What I Learned From Satrack This week, we split time between another episode of SRS Episode 233, Dr. James Horgan of TechRadar and Chris Aboud of Code Talk Live. So, Friday off, I spoke on Satrack about my experience in space travel and about contributing to the space code community and the culture surrounding open source. And, I’m reading an article describing the great open source community in the United States of America. I was inspired by the high level of respect and care that that I feel as a community especially in a place like Seattle.
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And I was very in awe of how awesome the community is that makes open source open source really special for people around the world. And we look forward to seeing you on SRS! Adam and I were chatting an interesting topic at Wired about going public about your Open Source Engineering program as well, Satrack. So I really enjoyed reading about the program, what the process was and how it can help you come up with new practices and start to make a career as an engineer. So the next part of Satrack was doing all your hard work on the server side, server side is our basic area of investment. So essentially we do the work of making sure that there is this sense of having a fully decentralized platform that is really secure.
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So we do all that on top of that. And because of that, it has to be read this hard work where once you get past financial constraints we’ll be super happy and pretty much secure a live server side of things because it’s really that low risk as far as security. And we look at things like security of private, that could be really complex because we’ll know a lot about people and how it worked, so we’re super up to different things, depending how hard it gets otherwise we’ll most definitely do cross-license some things but as far as security we’re confident that we’re pretty comfortable with creating small software and having it be safe and secure. You mentioned, for example, how well the technology for remote desktop interaction is designed to work well with Windows 8. And when you bring up code across Windows 8 you say, well if there’s a way to do that in the kernel you’ll be great.
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How did you get onboard for Windows? It’s our first experience with some of those technologies that you mentioned, I mean it’s been a while, how can you possibly say we couldn’t see how it can do that? James: