44 | | <abstract>Freedom, openness and participation have become a pervasive part of digital |
45 | | life. 250 million people use Firefox. Wikipedia reaches people in 260 languages. |
46 | | Whole countries have Linux in their schools. Flickr hosts millions of openly |
47 | | licenses photos. Apache underpins the Internet. We have moved mountains.</abstract> |
48 | | <description>At the same time, the terrain has shifted. Our digital world has moved into the |
49 | | cloud. And, our window into this world is just as often unhackable phones in our |
50 | | pocket as it is flexible computers on our desktop. Hundreds of millions of |
51 | | people take being digital for granted, and rarely stop to think what it means. |
52 | | The world where free and open source software were born is not the same as the |
53 | | world they have helped to build. |
54 | | |
55 | | It's time to ask: what do freedom, openness and participation look like 10 years |
56 | | from now? How do we promote these values into the future? Building the open web |
57 | | and hackability into the world of mobile is part of the answer. Promoting privacy, |
58 | | portability and user control in the cloud are also critical. But what else? Mark |
59 | | Surman will reflect on these questions and chat with the FOSDEM crowd.</description> |
60 | | <persons> |
61 | | <person id="473">Mark Surman</person> |
62 | | </persons> |
63 | | <links> |
64 | | </links> |
65 | | </event> |
66 | | <event id="500"> |
67 | | <start>11:30</start> |
68 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
| 46 | <abstract>This talk will |
| 47 | cover Aerosource, our project to bring open source development tools |
| 48 | and methods to internal developers.</abstract> |
| 49 | <description>At the Aerospace corporation our approximately 2500 engineers developer |
| 50 | a lot of software in the course of doing their jobs. This talk will |
| 51 | cover Aerosource, our project to bring open source development tools |
| 52 | and methods to internal developers. Aerosource is a project hosting |
| 53 | environment built on open source tools including Apache, FreeBSD, |
| 54 | PostgreSQL, Python, and Trac. We will share our experiences and |
| 55 | successes at promoting open source methods in a traditionally closed |
| 56 | environment.</description> |
| 57 | <persons> |
| 58 | <person id="665">Brooks Davis</person> |
| 59 | </persons> |
| 60 | <links> |
| 61 | </links> |
| 62 | </event> |
| 63 | <event id="802"> |
| 64 | <start>11:45</start> |
| 65 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
90 | | <tag>opensuse</tag> |
91 | | <title>openSUSE</title> |
92 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
93 | | <track>Distributions</track> |
94 | | <type>Podium</type> |
95 | | <language>English</language> |
96 | | <abstract>Since this is a distro talk, I will be covering the openSUSE Distro, |
97 | | the openSUSE Build Service, and how to become involved in the project |
98 | | and/or use the openSUSE Build Service to create packages for open |
99 | | source projects for multiple distributions.</abstract> |
100 | | <description></description> |
101 | | <persons> |
102 | | <person id="487">Joe Brockmeier</person> |
103 | | </persons> |
104 | | <links> |
105 | | </links> |
106 | | </event> |
107 | | <event id="498"> |
| 94 | <tag>systemtap</tag> |
| 95 | <title>What is my system doing - Full System Observability with SystemTap</title> |
| 96 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 97 | <track>Monitoring</track> |
| 98 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 99 | <language>English</language> |
| 100 | <abstract>SystemTap an application that observes your system on multiple levels, from kernel, libraries, applications, java to database transactions. SystemTap is a new player in the monitoring world!:t</abstract> |
| 101 | <description>Ever wondered what your system is really doing? Even if your whole system consists of Free Software you might still be scratching your head about what is really going on. Reading all the sources or staring at a core dump after the fact only gets you that far. You have to observe your system while it is running. Luckily the last few years there has been lots of improvements in GNU/Linux around how to monitor, trace, profile and debug your system. Kernel ftrace, pref, tracepoints, better debuginfo, application and library probe points, tapsets and compatibility with dtrace. Systemtap can take advantage of it all and provides a powerful way to get full system observability. |
| 102 | |
| 103 | Want to dive deep into applications, java processes or the linux kernel without needing to stop or interrupt anything? SystemTap is the tool of choice for complex tasks that may require live analysis, programmable on-line response, and whole-system symbolic access. SystemTap can also handle simple tracing jobs. Learn how to setup SystemTap, what ready to run scripts there are, and how to tailor your probes to specific applications or kernel usage patterns. |
| 104 | |
| 105 | SystemTap can observe on multiple levels, from kernel, libraries, applications, java to database transactions. To help users to get a better view what an application is doing you can add tapsets and static markers. And such markers can be made compatible with dtrace (to make your solaris hacker friends happy). There are already lots of packages that provide such high level observability, Postgresql, Java hotspot, Xorg, Python, Firefox, etc. Learn how to rapid prototype observability of your application through tapsets with function and statement probes (on any existing binary) and how to add high-level (zero-overhead) markers to your package sources that tell users about everything important, passes, transactions, service starting/stopping, etc.</description> |
| 106 | <persons> |
| 107 | <person id="194">Mark Wielaard</person> |
| 108 | </persons> |
| 109 | <links> |
| 110 | <link href="http://sourceware.org/systemtap/">Homepage</link> |
| 111 | </links> |
| 112 | </event> |
| 113 | <event id="810"> |
111 | | <tag>fedora</tag> |
112 | | <title>The Fedora Project</title> |
113 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
114 | | <track>Distributions</track> |
115 | | <type>Podium</type> |
116 | | <language>English</language> |
117 | | <abstract>The talk will take a look at the current roadmap for the Fedora Project, |
118 | | from a technical and community-building point of view. The discussion |
119 | | will focus on the recently-released Fedora 10 as well as the |
120 | | in-development Fedora 11, as well as other Fedora projects such as |
121 | | infrastructure, websites, translation, etc.</abstract> |
122 | | <description></description> |
123 | | <persons> |
124 | | <person id="165">Max Spevack</person> |
125 | | </persons> |
126 | | <links> |
127 | | <link href="http://fedoraproject.org/">Official website</link> |
128 | | </links> |
129 | | </event> |
130 | | <event id="644"> |
| 117 | <tag>ganglia</tag> |
| 118 | <title>Ganglia: 10 years of monitoring clusters and grids</title> |
| 119 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 120 | <track>Monitoring</track> |
| 121 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 122 | <language>English</language> |
| 123 | <abstract>During the talk Bernard will give an overview of Ganglia's strong points and it's technical architecture.</abstract> |
| 124 | <description>This talk will start off with a brief overview of the early beginnings of the project and how it has become the de facto standard for monitoring clusters and grids. The talk will then dive into the technical architecture of the system, discuss scalability issues, challenges ahead in adapting the software for cloud environments and other future developments. If you work with a lot of computers, then this talk is for you. |
| 125 | |
| 126 | Ganglia is a scalable system performance monitoring software started by Matt Massie in 1999 while he was at the University of California, Berkeley working on the Millennium Project. Since the inception of the project, it has seen 40+ releases and 299,208 total downloads recorded by SourceForge.net. Ganglia is simple to install and use and is available on most UNIX platforms. 30+ system metrics such as CPU load, memory usage, network traffic are collected by default and can be further extended via a command line metric reporting tool or pluggable modules written in C or Python. Ganglia is being used extensively all over the world by organizations large and small.</description> |
| 127 | <persons> |
| 128 | <person id="670">Bernard Li</person> |
| 129 | </persons> |
| 130 | <links> |
| 131 | </links> |
| 132 | </event> |
| 133 | <event id="808"> |
134 | | <tag></tag> |
135 | | <title>10 cool things about Exherbo</title> |
136 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
137 | | <track>Distributions</track> |
138 | | <type>Podium</type> |
139 | | <language>English</language> |
140 | | <abstract></abstract> |
141 | | <description>This talk will focus on 10 important features that makes it easier for users |
142 | | and developers alike to work with Exherbo. While the talk will focus on the |
143 | | current state of Exherbo and the short-term future the ideas being presented |
144 | | should be equally interesting for other distribution developers and users.</description> |
145 | | <persons> |
146 | | <person id="77">Bryan Østergaard</person> |
147 | | </persons> |
148 | | <links> |
149 | | <link href="http://www.exherbo.org/">Official website</link> |
| 137 | <tag>flapjack</tag> |
| 138 | <title>Starting the sysadmin tools renaissance: Flapjack + cucumber-nagios</title> |
| 139 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 140 | <track>Monitoring</track> |
| 141 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 142 | <language>English</language> |
| 143 | <abstract>Monitoring software is ripe for a renaissance. Now is the time to for building new tools and rethinking our problems. |
| 144 | Leading the charge are two projects: cucumber-nagios, and Flapjack.</abstract> |
| 145 | <description>A systems administrator's role in today's technology landscape has never been so important. It's our responsibility to manage provisioning and maintenance of massive infrastructures, to anticipate ahead of time when capacity must be grown or shrunk, and increasingly, to make sure our applications scale. |
| 146 | |
| 147 | While developer tools have improved tremendously, we sysadmins are still living in the dark ages, other than a few shining beacons of hope such as Puppet. We're still trying to make Nagios scale. We're still writing the same old monitoring checks. Getting statistics out of our applications is tedious and difficult, but increasingly important to scaling. |
| 148 | |
| 149 | cucumber-nagios lets you describe how a website should work in natural language, and outputs whether it does in the Nagios plugin format. It includes a standard library of website interactions, so you don't have to rewrite the same Nagios checks over and over. |
| 150 | |
| 151 | cucumber-nagios can also be used to check SSH logins, filesystem interactions, mail delivery, and Asterisk dialplans. By lowering the barrier of entry to writing fully featured checks, there's no reason not to start testing all of your infrastructure. But as you start adding more checks to your monitoring system you're going to notice slowdowns and reliability problems - enter Flapjack |
| 152 | |
| 153 | Flapjack is a scalable and distributed monitoring system. It natively talks the Nagios plugin format (so you can use all your existing Nagios checks), and can easily be scaled from 1 server to 1000. |
| 154 | |
| 155 | Flapjack breaks the monitoring lifecycle into several distinct chunks: workers that execute checks, notifiers that notify when checks fail, and an admin interface to manage checks and events. |
| 156 | |
| 157 | By breaking the monitoring lifecycle up, it becomes incredibly easy to scale your monitoring system with your infrastructure. Need to monitor more servers? Just add another server to the pool of workers. Need to take down your workers for maintenance? Just spin up another pool, and turn off the old one.</description> |
| 158 | <persons> |
| 159 | <person id="668">Lindsay Holmwood</person> |
| 160 | </persons> |
| 161 | <links> |
| 162 | <link href="http://flapjack-project.com/">Flapjack</link> |
| 163 | <link href="http://auxesis.github.com/cucumber-nagios">cucumber-nagios</link> |
158 | | <tag>openamq</tag> |
159 | | <title>OpenAMQ</title> |
160 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
161 | | <track>Development and Languages</track> |
162 | | <type>Podium</type> |
163 | | <language>English</language> |
164 | | <abstract>I'll speak about a new messaging protocol called AMQP, and the iMatix |
165 | | projects that implement this protocol.</abstract> |
166 | | <description>AMQP makes it possible to make cheap, fast distributed applications, for pubsub, cloud computing, |
167 | | telecoms, etc.. I'll explain our OpenAMQ implementation of AMQP, and |
168 | | also our web-based RESTful messaging project, Zyre, which makes AMQP |
169 | | work over plain HTTP. This talk is aimed at FOSS developers with |
170 | | interest in new protocols. AMQP is a good example of how large |
171 | | businesses are promoting and investing in FOSS today.</description> |
172 | | <persons> |
173 | | <person id="41">Pieter Hintjens</person> |
174 | | </persons> |
175 | | <links> |
176 | | </links> |
177 | | </event> |
178 | | <event id="499"> |
| 172 | <tag>maemo</tag> |
| 173 | <title>Maemo 6 security framework, making happy DRM business and freedom lovers with the same device</title> |
| 174 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 175 | <track>Security</track> |
| 176 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 177 | <language>English</language> |
| 178 | <abstract>The presentation will cover the Maemo Platform Security Architecture in more details, providing a deeper technical view on its components and their interaction.</abstract> |
| 179 | <description>The purpose of the Platform Security in the Maemo 6 platform is to protect the owner of a Maemo-powered device from getting her personal, private data and passwords from being stolen and used for malicious purposes, to prevent a malware from misusing a device and incurring costs on user, to prevent a user from accidentally breaking the device and to make the platform meet the requirements set by such third party software that requires a safe execution environment. |
| 180 | |
| 181 | The presentation will cover the Maemo Platform Security Architecture in more details, providing a deeper technical view on its components and their interaction.</description> |
| 182 | <persons> |
| 183 | <person id="661">Elena Reshetova</person> |
| 184 | </persons> |
| 185 | <links> |
| 186 | </links> |
| 187 | </event> |
| 188 | <event id="797"> |
182 | | <tag>reverse_engineering</tag> |
183 | | <title>Reverse Engineering of Proprietary Protocols, Tools and Techniques</title> |
184 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
185 | | <track>Development and Languages</track> |
186 | | <type>Podium</type> |
187 | | <language>English</language> |
188 | | <abstract>This talk is about reverse engineering a proprietary network protocol, |
189 | | and then creating my own implementation. The talk will cover the tools |
190 | | used to take binary data apart, capture the data, and techniques I use |
191 | | for decoding unknown formats. The protocol covered is the RTMP protocol |
192 | | used by Adobe flash, and this new implementation is part of the Gnash |
193 | | project.</abstract> |
194 | | <description></description> |
195 | | <persons> |
196 | | <person id="471">Rob Savoye</person> |
197 | | </persons> |
198 | | <links> |
199 | | <link href="http://www.gnu.org/software/gnash/">Gnash Official Website</link> |
200 | | </links> |
201 | | </event> |
202 | | <event id="505"> |
| 192 | <tag>nmap</tag> |
| 193 | <title>The Nmap scripting engine</title> |
| 194 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 195 | <track>Security</track> |
| 196 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 197 | <language>English</language> |
| 198 | <abstract>The Nmap Scripting Engine extends the results of an Nmap port scan. It |
| 199 | combines the Lua programming language, a library of network functions, |
| 200 | and the results provided by other parts of Nmap to give more information |
| 201 | about network hosts and their open ports.</abstract> |
| 202 | <description>There are standard scripts that grab SSH host keys or SSL certificates, discover the remote date |
| 203 | and time, check for weak passwords and unpatched vulnerabilites, and |
| 204 | much more. |
| 205 | |
| 206 | The talk will explain how the scripting engine fits in with Nmap's other |
| 207 | functions, the structure of a script, and how to modify a script or |
| 208 | write your own. We'll see how the scripting engine can benefit casual |
| 209 | users, researchers, and security auditors. Finally there will be a brief |
| 210 | overview of what's new in Nmap and its associated tools for the benefit |
| 211 | of casual users.</description> |
| 212 | <persons> |
| 213 | <person id="658">David Fifield</person> |
| 214 | </persons> |
| 215 | <links> |
| 216 | <link href="http://nmap.org">Official Website</link> |
| 217 | <link href="http://nmap.org/book/nse.html">NSF Chapters from the Nmap book</link> |
| 218 | </links> |
| 219 | </event> |
| 220 | <event id="800"> |
206 | | <tag>scala</tag> |
207 | | <title>Scala - A Scalable Language</title> |
208 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
209 | | <track>Development and Languages</track> |
210 | | <type>Podium</type> |
211 | | <language>English</language> |
212 | | <abstract>In this talk I'll describe the design principles of the Scala |
213 | | programming language, which has scalability as its primary design |
214 | | objective.</abstract> |
215 | | <description>Today's software landscape resembles increasingly a tower of Babel: |
216 | | Systems are built using many different languages, combining |
217 | | server-side and client-side languages, scripting and systems |
218 | | programming languages, general and domain specific languages, all |
219 | | glued together with a hefty amount of XML. The advantage of this |
220 | | approach is that each individual language can be tailored to a |
221 | | specific application domain. Its disadvantage is that the necessary |
222 | | amount of cross-language glue can make applications cumbersome to |
223 | | write, deploy, and maintain. |
224 | | |
225 | | An alternative is offered by scalable languages, which can be used for |
226 | | many different applications, ranging from small scripts to very large |
227 | | systems. An important aspect of a scalable language is that it itself |
228 | | is extensible and malleable. It should be possible to define very |
229 | | high-level libraries in it, which act in effect as specialized domain |
230 | | specific languages. The advantages of this approach is that it leads |
231 | | to more regular system designs, gives better static checking, makes |
232 | | applications easier to deploy, and increases their reliability. |
233 | | |
234 | | In this talk I'll describe the design principles of the Scala |
235 | | programming language, which has scalability as its primary design |
236 | | objective. Scala combines lightweight syntax with strong static |
237 | | checking on a Java-compatible platform. It encourages the embedding of |
238 | | domain-specific languages as high-level libraries. I discuss how Scala |
239 | | affects systems design and discuss its suitability for large scale |
240 | | industrial deployment.</description> |
241 | | <persons> |
242 | | <person id="477">Martin Odersky</person> |
| 224 | <tag>ossec</tag> |
| 225 | <title>OSSEC</title> |
| 226 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 227 | <track>Security</track> |
| 228 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 229 | <language>English</language> |
| 230 | <abstract>Expect an overview of the basic architecture as well as practical examples of how to customize OSSEC to manage logging from your infrastructure and applications.</abstract> |
| 231 | <description>Log management, Intrusion detection/prevention and event correlation is a challenge we have been facing for decades. Most of us have been able to ignore it but with developments in regulatory compliance (PCI-DSS, HIPAA, SOX, ISO27K, ...) companies are required to investigate solutions. |
| 232 | In this talk we will firstly touch upon the |
| 233 | problems that will be faced during such a project and how log management will look in the future (new standards are on their way). After this boring introduction to |
| 234 | the magical world that is log management and intrusion detection we will delve into the solution that is presented with OSSEC. While labeled as a Host-based Intrusion |
| 235 | Detection System (HIDS), OSSEC provides you with a complete arsenal of functionalities that allow you to build a log management solution which will translate |
| 236 | the most cryptic log message into a clear and actionable alert. Expect an overview of the basic architecture as well as practical examples of how to customize OSSEC to manage logging from your infrastructure and applications.</description> |
| 237 | <persons> |
| 238 | <person id="662">Wim Remes</person> |
279 | | <abstract>Open Invention Network (OIN), a collaborative enterprise that enables open source innovation and an increasingly vibrant ecosystem around Linux, has unveiled the Linux Defenders program, which is designed to make prior art more readily accessible to patent and trademark office examiners, increase the quality of granted patents and reduce the number of poor quality patents. |
280 | | |
281 | | |
282 | | |
283 | | Keith Bergelt will talk about how the open source community is leading the charge in market-based patent reform. Its Linux Defenders program offers the Linux and broader open source community a unique opportunity to harness its collaborative passion, intelligence, and ingenuity to ensure Linux’s natural migration to mobile devices and computing. He will also detail how this landmark program will benefit open source innovation by significantly reducing the number of poor quality patents that might otherwise be used by patent trolls or strategics whose behaviors and business models are antithetical to true innovation and are thus threatened by Linux. |
284 | | |
285 | | |
286 | | |
287 | | The Linux Defenders website is located at http://www.linuxdefenders.org.</abstract> |
288 | | <description>Co-sponsored by the Software Freedom Law Center and the Linux Foundation, Linux Defenders is a first-of-its-kind program which aims to reduce future intellectual property concerns about meritless patents for the Linux and open source community. The program is designed to accomplish this by soliciting prior art to enable the rejection of poor quality patent applications; soliciting prior art to enable the invalidation of poor quality issued patents; and soliciting high quality inventions that can be prepared as patent applications or defensive publications.</description> |
289 | | <persons> |
290 | | <person id="527">Keith Bergelt</person> |
291 | | </persons> |
292 | | <links> |
293 | | <link href="http://www.linuxdefenders.org/">http://www.linuxdefenders.org/</link> |
294 | | </links> |
295 | | </event> |
296 | | <event id="574"> |
297 | | <start>14:30</start> |
| 255 | <abstract>The main goal is to buffer the time between the opening of the room, and the first real lightning talk. |
| 256 | |
| 257 | If time permits, there will be a lightning talk about the lightning talks: with statistics about the proposals and acceptances, and the story of how these lightning talks are organized. Extra time can be filled with questions related to the organisation of the FOSDEM conference at large.</abstract> |
| 258 | <description>The FOSDEM Lightning Talks are organized by Mattias 'Tias' Guns since 2007. The lightning talks allow projects that do not fit in a developer room to present themselves to the large developer audience at FOSDEM. |
| 259 | |
| 260 | Lightning Talks can be described as the 15 minutes of fame for all free or open source projects. During exactly 15 minutes, one person gets to present the project or any aspect of it. All the lightning talks happen in a large room that can host up to 300 people.</description> |
