Articles in this category are biased towards education. They mostly focus around my own experiences as a student at the Rochester Institute of Technology, such as academic or project work I’m doing. It may include other general content.
- Hatchit Puts Open Source Power in Developers' Hands
This post was originally published on OpenSource.com. More and more students are learning about the world of open source through video games. Games like FreeCiv let players build empires based on the history of human civilization while games like Minetest emulates Minecraft in an open source block-building sandbox. Students are
- Virtual Meetup With WiC, Open Labs, FOSS Wave
Women in Computing @ RIT, Open Labs Albania, and FOSS Wave India are working on organizing a virtual meetup in October and November 2016.
- HackMIT Meets Fedora
HackMIT is the annual hackathon event organized by students at MIT. This year, the Fedora Project attended as sponsors and mentors during the hacking.
- Google Summer of Code, Fedora Class of 2016
This summer, I will be working on the Fedora Project via Google Summer of Code (GSoC). I intend to migrate services to Ansible configurations and more.
- Going to Bitcamp 2016
Over the weekend of April 9th to 10th, the Fedora Ambassadors of North America attended Bitcamp 2016 at the University of Maryland. Open source abound!
- The Night I Became a Hacker
On the night of April 15th, 2016, I became a hacker with my friends from the FOSSbox at RIT. Our medium was 1995's movie, "Hackers".
- BrickHack 2016
BrickHack 2016 recently happened at the Rochester Institute of Technology. I attended as a Fedora Project Ambassador. Read up on BrickHack 2016!
- HFOSS: Quiz #2
In the Humanitarian Free and Open Source Software Development course at RIT, we submit a quiz in the form of a blog post. This is Spring 2016, Quiz #2.
- HFOSS: Final Project Proposal
Our final project for the Humanitarian Free and Open Source Software Development course (HFOSS) is PyCut, a pizza-making puzzle game for 4th graders.
- HFOSS: Community Architecture Team Project Report
For the Community Architecture (CommArch) project for the HFOSS course at RIT, our group chose to analyze Tahrir, an extension of OpenBadges, by Fedora.