diff --git a/what-bkuhn-was-going-to-say.md b/what-bkuhn-was-going-to-say.md index 28fcaaa..153aa15 100644 --- a/what-bkuhn-was-going-to-say.md +++ b/what-bkuhn-was-going-to-say.md @@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ of the room has their hands up. Note that early on, we said Sourceforge. This is an interesting piece of history that most don't know: [ switch slides ] -## Sourceforge History: Slide 3 +## VA Linux / Sourceforge Debacle: Slide 3 Sourceforge is a very interesting case. Most younger developers may not know that in the late 1990s, Sourceforge (and forge software in general) was @@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ realized Inkscape downloads were one of their largest downloaded projects, and constantly pitched us toxic revenue-sharing schemes until Inkscape finally escaped Sourceforge. [ next slide ] -## Sourceforge Diaspora: Slide 3 +## Sourceforge Diaspora: Slide 4 The reason some projects had such trouble with getting away from Sourceforge was because there wasn't a primary fork, but dozens. Here's a list of the @@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ that, by the time AJAX and Web 2.0 came along, there was not enough leadership to move an old PHP+HTML application to the more interactive and modern looks that users were demanding by the late 2000s. [ switch slides ] -## Preston-Warner: Slide 4 +## Preston-Warner: Slide 5 Enter GitHub, founded in October 2007. GitHub from its very founding learned the VA Linux lesson: don't ever give anyone code, and in fact, take great @@ -187,7 +187,7 @@ proprietarizing it, they chose proprietarization *every* *single* *time*. [ next slide ] -## Microsoft Acquired GitHub: Slide 5 +## Microsoft Acquired GitHub: Slide 6 Ultimately, Microsoft was a perfect match for GitHub. [ Karen should say: ] I once spoke at Microsoft and asked them publicly apologize for calling the