| 261 | <persons> |
| 262 | <person id="19">Tias Guns</person> |
| 263 | </persons> |
| 264 | <links> |
| 265 | <link href="http://fosdem.org">http://fosdem.org</link> |
| 266 | </links> |
| 267 | </event> |
| 268 | <event id="833"> |
| 269 | <start>13:15</start> |
306 | | <abstract>When the European data retention directive becomes law in all member nations governments will store who's e-mailing whom and who's phoning whom. This is bad news for citizens and has a devastating effect journalists and bloggers who need to protect their sources, especially whistleblowers. |
307 | | |
308 | | The Small Sister Project created a tool, SmallMail. It adds anonimity to e-mail even when data retention is in effect. So SmallMail delivers e-mail privacy as it was meant to be: you decide what happens with your data. When needed and allowed people can deliver a message totally anonymous. |
309 | | |
310 | | The talk highlights the tools and then deals with the technical details of getting from A to B. Privacy and anonymity are complicated, but the tool is not. We build on the strong foundation laid by the Tor Project. The SmallMail engine is technically interesting, but quite easy to understand. In 15 minutes you can learn how simplicity and free software solve the problems posed by complex systems.</abstract> |
311 | | <description>The Small Sister Project tries to create a digital environment for all users to have a privacy-friendly system where personal data is properly secured |
312 | | |
313 | | So we try to create: |
314 | | * A toolkit that is very simple to install and acts like a flushot for a computer to add privacy/security |
315 | | * Sufficient information for people to empower themselves to secure systems and are aware of privacy-issues |
316 | | * Software that is the missing glue for what already exists and helps us reach our goals</description> |
317 | | <persons> |
318 | | <person id="528">Peter Roozemaal</person> |
319 | | </persons> |
320 | | <links> |
321 | | <link href="http://www,smallsister.org">http://www,smallsister.org</link> |
322 | | </links> |
323 | | </event> |
324 | | <event id="575"> |
325 | | <start>15:00</start> |
| 278 | <abstract>The talk gives a brief general view on the project's political and technical background in Germany's largest Municipality, shows the goals already achieved like the complete migration to OpenOffice.org and the city-wide use of the Open Document Format (ODF) and explains the steps for the next two years, the large-scale migration to the linux client.</abstract> |
| 279 | <description>Munich's LiMux project aims at the use of free software and open standards on most of the 14,000 PCs of the Municipality's administration. Challenges are the integration of the Debian GNU/Linux client, the availability of (proprietary) business applications for this linux client and the migration to OpenOffice.org.</description> |
| 280 | <persons> |
| 281 | <person id="678">Florian Schiessl</person> |
| 282 | </persons> |
| 283 | <links> |
| 284 | <link href="http://www.muenchen.de/limux">http://www.muenchen.de/limux</link> |
| 285 | </links> |
| 286 | </event> |
| 287 | <event id="834"> |
| 288 | <start>13:30</start> |
334 | | <abstract>The talk will show the main results of the FLOSSMetrics project. In particular, it will show how to obtain data about the history of software development of more than 2,000 FLOSS projects, which kind of data it is and how it can be used, and some results of using it in a research environment.</abstract> |
335 | | <description>FLOSSMetrics is collecting data from the CVS/SVN repos, mailing lists and issue tracking systems of several thousands of FOSS projects, and collecting all of it into a database that is offerered to researchers and others for data mining. See http://melquiades.flossmetrics.org for the data currently been offered. The project will end in August 2010, and more data and more projects are expected in the meantime.</description> |
336 | | <persons> |
337 | | <person id="214">Jesus M. Gonzalez Barahona</person> |
338 | | </persons> |
339 | | <links> |
340 | | <link href="http://flossmetrics.org">http://flossmetrics.org</link> |
341 | | </links> |
342 | | </event> |
343 | | <event id="577"> |
344 | | <start>15:15</start> |
| 297 | <abstract>CiviCRM support the work of NGOs on advocacy and better communication with their members and the general public. It allows to handle newsletters, receive donations, manage the membership and help organising events, all sharing the same contact database, and offering a 360 view of their contacts. |
| 298 | |
| 299 | But beside helping the NGOs to work better with an efficient software, there is also a common set of values about sharing, openness, transparency and freedom that are should be better promoted by FOSS promoters and better understood by NGOs. |
| 300 | |
| 301 | I will present how CiviCRM can help the civil society, and how to highlight these shared values while introducing FOSS to the civil society. |
| 302 | |
| 303 | All that in 15 minutes.</abstract> |
| 304 | <description>CiviCRM is an open source and freely downloadable constituent relationship management solution. It iss web-based, open source, internationalized, and designed specifically to meet the needs of advocacy, non-profit and non-governmental groups. Integration with both Drupal and Joomla! content management systems gives you the tools to connect, communicate and activate your supporters and constituents.</description> |
| 305 | <persons> |
| 306 | <person id="679">Xavier DUTOIT</person> |
| 307 | </persons> |
| 308 | <links> |
| 309 | <link href="http://www.civicrm.org">http://www.civicrm.org</link> |
| 310 | </links> |
| 311 | </event> |
| 312 | <event id="835"> |
| 313 | <start>14:00</start> |
372 | | <abstract>The presentation will give an overview about building your own customized OpenSolaris distribution. The presentation will discuss the new distro constructor being released with OpenSolaris 11.2008 and demonstrate on how to use it.</abstract> |
373 | | <description>The Distribution Constructor project is building a set of GUI and command-line tools allowing users to build an install image from a package repository. The distribution constructor tools accept input from the user and process a set of repository packages into one or more media images which can be utilized to install an OpenSolaris distribution. |
374 | | |
375 | | The Distribution Constructor package is available in the pkg.opensolaris.org repository as of build 99, its name is SUNWdistro-const. Some basic documentation is available. The OpenSolaris 2008.11 distribution is built using this tool beginning with the build 98 ISO images. |
376 | | |
377 | | A future phase of the project will add the ability to generate an installable distribution using an existing installed system as its input, rather than a set of packages in a repository. This would be either an enhancement to, or replacement for, the existing Flash Installation functionality. |
378 | | Key Requirements and Functionality (2008.11 Release) |
379 | | |
380 | | * A command-line interface to run the construction process |
381 | | * A manifest file format consumed by the constructor |
382 | | * Modifications to the Target Instantiation module built in Dwarf Caiman and Slim Install to create the file system structure needed for building thedistribution |
383 | | * Modifications to the Transfer module to support installing a set of IPS packages |
384 | | * A plug-in interface that the user or other projects can use to perform their image-specific customizations |
385 | | * Checkpointing interfaces which allow a build to be debugged, and restarted |
386 | | * A module for constructing a boot archive usable on installable media |
387 | | * Support for localization of the image produced |
388 | | * An installable package containing the distro constructor</description> |
389 | | <persons> |
390 | | <person id="462">Stefan Schneider</person> |
391 | | </persons> |
392 | | <links> |
393 | | <link href="http://opensolaris.org/os/project/caiman/Constructor/">http://opensolaris.org/os/project/caiman/Constructor/</link> |
394 | | </links> |
395 | | </event> |
396 | | <event id="579"> |
397 | | <start>16:00</start> |
| 341 | <abstract>Originally, I wanted to do a talk which actually demonstrates the automated setup of a RHEL 4 or 5, Debian 4 or 5 or NetBSD 4 or 5 system live, and using the resulting system to deploy new systems. However, I think 15 minutes would be a little tight for that. I want to talk about: |
| 342 | |
| 343 | 1: 5 minutes introduction: why openpcf |
| 344 | 2: 5 minutes internals: how it works |
| 345 | 3: 5 minutes results: what you can do with it</abstract> |
| 346 | <description>OpenPCF (which stands for Open Provisioning and Control Framework) is an open-source, automated system configuration tool. It can generate configurations for any service that runs on a posix-like platform. Services like DHCP, DNS, HTTP, LDAP and many more are supported. |
| 347 | |
| 348 | OpenPCF aims to automate the often-times manual labour of configuring services on a computer system you've just setup. The ultimate goal is a system that sets up all services needed within a datacenter resulting in a computer system that can deploy (through tftp, dhcp, pxe, http, nfs, cifs) various operating systems.</description> |
| 349 | <persons> |
| 350 | <person id="706">Rubin Simons</person> |
| 351 | </persons> |
| 352 | <links> |
| 353 | <link href="http://www.openpcf.org/">http://www.openpcf.org/</link> |
| 354 | </links> |
| 355 | </event> |
| 356 | <event id="837"> |
| 357 | <start>14:30</start> |
444 | | <abstract>Overview of Marionnet, advantages towards different solutions, how it proved to be a necessary tool, how teaching networking has become less painful.</abstract> |
445 | | <description>Marionnet is a virtual network laboratory: it allows users to define, configure and run complex computer networks without any need for physical setup. Only a single, possibly even non-networked GNU/Linux host machine is required to simulate a whole Ethernet network complete with computers, routers, hubs, switches, cables, and more. |
446 | | Support is also provided for integrating the virtual network with the physical host network. |
447 | | |
448 | | As Marionnet is meant to be used also by inexperienced people, it features a very intuitive graphical user interface. Marionnet is written in the mostly functional language OCaml and depends on User Mode Linux and VDE for the simulation part.</description> |
449 | | <persons> |
450 | | <person id="533">Marco Stronati</person> |
451 | | </persons> |
452 | | <links> |
453 | | <link href="http://www.marionnet.org/">http://www.marionnet.org/</link> |
454 | | </links> |
455 | | </event> |
456 | | <event id="582"> |
457 | | <start>17:00</start> |
| 407 | <abstract>Rather than configuring tunnels, a tinc VPN is more or less specified by its endpoints. The tinc daemons will automatically set up tunnels in order to create a full mesh network. The problem in today's Internet is that many users are trapped behind NAT, and ISPs are known to drop ICMP packets, IP fragments, and/or UDP packets, making reliable connections between peers difficult. Another problem is how to manage authentication and authorization in a fully decentralized, but user-friendly way. In this talk I will look at solutions already implemented in tinc and other VPN software, and I look at future work to solve the remaining problems.</abstract> |
| 408 | <description>tinc is a Virtual Private Network (VPN) daemon that automatically tries to create a full mesh network between peers. It can route IPv4 and IPv6 packets, or switch any type of Ethernet packet to create a virtual LAN. It can tunnel over IPv4 and IPv6, and runs on Linux, *BSD, Solaris, MacOS/X and Windows.</description> |
| 409 | <persons> |
| 410 | <person id="684">Guus Sliepen</person> |
| 411 | </persons> |
| 412 | <links> |
| 413 | <link href="http://tinc-vpn.org/">http://tinc-vpn.org/</link> |
| 414 | </links> |
| 415 | </event> |
| 416 | <event id="840"> |
| 417 | <start>15:30</start> |
466 | | <abstract>The talk will present |
467 | | - the background of LXDE |
468 | | - its developer team and community in Taiwan, Asia and worldwide |
469 | | - show the different LXDE components |
470 | | - offer insights into design principles and ideas of the developer team for gtk+ |
471 | | - show an example how to make a package of LXDE |
472 | | - show how to translate a LXDE component |
473 | | - show ways to join the LXDE team and community</abstract> |
474 | | <description>"Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment", is an extremely faster, |
475 | | performing and energy saving desktop environment started by Taiwanese |
476 | | hacker Hong Jen Yee aka PCMAN in 2005. Today it is maintained by an international |
477 | | community of developers. It comes with a beautiful interface, |
478 | | multi-language support, standard keyboard short cuts and additional |
479 | | features like tabbed file browsing. LXDE uses less CPU and less RAM. |
480 | | It is especially designed for computers with low hardware |
481 | | specifications like netbooks, mobile internet devices (MIDs) or older |
482 | | computers. LXDE can be installed with distributions like Ubuntu or |
483 | | Debian. Applications running on these systems will run with LXDE. The |
484 | | source code of LXDE is licensed partly under the terms of the General |
485 | | Public License and partly under the LGPL. LXDE has recently been |
486 | | included as a standard desktop in Fedora and Mandriva and will also be |
487 | | offered in the upcoming Debian release.</description> |
488 | | <persons> |
489 | | <person id="534">Mario Behling</person> |
490 | | </persons> |
491 | | <links> |
492 | | <link href="http://lxde.org">http://lxde.org</link> |
493 | | </links> |
494 | | </event> |
495 | | <event id="583"> |
496 | | <start>17:15</start> |
| 426 | <abstract>We will very briefly introduce Beernet's architecture describing the peer-to-peer network topology, the distributed hash table, and the transactional layer for replicated storage (called Trappist). We will also describe Beernet's API to create peers, exchange information between them, and to store and retrieve data from them. We will finally describe some applications built on top of Beernet, such as a small wiki, a collaborative drawing tool, and a web-base recommendation system.</abstract> |
| 427 | <description>Beernet is a library to build distributed systems as peer-to-peer networks. It provides replicated storage with distributed transactions, which are highly robust because they do not rely on a centralized point of control. Beernet can be used to develop synchronous and asynchronous collaborative applications. We have used it to build a decentralized wiki, a collaborative drawing application with gPhone clients, and a web-base recommendation system. |
| 428 | |
| 429 | Beernet stands for pbeer-to-pbeer network, where words peer and beer are mixed to emphasise the fact that this is peer-to-peer built on top of a relaxed-ring topology (beers are a known mean to achieve relaxation). The relaxed-ring provides a distributed hash table (DHT) with no central point of control and without relying on transitive connectivity between peers.</description> |
| 430 | <persons> |
| 431 | <person id="69">Boriss Mejias</person> |
| 432 | </persons> |
| 433 | <links> |
| 434 | <link href="http://beernet.info.ucl.ac.be">http://beernet.info.ucl.ac.be</link> |
| 435 | </links> |
| 436 | </event> |
| 437 | <event id="841"> |
| 438 | <start>16:00</start> |
524 | | <abstract>There is still a void for open source developers having their own platform for mobile development. The current choice is between Google, Nokia and Intel. Hackable1 intends to close this gap and offers desktop developers a quick start in minutes. No longer "fighting" with scratchbox or Openembedded: mobile development like on your desktop and with similar speed. If you have been developing for the desktop you will feel at home in no time. Hackable1 is based on Debian thus brings the power of 1500 DDs with it. It implements the GNOME Mobile stack and comes with a basic suite of phone applications: a dialer, a SMS and contacts application. |
525 | | |
526 | | Mobile devices are becoming ubiquitous and hackable1 is intended to bridge from desktop development to embedded development. It is an area where Open Source has a chance to be from the start ahead of the closed source competitors. We just need to do it!</abstract> |
527 | | <description>hackable:1 is a Debian based community distribution for hackable devices implementing the GNOME Mobile stack. Currently it runs on the Neo Freerunner from Openmoko but other devices will be supported soon too. |
528 | | |
529 | | As I have been developing myself on and for mobile platforms for several years now the main goal was to bring mobile development to all open source developers in minutes: mobile devices are the next "revolution" in computing and we should not leave the field to Google and Co. |
530 | | |
531 | | Hackable:1 comes with the full development environment, can be installed in minutes and provides an environment like on your desktop and allows for similar speeds. |
532 | | |
533 | | Bearstech (the french distributor of the openmoko phones) supports the development but a key point is community involvement - no decisions behind closed doors, everything is done in public on IRC and mailing lists.</description> |
534 | | <persons> |
535 | | <person id="449">Marcus Bauer</person> |
536 | | </persons> |
537 | | <links> |
538 | | <link href="http://www.hackable1.org/">http://www.hackable1.org/</link> |
539 | | </links> |
540 | | </event> |
541 | | <event id="585"> |
542 | | <start>18:00</start> |
| 468 | <abstract>Kamailio (OpenSER) 3.0.0 release represents a big step forward for the SIP server, with many new features and enhancements. Along with ability to run SIP Express Router (SER) modules due to the new SIP-Router.org core framework, it brings asynchronous TCP, refurbished secure transport TLS and SCTP, new command line interface (cli), number portability and topology hiding support, memcached connector and internal dns caching system. The presentation will focus to highlight what Kamailio 3.0.0 can offer to build scalable VoIP platforms.</abstract> |
| 469 | <description>Kamailio (former OpenSER) is an Open Source SIP Server released under GPL, able to handle thousands of call setups per second. Among features: asynchronous TCP, UDP and SCTP, secure communication via TLS for VoIP (voice, video), SIMPLE instant messaging and presence, ENUM, least cost routing, load balancing, routing fail-over, accounting, authentication and authorization against MySQL, Postgres, Oracle, Radius, LDAP, XMLRPC control interface, SNMP monitoring. It can be used to build large VoIP servicing platforms or to scale up SIP-to-PSTN gateways, PBX systems or media servers like Asterisk, FreeSWITCH or SEMS.</description> |
| 470 | <persons> |
| 471 | <person id="686">Daniel-Constantin Mierla</person> |
| 472 | </persons> |
| 473 | <links> |
| 474 | <link href="http://www.kamailio.org">http://www.kamailio.org</link> |
| 475 | </links> |
| 476 | </event> |
| 477 | <event id="843"> |
| 478 | <start>16:30</start> |
590 | | <abstract>In this talk, we will first introduce Gemvid, a system that allows the monitoring of animals in their own environment for an extended period of time. Then, we'll show how we demonstrated the sensitivity, reproducibility and stability of the system. Finally, we'll highlight some issues and interesting points for the future of Gemvid.</abstract> |
591 | | <description>Gemvid is a monitoring system that quantifies overall free movements of rodents without any markers, using a commercially available CCTV and a motion detection software developed on a GNU/Linux-operating computer. The application is based on software modules that allow the system to be used in a high-throughput workflow.</description> |
592 | | <persons> |
593 | | <person id="538">Jean-Etienne Poirrier</person> |
594 | | </persons> |
595 | | <links> |
596 | | <link href="http://www.bioinformatics.org/gemvid/">http://www.bioinformatics.org/gemvid/</link> |
| 529 | <abstract>Faban 1.0 was released in November 2009, this lightning talk briefly looks at the features that Faban offers for developing benchmarks, infrastructure management services and load drivers and then will show what you need to do in order to write a driver from scratch.</abstract> |
| 530 | <description>Faban is a tool for developing and running benchmarks. Faban supports multi-tier server benchmarks (such as web/cache/database benchmarks) run across dozens of machines. It also supports developing and running a simple micro-benchmark targeting a single component (such as an ftp server.)</description> |
| 531 | <persons> |
| 532 | <person id="688">Amanda Waite</person> |
| 533 | </persons> |
| 534 | <links> |
| 535 | <link href="http://faban.sunsource.net">http://faban.sunsource.net</link> |
| 536 | </links> |
| 537 | </event> |
| 538 | <event id="846"> |
| 539 | <start>17:30</start> |
| 540 | <duration>00:15</duration> |
| 541 | <room>Ferrer</room> |
| 542 | <tag>shadowcircle</tag> |
| 543 | <title>shadowcircle: a pentesting distribution alternative</title> |
| 544 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 545 | <track>Lightning Talks</track> |
| 546 | <type>Lightning-Talk</type> |
| 547 | <language>English</language> |
| 548 | <abstract>This talk would be about explaining what the shadowcircle project is: |
| 549 | |
| 550 | - why was it created. |
| 551 | - what is the philosophy behind this project. |
| 552 | - what are you concretely able to do with the integrated tools. |
| 553 | - why is it better than other similar solution (backtrack) |
| 554 | - Final words : we need contributors to side projects in order to replace some non FOS software. |
| 555 | |
| 556 | a Demo would also be performed : a vulnerabilities check on remote host ( implies 2 pc, provided by the speaker ) + exploit with specific payload.</abstract> |
| 557 | <description>shadowcircle is a free GNU/Linux Live CD distribution which was specially crafted for penetration testers. |
| 558 | |
| 559 | Forked from backtrack, this distribution aims to: |
| 560 | |
| 561 | - Remove any peace of non free software that was initially the backtrack packages base, and replace them by FOS equivalents. |
| 562 | - Bring more documentation about the integrated tools. |
| 563 | - Integrate cutting-edge security tools that are not yet available in similar distributions.</description> |
| 564 | <persons> |
| 565 | <person id="703">clement Game</person> |
| 566 | </persons> |
| 567 | <links> |
| 568 | <link href="http://www.shadowcircle.org">http://www.shadowcircle.org</link> |
| 569 | </links> |
| 570 | </event> |
| 571 | <event id="847"> |
| 572 | <start>18:00</start> |
| 573 | <duration>00:15</duration> |
| 574 | <room>Ferrer</room> |
| 575 | <tag>syncevolution</tag> |
| 576 | <title>SyncEvolution: From the SyncML Protocol to Free and Open Implementations</title> |
| 577 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 578 | <track>Lightning Talks</track> |
| 579 | <type>Lightning-Talk</type> |
| 580 | <language>English</language> |
| 581 | <abstract>Data synchronization is still mostly a missing piece in the free desktop |
| 582 | puzzle: solutions that are reliable and ready for the mythical Average |
| 583 | User just aren't available. This talk presents the SyncML protocol, |
| 584 | introduces the Synthesis SyncML engine (developed since 2000, open sourced |
| 585 | 2009) and outlines how SyncEvolution is used as the synchronization |
| 586 | solution in Moblin, GNOME and other Linux desktop systems - stay tuned for |
| 587 | more news about this. |
| 588 | |
| 589 | SyncEvolution is meant to be a cross-platform solution, therefore this |
| 590 | talk would be suitable for the cross-desktop developer room. |
| 591 | |
| 592 | Direct synchronization with other mobile devices is the main new feature |
| 593 | in the upcoming Moblin 1.0 release. It will be covered in this talk for |
| 594 | the first time.</abstract> |
