whose effect is almost identical to that of
the GFDL which it replaces.
6.1.9.3. Licensing markup in source code
<publicationStmt>
<publisher>OSS Watch, Oxford University</publisher>
<authority>OSS Watch</authority>
<address>
<email>info@oss-watch.ac.uk</email>
</address>
<availability>
<licence>
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/uk/
</licence>
</availability>
<date>2005-02-01</date>
</publicationStmt>
6.2. OSS Watch plans and current projects August-December 2005
Randy took up the reporting at this point and promised that
the year ahead would be even busier than the one just past:
- wiki
- website (redesign)
- presentations
- evaluation
- national survey
- conferences and workshops
- sustainability study
- sustainability conference
6.2.1. OSS Watch Wiki
During August and September the OSS Watch team have been preparing
the launch of a new public wiki for OSS Watch
http://wiki.oss-watch.ac.uk/. This
has involved a number of steps over the past year:
- evaluation of internal wiki intranet
- establishing criteria for public wiki
- wiki selection
- Moin Moin experimentation
- issues list
- initial policy decisions, e.g. licensing, requiring registration, etc.
- gradual introduction of content and extended roll-out
This wiki is for those who use it. Its success depends entirely upon
the participation of the community. OSS Watch staff will be
participating in the ongoing creation of content, as well as serving
as wiki gnomes tidying the content of others. But OSS
Watch will not be constraining the further development of the wiki.
6.2.2. Website redesign
Between August and October OSS Watch is undertaking a substantial
overhaul of its website. There are two principal reasons for this redesign:
- the weight of ever increasing content
- the need for a fresh accessible design
During the past year OSS Watch has published more than 40 briefing
notes and other documents. With an equal number of documents likely to
follow, it is increasingly clear that new means need to be found to
deliver this content.
An initial move in this direction was made in the Spring of 2005
when meta-navigational documents for each of the key stakeholder
groups were added to the website.
During the current redesign an effort has been made to organise OSS
Watch's resources around key themes. The result will be a website
which facilitates access to its content through:
- stakeholder meta-navigational documents
- resource themes
- indexed search
- featured article spotlights
Together these should make access to the content that matters for our
users even easier.
The process of redesign also offers up the possibility of moving to
a new design standard that is both fresh and accessible:
- no tables
- presentation handled entirely with CSS
- degrades gracefully
- focus is on access to content
The new website and wiki should be ready for launch by mid-October
2005.
6.2.3. Presentations
OSS Watch will continue to press the case for sensible treatment of free and
open source software in such places as:
- NILTA National Technical Conference
- SIGOSEE/JOIN Conference
- JISC Joint Programmes meetings
- BCS SIG on Open Source
- and many more
6.2.4. External evaluation
OSS Watch is about to engage in a process of external
evaluation. External evaluation is a component of most JISC
projects. In OSS Watch's case, the goals are to:
- assess how well OSS Watch is fulfilling its brief
- provide recommendations for fine-tuning that brief
The evaluation will also contribute to JISC's thinking about what
happens to the open source advisory service post-July 2006, the end of
the current round of funding. The evaluation will be conducted by Professor Michael Kelleher of CIBIT
Consultants|Educators during September/October.
6.2.5. National survey
OSS Watch's initial Scoping Study was conducted Oct-Nov 2003. This significantly aided the early
development of OSS Watch's effort. The new survey will:
- provide key comparison data
- provide more fine-grained data in key areas
The new survey
may:
- reveal new areas of concern for stakeholders
- reflect a step-change in awareness amongst stakeholders
- set the agenda for OSS Watch in the future
6.2.6. Conferences and workshops
OSS Watch's key theme for conferences and workshops in the
immediate future is licensing.
6.2.7. Sustainability
OSS Watch has been contacted with a request to manage a JISC study
on sustainable models of software development. The study
- examines 7 models for sustainability
- will commission case studies by a variety of active participants
- will result in summary recommendations
The JISC sustainability study, should OSS Watch take it on, will
complement the theme of OSS Watch's largest conference yet:
Sustainability and Open Source Software. This international event is
scheduled for 10-12 April 2006 in Oxford.
6.3. Discussion
The committee discussion during and after the two reports
concentrated on five areas
- The new web site design was analysed in some detail, and the
committee was supportive of the approaches being taken to provide
targeted information for stakeholder groups. The change to CC
licensing was welcomed, with discussion about take-up and reuse of
documents, which the OSS Watch staff were keen to stress is already
happening. Mike Fraser noted that making the metadata more widely
available, e.g. via OAI, might be useful.
- The extent to which JISC programme managers and projects are
taking up the (unpublished) open source policy was debated. Projects
have a tendency not to ask for direct advice but simply quote from OSS
Watch published documents. It was stressed that the sustainability of
JISC projects does not just depend on applying an OSS licence though
the broader concepts surrounding OSS are also useful, and noted that
the OMII is seeking JISC funds to assist with the sustainability
issues. Learning from failure is also important. Bodington was cited as an
example of another project from which lessons might be learnt (both
good and less good). There was a recommendation to increase
collaboration with Sakai (which has both developer and political
aspects). It was noted that Stuart Yeates now works on
SAKAI-related project as well as OSS Watch, providing useful
cross-over.
- In the government sector, the new Open Source
Academy was mentioned, though there is not much information
publicly available. Phill Camp said that his institution was involved
in this.
- OSS Watch's role in open source and e-learning was regarded as
an important area to work in. In a VLE procurement process, for
example, who presents the sales pitch? Does OSS Watch have a role to
play in this area? Oxford is apparently in the business of
promoting Bodington to other institutions, and there are
JISC e-learning events to bring together demonstrations of Moodle,
Bodington and other open source products in an open day. OSS Watch can
have a role as an ‘honest broker’ in such events; it was stressed
by the OSS Watch staff that they were already primary speakers at VLE
events, but they would continue to pay much attention to this.
- Sebastian Rahtz circulated a document outlining points about
open source which HE/FE institutions might address in their IT
policies; he said that he was trialling this in Oxford, trying to
see where and how some key points (eg on staff contribution to OSS)
might best be discussed. The committee debated this at some length,
with some scepticism about how easily such points would be considered,
and how portable they were, but welcomed the discussion.
7. Date of next meeting
t.b.c. (either late January or early February), Norwich
11:00 - 15:30 with lunch provided. Andrew Savory has kindly
offered to host this meeting.