Two days of LinuxWorld have left me tired by happy. I ended up giving two talks, because Karsten and I made it a double on wednesday and then on Thursday I had another one on best practices in license selection for Free Software projects (one-line summary: pick one that is consisten with your business strategy). The Open Source pavilion at LW isn't all that large, so 14-20 people as an audience fills it.

Besides giving some talks on licensing topics (FSFE hat), I sometimes stood around the NLUUG booth and handed out posters for the next NLUUG conference -- spring 2010, topic "System administration." Very traditional for an Open Systems and Open Standards organization. And aside from that, wandering around a trade fair with four themes -- Linux, Storage, Security and Business Tools -- is an education in itself. I try to make clear at the start of every conversation that I'm not a sales opportunity, as that seems to avoid wasting time for both of us if I run into a hard-sell booth (still, the one stand that asked "How many workplaces does your company have?" and then "Well, you have less than five hundred desks, you're not interesting, goodbye!" -- I never even found out what they were selling at all.) You can still get conference goodies though, so I got home with a nice collection of peppermints and flashlights for the kids.