| 595 | <description>SyncEvolution is a tool that synchronizes personal information management (PIM) data like contacts, calenders, tasks, and memos using the SyncML information synchronization standard. SyncEvolution compiled for GNOME's Evolution supports all of these data items. Compiled for Nokia 770/800/810 Internet Tablets, Mac OS X and the iPhone (only 0.7), it supports synchronizing the system address book. The command-line tool 'syncevolution' (compiled separately for each of these platforms) executes the synchronization. In addition, there is the GTK "sync-UI". The external Genesis is a graphical frontend for SyncEvolution written in PyGTK. The GUIs make SyncEvolution accessible without having to use a command line and provides graphical feedback of transaction results. |
| 596 | |
| 597 | SyncEvolution was written to have a small, reliable solution for Evolution PIM data synchronization without reinventing the wheel. SyncML is the established industry standard and Funambol has kindly provided their source code under the GPL, so there was already an existing code base for client and server development. During SyncEvolution's development special attention was paid to automated testing and coverage of corner cases of the SyncML, vCard and iCalendar standards to ensure that no data gets lost or mangled. |
| 598 | |
| 599 | The focus right now is to deliver the best possible SyncML client for Moblin and Linux. With the switch to the Synthesis SyncML Engine it will be easier to also implement a server mode and direct device-to-device synchronization - this is already working in the 1.0 alpha release.</description> |
| 600 | <persons> |
| 601 | <person id="704">Patrick Ohly</person> |
| 602 | </persons> |
| 603 | <links> |
| 604 | <link href="http://syncevolution.org">http://syncevolution.org</link> |
| 605 | </links> |
| 606 | </event> |
| 607 | <event id="848"> |
| 608 | <start>18:15</start> |
| 609 | <duration>00:15</duration> |
| 610 | <room>Ferrer</room> |
| 611 | <tag>geexbox</tag> |
| 612 | <title>GeeXboX: An Introduction to Enna Media Center</title> |
| 613 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 614 | <track>Lightning Talks</track> |
| 615 | <type>Lightning-Talk</type> |
| 616 | <language>English</language> |
| 617 | <abstract>Enna is GeeXboX's next generation Media Center interface, built upon Enlightenment Foundation Libraries (EFL). It allows you to listen to your music files, watch your favorite movies, TV shows and photos across your network. It relies on libplayer multimedia A/V abstraction framework to control your preferred player and libvalhalla, a fast media scanner API that will grab metadata (covers, fan arts, song lyrics and so many more) from your multimedia contents.</abstract> |
| 618 | <description>GeeXboX is a free embedded Linux distribution which aims at turning your computer into a so called HTPC (Home Theater PC) or Media Center. The GeeXboX project features both a LiveCD distribution and a standalone media center application (Enna); the project developed also several libraries (libplayer, libvalhalla) to enhance the multimedia experience under GNU/Linux.</description> |
| 619 | <persons> |
| 620 | <person id="705">Benjamin Zores</person> |
| 621 | </persons> |
| 622 | <links> |
| 623 | <link href="http://www.geexbox.org/">http://www.geexbox.org/</link> |
| 624 | </links> |
| 625 | </event> |
| 626 | <event id="865"> |
| 627 | <start>18:30</start> |
| 628 | <duration>00:15</duration> |
| 629 | <room>Ferrer</room> |
| 630 | <tag>uzbl</tag> |
| 631 | <title>Uzbl: A webbrowser which adheres to the unix philosophy</title> |
| 632 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 633 | <track>Lightning Talks</track> |
| 634 | <type>Lightning-Talk</type> |
| 635 | <language>English</language> |
| 636 | <abstract>I will describe how the design ideas and implementation of Uzbl are radically different from other (even "lightweight") browsers. Why this is important and which advantages this brings for hackers and control freaks. I will demonstrate how one can leverage these properties to integrate webbrowsing with other activities and vice versa, by using simple scripts and tools.</abstract> |
| 637 | <description>Uzbl is: |
| 638 | * uzbl-core: a small program providing a UI to interact with webpages, a means to report events and send commands |
| 639 | * uzbl-browser: a complete browser implementation based on uzbl-core and various scripts providing commonly used features. |
| 640 | * many more scripts providing tabs, download managers etc</description> |
| 641 | <persons> |
| 642 | <person id="707">Dieter Plaetinck</person> |
| 643 | </persons> |
| 644 | <links> |
| 645 | <link href="http://www.uzbl.org">http://www.uzbl.org</link> |
601 | | <event id="735"> |
602 | | <start>13:00</start> |
603 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
604 | | <room>Lameere</room> |
605 | | <tag>emb_openwrt_uci</tag> |
606 | | <title>OpenWrt: UCI and beyond</title> |
607 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
608 | | <track>Embedded</track> |
609 | | <type>Podium</type> |
610 | | <language>English</language> |
611 | | <abstract>Most embedded routers and similar devices have traditionally limited themselves to a very static system, typically providing the web interface as the only means of doing any configuration. |
612 | | |
613 | | OpenWrt intends to solve this problem in a generic way by providing a structured, extensible and modular configuration system, which does not limit itself to being the backend of a web interface.</abstract> |
614 | | <description></description> |
615 | | <persons> |
616 | | <person id="627">John Crispin</person> |
617 | | <person id="626">Felix Fietkau</person> |
618 | | </persons> |
619 | | <links> |
620 | | </links> |
621 | | </event> |
622 | | <event id="736"> |
623 | | <start>14:00</start> |
624 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
625 | | <room>Lameere</room> |
626 | | <tag>emb_wt_toolkit</tag> |
627 | | <title>Wt, a C++ web toolkit, for rich web interfaces to embedded systems</title> |
628 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
629 | | <track>Embedded</track> |
630 | | <type>Podium</type> |
631 | | <language>English</language> |
632 | | <abstract>Pieter presents [[http://www.webtoolkit.eu/wt Wt], an open source web toolkit that brings state-of-the-art cross-browser, AJAX-enabled web application development to C++ programmers who have little or no experience in web technologies.</abstract> |
633 | | <description>A web interface to an embedded system provides many benefits, such as remote control without software installation, and comfortable device operation and configuration without the constraints and the cost of an awkward user interface due to limited space on the device itself. |
634 | | |
635 | | |
636 | | At the same time, web interfaces are becoming the preferred choice for application development of various types, driven by rapid advances in web browser technology, (wireless) network availability, and low deployment costs. |
637 | | |
638 | | [http://www.webtoolkit.eu/wt Wt] is an open source web toolkit that brings state-of-the-art cross-browser, AJAX-enabled web application development to C++ programmers who have little or no experience in web technologies. We present some of its features and show how it resembles typical desktop GUI toolkits from a programmer point of view. Because of its high performance, it is popular for large deployments on Internet and intranet servers down to small deployments on embedded systems. We discuss its suitability for embedded systems compared to alternative approaches, and demonstrate some capabilities using a 200MHz ARM device.</description> |
639 | | <persons> |
640 | | <person id="628">Pieter Libin</person> |
641 | | </persons> |
642 | | <links> |
643 | | <link href="http://www.webtoolkit.eu/wt">Wt website</link> |
644 | | </links> |
645 | | </event> |
646 | | <event id="737"> |
647 | | <start>15:00</start> |
648 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
649 | | <room>Lameere</room> |
650 | | <tag>emb_voltage_regulator</tag> |
651 | | <title>Dynamic voltage and current regulator interface for the Linux kernel</title> |
652 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
653 | | <track>Embedded</track> |
654 | | <type>Podium</type> |
655 | | <language>English</language> |
656 | | <abstract>Every uA is sacred: A dynamic voltage and current regulator interface for the Linux kernel</abstract> |
657 | | <description>The Linux kernel voltage and current regulator subsystem is designed to provide a standard kernel interface to device drivers and board level code in order to control system voltage and current regulators. The subsystem is designed to allow systems to dynamically control their regulator power output in order to save system power and prolong battery life. |
658 | | |
659 | | This talk will describe the regulator subsystem and discuss how the subsystem can be used to reduce dynamic and static system power consumption.</description> |
660 | | <persons> |
661 | | <person id="172">Liam Girdwood</person> |
662 | | </persons> |
663 | | <links> |
664 | | </links> |
665 | | </event> |
666 | | <event id="738"> |
667 | | <start>16:00</start> |
668 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
669 | | <room>Lameere</room> |
670 | | <tag>emb_bug</tag> |
671 | | <title>Hacking with modular hardware: the BUG</title> |
672 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
673 | | <track>Embedded</track> |
674 | | <type>Podium</type> |
675 | | <language>English</language> |
676 | | <abstract>[http://buglabs.net BUG] is a device that takes the concept of a standard PC, turns it inside out, and makes it fit in your hand. |
677 | | |
678 | | Using open source hardware and software, applications can be created with previously non-existent device configurations.</abstract> |
679 | | <description>This talk will discuss the BUG platform in general, and our use of OpenEmbedded and Poky Linux. No proprietary or commercial tools, drivers, or applications are used. If there is interest we may also get into some application development and show some existing apps. |
680 | | |
681 | | More information on BUG is available at [http://buglabs.net]. |
682 | | |
683 | | Also giving away two BUGS in the devroom.</description> |
684 | | <persons> |
685 | | <person id="537">Ken Gilmer</person> |
686 | | </persons> |
687 | | <links> |
688 | | </links> |
689 | | </event> |
690 | | <event id="739"> |
691 | | <start>17:00</start> |
692 | | <duration>01:30</duration> |
693 | | <room>Lameere</room> |
694 | | <tag>emb_ptxdist</tag> |
695 | | <title>Building Embedded Linux Systems with PTXdist</title> |
696 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
697 | | <track>Embedded</track> |
698 | | <type>Podium</type> |
699 | | <language>English</language> |
700 | | <abstract>PTXdist is a "make your own distribution" build system, based on Bash, Kconfig and GNU Make.</abstract> |
701 | | <description>Dealing with embedded systems is a complicated thing: you have to take care of toolchains, cross compiling and, in industrial projects, most of all: reproducability and testability. |
702 | | |
703 | | PTXdist is a "make your own distribution" build system, based on Bash, Kconfig and GNU Make. Making a root filesystem for a target box can be as easy as 'ptxdist go', but the focus is on "executable documentation", not distribution. We care about upstream of the managed softare, separate our patches and try to be part of the world domination project by finding bugs in other people's open source software.</description> |
704 | | <persons> |
705 | | <person id="629">Robert Schwebel</person> |
706 | | </persons> |
707 | | <links> |
708 | | </links> |
709 | | </event> |
714 | | <duration>00:15</duration> |
715 | | <room>H.1301</room> |
716 | | <tag>kde_welcome</tag> |
717 | | <title>Welcome to the KDE devroom</title> |
718 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
719 | | <track>KDE</track> |
720 | | <type>Other</type> |
721 | | <language>English</language> |
722 | | <abstract>Welcome to the KDE developer room at FOSDEM 2010.</abstract> |
723 | | <description></description> |
724 | | <persons> |
725 | | <person id="95">Bart Coppens</person> |
726 | | </persons> |
727 | | <links> |
728 | | </links> |
729 | | </event> |
730 | | <event id="549"> |
731 | | <start>13:30</start> |
732 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
733 | | <room>H.1301</room> |
734 | | <tag>kde_42</tag> |
735 | | <title>KDE 42 and you</title> |
736 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
737 | | <track>KDE</track> |
738 | | <type>Podium</type> |
739 | | <language>English</language> |
740 | | <abstract>The answer to life, the universe and everything. We bring you KDE "the answer" 42. After a rather generic introduction to the KDE community and what we do, I present the new features in the latest release of the KDE software suite. What's done? What's not? And what will the future bring? If you want to know the answers to these questions, join this talk.</abstract> |
741 | | <description></description> |
742 | | <persons> |
743 | | <person id="98">Jos Poortvliet</person> |
744 | | </persons> |
745 | | <links> |
746 | | </links> |
747 | | </event> |
748 | | <event id="550"> |
749 | | <start>14:15</start> |
750 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
751 | | <room>H.1301</room> |
752 | | <tag>kde_amarok2</tag> |
753 | | <title>Amarok 2 - rediscover music</title> |
754 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
755 | | <track>KDE</track> |
756 | | <type>Podium</type> |
757 | | <language>English</language> |
758 | | <abstract>Verson 2.0 was a major step for the Amarok project: new look and tight integration with web services. But this is only the beginning of a new era.</abstract> |
759 | | <description>This talk shows you the current state of Amarok 2.0 and what to expect from the wonderful world of 2.1. You wanna customize your Amarok? Learn how you can use the new extremely powerful JavaScript interface to extend Amarok with new internet services and tools. The scripting interface gives you access to the entire Qt API; it is the same API we use to write Amarok itself.</description> |
760 | | <persons> |
761 | | <person id="70">Sven Krohlas</person> |
762 | | <person id="514">Ian Monroe</person> |
763 | | <person id="515">Lydia Pintscher</person> |
764 | | </persons> |
765 | | <links> |
766 | | </links> |
767 | | </event> |
768 | | <event id="551"> |
769 | | <start>15:00</start> |
770 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
771 | | <room>H.1301</room> |
772 | | <tag>kde_koffice_2_0</tag> |
773 | | <title>KOffice 2.0: KOffice coming to KDE4</title> |
774 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
775 | | <track>KDE</track> |
776 | | <type>Podium</type> |
777 | | <language>English</language> |
778 | | <abstract>KOffice is in the final stages of creating it's 2.0 version, which is based on Qt4 and KDE4 technologies. These new technologies have opened many doors, such as being able to run KOffice on more diverse systems than was possible before, such as OS X, and the N810.</abstract> |
779 | | <description>Marijn will show some of the new features KOffice has acquired, and how all the components in KOffice interact.</description> |
780 | | <persons> |
781 | | <person id="516">Marijn Kruisselbrink</person> |
782 | | </persons> |
783 | | <links> |
784 | | </links> |
785 | | </event> |
786 | | <event id="552"> |
787 | | <start>15:45</start> |
844 | | <tag>kde_opensolaris</tag> |
845 | | <title>KDE on OpenSolaris</title> |
846 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
847 | | <track>KDE</track> |
848 | | <type>Podium</type> |
849 | | <language>English</language> |
850 | | <abstract>This talk covers the progress the KDE community has made together with Sun Microsystems.</abstract> |
851 | | <description>It details on how to get a project as large as KDE into OpenSolaris. |
852 | | |
853 | | What are the issues? What is a repository? Can anyone contribute to repository code? How can someone contribute? What work needsto be done to get on the opensolaris.com distrubution DVD?</description> |
854 | | <persons> |
855 | | <person id="648">Gerard van den Berg</person> |
| 711 | <tag>moz_sync_weave</tag> |
| 712 | <title>Sync + Weave</title> |
| 713 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 714 | <track>Mozilla</track> |
| 715 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 716 | <language>English</language> |
| 717 | <abstract>How Weave and in particular sync is going to integrate with Firefox through 2010 and Firefox 4.</abstract> |
| 718 | <description>There will be some discussion on how add-on authors can integrate with Weave starting now, and directions being made to surface this data in the browser.</description> |
| 719 | <persons> |
| 720 | <person id="640">Mike Connor</person> |
| 721 | </persons> |
| 722 | <links> |
| 723 | </links> |
| 724 | </event> |
| 725 | <event id="938"> |
| 726 | <start>15:45</start> |
| 727 | <duration>01:00</duration> |
| 728 | <room>H.1301</room> |
| 729 | <tag>moz_firefox_mobile</tag> |
| 730 | <title>Firefox Mobile</title> |
| 731 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 732 | <track>Mozilla</track> |
| 733 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 734 | <language>English</language> |
| 735 | <abstract>tba</abstract> |
| 736 | <description></description> |
| 737 | <persons> |
| 738 | <person id="261">Mark Finkle</person> |
| 739 | </persons> |
| 740 | <links> |
| 741 | </links> |
| 742 | </event> |
| 743 | <event id="939"> |
| 744 | <start>16:45</start> |
| 745 | <duration>01:00</duration> |
| 746 | <room>H.1301</room> |
| 747 | <tag>moz_html5</tag> |
| 748 | <title>HTML 5</title> |
| 749 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 750 | <track>Mozilla</track> |
| 751 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 752 | <language>English</language> |
| 753 | <abstract>tba</abstract> |
| 754 | <description></description> |
| 755 | <persons> |
| 756 | <person id="344">Tristan Nitot</person> |
866 | | <tag>pg_bsd_welcome</tag> |
867 | | <title>Welcome to the PostgreSQL and *BSD devroom</title> |
868 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
869 | | <track>BSD+PostgreSQL</track> |
870 | | <type>Podium</type> |
871 | | <language>English</language> |
872 | | <abstract>Keynote and welcome to the PostgreSQL and *BSD developer room at FOSDEM 2010.</abstract> |
873 | | <description></description> |
874 | | <persons> |
875 | | <person id="632">Marc Balmer</person> |
876 | | <person id="245">Robert Watson</person> |
877 | | <person id="415">Magnus Hagander</person> |
878 | | <person id="631">Andreas Scherbaum</person> |
879 | | </persons> |
880 | | <links> |
881 | | </links> |
882 | | </event> |
883 | | <event id="747"> |
884 | | <start>13:30</start> |
885 | | <duration>00:30</duration> |
886 | | <room>UA2.114</room> |
887 | | <tag>pg_8_4</tag> |
888 | | <title>What's coming in PostgreSQL 8.4 ?</title> |
889 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
890 | | <track>BSD+PostgreSQL</track> |
891 | | <type>Podium</type> |
892 | | <language>English</language> |
893 | | <abstract></abstract> |
894 | | <description></description> |
895 | | <persons> |
896 | | <person id="415">Magnus Hagander</person> |
897 | | </persons> |
898 | | <links> |
899 | | </links> |
900 | | </event> |
901 | | <event id="748"> |
902 | | <start>14:00</start> |
903 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
904 | | <room>UA2.114</room> |
905 | | <tag>pg_replication</tag> |
906 | | <title>Replication, Replication, Replication</title> |
907 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
908 | | <track>BSD+PostgreSQL</track> |
909 | | <type>Podium</type> |
910 | | <language>English</language> |
911 | | <abstract></abstract> |
912 | | <description></description> |
913 | | <persons> |
914 | | <person id="406">Simon Riggs</person> |
915 | | </persons> |
916 | | <links> |
917 | | </links> |
918 | | </event> |
919 | | <event id="749"> |
920 | | <start>15:00</start> |
921 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
922 | | <room>UA2.114</room> |
923 | | <tag>bsd_utf8</tag> |
924 | | <title>UTF-8 support for syscons, new TTY layer</title> |
925 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
926 | | <track>BSD+PostgreSQL</track> |
927 | | <type>Podium</type> |
928 | | <language>English</language> |
929 | | <abstract>During my internship for my B.ASc. degree, I was sponsored by a Dutch IT firm to improve the design of the TTY layer.</abstract> |
930 | | <description>After I committed this work to the source tree back in August, I moved my interest to the syscons driver. I'm currently working on adding support for Unicode font rendering. I will discuss the design of the new TTY layer, but also the changes I am planning to make to syscons.</description> |
931 | | <persons> |
932 | | <person id="633">Ed Schouten</person> |
933 | | </persons> |
934 | | <links> |
935 | | </links> |
936 | | </event> |
937 | | <event id="752"> |
938 | | <start>16:00</start> |
939 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
940 | | <room>UA2.114</room> |
941 | | <tag>bsd_olap_windowing</tag> |
942 | | <title>OLAP/Windowing functions</title> |
943 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
944 | | <track>BSD+PostgreSQL</track> |
945 | | <type>Podium</type> |
946 | | <language>English</language> |
947 | | <abstract></abstract> |
948 | | <description></description> |
949 | | <persons> |
950 | | <person id="403">David Fetter</person> |
951 | | </persons> |
952 | | <links> |
953 | | </links> |
954 | | </event> |
955 | | <event id="750"> |
956 | | <start>17:00</start> |
957 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
958 | | <room>UA2.114</room> |
959 | | <tag>bsd_porting_freebsd</tag> |
960 | | <title>Porting applications in FreeBSD</title> |
961 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
962 | | <track>BSD+PostgreSQL</track> |
963 | | <type>Podium</type> |
964 | | <language>English</language> |
965 | | <abstract></abstract> |
966 | | <description></description> |
967 | | <persons> |
968 | | <person id="634">Rodrigo Osorio</person> |
969 | | </persons> |
970 | | <links> |
971 | | </links> |
972 | | </event> |
973 | | <event id="751"> |
974 | | <start>18:00</start> |
975 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
976 | | <room>UA2.114</room> |
977 | | <tag>pg_clarify_rumours</tag> |
978 | | <title>Clarify technical rumours about PostgreSQL</title> |
979 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
980 | | <track>BSD+PostgreSQL</track> |
981 | | <type>Podium</type> |
982 | | <language>English</language> |
983 | | <abstract></abstract> |
984 | | <description></description> |
985 | | <persons> |
986 | | <person id="414">Susanne Ebrecht</person> |
| 767 | <tag>typo3</tag> |
| 768 | <title>TYPO3 exam session</title> |
| 769 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 770 | <track>Certification</track> |
| 771 | <type>Other</type> |
| 772 | <language>English</language> |
| 773 | <abstract>TYPO3 exam session</abstract> |
| 774 | <description></description> |
| 775 | <persons> |
| 776 | <person id="676">Sacha Storz</person> |
| 787 | <tag>dist_hermes</tag> |
| 788 | <title>Hermes Message Dispatching</title> |
| 789 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 790 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 791 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 792 | <language>English</language> |
| 793 | <abstract></abstract> |
| 794 | <description></description> |
| 795 | <persons> |
| 796 | <person id="334">Klaas Freitag</person> |
| 797 | </persons> |
| 798 | <links> |
| 799 | </links> |
| 800 | </event> |
| 801 | <event id="972"> |
| 802 | <start>13:45</start> |
| 803 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 804 | <room>H.1302</room> |
| 805 | <tag>dist_clicfs</tag> |
| 806 | <title>Clicfs as perfect live CD file system</title> |
| 807 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 808 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 809 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 810 | <language>English</language> |
| 811 | <abstract></abstract> |
| 812 | <description></description> |
| 813 | <persons> |
| 814 | <person id="330">Stephan Kulow</person> |
| 815 | </persons> |
| 816 | <links> |
| 817 | </links> |
| 818 | </event> |
| 819 | <event id="973"> |
| 820 | <start>14:30</start> |
| 821 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 822 | <room>H.1302</room> |
| 823 | <tag>dist_mirrorbrain</tag> |
| 824 | <title>MirrorBrain</title> |
