Clean Air, Open Code
Massachusetts might have been the FOSS shot heard 'round the world, but California may be quietly building pressure for an open source earthquake of its own. On the face of it, the California Air Resources Board (ARB) is not setting the world on fire with its well-documented adoption of free open source software. It is using FOSS primarily in the back office, just like so many other governmental agencies and businesses. But if you dig just a little deeper, as shown in this Mad Penguin™ interview of the ARB staffers responsible for moving ARB toward a more FOSSy future, you can see that the seeds of more profound change gradually developing.
This Mad Penguin™ interview brings together the CIO of ARB, Bill Welty (BW); Narcisco Gonzalez (NG), one of the Staff Programmer Analysts, and Harry Ng (HN), the Applications Development Manager. The interview panel also included Bill Fell (BF), the ARB Webmaster who teamed with Harry to blend the use of FOSS code with ARB's scientific and engineering culture of collaboration, peer review and information-sharing. The result has been the implementation of an Internet-based community of regulators, the industry members they regulate, and clean air advocates, worldwide.
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