Change, Inspiration, and Growth
Today was the first day of Linux.conf.au proper, here at the University of Ballarat. It's a beautiful regional campus, comfortably sprawling and surrounded by bushland. It presents a mix of gum trees, scrub, landscaped lakes, and university buildings which is so delightfully Australian. Maybe because I also just described Canberra.
There are many others who are reflecting on individual sessions in more detail, so I was interested in themes which emerged for me today. I came up with three: Change, Inspiration, and Growth.
One of the things I have learnt in the last year is about change. Today at the conference, I saw repeated examples of a common error make when approaching change: applying technical solutions to adaptive problems. Ron Heifetz defined change in two categories: technical, where the problem is well defined and domain knowledge extensive; and adaptive, where the outcome is less clear and learning is required. Generally we prefer technical change, because there is less uncertainty. However if you approach an adaptive change as though it were technical, you get pain and suffering.
In several sessions today, often in the Q&A at the end, I heard examples of people treating adaptive change as though it were a technical problem: social issues, the habits of users, team or organisational direction, or the direction of entire open source projects. It's really important to ask the question "What is the nature of this change?" because the way you approach it will be very different. This is also related to adaptive capacity, important when building sustainable projects.
Today, I was also inspired. I had that thrill that one gets when the imagination is fully engaged. The session was about Project Horus, and the sheer awesomeness of seeing a group of friends able to achieve great things, and realising that technology now means that amateurs can send a payload to ~35km on a regular basis. Incredible. To top it off, they launched a balloon from the conference!
Finally, I was remembering my experiences at the first Linux.conf.au I attended in Dunedin in 2006 and how much I have grown since then. Dunedin was an incredible, stimulating event. I was starry eyed and awestruck at these gods among men who wrote this thing Linux I love so much. ("OMG is that Keith Packard? OMG is that ANDREW TRIDGELL!?")
I am pleased that although I am now older, less starry eyed, and think more critically about things, that I am not cynical. I have a great deal of affection for the unique and essential culture that exists here. I think I'm going to enjoy this week.