| 825 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 826 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 827 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 828 | <language>English</language> |
| 829 | <abstract></abstract> |
| 830 | <description></description> |
| 831 | <persons> |
| 832 | <person id="134">Adrian Schroeter</person> |
| 833 | </persons> |
| 834 | <links> |
| 835 | </links> |
| 836 | </event> |
| 837 | <event id="974"> |
| 838 | <start>15:15</start> |
| 839 | <duration>01:00</duration> |
| 840 | <room>H.1302</room> |
| 841 | <tag>dist_infrastructure</tag> |
| 842 | <title>Infrastructure round table</title> |
| 843 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 844 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 845 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 846 | <language>English</language> |
| 847 | <abstract></abstract> |
| 848 | <description></description> |
| 849 | <persons> |
| 850 | <person id="182">Ralph Angenendt</person> |
| 851 | </persons> |
| 852 | <links> |
| 853 | </links> |
| 854 | </event> |
| 855 | <event id="975"> |
| 856 | <start>16:45</start> |
| 857 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 858 | <room>H.1302</room> |
| 859 | <tag>dist_pkg_desc</tag> |
| 860 | <title>Translations of package descriptions</title> |
| 861 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 862 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 863 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 864 | <language>English</language> |
| 865 | <abstract></abstract> |
| 866 | <description></description> |
| 867 | <persons> |
| 868 | <person id="761">Anne Nicolas</person> |
| 869 | </persons> |
| 870 | <links> |
| 871 | </links> |
| 872 | </event> |
| 873 | <event id="961"> |
| 874 | <start>17:30</start> |
| 875 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 876 | <room>H.1302</room> |
| 877 | <tag>dist_gnome</tag> |
| 878 | <title>Working with GNOME upstream</title> |
| 879 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 880 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 881 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 882 | <language>English</language> |
| 883 | <abstract>This session is not a talk, but an interactive session. The goal of this session is to have the downstream and upstream people working on GNOME meet, joke, fight, laugh, cry and dance together. And after that, an open discussion will take place about all the topics that we feel we should discuss.</abstract> |
| 884 | <description>Potential topics include: |
| 885 | * what GNOME is not doing right for downstream, and how we could change this |
| 886 | * what GNOME is doing right compared to other projects, so we know this should not be changed ;-) |
| 887 | * forwarding downstream patches and bugs |
| 888 | * forwarding feedback from distribution users |
| 889 | * communicating important bugfixes to downstream |
| 890 | * how GNOME 3 will affect packagers</description> |
| 891 | <persons> |
| 892 | <person id="558">Vincent Untz</person> |
| 893 | </persons> |
| 894 | <links> |
| 895 | </links> |
| 896 | </event> |
| 897 | <event id="977"> |
| 898 | <start>18:15</start> |
| 899 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 900 | <room>H.1302</room> |
| 901 | <tag>dist_spacewalk</tag> |
| 902 | <title>Spacewalk: Linux Systems Lifecycle Management</title> |
| 903 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 904 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 905 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 906 | <language>English</language> |
| 907 | <abstract>Brief introduction of the Spacewalk systems management solution with a short live demo.</abstract> |
| 908 | <description>Spacewalk is a free and open source lifecycle management which provides software management, provisioning and monitoring capabilities. The clean web interface allows viewing of systems and their software update status, as well as initiating actions like kickstarting systems or managing configuration files. |
| 909 | |
| 910 | Spacewalk's monitoring feature lets you view monitoring status for your systems alongside their software update status. Spacewalk also has virtualization capabilities to enable you to provision, control, manage, and monitor virtual Xen and KVM guests.</description> |
| 911 | <persons> |
| 912 | <person id="763">Sandro Mathys</person> |
| 913 | <person id="764">Marcus Moeller</person> |
| 914 | </persons> |
| 915 | <links> |
| 916 | </links> |
| 917 | </event> |
| 918 | </room> |
| 919 | <room name="H.1308"> |
| 920 | <event id="957"> |
| 921 | <start>14:00</start> |
| 922 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 923 | <room>H.1308</room> |
| 924 | <tag>dist_maemo_council</tag> |
| 925 | <title>The Maemo Community Council: a case-study in governance</title> |
| 926 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 927 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 928 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 929 | <language>English</language> |
| 930 | <abstract>tba</abstract> |
| 931 | <description></description> |
| 932 | <persons> |
| 933 | <person id="51">Dave Neary</person> |
| 934 | </persons> |
| 935 | <links> |
| 936 | </links> |
| 937 | </event> |
| 938 | <event id="958"> |
| 939 | <start>14:45</start> |
| 940 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 941 | <room>H.1308</room> |
| 942 | <tag>dist_fedora_governance</tag> |
| 943 | <title>Fedora Governance</title> |
| 944 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 945 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 946 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 947 | <language>English</language> |
| 948 | <abstract>In this talk, former Fedora Project Leader Max Spevack will discuss the governance and decision-making processes that exist within Fedora.</abstract> |
| 949 | <description>From individual contributors to special-interest-groups to the core projects that make up Fedora, this talk will explain not only how the Fedora Project is structured, but the underlying principles and goals of Fedora that have led it to have its current organizational structure. The talk will also discuss some general ideas about governance and organization in volunteer-led communities -- both in Open Source, as well as other fields.</description> |
| 950 | <persons> |
| 951 | <person id="165">Max Spevack</person> |
| 952 | </persons> |
| 953 | <links> |
| 954 | </links> |
| 955 | </event> |
| 956 | <event id="959"> |
| 957 | <start>15:30</start> |
| 958 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 959 | <room>H.1308</room> |
| 960 | <tag>dist_hr_management</tag> |
| 961 | <title>Distribution HR management</title> |
| 962 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 963 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 964 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 965 | <language>English</language> |
| 966 | <abstract>The technical differences between distributions are often compared but big differences can also be found in how distributions manage their developer pool.</abstract> |
| 967 | <description>In this talk I will present how Gentoo manages their human resources and our views on what has worked and what hasn't followed by a general discussion about distributions in general.</description> |
| 968 | <persons> |
| 969 | <person id="292">Petteri Räty</person> |
| 970 | </persons> |
| 971 | <links> |
| 972 | </links> |
| 973 | </event> |
| 974 | <event id="960"> |
| 975 | <start>16:45</start> |
| 976 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 977 | <room>H.1308</room> |
| 978 | <tag>dist_mobile_upstream</tag> |
| 979 | <title>Mobile distributions and upstream challenges</title> |
| 980 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 981 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 982 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 983 | <language>English</language> |
| 984 | <abstract></abstract> |
| 985 | <description></description> |
| 986 | <persons> |
| 987 | <person id="756">Andrew Savory</person> |
| 988 | </persons> |
| 989 | <links> |
| 990 | </links> |
| 991 | </event> |
| 992 | <event id="976"> |
| 993 | <start>17:30</start> |
| 994 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 995 | <room>H.1308</room> |
| 996 | <tag>dist_fedora_fr</tag> |
| 997 | <title>Fedora-fr and upstream French communities</title> |
| 998 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 999 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 1000 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1001 | <language>English</language> |
| 1002 | <abstract>Note that this session will be held in French ! |
| 1003 | |
| 1004 | Open Discussion around Fedora-Fr and FedoraProject.</abstract> |
| 1005 | <description>* Who is Fedora-Fr organization ? |
| 1006 | * Fedora-Fr Goals |
| 1007 | * Fedora-Fr Website |
| 1008 | * Fedora-Fr Events coverage in France in 2009 and 2010</description> |
| 1009 | <persons> |
| 1010 | <person id="762">Armel Kermovant</person> |
| 1011 | </persons> |
| 1012 | <links> |
| 1013 | </links> |
| 1014 | </event> |
| 1015 | <event id="962"> |
| 1016 | <start>18:15</start> |
| 1017 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 1018 | <room>H.1308</room> |
| 1019 | <tag>dist_good_upstream</tag> |
| 1020 | <title>How to be a good upstream</title> |
| 1021 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1022 | <track>Distributions</track> |
| 1023 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1024 | <language>English</language> |
| 1025 | <abstract>How upstreams run their projects determines how easy the projects are for packagers to package.</abstract> |
| 1026 | <description>The aim of this coal is to introduce what kind things should be taken into account in order to make the life of distributions easier.</description> |
| 1027 | <persons> |
| 1028 | <person id="292">Petteri Räty</person> |
| 1029 | </persons> |
| 1030 | <links> |
| 1031 | </links> |
| 1032 | </event> |
| 1033 | </room> |
| 1034 | <room name="H.1309"> |
| 1035 | <event id="907"> |
| 1036 | <start>13:00</start> |
| 1037 | <duration>00:15</duration> |
| 1038 | <room>H.1309</room> |
1021 | | <abstract>The People framework provides an unified way for applications to access and gather contact information from disconnected sources (local address-book, social network, web service, mobile phone...). It's been presented during last GUADEC in Istanbul and we would like to update the community on progress made, presenting demos such as experimental integration within Empathy.</abstract> |
1022 | | <description></description> |
1023 | | <persons> |
1024 | | <person id="517">Johann Prieur</person> |
1025 | | <person id="518">Ali Sabil</person> |
1026 | | </persons> |
1027 | | <links> |
1028 | | </links> |
1029 | | </event> |
1030 | | <event id="558"> |
1031 | | <start>14:15</start> |
1032 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
1033 | | <room>H.1302</room> |
1034 | | <tag>gnome_hynerian</tag> |
1035 | | <title>The Hynerian Empire</title> |
1036 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1037 | | <track>GNOME</track> |
1038 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1039 | | <language>English</language> |
1040 | | <abstract>[http://live.gnome.org/Rygel Rygel] is an implementation of the UPnP MediaServer V 2.0 specification that is specifically designed for GNOME (Mobile). It is based on GUPnP and is written (mostly) in Vala language.</abstract> |
1041 | | <description>Zeeshan will start the presentation with information on the past, present and future of Rygel project. |
1042 | | |
1043 | | He will then introduce the plugin API with the help of a Sample plugin, followed by a demo and Q&A session in the end.</description> |
1044 | | <persons> |
1045 | | <person id="374">Zeeshan Ali</person> |
1046 | | </persons> |
1047 | | <links> |
1048 | | <link href="http://live.gnome.org/Rygel">http://live.gnome.org/Rygel</link> |
1049 | | </links> |
1050 | | </event> |
1051 | | <event id="559"> |
1052 | | <start>15:00</start> |
1053 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
1054 | | <room>H.1302</room> |
1055 | | <tag>gnome_sugar_platform</tag> |
1056 | | <title>The Sugar platform</title> |
1057 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1058 | | <track>GNOME</track> |
1059 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1060 | | <language>English</language> |
1061 | | <abstract>This session will consist of a presentation of the [http://sugarlabs.org/go/Supported_systems Sugar platform], the [http://sugarlabs.org/ SugarLabs organization], its relationship with GNOME Mobile and points that might interest mainstream GNOME development.</abstract> |
1062 | | <description></description> |
1063 | | <persons> |
1064 | | <person id="519">Tomeu Vizoso</person> |
1065 | | </persons> |
1066 | | <links> |
1067 | | </links> |
1068 | | </event> |
1069 | | <event id="560"> |
1070 | | <start>15:45</start> |
1071 | | <duration>00:30</duration> |
1072 | | <room>H.1302</room> |
1073 | | <tag>gnome_group_pic</tag> |
1074 | | <title>Group Picture</title> |
1075 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1076 | | <track>GNOME</track> |
1077 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1078 | | <language>English</language> |
1079 | | <abstract>Group picture of GNOME developers</abstract> |
1080 | | <description></description> |
1081 | | <persons> |
1082 | | <person id="130">Christophe Fergeau</person> |
1083 | | </persons> |
1084 | | <links> |
1085 | | </links> |
1086 | | </event> |
1087 | | <event id="561"> |
1088 | | <start>16:15</start> |
1089 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
1090 | | <room>H.1302</room> |
1091 | | <tag>gnome_geolocation</tag> |
1092 | | <title>Bringing geolocation into GNOME</title> |
1093 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1094 | | <track>GNOME</track> |
1095 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1096 | | <language>English</language> |
1097 | | <abstract>This talk will be about some of the efforts to bring geolocation into Gnome.</abstract> |
1098 | | <description>In particular, it'll focus on the Gtk/Clutter widget to display maps: http://blog.pierlux.com/projects/libchamplain/ and geoclue. |
1099 | | |
1100 | | It'll go on with examples of where they are already used in Gnome apps (such as the EOG plugin and Empathy (in a feature to be released soon)).</description> |
1101 | | <persons> |
1102 | | <person id="520">Pierre-Luc Beaudoin</person> |
1103 | | </persons> |
1104 | | <links> |
1105 | | </links> |
1106 | | </event> |
1107 | | <event id="745"> |
1108 | | <start>17:00</start> |
1109 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
1110 | | <room>H.1302</room> |
1111 | | <tag>gnome_nemiver</tag> |
1112 | | <title>Nemiver, a GNOME debugger</title> |
1113 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1114 | | <track>GNOME</track> |
1115 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1116 | | <language>English</language> |
1117 | | <abstract>This talk will introduce [http://projects.gnome.org/nemiver/ Nemiver], present its history, features and architecture.</abstract> |
1118 | | <description>The main objective of Nemiver is to provide a simple tool that allows developers to quickly and easily debug usual problems |
1119 | | in their applications without necessarily having to know about command line debuggers arcanes.</description> |
1120 | | <persons> |
1121 | | <person id="117">Dodji Seketeli</person> |
1122 | | </persons> |
1123 | | <links> |
1124 | | <link href="http://projects.gnome.org/nemiver/">Nemiver project page</link> |
1125 | | </links> |
1126 | | </event> |
1127 | | <event id="563"> |
1128 | | <start>17:45</start> |
1129 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
1130 | | <room>H.1302</room> |
1131 | | <tag>gnome_tracker</tag> |
1132 | | <title>Tracker</title> |
1133 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1134 | | <track>GNOME</track> |
1135 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1136 | | <language>English</language> |
1137 | | <abstract>tbd.</abstract> |
1138 | | <description></description> |
1139 | | <persons> |
1140 | | <person id="116">Philip Van Hoof</person> |
1141 | | </persons> |
1142 | | <links> |
1143 | | </links> |
1144 | | </event> |
1145 | | </room> |
1146 | | <room name="H.1308"> |
1147 | | <event id="768"> |
1148 | | <start>13:15</start> |
1149 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
1150 | | <room>H.1308</room> |
1151 | | <tag>moz_europe</tag> |
1152 | | <title>Mozilla Europe</title> |
1153 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1154 | | <track>Mozilla</track> |
1155 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1156 | | <language>English</language> |
1157 | | <abstract>General Introduction followed by an update on the work of Mozilla in Europe.</abstract> |
1158 | | <description></description> |
1159 | | <persons> |
1160 | | <person id="344">Tristan Nitot</person> |
1161 | | </persons> |
1162 | | <links> |
1163 | | </links> |
1164 | | </event> |
1165 | | <event id="769"> |
1166 | | <start>14:00</start> |
1167 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
1168 | | <room>H.1308</room> |
1169 | | <tag>moz_foundation</tag> |
1170 | | <title>Mozilla Foundation</title> |
1171 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1172 | | <track>Mozilla</track> |
1173 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1174 | | <language>English</language> |
1175 | | <abstract>Foundation update, programs, goals, etc.</abstract> |
1176 | | <description></description> |
1177 | | <persons> |
1178 | | <person id="177">Gervase Markham</person> |
1179 | | </persons> |
1180 | | <links> |
1181 | | </links> |
1182 | | </event> |
1183 | | <event id="770"> |
1184 | | <start>14:45</start> |
1185 | | <duration>00:30</duration> |
1186 | | <room>H.1308</room> |
1187 | | <tag>moz_univ</tag> |
1188 | | <title>Mozilla and Universities</title> |
1189 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1190 | | <track>Mozilla</track> |
1191 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1192 | | <language>English</language> |
1193 | | <abstract>Lightning talk about MAOW Madrid organized jointly with Madrid University.</abstract> |
1194 | | <description></description> |
1195 | | <persons> |
1196 | | <person id="639">Gregorio Robles</person> |
1197 | | <person id="351">Pascal Chevrel</person> |
1198 | | </persons> |
1199 | | <links> |
1200 | | </links> |
1201 | | </event> |
1202 | | <event id="771"> |
1203 | | <start>15:15</start> |
1204 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
1205 | | <room>H.1308</room> |
1206 | | <tag>moz_after_ff_3_1</tag> |
1207 | | <title>What's next after Firefox 3.1</title> |
1208 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1209 | | <track>Mozilla</track> |
1210 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1211 | | <language>English</language> |
1212 | | <abstract>Firefox 3.2, Extensions 2.0, Labs, and more</abstract> |
1213 | | <description></description> |
1214 | | <persons> |
1215 | | <person id="640">Mike Connor</person> |
1216 | | </persons> |
1217 | | <links> |
1218 | | </links> |
1219 | | </event> |
1220 | | <event id="772"> |
1221 | | <start>16:00</start> |
1222 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
1223 | | <room>H.1308</room> |
1224 | | <tag>moz_community_sites</tag> |
1225 | | <title>Mozilla Community Sites Project</title> |
1226 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1227 | | <track>Mozilla</track> |
1228 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1229 | | <language>English</language> |
1230 | | <abstract></abstract> |
1231 | | <description></description> |
1232 | | <persons> |
1233 | | <person id="175">Zbigniew Braniecki</person> |
1234 | | </persons> |
1235 | | <links> |
1236 | | </links> |
1237 | | </event> |
1238 | | <event id="773"> |
1239 | | <start>16:45</start> |
1240 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
1241 | | <room>H.1308</room> |
1242 | | <tag>moz_community_design</tag> |
1243 | | <title>Community and Design</title> |
1244 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1245 | | <track>Mozilla</track> |
1246 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1247 | | <language>English</language> |
1248 | | <abstract>"Open Source Design, Mozilla and You" - A discussion about what open source design is, how Mozilla uses it to help spread Firefox, and the process of building up a worldwide design community (and how you can help!).</abstract> |
1249 | | <description></description> |
1250 | | <persons> |
1251 | | <person id="641">John Slater</person> |
1252 | | </persons> |
1253 | | <links> |
1254 | | </links> |
1255 | | </event> |
1256 | | </room> |
1257 | | <room name="H.1309"> |
1258 | | <event id="636"> |
| 1063 | <abstract>This Bugsquad session will be about statistics and people.</abstract> |
| 1064 | <description>While I'll show, in what shape our bug database is, I'll also explain, how to use the current infrastructure appropriately in order to manage our bugs. That includes how to use the bugtracker, the mailinglist and our IRC channel to successfully manage bugs. |
| 1065 | |
| 1066 | We'll have a Q&A session afterwards, where we explicitly want to introduce new triagers which will be part of the new bugsquad :)</description> |
| 1067 | <persons> |
| 1068 | <person id="730">Tobias Mueller</person> |
| 1069 | </persons> |
| 1070 | <links> |
| 1071 | </links> |
| 1072 | </event> |
| 1073 | <event id="908"> |
1318 | | <tag>xorg_intel_graphics</tag> |
1319 | | <title>Intel's graphics projects for the coming year.</title> |
1320 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1321 | | <track>X.org</track> |
1322 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1323 | | <language>English</language> |
1324 | | <abstract>While significant progress has been made in fixing the Linux graphics architecture, there are still some sharp edges. This talk will cover Intel's plans for the coming year, including DRI2 vblank support, DRI2 page flipping, rebuilding Mesa's compiler infrastructure, pulling ideas from Gallium into core Mesa, and more.</abstract> |
1325 | | <description></description> |
1326 | | <persons> |
1327 | | <person id="656">Eric Anholt</person> |
| 1133 | <tag>gnome_apps_plugins</tag> |
| 1134 | <title>Add plugins to your GNOME apps</title> |
| 1135 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1136 | <track>GNOME</track> |
| 1137 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1138 | <language>English</language> |
| 1139 | <abstract>This talk will focus on libpeas, a lib-ification of the gedit plugin's engine intended to allow adding support for plugins written in various languages (currently C, python, javascript) into gobject-based apps in a very simple and quick fashion.</abstract> |
| 1140 | <description></description> |
| 1141 | <persons> |
| 1142 | <person id="728">Steve Frécinaux</person> |
| 1143 | </persons> |
| 1144 | <links> |
| 1145 | </links> |
| 1146 | </event> |
| 1147 | <event id="903"> |
| 1148 | <start>16:30</start> |
| 1149 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 1150 | <room>H.1309</room> |
| 1151 | <tag>gnome_devtools</tag> |
| 1152 | <title>Gnome Development Tools</title> |
| 1153 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1154 | <track>GNOME</track> |
| 1155 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1156 | <language>English</language> |
| 1157 | <abstract>High-Level Debugging and the Misha Research IDE</abstract> |
| 1158 | <description>Misha Research I.D.E., apart from introducing new debugging facilities (that I would also like to see and implement for Anjuta), is a great example of how new innovative widgets and programming interfaces can be implemented on top of the gtk+/pygtk libraries and the gnome platform.</description> |
| 1159 | <persons> |
| 1160 | <person id="726">Nick Papoylias</person> |
| 1161 | </persons> |
| 1162 | <links> |
| 1163 | <link href="http://www.softnet.tuc.gr/~whoneedselta/misha/">Project site</link> |
| 1164 | <link href="http://www.softnet.tuc.gr/~whoneedselta/misha/video/flowplayer/play/">Video presentation</link> |
| 1165 | </links> |
| 1166 | </event> |
| 1167 | <event id="910"> |
| 1168 | <start>17:15</start> |
| 1169 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 1170 | <room>H.1309</room> |
| 1171 | <tag>gnome_ocrfeeder</tag> |
| 1172 | <title>OCRFeeder</title> |
| 1173 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1174 | <track>GNOME</track> |
