Hurricane Katrina - my year (Part 5)
When we kicked off the Katrina Evacuee Help Center in response to hurricane Katrina, we managed to very quickly (as in hours) build a team from throughout the Open Source software community. Our team was made up of volunteers from Switzerland, Germany, Belgium, Spain, the United Kingdom, Italy, the United States, and of course, me here in New Zealand. To provide a “one stop” resource for the people affected by the hurricane was an enormous task - one we could not have done without the dedication and goodwill of a large number of volunteers. Managing the team and a project that was reactionary, rather than planned in advance, AND developing the site and software in real time on a live site that was serving hundreds of thousands of people was something no sane developers would do if they had time to think! A software developer said to me afterwards, “we were so busy making it happen, we didn’t have time to think it was impossible”.
It could not have happened if we were not developing open source software. Between us, we knew a lot of other developers, a lot of scripts, and what could be done with PHP, MySQL, and a Linux system running Apache. We were able to utilise existing scripts and where we had needs not met through existing code, we wrote our own. Some of this code has gone out to the world in other open source development. The power of collaborative development with free, open source code really came into its own with disastersearch.org.
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Hurricane Katrina and open source software
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