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The US DoD develops and maintains huge amounts of software for all aspects of military life. In episode 29 we talk about the challenges and benefits of use of open source tools in regards to Military software culture, acquisition or contracting with open source, and handling security of both code and data used in Miltary applications.
Today’s panel includes:
- John Scott (special guest)
- Luis Ibáñez (special guest)
- Chuck Atkins (special guest)
- Andy R. Terrel (moderator)
- Matt McCormick (organizer)
John Scott drafted the U.S. Department of Defense policy for the use of open source software and is often called as an expert in this area. He founded (now co-chairman) Open Source for America, an advocacy group for use of open source software in government and the Military Open Source Software Working Group (http://mil-oss.org/). He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, holds a BS in Mechanical Engineering from Lehigh University and an MS in Systems Engineering from Virginia Tech and writes about defense software and acquisitions related issues, recently at Defense News entitled “Pentagon Is Losing the Softwar(e).”
Luis Ibáñez is a Technical Leader at Kitware, Inc. He is one of the Editors of the Insight Journal, the only Journal with reproducible papers in the medical imaging field.
Chuck Atkins is currently involved as an R&D Engineer for the Computer Vision team at Kitware. At Kitware, he is a driving force in pushing for the public release of their software and research efforts with DARPA and the DoD. He also actively maintains the build and test infrastructure for the open source LAPACK project for numerical linear algebra.
David
2012/09/06
FYI – On ITunes, this episode (Episode 29: OSS in the US Military) actually plays the Advanced School For Scientific Software Development episode.
Anthony Scopatz
2012/09/06
Hmmm that is very weird. There are no links to that episode anywhere in our post….
daviddoria
2012/09/06
I reproduced this on two machines. Were you saying it is weird and you see it too? Or it is weird that I see and it works fine for you?
Anthony Scopatz
2012/09/06
It is weird that it happens at all. I have observed this behavior with some other episodes as well. Apple doesn’t seem to be very good about updating their feed entries once they have been changed. I have tried, and failed, to fix this issue in the past. I have put out a call on the list for help with this. If you want to take a stab at it yourself, I will give you all of the permissions that you need.