| 1175 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1176 | <language>English</language> |
| 1177 | <abstract>OCRFeeder is a document layout analysis and optical character recognition system that I wrote for my Master's Thesis project.</abstract> |
| 1178 | <description>Like it says on its website, given the images it will automatically outline its contents, distinguish between what's graphics and text and perform OCR over the latter. It generates multiple formats being its main one ODT. |
| 1179 | |
| 1180 | I think this is currently the most complete and user friendly OCR application for GNU/Linux out there and, of course, I wrote it to be used mainly with GNOME, featuring a GUI written in PyGTK and respecting, as far as I could, the GNOME User Interface Guidelines. |
| 1181 | |
| 1182 | I would like to present how the application works on the inside, for example the page segmentation algorithm I created for it, etc. I think this would be interest for the GNOME community and general attendants of the GNOME Dev room at FOSDEM.</description> |
| 1183 | <persons> |
| 1184 | <person id="731">Joaquim Rocha</person> |
| 1185 | </persons> |
| 1186 | <links> |
| 1187 | </links> |
| 1188 | </event> |
| 1189 | <event id="911"> |
| 1190 | <start>18:00</start> |
| 1191 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 1192 | <room>H.1309</room> |
| 1193 | <tag>gnome_things</tag> |
| 1194 | <title>Getting Things GNOME!</title> |
| 1195 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1196 | <track>GNOME</track> |
| 1197 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1198 | <language>English</language> |
| 1199 | <abstract>Getting Things GNOME! is a Python todo-list manager inspired by the Getting Things Done method.</abstract> |
| 1200 | <description>GTG was first introduced during FOSDEM 2009. This talk will be a brief retrospective of one year of development and what we have learned from them. We will also cover the basis of GTG structure, have a brief look at the future and, if everybody is still not asleep, explain the first steps to contribute to GTG because, in GTG, fixing a bug is often easier than writing the bug report.</description> |
| 1201 | <persons> |
| 1202 | <person id="732">Lionel Dricot</person> |
| 1203 | <person id="771">Bertrand Rousseau</person> |
| 1204 | </persons> |
| 1205 | <links> |
| 1206 | </links> |
| 1207 | </event> |
| 1208 | <event id="912"> |
| 1209 | <start>18:45</start> |
| 1210 | <duration>00:15</duration> |
| 1211 | <room>H.1309</room> |
| 1212 | <tag>gnome_closing</tag> |
| 1213 | <title>GNOME closing talk</title> |
| 1214 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1215 | <track>GNOME</track> |
| 1216 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1217 | <language>English</language> |
| 1218 | <abstract></abstract> |
| 1219 | <description></description> |
| 1220 | <persons> |
| 1221 | <person id="130">Christophe Fergeau</person> |
1334 | | <event id="626"> |
1335 | | <start>13:00</start> |
1336 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
1337 | | <room>H.2213</room> |
1338 | | <tag>fedora_rpm_packaging</tag> |
1339 | | <title>RPM packaging</title> |
1340 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1341 | | <track>Fedora+CentOS</track> |
1342 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1343 | | <language>English</language> |
1344 | | <abstract></abstract> |
1345 | | <description></description> |
1346 | | <persons> |
1347 | | <person id="576">Christophe Wickert</person> |
1348 | | </persons> |
1349 | | <links> |
1350 | | </links> |
1351 | | </event> |
1352 | | <event id="622"> |
1353 | | <start>14:00</start> |
1354 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
1355 | | <room>H.2213</room> |
1356 | | <tag>fedora_fel</tag> |
1357 | | <title>Fedora Electronic Lab</title> |
1358 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1359 | | <track>Fedora+CentOS</track> |
1360 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1361 | | <language>English</language> |
1362 | | <abstract>[http://chitlesh.fedorapeople.org/FEL/ Fedora's Electronic Laboratory] is dedicated to supporting the innovation and development of opensource EDA community along with a history of experience in multiple applications.</abstract> |
1363 | | <description>Fedora Electronic Laboratory provides a complete electronic laboratory setup with reliable open source design tools in order to meet one's requirements to keep one in pace with current technological race. Project management tools such as spreadsheet, gantt diagram, mindmapping tools.... are also included.</description> |
1364 | | <persons> |
1365 | | <person id="164">Chitlesh Goorah</person> |
1366 | | </persons> |
1367 | | <links> |
1368 | | </links> |
1369 | | </event> |
1370 | | <event id="627"> |
1371 | | <start>15:00</start> |
1372 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
1373 | | <room>H.2213</room> |
1374 | | <tag>fedora_future_fr</tag> |
1375 | | <title>Future Fedora-fr challenges</title> |
1376 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1377 | | <track>Fedora+CentOS</track> |
1378 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1379 | | <language>English</language> |
1380 | | <abstract>Fedora organization in French speaking country.</abstract> |
1381 | | <description>Fedora-fr is a non profit organization mainly active in France. Now that the organization is well organized and going to have its head renewed for the first time at the beginning of this year, Fedora-fr has to meet other French speaking Fedora addicts in foreign countries, and see how it can help them buzz about Fedora and organise events in their own areas.</description> |
1382 | | <persons> |
1383 | | <person id="168">Thomas Canniot</person> |
1384 | | </persons> |
1385 | | <links> |
1386 | | </links> |
1387 | | </event> |
1388 | | <event id="628"> |
1389 | | <start>16:00</start> |
1390 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
1391 | | <room>H.2213</room> |
1392 | | <tag>fedora_func_symbolic</tag> |
1393 | | <title>Func, Symbolic: Present and future</title> |
1394 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1395 | | <track>Fedora+CentOS</track> |
1396 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1397 | | <language>English</language> |
1398 | | <abstract>Theory and demo. In the first part will be a short explanation about what are func and symbolic, and (in particular for symbolic) what are future plans. In the second part will be how set-up func and symbolic and hot they work.</abstract> |
1399 | | <description></description> |
1400 | | <persons> |
1401 | | <person id="578">Francesco Crippa</person> |
1402 | | <person id="577">Luca Foppiano</person> |
1403 | | </persons> |
1404 | | <links> |
1405 | | <link href="https://fedorahosted.org/func/">Func project page</link> |
1406 | | </links> |
1407 | | </event> |
1408 | | <event id="629"> |
1409 | | <start>17:00</start> |
1410 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
1411 | | <room>H.2213</room> |
1412 | | <tag>fedora_sugar</tag> |
1413 | | <title>Sugar: what is and why Fedora might care</title> |
1414 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1415 | | <track>Fedora+CentOS</track> |
1416 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1417 | | <language>English</language> |
1418 | | <abstract>Introduction to [http://sugarlabs.org/ Sugar and SugarLabs], strategic importance it might have for Fedora and GNOME, and synergy with other projects Fedora cares about.</abstract> |
1419 | | <description></description> |
1420 | | <persons> |
1421 | | <person id="579">Greg DeKoenigsberg</person> |
1422 | | <person id="519">Tomeu Vizoso</person> |
1423 | | </persons> |
1424 | | <links> |
1425 | | </links> |
1426 | | </event> |
1427 | | <event id="625"> |
1428 | | <start>18:00</start> |
1429 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
1430 | | <room>H.2213</room> |
1431 | | <tag>fedora_augeas</tag> |
1432 | | <title>Augeas</title> |
1433 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1434 | | <track>Fedora+CentOS</track> |
1435 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1436 | | <language>English</language> |
1437 | | <abstract>[http://augeas.net/ Augeas] is a configuration editing tool. It parses configuration files in their native formats and transforms them into a tree. Configuration changes are made by manipulating this tree and saving it back into native config files.</abstract> |
1438 | | <description>One of the many things that makes Linux configuration management the minefield we all love is the lack of a local configuration API. The main culprit for this situation, that configuration data is generally stored in text files in a wide variety of formats, is both an important part of the Linux culture and valuable when humans need to make configuration changes manually. AUGEAS provides a local configuration API that presents configuration data as a tree. The tree is backed directly by the various config files as they exist today; modifications to the tree correspond directly to changes in the underlying files. |
1439 | | |
1440 | | AUGEAS takes great care to preserve comments and other formatting details across editing operations. The transformation from files into the tree and back is controlled by a description of the file's format, consisting of regular expressions and instructions on how to map matches into the tree. AUGEAS currently can be used through a command line tool, the C API, and from Ruby, Python, and OCaml. It also comes with descriptions for a good number of common Linux config files that can be edited "out-of-the-box."</description> |
1441 | | <persons> |
1442 | | <person id="575">Raphaël Pinson</person> |
1443 | | </persons> |
1444 | | <links> |
1445 | | <link href="http://augeas.net/">Augeas</link> |
1446 | | </links> |
1447 | | </event> |
1566 | | <tag>opensuse_create_your_own</tag> |
1567 | | <title>Create your own Linux Distribution</title> |
1568 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1569 | | <track>openSUSE</track> |
1570 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1571 | | <language>English</language> |
1572 | | <abstract>This talk will explain briefly how you create your own openSUSE based Linux distribution installation media and Live media with the openSUSE Build Service. |
1573 | | |
1574 | | It includes a brief introduction to kiwi-instsource (which was presented as an outlook last year) and the way we define products; how the buildservice creates an installation source from that.</abstract> |
1575 | | <description>= Gory details: |
1576 | | * kiwi in general (few minutes) |
1577 | | * kiwi-instsource: purpose, implementation, xml extension, metapackages (10-15 minutes) |
1578 | | * product definition file (5-10 minutes) |
1579 | | * plugging together: product converter, necessary permission, vision of the release process, target groups etc. (10-15 minutes) |
1580 | | |
1581 | | = Demo: |
1582 | | Jan-Christoph will demonstrate the following: |
1583 | | * setup your own project |
1584 | | * how to get this marked as product project |
1585 | | * how to set base repos |
1586 | | * how to define a product (package groups) |
1587 | | * build a product: instsource(ftp repo, dvd) and live medium</description> |
1588 | | <persons> |
1589 | | <person id="338">Jan-Christoph Bornschlegel</person> |
1590 | | </persons> |
1591 | | <links> |
1592 | | </links> |
1593 | | </event> |
1594 | | <event id="603"> |
1595 | | <start>17:00</start> |
| 1342 | <tag>kde_amarok</tag> |
| 1343 | <title>Amarok 2.2 Rocking</title> |
| 1344 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1345 | <track>KDE</track> |
| 1346 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1347 | <language>English</language> |
| 1348 | <abstract>Amarok rediscovers your music. It sorts and searchs through your collections, music devices and internet music services.</abstract> |
| 1349 | <description>Sven will take us through the latest features in this rocking application.</description> |
| 1350 | <persons> |
| 1351 | <person id="70">Sven Krohlas</person> |
| 1352 | </persons> |
| 1353 | <links> |
| 1354 | </links> |
| 1355 | </event> |
| 1356 | <event id="900"> |
| 1357 | <start>18:15</start> |
1598 | | <tag>opensuse_studio</tag> |
1599 | | <title>Creating customized openSUSE versions with SUSE Studio</title> |
1600 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1601 | | <track>openSUSE</track> |
1602 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1603 | | <language>English</language> |
1604 | | <abstract>SUSE Studio is a new web application to build openSUSE based appliances. It provides an easy to use interface to quickly create images for live CDs, |
1605 | | bootable USB sticks and VMware. It's also possible to conveniently customize software selection, configuration and theming of the appliances. Third party software may be integrated through coupling with the openSUSE Build Service.</abstract> |
1606 | | <description>Studio's testdrive feature allows users to run the appliance via the web interface for testing and further configuration. |
1607 | | |
1608 | | We will present the concepts behind SUSE Studio and demonstrate how to easily create a customized openSUSE version in five minutes.</description> |
1609 | | <persons> |
1610 | | <person id="549">Daniel Bornkessel</person> |
1611 | | <person id="135">Cornelius Schumacher</person> |
1612 | | </persons> |
1613 | | <links> |
1614 | | <link href="http://susestudio.com">SUSE Studio</link> |
1615 | | </links> |
1616 | | </event> |
1617 | | <event id="604"> |
1618 | | <start>17:45</start> |
1619 | | <duration>00:30</duration> |
1620 | | <room>H.2214</room> |
1621 | | <tag>opensuse_legal</tag> |
1622 | | <title>Legal aspects of distribution development</title> |
1623 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1624 | | <track>openSUSE</track> |
1625 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1626 | | <language>English</language> |
1627 | | <abstract>Every community distributions have to deal with legal issues. The talk shows what kind of pitfalls we have in our daily distribution work and how to solve them. This will only work with the upstream developers of the projects and most of the work will be done for every distribution again.</abstract> |
1628 | | <description></description> |
1629 | | <persons> |
1630 | | <person id="550">Jürgen Weigert</person> |
1631 | | </persons> |
1632 | | <links> |
1633 | | </links> |
1634 | | </event> |
1635 | | <event id="605"> |
1636 | | <start>18:15</start> |
1637 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
1638 | | <room>H.2214</room> |
1639 | | <tag>opensuse_apport</tag> |
1640 | | <title>Apport - Automatic Application Crash Reporting for openSUSE</title> |
1641 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1642 | | <track>openSUSE</track> |
1643 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1644 | | <language>English</language> |
1645 | | <abstract>Apport for automatic crash reporting on openSUSE.</abstract> |
1646 | | <description>Many application crashes remain unreported due to different reasons: |
1647 | | * the crash is silently ignored since no core file is produced |
1648 | | * existing crash handlers like bug-buddy or Dr. Konqi are desktop application specific |
1649 | | * the crash is not easy to reproduce |
1650 | | * the location to report the crash is unknown |
1651 | | |
1652 | | Apport gives you an easy way to solve these problems.</description> |
1653 | | <persons> |
1654 | | <person id="138">Jan Blunck</person> |
1655 | | </persons> |
1656 | | <links> |
1657 | | <link href="http://en.opensuse.org/Apport">Apport website</link> |
| 1360 | <tag>kde_es</tag> |
| 1361 | <title>KDE España</title> |
| 1362 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1363 | <track>KDE</track> |
| 1364 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1365 | <language>English</language> |
| 1366 | <abstract>KDE España is the society for KDE developers in Spain.</abstract> |
| 1367 | <description>Aleix will tell us what it does and why it exists.</description> |
| 1368 | <persons> |
| 1369 | <person id="725">Aleix Pol</person> |
| 1370 | </persons> |
| 1371 | <links> |
| 1372 | <link href="http://es.kde.org/">http://es.kde.org/</link> |
1704 | | <event id="723"> |
1705 | | <start>13:00</start> |
1706 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
1707 | | <room>AW1.117</room> |
1708 | | <tag>goe_gnustep_theming</tag> |
1709 | | <title>Theming in GNUstep</title> |
1710 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1711 | | <track>GNUstep+OpenGroupware+Etoile</track> |
1712 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1713 | | <language>English</language> |
1714 | | <abstract>A Presentation of the GNUstep theming API and the 'Thematic' application intended for building theme bundles.</abstract> |
1715 | | <description>This discusses design philosophy (what theming is supposed to accomplish), technical design (an overview of the implementation) and state of development.</description> |
1716 | | <persons> |
1717 | | <person id="623">Richard Frith-Macdonald</person> |
1718 | | </persons> |
1719 | | <links> |
1720 | | </links> |
1721 | | </event> |
1722 | | <event id="724"> |
1723 | | <start>14:00</start> |
1724 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
1725 | | <room>AW1.117</room> |
1726 | | <tag>geo_scalable_ogo</tag> |
1727 | | <title>ScalableOGo</title> |
1728 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1729 | | <track>GNUstep+OpenGroupware+Etoile</track> |
1730 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1731 | | <language>English</language> |
1732 | | <abstract>This presentation presents ScalableOGo, a standards compliant free software groupware server.</abstract> |
1733 | | <description>Scalable OGo (SOGo) is a free groupware server focused on scalability instead of depth in functionality. The web interface uses human readable URLs and can be accessed according to REST web service ideas. |
1734 | | |
1735 | | The server stores data in the iCalendar/vCard formats and has broad support for theCalDAV/GroupDAV protocols.</description> |
1736 | | <persons> |
1737 | | <person id="500">Helge Heß</person> |
1738 | | </persons> |
1739 | | <links> |
1740 | | </links> |
1741 | | </event> |
1742 | | <event id="725"> |
1743 | | <start>15:00</start> |
1744 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
1745 | | <room>AW1.117</room> |
1746 | | <tag>goe_objc_gnustep</tag> |
1747 | | <title>Cross-Platform Objective-C Development using GNUstep</title> |
1748 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1749 | | <track>GNUstep+OpenGroupware+Etoile</track> |
1750 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1751 | | <language>English</language> |
1752 | | <abstract>This presentation explores the free tools that the GNUstep project provides for writing cross-platform Objective-C software.</abstract> |
1753 | | <description>Objective-C is most known for being the language of choice of Apple and being the "native" language for Apple Mac OS X and iPhone development. Unfortunately, while Objective-C is a fantastic language, the development tools provided by Apple are designed to lock developers into a closed Apple-only environment. |
1754 | | |
1755 | | GNUstep provides an alternative, free implementation of the OpenStep specification (the core Objective-C libraries), largely compatible with the Apple Mac OS X Cocoa implementation, and a number of tools that allow Objective-C software |
1756 | | to be developed and easily distributed across a number of platforms, including GNU/Linux, *BSD, Apple Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows.</description> |
1757 | | <persons> |
1758 | | <person id="86">Nicola Pero</person> |
1759 | | </persons> |
1760 | | <links> |
1761 | | </links> |
1762 | | </event> |
1763 | | <event id="726"> |
1764 | | <start>16:00</start> |
1765 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
1766 | | <room>AW1.117</room> |
1767 | | <tag>geo_ws_objc</tag> |
1768 | | <title>Web Services in Objective-C</title> |
1769 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1770 | | <track>GNUstep+OpenGroupware+Etoile</track> |
1771 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1772 | | <language>English</language> |
1773 | | <abstract>An overview of web services and a free software implementation to make them easy Objective-C programmers (GNUstep and MacOS-X/Cocoa).</abstract> |
1774 | | <description>No need to resort to Java or C# frameworks now that we can use web services directly from a language we love.</description> |
1775 | | <persons> |
1776 | | <person id="624">Riccardo Mottola</person> |
1777 | | <person id="623">Richard Frith-Macdonald</person> |
1778 | | </persons> |
1779 | | <links> |
1780 | | </links> |
1781 | | </event> |
1782 | | <event id="727"> |
1783 | | <start>17:00</start> |
1784 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
1785 | | <room>AW1.117</room> |
1786 | | <tag>geo_etoile</tag> |
1787 | | <title>Etoilé</title> |
1788 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1789 | | <track>GNUstep+OpenGroupware+Etoile</track> |
1790 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1791 | | <language>English</language> |
1792 | | <abstract>[http://etoileos.com/etoile/ Etoile] is a Desktop Environment for Unix based on the GNUstep frameworks. |
1793 | | It focuses on the notions of modularity and small components, collaboration, persistence and flexibility.</abstract> |
1794 | | <description>In this talk I will present an overview of the project: its goals, concepts, and its current state.</description> |
1795 | | <persons> |
1796 | | <person id="92">Nicolas Roard</person> |
1797 | | </persons> |
1798 | | <links> |
1799 | | </links> |
1800 | | </event> |
1898 | | <tag>jabber_media_nets</tag> |
1899 | | <title>Personal Media Networks</title> |
1900 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1901 | | <track>Jabber+XMPP</track> |
1902 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1903 | | <language>English</language> |
1904 | | <abstract></abstract> |
1905 | | <description></description> |
1906 | | <persons> |
1907 | | <person id="590">Dirk Meyer</person> |
1908 | | </persons> |
1909 | | <links> |
1910 | | </links> |
1911 | | </event> |
1912 | | <event id="677"> |
1913 | | <start>16:30</start> |
1914 | | <duration>00:30</duration> |
1915 | | <room>AW1.120</room> |
1916 | | <tag>jabber_large_scale</tag> |
1917 | | <title>Large-Scale XMPP Deployments</title> |
1918 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1919 | | <track>Jabber+XMPP</track> |
1920 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1921 | | <language>English</language> |
1922 | | <abstract></abstract> |
1923 | | <description></description> |
1924 | | <persons> |
1925 | | <person id="591">Florian Jensen</person> |
1926 | | </persons> |
1927 | | <links> |
1928 | | </links> |
1929 | | </event> |
1930 | | <event id="678"> |
1931 | | <start>17:00</start> |
1932 | | <duration>00:30</duration> |
1933 | | <room>AW1.120</room> |
1934 | | <tag>jabber_real_life</tag> |
1935 | | <title>XMPP in Real Life</title> |
1936 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1937 | | <track>Jabber+XMPP</track> |
1938 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1939 | | <language>English</language> |
1940 | | <abstract>XMPP in real life: attacks, bad behaviour and how to cope with them.</abstract> |
1941 | | <description></description> |
1942 | | <persons> |
1943 | | <person id="206">Mickaël Rémond</person> |
1944 | | </persons> |
1945 | | <links> |
1946 | | </links> |
1947 | | </event> |
1948 | | <event id="679"> |
| 1489 | <tag>ooo_hidden_pearls</tag> |
| 1490 | <title>Hidden Pearls - What's There to ReUse for Other Projects</title> |
| 1491 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1492 | <track>OpenOffice.org</track> |
| 1493 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1494 | <language>English</language> |
| 1495 | <abstract>This session presents a few examples of uniquely useful code inside OOo, plus a way for other projects to mine those pearls.</abstract> |
| 1496 | <description>This rant http://blog.thebehrens.net/2008/09/29/ooo-non-vision/ (except for the ranting) pretty much conveys the ideas I want to present here</description> |
| 1497 | <persons> |
| 1498 | <person id="271">Thorsten Behrens</person> |
| 1499 | </persons> |
| 1500 | <links> |
