Day 07- A picture of someone/something that has the biggest impact on you

This is a tricky one, there have been a lot of people who have had a great impact – friends, parents, colleagues, so I’ve chosen the event that had the biggest impact on me.

This picture is from linux.conf.au 2006, which was the very first linux.conf.au I ever attended, held in Dunedin NZ.

I had just left college and was looking for a job in IT at the time, planning to sit my RHCE in a couple months (which I did and passed), before taking my first job.

To say that linux.conf.au blew my mind, would be an understatement – before then I was a geek sitting in my bedroom, compiling linux systems from source and attending college with a bunch of time wasters – at linux.conf.au, I realised that I wasn’t alone and that there were hundreds of ubernerds like myself out there.

It was an entire week of geekery with some of the brightest minds and celebrities of the open source work, I came away from it with:

  • Dozens of new friends, some whom I still talk to on a semi-frequent basis.
  • Realisation that most geeks are a pretty friendly, awesome bunch to hang with.
  • Discovered, it’s normal to sit around on your laptop all the time.
  • Knew that I was on the right path with a life in IT.

But linux.conf.au also served as a point in my life where I formulated my ideas regarding ethics, open source, freedom and many of the views that I hold to this day.

Probably one of the most memorable experiences in my life – I still go to linux.conf.au every year and it’s still my most favourite week of the year and I always come back feeling excited and renewed with awesome ideas.

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2 Responses to Day 07- A picture of someone/something that has the biggest impact on you

  1. Kai says:

    Awesome. That’s exactly how it should be! Well done, Jethro!

  2. Ian says:

    I was there too. It was an awesome week.

    And it was the week my MSCE card delaminated in my wallet .. a sign I’m sure! It wasn’t long after that I changed jobs from a MS centric place (and going deeper down that rabbit hole) to one where open source is the norm and closed, legacy OS are frowned upon.

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