This week I spent most of my time figuring out what was left to finish in our eutester repository. I also used a lot of screenshots from github for my powerpoint presentation. I worked with Nate, Coady, and Marcos to put together our final project. We all put together screenshots and code samples from the changes we added to the repo to show everything we accomplished this semester.
Also, I wrote my paper on the Eucalyptus Ethical Analysis this week. It was interesting to look at the software and find out where it was good and where it was not so good. As it turns out, Eucalyptus is not 100% free and open source. It is better described as “open-core” because it only allows certain aspects of the product to be used for free. To add on more powerful features, users must pay a fee, which goes against the entire open source mindset. Users are only given a free trial of the software and all of the products that can be used with Eucalyptus are proprietary. There are other options that are similar to Eucalyptus, that are actually free and open source, but it appears that Eucalyptus is more mainstream and user friendly.
From the blog trevorhodde by Trevor and used with permission of the author. All other rights reserved by the author.