| 1501 | <link href="http://blog.thebehrens.net/2008/09/29/ooo-non-vision/">http://blog.thebehrens.net/2008/09/29/ooo-non-vision/</link> |
| 1502 | </links> |
| 1503 | </event> |
| 1504 | <event id="953"> |
1970 | | <tag>jabber_lightning_talks</tag> |
1971 | | <title>Lightning Talks!</title> |
1972 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1973 | | <track>Jabber+XMPP</track> |
1974 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1975 | | <language>English</language> |
1976 | | <abstract>BoFs, lightning talks around Jabber/XMPP.</abstract> |
1977 | | <description></description> |
1978 | | <persons> |
1979 | | <person id="22">Peter Saint-Andre</person> |
| 1526 | <tag>odf_server</tag> |
| 1527 | <title>ODF on the server - ODFDOM architecture</title> |
| 1528 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1529 | <track>OpenOffice.org</track> |
| 1530 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1531 | <language>English</language> |
| 1532 | <abstract>ODFDOM is the name of the free OpenDocument framework, which was recently published in version 0.75 to support ODF 1.2.</abstract> |
| 1533 | <description>Its overall purpose is to provide the ODF developer community a lightweight programming API in order to easily access and manipulate ODF documents. With its version 0.75, ODFDOM supports all ODF 1.2 elements and attributes, generated from the OpenDocument RelaxNG schema directly into the Java source code. The upcoming presentation will give an overview over the architecture, design ideas and in addition deliver insights about the roadmap and upcoming features.</description> |
| 1534 | <persons> |
| 1535 | <person id="753">Svante Schubert</person> |
| 1536 | </persons> |
| 1537 | <links> |
| 1538 | <link href="http://odftoolkit.org/projects/odfdom/pages/Home">http://odftoolkit.org/projects/odfdom/pages/Home</link> |
| 1539 | </links> |
| 1540 | </event> |
| 1541 | <event id="955"> |
| 1542 | <start>18:30</start> |
| 1543 | <duration>00:30</duration> |
| 1544 | <room>AW1.120</room> |
| 1545 | <tag>odf_lpod</tag> |
| 1546 | <title>lpOD – languages & platforms OpenDocument</title> |
| 1547 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1548 | <track>OpenOffice.org</track> |
| 1549 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1550 | <language>English</language> |
| 1551 | <abstract>Presentation of the lpOD -- languages & platforms OpenDocument</abstract> |
| 1552 | <description>lpOD, is a Free Software project that offers, for high level use cases, an application programming interface dedicated to document processing with the Python, Perl and Ruby languages. It’s complying with the Open Document Format (ODF).</description> |
| 1553 | <persons> |
| 1554 | <person id="754">Luis Belmar-Letelier</person> |
1986 | | <event id="702"> |
| 1561 | <event id="999"> |
| 1562 | <start>13:00</start> |
| 1563 | <duration>00:15</duration> |
| 1564 | <room>AW1.121</room> |
| 1565 | <tag>pgsql_welcome</tag> |
| 1566 | <title>Welcome to the PostgreSQL devroom</title> |
| 1567 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1568 | <track>PostgreSQL</track> |
| 1569 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1570 | <language>English</language> |
| 1571 | <abstract></abstract> |
| 1572 | <description></description> |
| 1573 | <persons> |
| 1574 | <person id="631">Andreas Scherbaum</person> |
| 1575 | </persons> |
| 1576 | <links> |
| 1577 | </links> |
| 1578 | </event> |
| 1579 | <event id="1000"> |
| 1580 | <start>13:15</start> |
| 1581 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 1582 | <room>AW1.121</room> |
| 1583 | <tag>pgsql_8_5</tag> |
| 1584 | <title>Developments in PostgreSQL 8.5</title> |
| 1585 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1586 | <track>PostgreSQL</track> |
| 1587 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1588 | <language>English</language> |
| 1589 | <abstract>This talk will briefly examine the development process used by the PostgreSQL project over the last year, and take a look back at the new features that have been committed to the source tree for the upcoming 8.5 release, as well as some of those currently in development.</abstract> |
| 1590 | <description></description> |
| 1591 | <persons> |
| 1592 | <person id="635">Dave Page</person> |
| 1593 | </persons> |
| 1594 | <links> |
| 1595 | </links> |
| 1596 | </event> |
| 1597 | <event id="1001"> |
| 1598 | <start>14:15</start> |
| 1599 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 1600 | <room>AW1.121</room> |
| 1601 | <tag>pgsql_streaming_rep</tag> |
| 1602 | <title>Streaming replication under the hood</title> |
| 1603 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1604 | <track>PostgreSQL</track> |
| 1605 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1606 | <language>English</language> |
| 1607 | <abstract>In this talk, we're going to peek under the hood of the new Streaming Replication feature.</abstract> |
| 1608 | <description>I am going to introduce the concepts of WAL receiver and sender, how they communicate over the network, how they interact with the rest of the server etc. I'm also going to cover advanced setups like multiple slaves, cascading slaves, and WAL archiving from a slave.</description> |
| 1609 | <persons> |
| 1610 | <person id="418">Heikki Linnakangas</person> |
| 1611 | </persons> |
| 1612 | <links> |
| 1613 | </links> |
| 1614 | </event> |
| 1615 | <event id="1002"> |
| 1616 | <start>15:15</start> |
| 1617 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 1618 | <room>AW1.121</room> |
| 1619 | <tag>pgsql_hot_standby</tag> |
| 1620 | <title>Hot Standby Live</title> |
| 1621 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1622 | <track>PostgreSQL</track> |
| 1623 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1624 | <language>English</language> |
| 1625 | <abstract>Live demo of Hot Standby, plus discussion of various features and difficulties. Requests for prioritisation of new feature development, with round table discussion and voting.</abstract> |
| 1626 | <description></description> |
| 1627 | <persons> |
| 1628 | <person id="406">Simon Riggs</person> |
| 1629 | </persons> |
| 1630 | <links> |
| 1631 | </links> |
| 1632 | </event> |
| 1633 | <event id="1003"> |
| 1634 | <start>16:15</start> |
| 1635 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 1636 | <room>AW1.121</room> |
| 1637 | <tag>pgsql_beyond_unique</tag> |
| 1638 | <title>Beyond UNIQUE: Exclusion constraints in PostgreSQL 8.5</title> |
| 1639 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1640 | <track>PostgreSQL</track> |
| 1641 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1642 | <language>English</language> |
| 1643 | <abstract>Magnus presents the new "Exclusion Constraints" feature that has been added in PostgreSQL 8.5</abstract> |
| 1644 | <description>A core feature of a relational database is being able to define constraints on the data, and have the database enforce those constraints. Today, there exists only one kind of constraint that will look at a combination of more than one row in a table - the UNIQUE constraint, often used as a tables PRIMARY KEY. This constraint makes sure no two rows have the same combination of values in the specified columns. But many datamodels contain completely different constraints, such as requiring non-overlapping ranges. For example, the requirement that a resource such as a conference room is not double booked. |
| 1645 | |
| 1646 | PostgreSQL 8.5 introduces the feature Exclusion Constraints, and this talk will present this feature and how to use it to solve this type of problem with a declarative constraint - while maintaining performance and concurrency in the system.</description> |
| 1647 | <persons> |
| 1648 | <person id="415">Magnus Hagander</person> |
| 1649 | </persons> |
| 1650 | <links> |
| 1651 | </links> |
| 1652 | </event> |
| 1653 | <event id="1004"> |
| 1654 | <start>17:15</start> |
| 1655 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 1656 | <room>AW1.121</room> |
| 1657 | <tag>pgsql_basel_zoo</tag> |
| 1658 | <title>PostgreSQL at the Heart of the Basel Zoo POS</title> |
| 1659 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1660 | <track>PostgreSQL</track> |
| 1661 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1662 | <language>English</language> |
| 1663 | <abstract>Elephants and Other Wild Animals: PostgreSQL at the Heart of the Ticketing Point of Sale in the Basel Zoo</abstract> |
| 1664 | <description>For 134 years the Basel Zoo, one of the most renowned and beautiful zoos in europe, has sold entrance ticket by hand. A simple roll of paper tickets and manual book keeping where all that was there. Being a legal incorporated, law forced them to introduce an electronic point of sale system. First of January 2009, the system went into production and, unlike in other Zoos, worked without any problems right from the start. It is now in production for a year and has proven extremly stable and efficient. |
| 1665 | |
| 1666 | The PostgreSQL database is at the heart of the point of sale application and in this presentation Marc Balmer will show how PostgreSQL helped to create an enterprise grade application database which is accessed by different client applications in a distributed network, including low-bandwidth network links. The overall application architecture will be discussed and how PL/PGSQL helped to keep the business logic in the database itself, leveraging client complexity. Details will be given about the Motif based POS application, written in pure C and extended in Lua, as well as the backoffice which is web based and implemented in C and Lua. The presentation is aimed at programmers that want to include PostgreSQL in their application portfolio as well as decision makers that have to decide upon a strategic database platform for their products.</description> |
| 1667 | <persons> |
| 1668 | <person id="632">Marc Balmer</person> |
| 1669 | </persons> |
| 1670 | <links> |
| 1671 | </links> |
| 1672 | </event> |
| 1673 | <event id="1005"> |
| 1674 | <start>18:15</start> |
| 1675 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 1676 | <room>AW1.121</room> |
| 1677 | <tag>pgsql_most_wanted</tag> |
| 1678 | <title>Most Wanted: Future PostgreSQL Features</title> |
| 1679 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1680 | <track>PostgreSQL</track> |
| 1681 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1682 | <language>English</language> |
| 1683 | <abstract>Based on user feedback, I will discuss the most requested features for PostgreSQL, their implementation status, difficulties, blockers, and future plans. Items include replication, materialized views, parallel queries, in-place upgrade. The audience is invited to join the discussion.</abstract> |
| 1684 | <description></description> |
| 1685 | <persons> |
| 1686 | <person id="616">Peter Eisentraut</person> |
| 1687 | </persons> |
| 1688 | <links> |
| 1689 | </links> |
| 1690 | </event> |
| 1691 | </room> |
| 1692 | <room name="AW1.124"> |
| 1693 | <event id="1028"> |
1989 | | <room>AW1.121</room> |
1990 | | <tag>debian_video_team</tag> |
1991 | | <title>Outside broadcast on a budget - the DebConf video team and DVswitch</title> |
1992 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
1993 | | <track>Debian</track> |
1994 | | <type>Podium</type> |
1995 | | <language>English</language> |
1996 | | <abstract>We discuss the provisions of video coverage of [http://www.debconf.org/ DebConf] and Debian mini-conferences, starting in 2005. In particular, we describe the development of supporting software from simple scripts to a software video mixer and database of recordings with a web front-end.</abstract> |
1997 | | <description></description> |
1998 | | <persons> |
1999 | | <person id="608">Ben Hutchings</person> |
2000 | | <person id="163">Holger Levsen</person> |
2001 | | </persons> |
2002 | | <links> |
2003 | | <link href="http://dvswitch.alioth.debian.org/wiki/">DVswitch</link> |
2004 | | </links> |
2005 | | </event> |
2006 | | <event id="703"> |
2007 | | <start>14:00</start> |
2008 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
2009 | | <room>AW1.121</room> |
2010 | | <tag>debian_ultimate_database</tag> |
2011 | | <title>Ultimate Debian Database: datamining Debian made easy!</title> |
2012 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2013 | | <track>Debian</track> |
2014 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2015 | | <language>English</language> |
2016 | | <abstract>Ultimate Debian Database (UDD) gathers a lot of data about various aspects of Debian in an SQL database. It allows users to easily access and combine all this data.</abstract> |
2017 | | <description>We will describe the current status of UDD, explain how you can make use of it, and give some examples of cool stuff that you can already learn about Debian using it and ways it could be used to improve Quality Assurance in Debian</description> |
2018 | | <persons> |
2019 | | <person id="609">Stefano Zacchiroli</person> |
2020 | | <person id="152">Lucas Nussbaum</person> |
2021 | | </persons> |
2022 | | <links> |
2023 | | </links> |
2024 | | </event> |
2025 | | <event id="704"> |
2026 | | <start>15:00</start> |
2027 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
2028 | | <room>AW1.121</room> |
2029 | | <tag>debian_data_export</tag> |
2030 | | <title>Introducing DDE, Debian Data Export</title> |
2031 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2032 | | <track>Debian</track> |
2033 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2034 | | <language>English</language> |
2035 | | <abstract>DDE (Debian Data Export) is a simple interface to remotely access Debian information.</abstract> |
2036 | | <description>It is designed to be simple to query, and to back the implementation of nice things such as package name autocompletion on all input fields in Debian web pages, or to make more data easily available to Debian utilities and package managers. |
2037 | | |
2038 | | On top of all that, it is a RESTful Web 2.0 middleware designed to enable AJAX mashups. What more can you ask? Come and have a look.</description> |
2039 | | <persons> |
2040 | | <person id="158">Enrico Zini</person> |
2041 | | </persons> |
2042 | | <links> |
2043 | | </links> |
2044 | | </event> |
2045 | | <event id="706"> |
2046 | | <start>16:00</start> |
2047 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
2048 | | <room>AW1.121</room> |
2049 | | <tag>debian_openmoko</tag> |
2050 | | <title>The Debian status quo on the Openmoko Neo Freerunner</title> |
2051 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2052 | | <track>Debian</track> |
2053 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2054 | | <language>English</language> |
2055 | | <abstract>Because Debian calls itself "the universal operating system", it was inevitable that it would have come to the first F/LOSS-friendly mobile phone, the Openmoko Neo FreeRunner.</abstract> |
2056 | | <description>Debian on the Openmoko FreeRunner is not a new port nor a new distribution, but instead a different underlying system for the various Openmoko distributions (originally based on OpenEmbedded). At the moment the Debian FreeSmartphone.Org team has focused its works mainly on the FreeSmartphone.Org stack, which is intended not only for the Openmoko devices, but as a general stack for all mobile phones.</description> |
2057 | | <persons> |
2058 | | <person id="610">Luca Capello</person> |
2059 | | </persons> |
2060 | | <links> |
2061 | | </links> |
2062 | | </event> |
2063 | | <event id="705"> |
2064 | | <start>17:00</start> |
2065 | | <duration>00:30</duration> |
2066 | | <room>AW1.121</room> |
2067 | | <tag>debian_nas</tag> |
2068 | | <title>Running Debian on Inexpensive Network Storage Devices</title> |
2069 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2070 | | <track>Debian</track> |
2071 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2072 | | <language>English</language> |
2073 | | <abstract>Network Storage Devices (NAS) are gaining popularity and are available quite inexpensively. For most customers, they are basically just a hard drive that you connect to the network for file storage. In reality, these devices are complete, even if fairly low-end, computers - and Debian can be installed on some of them.</abstract> |
2074 | | <description>This talk will discuss a number of devices that are currently supported and cover some platforms that may be supported in the future.</description> |
2075 | | <persons> |
2076 | | <person id="160">Martin Michlmayr</person> |
2077 | | </persons> |
2078 | | <links> |
2079 | | </links> |
2080 | | </event> |
2081 | | <event id="707"> |
2082 | | <start>17:30</start> |
2083 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
2084 | | <room>AW1.121</room> |
2085 | | <tag>debian_grid</tag> |
2086 | | <title>Grid Computing with Debian, Globus and ARC</title> |
2087 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2088 | | <track>Debian</track> |
2089 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2090 | | <language>English</language> |
2091 | | <abstract>Grid Computing with Debian, Globus and ARC - collaborations in high-performance computing beyond programming and packaging.</abstract> |
2092 | | <description>Debian is known for being developed from its userbase. The individuals mutually trust each other, implemented mechanisms for peer review and have the technical support for authorisation and authentication. This way, the workload to provide the software packages for the compute infrastructure is shouldered by many individuals. Grid computing takes this collaboration further. Here, research groups offer access to their local resources not only to other research groups, but they may even grant the right to admit users to virtual organisations - much like the Debian keyring. |
2093 | | |
2094 | | The presentation presents an overview on current grid middleware and computational grids established. The Globus grid middleware and its Debian packaging are explained, together with the packages of the Advanced Resource Connector (ARC). |
2095 | | |
2096 | | Today, the most usecases of the technology are the sharing of the computational resources like plain compute power or storage. With the advent of these packages in the Debian main distribution, the adoption of these packages is expected to become more of a commodity to exchange computational workflows, share the burden to maintain rapidly changing data, or control the limited access to special hardware. |
2097 | | |
2098 | | The speakers are researchers at the Universities of Copenhagen, Lübeck and Uppsala. With funds from several national and international projects in high-energy physics or grid computing, the three are contributing to the development of the ARC grid middleware - and for the provisioning of its Debian packages.</description> |
2099 | | <persons> |
2100 | | <person id="612">Anders Wäänänen</person> |
2101 | | <person id="611">Steffen Möller</person> |
2102 | | <person id="613">Mattias Ellert</person> |
2103 | | </persons> |
2104 | | <links> |
2105 | | </links> |
2106 | | </event> |
2107 | | <event id="708"> |
2108 | | <start>18:15</start> |
2109 | | <duration>00:45</duration> |
2110 | | <room>AW1.121</room> |
2111 | | <tag>debian_dpl</tag> |
2112 | | <title>What does the DPL do?</title> |
2113 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2114 | | <track>Debian</track> |
2115 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2116 | | <language>English</language> |
2117 | | <abstract>After being the person in the hot seat for most of a year, Steve wants to give some details about how the job works and how he thinks it should work.</abstract> |
2118 | | <description>This is *not* meant to be an early start to an election campaign, but instead an objective discussion of the role of the DPL within the Debian Project.</description> |
2119 | | <persons> |
2120 | | <person id="614">Steve McIntyre</person> |
2121 | | </persons> |
2122 | | <links> |
2123 | | </links> |
2124 | | </event> |
2125 | | </room> |
2126 | | <room name="AW1.124"> |
2127 | | <event id="536"> |
2128 | | <start>13:00</start> |
2129 | | <duration>00:15</duration> |
2225 | | <tag>ada_annex_e</tag> |
2226 | | <title>Ada Annex E - Distributed Systems</title> |
2227 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2228 | | <track>Ada</track> |
2229 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2230 | | <language>English</language> |
2231 | | <abstract>The [http://www.adaic.com/standards/05rm/html/RM-E.html Distributed Systems Annex] is an optional part of the Ada language that allows writing programs that are distributed across several computers.</abstract> |
2232 | | <description>Each "partition" of the program, running on one machine, communicates with the others by means of remote procedure calls and shared data structures. Ada provides facilities to make this communication completely transparent to the programmer. Thanks to it, writing a distributed program is no more complex than writing a monolithic one. Indeed, it is possible to recompile a distributed program to make it either distributed or monolithic with no changes to the program source. There are two Free Software implementations of Annex E for GNAT, the GNU Ada compiler: GLADE and its successor [https://libre.adacore.com/polyorb PolyORB], both licensed under terms of the GPL.</description> |
2233 | | <persons> |
2234 | | <person id="505">Thomas Quinot</person> |
2235 | | </persons> |
2236 | | <links> |
2237 | | </links> |
2238 | | </event> |
2239 | | <event id="541"> |
2240 | | <start>18:00</start> |
2241 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
2242 | | <room>AW1.124</room> |
2243 | | <tag>ada_narval</tag> |
2244 | | <title>NARVAL - Distributed Data Acquisition from Particle</title> |
2245 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2246 | | <track>Ada</track> |
2247 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2248 | | <language>English</language> |
2249 | | <abstract>NARVAL stands for "Nouvelle Acquisition temps Reel Version 1.6 Avec Linux". It is a distributed data acquisition software system that collects and processes data from nuclear and particles physics detectors.</abstract> |
2250 | | <description>NARVAL replaces an older system based on C, Fortran and proprietary technologies with Ada and Debian GNU/Linux and is itself Free Software. In order to ensure maximum data safety most of the program is written in Ada with heavy use of Annex E, the Distributed Systems Annex. Software engineers and physicists from several countries use this system for fundamental research. The talk will present the NARVAL architecture in detail with some focus on the multi-tasking dataflow core and the configuration done through Annex E.</description> |
2251 | | <persons> |
2252 | | <person id="506">Xavier Grave</person> |
2253 | | </persons> |
2254 | | <links> |
2255 | | <link href="http://www.in2p3.fr">Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique</link> |
| 1770 | <tag>coreboot_flashrom</tag> |
| 1771 | <title>Flashrom, the universal flash tool</title> |
| 1772 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1773 | <track>coreboot</track> |
| 1774 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1775 | <language>English</language> |
| 1776 | <abstract>Flashrom is the open source utility of choice to identify, read, write, verify and erase flash chips.</abstract> |
| 1777 | <description>It is commonly used to flash BIOSes from under Linux, *BSD, OpenSolaris and Mac OS X, but it also has the ability to reflash graphics cards, SATA controllers, network cards and one game console. A wide variety of external programmers is supported as well, from ultra-cheap homemade setups to high end commercial machines. |
| 1778 | Hotflashing and crossflashing complete the feature set. |
| 1779 | |
| 1780 | This talk introduces flashrom, and explains its structure and implementation. Common issues and future directions are explained, and even a demonstration will be given.</description> |
| 1781 | <persons> |
| 1782 | <person id="797">Carl-Daniel Hailfinger</person> |
| 1783 | </persons> |
| 1784 | <links> |
2270 | | <abstract>A summary of the past year's accomplishments, some views on what remains to be done, and a look ahead to the content of JDK 7 and the process by which it will be developed.</abstract> |
2271 | | <description>And where are we with OpenJDK 6 today and where will we go tomorrow? The origins and initial design decision of the project will be discussed and well as possible future directions of the project.</description> |
2272 | | <persons> |
2273 | | <person id="559">Joe Darcy</person> |
2274 | | <person id="113">Mark Reinhold</person> |
2275 | | </persons> |
2276 | | <links> |
2277 | | </links> |
2278 | | </event> |
2279 | | <event id="648"> |
2280 | | <start>13:45</start> |
2281 | | <duration>00:30</duration> |
2282 | | <room>AW1.125</room> |
2283 | | <tag>java_jigsaw</tag> |
2284 | | <title>Project Jigsaw</title> |
2285 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2286 | | <track>Free Java</track> |
2287 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2288 | | <language>English</language> |
2289 | | <abstract>One of the most significant changes in JDK 7 will be to modularize the code base, to modularize the platform, and to enable the modularization of applications, all via [http://blogs.sun.com/mr/entry/jigsaw Project Jigsaw].</abstract> |
2290 | | <description>Mark will discuss how the introduction of language-level modules, in concert with corresponding updates to the tool chain and the runtime environment, should to allow applications and libraries written in Java to be distributed as sensible and familiar [http://blogs.sun.com/mr/entry/packaging_java_code distro-specific packages].</description> |
2291 | | <persons> |
2292 | | <person id="113">Mark Reinhold</person> |
2293 | | </persons> |
2294 | | <links> |
2295 | | <link href="http://blogs.sun.com/mr/entry/jigsaw">Project Jigsaw</link> |
2296 | | <link href="http://blogs.sun.com/mr/entry/packaging_java_code">http://blogs.sun.com/mr/entry/packaging_java_code</link> |
2297 | | </links> |
2298 | | </event> |
2299 | | <event id="649"> |
2300 | | <start>14:15</start> |
2301 | | <duration>00:30</duration> |
2302 | | <room>AW1.125</room> |
2303 | | <tag>java_small_changes</tag> |
2304 | | <title>Small Language Changes</title> |
2305 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2306 | | <track>Free Java</track> |
2307 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2308 | | <language>English</language> |
2309 | | <abstract>In addition to modularity support, JDK 7 is also planned to have a number of small language changes. Unlike previous JSRs to change the Java programming language, this project will be taking input from a public call for proposals phase.</abstract> |
2310 | | <description>Joe will be talking about criteria developed to evaluate language changes and the current status of the project.</description> |
2311 | | <persons> |
2312 | | <person id="559">Joe Darcy</person> |
2313 | | </persons> |
2314 | | <links> |
2315 | | </links> |
2316 | | </event> |
2317 | | <event id="650"> |
| 1799 | <abstract>The talk wants to give a brief overview of the current state and recent trends of Java packaging in Debian.</abstract> |
| 1800 | <description>Around half of the time should be reserved for discussions and coordination between attending developers of Linux distributions and upstream projects. |
| 1801 | |
| 1802 | A wiki site is used to collect discussion points beforehand: [http://wiki.debian.org/Java/DevJam/2010/FosdemProposedTalks/JavaPackaging]</description> |
| 1803 | <persons> |
| 1804 | <person id="293">Thomas Koch</person> |
| 1805 | </persons> |
| 1806 | <links> |
| 1807 | <link href="http://wiki.debian.org/Java/DevJam/2010/FosdemProposedTalks/JavaPackaging">http://wiki.debian.org/Java/DevJam/2010/FosdemProposedTalks/JavaPackaging</link> |
| 1808 | </links> |
| 1809 | </event> |
| 1810 | <event id="869"> |
2424 | | <abstract>This talk will present status and usage of OpenGL ES in the embedded Java world.</abstract> |
2425 | | <description>* Available OpenGL ES implementations and Java bindings |
2426 | | * Compatibility with existing Java environments |
2427 | | * Application development with OpenGL ES: games and clutter-like user interfaces |
2428 | | * OpenGL ES as backend for graphical libraries (MIDP, LWUIT, AWT)</description> |
2429 | | <persons> |
2430 | | <person id="287">Guillaume Legris</person> |
2431 | | </persons> |
2432 | | <links> |
2433 | | </links> |
2434 | | </event> |
2435 | | <event id="655"> |
2436 | | <start>17:45</start> |
2437 | | <duration>00:30</duration> |
2438 | | <room>AW1.125</room> |
2439 | | <tag>java_xrender</tag> |
2440 | | <title>XRender Java2D Pipeline</title> |
2441 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2442 | | <track>Free Java</track> |
2443 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2444 | | <language>English</language> |
2445 | | <abstract>- Overview over the current X11 pipeline and xorg enhancements and the problems they cause for Java. |
2446 | | - Short introduction into XRender's features and how it maps to Java2D's functionality. |
2447 | | - Presentation of the existing Java/C based implementation that was created at the OpenJDK Challenge |
2448 | | - Future development, goals and design of the new pure Java based pipeline.</abstract> |
2449 | | <description></description> |
2450 | | <persons> |
2451 | | <person id="561">Clemens Eisserer</person> |
2452 | | </persons> |
2453 | | <links> |
2454 | | <link href="http://78.31.67.79:8080/jxrender/">http://78.31.67.79:8080/jxrender/</link> |
2455 | | <link href="http://linuxhippy.blogspot.com/">Blog</link> |
2456 | | </links> |
2457 | | </event> |
2458 | | <event id="656"> |
2459 | | <start>18:15</start> |
2460 | | <duration>00:30</duration> |
2461 | | <room>AW1.125</room> |
2462 | | <tag>java_gervill</tag> |
2463 | | <title>Gervill Software Synthesizer</title> |
2464 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2465 | | <track>Free Java</track> |
2466 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2467 | | <language>English</language> |
2468 | | <abstract>The [https://gervill.dev.java.net/ Gervill Software Synthesizer].</abstract> |
2469 | | <description>* How it began |
2470 | | * History of progress |
2471 | | * Performance |
2472 | | * Future improvements |
2473 | | |
2474 | | And if possible some demonstrations.</description> |
2475 | | <persons> |
2476 | | <person id="562">Karl Helgason</person> |
2477 | | </persons> |
2478 | | <links> |
| 1882 | <abstract>Java web development is often based on a growing stack of software layers. This increasing complexity is impacting productivity and causing frustration of developers in each step of development, maintenance and deployment. The Play framework aims to bring back the fun with a simpler and cleaner stack, introducing conventions over configuration and encouraging RESTful architectures.</abstract> |
| 1883 | <description>Version 1.0 have been released in October 2009 under the Apache 2 Licence. We will present the framework, explain and demonstrate how it is used to develop web applications, and introduce the vision and roadmap for the next versions.</description> |
| 1884 | <persons> |
| 1885 | <person id="711">Erwan Loisant</person> |
| 1886 | </persons> |
| 1887 | <links> |
| 1888 | <link href="http://www.playframework.org/">http://www.playframework.org/</link> |
2483 | | <event id="767"> |
2484 | | <start>13:00</start> |
2485 | | <duration>00:15</duration> |
2486 | | <room>AW1.126</room> |
2487 | | <tag>ooo_welcome</tag> |
2488 | | <title>Welcome to the OpenOffice.org devroom</title> |
2489 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2490 | | <track>OpenOffice.org</track> |
2491 | | <type>Other</type> |
2492 | | <language>English</language> |
2493 | | <abstract>Welcome to the OpenOffice.org developer room at FOSDEM 2010.</abstract> |
2494 | | <description></description> |
2495 | | <persons> |
2496 | | <person id="272">Jürgen Schmidt</person> |
2497 | | </persons> |
2498 | | <links> |
2499 | | </links> |
2500 | | </event> |
2501 | | <event id="717"> |
2502 | | <start>13:15</start> |
2503 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
2504 | | <room>AW1.126</room> |
2505 | | <tag>ooo_uno</tag> |
2506 | | <title>UNO: Anecdotal Evidence</title> |
2507 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2508 | | <track>OpenOffice.org</track> |
2509 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2510 | | <language>English</language> |
2511 | | <abstract>UNO is the object model underlying OpenOffice.org. With its by now long and winding history, this might be a good time to reflect on its design and implementation, its shortcomings and strengths.</abstract> |
2512 | | <description>In this talk we will look at details in various areas of UNO, tell the occasional anecdote, and generally have fun.</description> |
2513 | | <persons> |
2514 | | <person id="270">Stephan Bergmann</person> |
2515 | | </persons> |
2516 | | <links> |
2517 | | </links> |
2518 | | </event> |
2519 | | <event id="718"> |
2520 | | <start>14:15</start> |
2521 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
2522 | | <room>AW1.126</room> |
2523 | | <tag>ooo_java</tag> |
2524 | | <title>Introduction to Java development with OpenOffice.org</title> |
2525 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2526 | | <track>OpenOffice.org</track> |
2527 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2528 | | <language>English</language> |
2529 | | <abstract>OpenOffice.org entry barrier is quite high - people need lot of time to learn how to develop for the OpenOffice.org. This talk is more or less theoretical and it tries to cover all possible areas.</abstract> |
2530 | | <description>We will define common terms, describe UNO Java bridge, go through documentation and explain how to read it, where to find information we need. Introspection interface with tool examples will be described too. And finally, we will take a look at the OpenOffice.org on the server. This talk should lower entry barrier for developers and prepare them for OpenOffice.org development.</description> |
2531 | | <persons> |
2532 | | <person id="620">Robert Vojta</person> |
2533 | | </persons> |
2534 | | <links> |
2535 | | </links> |
2536 | | </event> |
2537 | | <event id="719"> |
2538 | | <start>15:15</start> |
2539 | | <duration>02:00</duration> |
2540 | | <room>AW1.126</room> |
2541 | | <tag>ooo_extensions_in_java</tag> |
2542 | | <title>OpenOffice.org Extensions in Java – do it yourself</title> |
2543 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2544 | | <track>OpenOffice.org</track> |
2545 | | <type>Workshop</type> |
2546 | | <language>English</language> |
2547 | | <abstract>The workshop focused on the creation of an extension in Java with the OpenOffice.org API plugin for NetBeans. The attendees can choose if they want to create a smart tag, or an options page demo or if they want to create a weather forecast demo.</abstract> |
2548 | | <description>Two of the demos make use of external functionality and show how easy it can be to make use of web services or external libraries. The attendees will by guided through a detailed tutorial and will create their extension of choice step by step. |
2549 | | Ideally the attendees should bring their own laptop into the workshop. And they should have installed NetBeans 6.5, Java 1.6, OpenOfice.org and the OpenOffice.org SDK. A CD with installation programs for the common platforms and the whole workshop material will be available in the workshop room as well. |
2550 | | |
2551 | | If you have no laptop, no problem watch your neighbour over the shoulder and work together. Or simply listen and watch what the speaker is doing ;-)</description> |
2552 | | <persons> |
2553 | | <person id="272">Jürgen Schmidt</person> |
2554 | | </persons> |
2555 | | <links> |
2556 | | </links> |
2557 | | </event> |
2558 | | <event id="720"> |
2559 | | <start>17:15</start> |
2560 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
2561 | | <room>AW1.126</room> |
2562 | | <tag>ooo_gfx_hackers</tag> |
2563 | | <title>Layout & Canvas & Slideshow - selected topics for the graphics hackers</title> |
2564 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2565 | | <track>OpenOffice.org</track> |
2566 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2567 | | <language>English</language> |
2568 | | <abstract>This talk will give an introduction to areas inside OOo amenable to graphics hackers - stuff that has the desirable property of instant visual gratification.</abstract> |
2569 | | <description>Layout: there's currently work underway to give OOo's dialogs an auto-layouting facility. Besides work on the layouting core, there's also help solicited for converting existing dialogs to the new layout-enabled scheme. |
2570 | | |
2571 | | Canvas: the new OOo rendering subsystem, and what it can do; showing a prototype of an OpenGL-based implementation plus pointers where interested hackers can start helping Slideshow: probably the easiest way to make an impact to millions of OOo users is to code another Impress 3D slide transition – here's how to do that.</description> |
2572 | | <persons> |
2573 | | <person id="271">Thorsten Behrens</person> |
2574 | | </persons> |
2575 | | <links> |
2576 | | </links> |
2577 | | </event> |
2578 | | <event id="788"> |
2579 | | <start>18:15</start> |
2580 | | <duration>00:30</duration> |
2581 | | <room>AW1.126</room> |
2582 | | <tag>ooo_bug_hunting</tag> |
2583 | | <title>OOo Bug hunting and fixing</title> |
2584 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2585 | | <track>OpenOffice.org</track> |
2586 | | <type>Workshop</type> |
2587 | | <language>English</language> |
2588 | | <abstract></abstract> |
2589 | | <description></description> |
2590 | | <persons> |
2591 | | <person id="272">Jürgen Schmidt</person> |
2592 | | </persons> |
2593 | | <links> |
2594 | | </links> |
2595 | | </event> |
2644 | | <tag>cobbler_koan</tag> |
2645 | | <title>Cobbler & Koan</title> |
2646 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2647 | | <track>Systems</track> |
2648 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2649 | | <language>English</language> |
2650 | | <abstract>During this talk, we aim to give you an overview of the Cobbler project, |
2651 | | explain where we'd like to see it going and explain a few use cases.</abstract> |
2652 | | <description>Cobbler is an installation server, written in Python, which allows for rapid |
2653 | | deployment (and re-deployment) of large amounts of physical and virtual |
2654 | | machines by defining distributions, repositories, profiles and systems as |
2655 | | objects. It's easy to get started with Cobbler, but we ship a lot of |
2656 | | advanced features to make it as versatile as possible, so you won't get |
2657 | | bored with it.</description> |
2658 | | <persons> |
2659 | | <person id="572">Robert Lazzurs</person> |
2660 | | <person id="573">Jasper Capel</person> |
2661 | | </persons> |
2662 | | <links> |
2663 | | <link href="https://fedorahosted.org/cobbler/">Cobbler project</link> |
2664 | | </links> |
2665 | | </event> |
2666 | | <event id="495"> |
| 1941 | <tag>reprap</tag> |
| 1942 | <title>RepRap - Manufacturing for the Masses</title> |
| 1943 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1944 | <track>Various</track> |
| 1945 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1946 | <language>English</language> |
| 1947 | <abstract>This talk will start by briefly introducing RepRap - the replicating rapid prototyper.</abstract> |
| 1948 | <description>The talk will then look at how a growth of replicator technology may change economic activity, society, and the nature of wealth. Material costs for a RepRap are currently about 350 EUR. That means that RepRap is accessible to small communities in the developing world as well as to individuals in the developed world. The designs for the RepRap machine are being is distributed free to everyone using the GPL - so people can copy the machines to their friends without limit. |
| 1949 | |
| 1950 | Finally it will examine replicator technology in the biological context, considering both it and human beings to be collaborating and competing replicators in a Darwinian ecology</description> |
| 1951 | <persons> |
| 1952 | <person id="677">Adrian Bowyer</person> |
| 1953 | </persons> |
| 1954 | <links> |
| 1955 | <link href="http://reprap.org/bin/view/Main/PressPix">RepRap</link> |
| 1956 | </links> |
| 1957 | </event> |
| 1958 | <event id="854"> |
2690 | | <tag>upstart</tag> |
2691 | | <title>Upstart</title> |
2692 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2693 | | <track>Systems</track> |
2694 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2695 | | <language>English</language> |
2696 | | <abstract>This talk takes a trip along the Roadmap for Upstart 1.0, introducing |
2697 | | what features will be available.</abstract> |
2698 | | <description>Linux has always traditionally lacked good service management |
2699 | | facilities, so much so that the typical daemon doesn't use what ones we |
2700 | | have and instead relies on hokey shell scripts. |
2701 | | |
2702 | | Upstart is being developed to not only solve this problem but also how |
2703 | | it, through integration with D-Bus, DeviceKit and similar frameworks, |
2704 | | allows service lifecycles to be tied to hardware and system state.</description> |
2705 | | <persons> |
2706 | | <person id="481">Scott James Remnant</person> |
2707 | | </persons> |
2708 | | <links> |
2709 | | <link href="http://upstart.ubuntu.com/">Official website</link> |
2710 | | <link href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upstart">Wikipedia entry</link> |
2711 | | </links> |
2712 | | </event> |
2713 | | <event id="506"> |
| 1981 | <tag></tag> |
| 1982 | <title>MINIX 3: a Modular, Self-Healing POSIX-compatible Operating System</title> |
| 1983 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 1984 | <track>Various</track> |
| 1985 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 1986 | <language>English</language> |
| 1987 | <abstract>MINIX started in 1987 and led to several offshoots, the best known being Linux. MINIX 3 is the third major version of MINIX and is now focused on very high-reliability and security.</abstract> |
| 1988 | <description>MINIX started in 1987 and led to several offshoots, the best known being Linux. MINIX 3 is the third major version of MINIX and is now focused on very high-reliability and security. When you buy a TV set, you just plug it in and it works perfectly for the next 10 year. We are trying to make operating systems as good as that. The current version of MINIX 3 can detect device driver crashes and some server crashes and automatically replace the failed component without user intervention and without affecting running processes. The talk will discuss these aspects as well as new work.</description> |
| 1989 | <persons> |
| 1990 | <person id="709">Andrew Tanenbaum</person> |
| 1991 | </persons> |
| 1992 | <links> |
| 1993 | </links> |
| 1994 | </event> |
| 1995 | <event id="798"> |
2717 | | <tag>syslinux</tag> |
2718 | | <title>Syslinux and the dynamic x86 boot process</title> |
2719 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2720 | | <track>Kernel</track> |
2721 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2722 | | <language>English</language> |
2723 | | <abstract>This talk will discuss the x86 boot process, how to make it work in a |
2724 | | dynamic system, and the tradeoffs between versatility and reliability. |
2725 | | It will also discuss the Syslinux modular interface and how to use it |
2726 | | to quickly add new features with a minimum of coding.</abstract> |
2727 | | <description>Originally written during an all-night hacking session in 1994 with |
2728 | | the intent to better support the then-ubiquitous install boot |
2729 | | floppies, Syslinux has evolved over the years into a widely used boot |
2730 | | loader suite with an advanced modular interface, with emphasis on ease |
2731 | | of use and reliability. It is now the most commonly used x86 |
2732 | | bootloader for removable media, and is increasingly used for |
2733 | | conventional hard disk booting as well.</description> |
2734 | | <persons> |
2735 | | <person id="478">H. Peter Anvin</person> |
2736 | | </persons> |
2737 | | <links> |
2738 | | </links> |
2739 | | </event> |
2740 | | <event id="507"> |
| 1999 | <tag>hadoop</tag> |
| 2000 | <title>Large scale data analysis made easy - Apache Hadoop</title> |
| 2001 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 2002 | <track>Scalability</track> |
| 2003 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 2004 | <language>English</language> |
| 2005 | <abstract>The goal of Apache Hadoop is to make large scale data analysis easy. Hadoop implements a distributed filesystem based on the dieas behind GFS, the Google File System. With Map/Reduce it provides an easy way to implement parallel algorithms.</abstract> |
| 2006 | <description>Storage has become ever cheaper in recent years. Currently one terabyte of harddisk space costs less than 100 Euros. As a result a growing number of businesses have started collecting and digitizing data: Custumer transaction logs, news articles published over decades, crawls of parts o f the world wide web are only few use cases that produce large amounts of data. But with petabytes of data at your fingertips the question of how to make ad-hoc as well as continuous processing efficient arises. |
| 2007 | |
| 2008 | The goal of Apache Hadoop is to make large scale data analysis easy. Hadoop implements a distributed filesystem based on the dieas behind GFS, the Google File System. With Map/Reduce it provides an easy way to implement parallel algorithms. |
| 2009 | |
| 2010 | After motivating the neeed for a distributed library the talk gives an introduction to Hadoop detailing its strengths and weaknesses. It gives an introduction on how to quickly get your own Map/Reduce jobs up and running. The talk closes with an overview of the Hadoop ecosystem.</description> |
| 2011 | <persons> |
| 2012 | <person id="660">Isabel Drost</person> |
| 2013 | </persons> |
| 2014 | <links> |
| 2015 | </links> |
| 2016 | </event> |
| 2017 | <event id="801"> |
2744 | | <tag>ext4</tag> |
2745 | | <title>Ext4</title> |
2746 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2747 | | <track>Kernel</track> |
2748 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2749 | | <language>English</language> |
2750 | | <abstract>This presentation will discuss history of ext4, its features and advantages, and how |
2751 | | best to use the ext4 filesystem.</abstract> |
2752 | | <description>The latest generation of the ext2/ext3 filesystems is the ext4 |
2753 | | filesystem, which recently left the development status of 2.6.28. |
2754 | | With extents, delayed allocation, multiblock allocation, persistent |
2755 | | preallocation, and its other new features, it is substantally faster |
2756 | | and more efficient compared to the ext3 filesystem.</description> |
2757 | | <persons> |
2758 | | <person id="479">Theodore Ts'o</person> |
2759 | | </persons> |
2760 | | <links> |
2761 | | <link href="http://ext4.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Main_Page">Official website</link> |
2762 | | <link href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ext4">Wikipedia entry</link> |
2763 | | </links> |
2764 | | </event> |
2765 | | <event id="508"> |
| 2021 | <tag>scalingfacebook</tag> |
| 2022 | <title>Scaling Facebook with OpenSource tools</title> |
| 2023 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 2024 | <track>Scalability</track> |
| 2025 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 2026 | <language>English</language> |
| 2027 | <abstract>This talk will give you a better idea of what it takes to scale Facebook.</abstract> |
| 2028 | <description>From the day that Mark Zuckerberg started building Facebook in his Harvard dorm room in 2004 to today, the site has been built on common open source software such as Linux, Apache, MySQL, and PHP. Today Facebook reaches over 350 million people per month, is the largest PHP site in the World, and has released major pieces of our infrastructure as open source. |
| 2029 | |
| 2030 | It's not possible to scale a site like Facebook simply by sharding your databases, rather we've developed and contributed to a series of open source infrastructure technologies. Some of these projects include Cassandra, Hive, Haystack, memcached, and Scribe, where each focuses on solving a specific problem with Thrift allowing them to communicate across languages. This talk will give you a better idea of what it takes to scale Facebook, a look into the infrastructure we use to do so, and dive into performance work we're focused on in order to scale PHP to over 350 billion page views per month.</description> |
| 2031 | <persons> |
| 2032 | <person id="663">David Recordon</person> |
| 2033 | </persons> |
| 2034 | <links> |
| 2035 | </links> |
| 2036 | </event> |
| 2037 | <event id="820"> |
2797 | | <abstract>Ever wondered what it takes to make a community of more than 180 F/LOSS |
2798 | | projects and 5,000+ geeks create great software?</abstract> |
2799 | | <description>In this talk, Leslie Hawthorn will explore the successes and setbacks of [http://code.google.com/soc/ Google Summer of Code], the first global program |
2800 | | designed to introduce University students to Free and Open Source software |
2801 | | development practices and methodologies. Leslie will discuss the program's |
2802 | | inception, history, and impact, and the evolving requirements for managing a |
2803 | | large scale global community. She will share lessons learned during the |
2804 | | past three years as the program's Community Manager, with an eye to |
2805 | | providing audience members with strategies for organizing their own |
2806 | | community participation initiative, and provide attendees with an update on |
2807 | | [http://code.google.com/p/soc/ Melange], the new work flow application |
2808 | | designed to manage *Google Summer of Code* - or similar programs - and |
2809 | | Google's first Open Source project developed in the open from the first |
2810 | | commit.</description> |
2811 | | <persons> |
2812 | | <person id="469">Leslie Hawthorn</person> |
2813 | | </persons> |
2814 | | <links> |
2815 | | <link href="http://code.google.com/soc">Official website</link> |
| 2067 | <abstract>As A core member of the Linux Kernel team, Greg will show us how to write a kernel patch.</abstract> |
| 2068 | <description>This talk will cover the steps necessary to properly compose, describe, and submit a Linux kernel patch. It will cover the basic usage of git, and how that works with the Linux kernel development cycle. |
| 2069 | Attendees should have a solid grasp of the C language, and know how to build and install, a Linux kernel from scratch (if not,reading the book, Linux Kernel in a Nutshell, free online, ahead of time would be a very good idea.)</description> |
| 2070 | <persons> |
| 2071 | <person id="666">Greg Kroah-Hartman</person> |
| 2072 | </persons> |
| 2073 | <links> |
2824 | | <tag></tag> |
2825 | | <title>OWASP Testing Guide v3 and Secure Software Development</title> |
2826 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2827 | | <track>Security</track> |
2828 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2829 | | <language>English</language> |
2830 | | <abstract>The speech goal is to show the OWASP testing methodology and how you |
2831 | | can implement a software development lifecycle that permit to develop |
2832 | | more secure applications.</abstract> |
2833 | | <description>The Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) wants to deliver |
2834 | | free tools and documentation for the Web Application Security. |
2835 | | The talk will present the new OWASP Testing Guide v3 that includes a |
2836 | | "best practice" penetration testing framework which users can |
2837 | | implement in their own organizations and a "low level" penetration |
2838 | | testing guide that describes techniques for testing most common web |
2839 | | application and web service security issues. OWASP Testing Guide v3 is |
2840 | | a 349 page book; we have split the set of active tests in 9 |
2841 | | sub-categories for a total of 66 controls to test during the Web |
2842 | | Application Testing activity.</description> |
2843 | | <persons> |
2844 | | <person id="584">Matteo Meucci</person> |
2845 | | </persons> |
2846 | | <links> |
2847 | | <link href="http://www.owasp.org/index.php/Category:OWASP_Testing_Project">Official website</link> |
2848 | | <link href="http://www.owasp.org">OWASP Website</link> |
2849 | | </links> |
2850 | | </event> |
2851 | | <event id="493"> |
| 2082 | <tag>dojo</tag> |
| 2083 | <title>Building High Performance Web Applications with the Dojo Toolkit</title> |
| 2084 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 2085 | <track>Javascript</track> |
| 2086 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 2087 | <language>English</language> |
| 2088 | <abstract>The Dojo Toolkit is a robust toolkit for creating JavaScript-based web applications.</abstract> |
| 2089 | <description>The Dojo Toolkit is a robust toolkit for creating JavaScript-based web applications. In this talk you will learn about: |
| 2090 | |
| 2091 | * The origins of the toolkit |
| 2092 | * A high level overview of features and project direction and philosophy |
| 2093 | * Practical examples and key architectural approaches that may be applied to building any JavaScript-based application</description> |
| 2094 | <persons> |
| 2095 | <person id="673">Dylan Schiemann</person> |
| 2096 | </persons> |
| 2097 | <links> |
| 2098 | </links> |
| 2099 | </event> |
| 2100 | <event id="817"> |
2855 | | <tag>freeipa</tag> |
2856 | | <title>FreeIPA, Identity Management</title> |
2857 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2858 | | <track>Security</track> |
2859 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2860 | | <language>English</language> |
2861 | | <abstract>Free Software Identity Management challenges and technical details</abstract> |
2862 | | <description>The presentation will revolve around the problems of building a modern |
2863 | | Free Software based Identity Management Solution. The challenges we |
2864 | | faced in trying to combine security, ease of used, standards, features, |
2865 | | and interoperability with other solutions. The choices we have made for |
2866 | | the current code base, and the choices we are facing going forward. |
2867 | | The vision and future directions. |
2868 | | The presentation will introduce the public to the technologies used, the |
2869 | | modifications or additions we performed and will dive into technical |
2870 | | details about how we architect the server and the future client |
2871 | | components.</description> |
2872 | | <persons> |
2873 | | <person id="468">Simo Sorce</person> |
2874 | | </persons> |
2875 | | <links> |
2876 | | <link href="http://freeipa.org/">Official website</link> |
2877 | | <link href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FreeIPA">Wikipedia entry</link> |
2878 | | </links> |
2879 | | </event> |
2880 | | <event id="496"> |
2881 | | <start>12:00</start> |
2882 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
| 2104 | <tag>mootools</tag> |
| 2105 | <title>MooTools as a General Purpose Application Framework</title> |
| 2106 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 2107 | <track>Javascript</track> |
| 2108 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 2109 | <language>English</language> |
| 2110 | <abstract>This talk presents the various MooTools projects and how they help with web application development.</abstract> |
| 2111 | <description>This talk presents the various MooTools projects and how they help with web application development. We will focus in detail on the MooTools Core Library and its inner workings. The talk will cover the functionality found in Core including the class oriented inheritance model and the merits of extending the native types in JavaScript. We will also discuss how the Framework extends beyond Browsers into any JavaScript environment and how this can enhance application development.</description> |
| 2112 | <persons> |
| 2113 | <person id="674">Christoph Pojer</person> |
| 2114 | </persons> |
| 2115 | <links> |
| 2116 | </links> |
| 2117 | </event> |
| 2118 | <event id="818"> |
| 2119 | <start>14:00</start> |
| 2120 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
2908 | | <tag>mediawiki</tag> |
2909 | | <title>MediaWiki</title> |
2910 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2911 | | <track>Collaboration</track> |
2912 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2913 | | <language>English</language> |
2914 | | <abstract>I'll be going over some of the particular UI and workflow issues in |
2915 | | editing, media uploading, and other areas that we intend to tackle, |
2916 | | summarize some of the existing work toward those ends, and give a |
2917 | | preview our upcoming Wikipedia Usability Initiative.</abstract> |
2918 | | <description>MediaWiki was born in 2002, when Wikipedia's editing activity outgrew |
2919 | | the concurrency limits of its original wiki engine. The first 6 years of |
2920 | | this open-source wiki platform's development were largely devoted to |
2921 | | scaling and performance, ensuring that the world's most editable online |
2922 | | encyclopedia could keep up with the number of articles, visitors, and |
2923 | | changes that come with being an insanely popular user-written site. But |
2924 | | the user interface hasn't changed much since 2003; if anything, packing |
2925 | | in more features has made many aspects of the wiki harder to use over time. |
2926 | | |
2927 | | In 2010, MediaWiki developers are turning their eye towards usability |
2928 | | and design issues. As with the scaling problems we've tackled before, we |
2929 | | have to be able to target anything from a tiny personal or intranet wiki |
2930 | | to the massive Wikipedia sites, making a range of different use cases |
2931 | | with different needs... It'll be fun!</description> |
2932 | | <persons> |
2933 | | <person id="474">Brion Vibber</person> |
2934 | | </persons> |
2935 | | <links> |
2936 | | <link href="http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/MediaWiki">Official website</link> |
2937 | | <link href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediawiki">Wikipedia entry</link> |
2938 | | </links> |
2939 | | </event> |
2940 | | <event id="503"> |
2941 | | <start>15:00</start> |
2942 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
| 2140 | <tag>mariadb</tag> |
| 2141 | <title>MariaDB: extra features that make it a better branch of MySQL</title> |
| 2142 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 2143 | <track>Database</track> |
| 2144 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 2145 | <language>English</language> |
| 2146 | <abstract>MariaDB is an independent branch of MySQL with additional features and patches. This talk will give a technical overview of MariaDB.</abstract> |
| 2147 | <description>MariaDB is an independent branch of MySQL with additional features and |
| 2148 | patches. This talk will give a technical overview of MariaDB, including: |
| 2149 | |
| 2150 | * A walkthrough of extra features available in MariaDB 5.1: |
| 2151 | ** Extra storage engines (XtraDB, PBXT, Maria, FederatedX) |
| 2152 | ** Community patches integrated into MariaDB |
| 2153 | ** Additional features and optimizations |
| 2154 | * Compatibility policy between mainline MySQL and MariaDB |
| 2155 | * MariaDB's approach to accepting external contributions |
| 2156 | * Further technical directions of MariaDB project</description> |
| 2157 | <persons> |
| 2158 | <person id="672">Sergey Petrunya</person> |
| 2159 | </persons> |
| 2160 | <links> |
| 2161 | </links> |
| 2162 | </event> |
| 2163 | <event id="813"> |
| 2164 | <start>16:00</start> |
| 2165 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
2944 | | <tag>zarafa</tag> |
2945 | | <title>Easy Integration with plugin frameworks for open source Zarafa Groupware and advanced replication</title> |
2946 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2947 | | <track>Collaboration</track> |
2948 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2949 | | <language>English</language> |
2950 | | <abstract>The Zarafa webaccess plugin system is aimed at allowing developers to add functionality to the Zarafa webaccess, while not requiring them to modify existing system files inside the core of the Zarafa WebAccess software. |
2951 | | |
2952 | | Zarafa will show how to programm a module and shows the architecture integrations with open source solutions such as Alfresco and Sugarcrm and other community contributions.</abstract> |
2953 | | <description>The Zarafa webaccess plugin system is aimed at allowing developers to add functionality to the Zarafa WebAccess, while not requiring them to modify existing system files inside the core of the Zarafa WebAccess software. |
2954 | | |
2955 | | Steve will show how to program a module and shows the architecture integrations with open source solutions such as Alfresco and Sugarcrm and other community contributions.</description> |
2956 | | <persons> |
2957 | | <person id="475">Steve Hardy</person> |
2958 | | </persons> |
2959 | | <links> |
2960 | | </links> |
2961 | | </event> |
2962 | | <event id="790"> |
2963 | | <start>16:00</start> |
2964 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
2965 | | <room>Chavanne</room> |
2966 | | <tag>caldav</tag> |
2967 | | <title>CalDAV - the open groupware protocol</title> |
2968 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
2969 | | <track>Collaboration</track> |
2970 | | <type>Podium</type> |
2971 | | <language>English</language> |
2972 | | <abstract>Introduction into the CalDAV protocol and related protocols. Overview on OpenSource CalDAV clients and servers, and on libraries for CalDAV development. |
2973 | | Attempt to motivate people to implement IETF standard protocols instead of proprietrary ones.</abstract> |
2974 | | <description>CalDAV is a calendaring and scheduling client/server protocol designed to allow users to access calendar data on a server, and to schedule meetings with other users on that server or other servers.</description> |
2975 | | <persons> |
2976 | | <person id="500">Helge Heß</person> |
| 2167 | <tag>couchdb</tag> |
| 2168 | <title>CouchDB! REST and Database!</title> |
| 2169 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 2170 | <track>Database</track> |
| 2171 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 2172 | <language>English</language> |
| 2173 | <abstract>CouchDB how does a document-oriented DB work or how does it work for you?</abstract> |
| 2174 | <description>This presentation takes a look at CouchDB, a distributed, fault-tolerant and schema-free document-oriented database accessible via a RESTful HTTP/JSON API. CouchDB design and replication features solve the problem of high-traffic websites, distributed peer-to-peer, and offline application, all in the same time. |
| 2175 | |
| 2176 | The talk will cover the different CouchDB usages and integration in applications and its deployment. It will also present how to build and distribute standalone CouchDB applications on top of CouchDB using its REST API. CouchDB applications can run on users desktop an be replicated using a P2P system. Data could also be available offline.</description> |
| 2177 | <persons> |
| 2178 | <person id="671">Benoît Chesneau</person> |
3012 | | <abstract>The talk will start with a very short overview of the history of Mailman and |
3013 | | the mailman-pgp-smime project. Some remarks will be made on how to install and |
3014 | | configure the software, so that one can try it. Currently supported features |
3015 | | will be mentioned, as well as an overview of development plans. One will learn |
3016 | | how to contribute to the project; an overview of the revision control system |
3017 | | used will be given. Some remarks on the future of the patch will be made: will |
3018 | | it be shipped with Mailman itself? |
3019 | | |
3020 | | If you have used Mailman, both as a subscriber and as a list admin, and if |
3021 | | you know what PGP and S/MIME are, you should definitely attend this talk.</abstract> |
3022 | | <description>he Secure List Server, mailman-pgp-smime, is an effort to add support for |
3023 | | encryption and authentication to Mailman, the GNU mailing list software. This |
3024 | | enhancement enables groups of people to safely cooperate and communicate using |
3025 | | email. The patch includes support for both RFC 2633 (S/MIME) and RFC 2440 |
3026 | | (OpenPGP) email messages. |
3027 | | |
3028 | | Development of the patch is made possible by the NLnet foundation. |
3029 | | |
3030 | | A post to a secure list will be distributed only if the PGP (or S/MIME) |
3031 | | signature on the post is from one of the list members. For sending encrypted |
3032 | | email, a list member encrypts to the public key of the list. The post will be |
3033 | | decrypted and re-encrypted to the public keys of all list members.</description> |
3034 | | <persons> |
3035 | | <person id="486">Joost van Baal</person> |
3036 | | </persons> |
3037 | | <links> |
3038 | | <link href="http://non-gnu.uvt.nl/mailman-pgp-smime/">http://non-gnu.uvt.nl/mailman-pgp-smime/</link> |
3039 | | </links> |
3040 | | </event> |
3041 | | <event id="515"> |
| 2222 | <abstract>This talk introduces the Apache ACE project, shows how to use it to assemble software out of reusable components and deploy those components onto an ever increasing number of managed target platforms. Besides giving a high level overview of the architecture, some examples of how to use and extend the project will be shown, and different options given to setup an automated development, QA/testing, staging and production environment.</abstract> |
| 2223 | <description>Apache ACE is a software distribution framework that allows you to centrally manage and distribute software components, configuration data and other artifacts to target systems. It is built using OSGi and can be deployed in different topologies. The target systems are usually also OSGi based, but don't have to be.</description> |
| 2224 | <persons> |
| 2225 | <person id="531">Marcel Offermans</person> |
| 2226 | </persons> |
| 2227 | <links> |
| 2228 | <link href="http://incubator.apache.org/ace/">http://incubator.apache.org/ace/</link> |
| 2229 | </links> |
| 2230 | </event> |
| 2231 | <event id="852"> |
3051 | | <abstract>The talk will be focused on the main features delivered by the JTR Project that enable the seamless distribution of the full spectrum of test-suites that can be written to a set of JTR-enabled nodes making it easy performing distributed test sessions.</abstract> |
3052 | | <description>The JTR Project is a Java distributed testing framework conceived to fill a gap existing today most notably in the open-source world that’s the lack of a single tool that could help in developing from simple to complex test suites in Java with particular emphasis on the stack of backend-technologies embraced by the JEE specification. |
3053 | | |
3054 | | The JTR Framework is aimed at fastening the development of both functional and stress-test suites for verifying the requirements and robustness of both JSE and JEE projects. The JTR Framework supports you in writing components meant for testing: |
3055 | | •standard JSE components / applications |
3056 | | •EJBs conforming to both J2EE 2.x and JEE specifications |
3057 | | •MOM-based JSE and JEE systems (JMS) |
3058 | | •web-services (both document-based and rpc-like)</description> |
3059 | | <persons> |
3060 | | <person id="488">Francesco Russo</person> |
3061 | | </persons> |
3062 | | <links> |
3063 | | <link href="http://jtrunner.sourceforge.net">http://jtrunner.sourceforge.net</link> |
3064 | | </links> |
3065 | | </event> |
3066 | | <event id="516"> |
| 2241 | <abstract>In this talk we will discuss the issue of server images, and how it affects inter-cloud portability. We will describe our vision for a universal format which can be shared and improved as easily as a Git repository, and how we're implementing it with cloudlets.</abstract> |
| 2242 | <description>Cloudlets are universal server images for the cloud. They're lightweight, version-controlled, and you can export them to any bootable format known to man: Xen, KVM, Amazon EC2, or just a plain bootable CD. They can be shared and distributed with the semantics of tools such as Git and Mercurial. |
| 2243 | |
| 2244 | Our goal is to build the foundations for truly cloud-independent infrastructures. Our roadmap includes: |
| 2245 | |
| 2246 | * Multi-image stacks |
| 2247 | * Auto-scaling |
| 2248 | * Automated integration tests |
| 2249 | * In-place image editing |
| 2250 | * Integration with existing VM generation and configuration management tools</description> |
| 2251 | <persons> |
| 2252 | <person id="690">Solomon Hykes</person> |
| 2253 | </persons> |
| 2254 | <links> |
| 2255 | <link href="http://bitbucket.org/dotcloud/cloudlets">http://bitbucket.org/dotcloud/cloudlets</link> |
| 2256 | </links> |
| 2257 | </event> |
| 2258 | <event id="853"> |
3076 | | <abstract>We have found two main limitations in Berkeley Sockets API: |
3077 | | (1) it has been designed to manage one stack per protocol family |
3078 | | (2) there is not a protocol family supporting (fast) multicast for Inter Process Communication (among processes running on the same computer). |
3079 | | The virtualsquare team proposes solutions for both problems: |
3080 | | (1) the msocket call to support several stacks (implemented in lwipv6 and ipnet) |
3081 | | (2) the IPN (inter process networking) protocol family. |
3082 | | IPN can be used for many applications: midi, mpeg-ts dispatching, kernel based |
3083 | | vde switches.</abstract> |
3084 | | <description>We have found two main limitations in Berkeley Sockets API: |
3085 | | (1) it has been designed to manage one stack per protocol family |
3086 | | (2) there is not a protocol family supporting (fast) multicast for Inter Process Communication (among processes running on the same computer). |
3087 | | The virtualsquare team proposes solutions for both problems: |
3088 | | (1) the msocket call to support several stacks (implemented in lwipv6 and ipnet) |
3089 | | (2) the IPN (inter process networking) protocol family. |
3090 | | IPN can be used for many applications: midi, mpeg-ts dispatching, kernel based |
3091 | | vde switches.</description> |
3092 | | <persons> |
3093 | | <person id="490">Renzo Davoli</person> |
3094 | | </persons> |
3095 | | <links> |
3096 | | <link href="http://wiki.virtualsquare.org/index.php/IPN">http://wiki.virtualsquare.org/index.php/IPN</link> |
3097 | | <link href="http://wiki.virtualsquare.org/index.php/Multi_stack_support_for_Berkeley_Sockets">http://wiki.virtualsquare.org/index.php/Multi_stack_support_for_Berkeley_Sockets</link> |
3098 | | </links> |
3099 | | </event> |
3100 | | <event id="517"> |
| 2268 | <abstract>The talk introduces Wt::Dbo. It will be compared to existing ORM and database solutions for C++ and other programming languages. Based on simple examples, you will learn how you can use Wt::Dbo to manipulate objects that are stored in a database from within C++.</abstract> |
| 2269 | <description>Wt::Dbo is a brand new C++ ORM layer. Similar to Hibernate for Java and ActiveRecords for Ruby, Wt::Dbo offers a convenient way to interact with objects which are serialized in a database. |
| 2270 | |
| 2271 | Although the lack of introspection in C++ seems to be problematic to write a decent ORM in C++, Wt::Dbo demonstrates that appropriate use of the C++ template system offers a perfect alternative. |
| 2272 | |
| 2273 | Currently, Wt:dbo contains the following functionality: |
| 2274 | <ul> |
| 2275 | <li>Automatic schema creation</li> |
| 2276 | <li>Mapping of 1-N and M-N relations</li> |
| 2277 | <li>Lazy loading of objects and collections</li> |
| 2278 | <li>Uses prepared statements throughout</li> |
| 2279 | <li>Basic query support</li> |
| 2280 | <li>Automatic dirty checking and database synchronization</li> |
| 2281 | <li>Built-in optimistic locking (using a version field)</li> |
| 2282 | <li>Transactional integrity, even when a transaction fails: dirty objects remain dirty and may later be saved in a new transaction, or may be reverted to their persisted state (unlike Hibernate where you are forced to discard the whole session)</li> |
| 2283 | <li>Transaction write-behind for changes, with support for manual flushing</li> |
| 2284 | <li>Forces use of surrogate keys</li> |
| 2285 | <li>Does not depend on Wt (can be used independently)</li> |
| 2286 | <li>Simple backend system: at the moment only SQLite3. We are looking at how we can perhaps can leverage SOCI if it makes its way into Boost.</li> |
| 2287 | </ul></description> |
| 2288 | <persons> |
| 2289 | <person id="691">Koen Deforche</person> |
| 2290 | </persons> |
| 2291 | <links> |
| 2292 | <link href="http://www.webtoolkit.eu/wt/blog/2009/11/26/wt__dbo__an_orm__c___style">http://www.webtoolkit.eu/wt/blog/2009/11/26/wt__dbo__an_orm__c___style</link> |
| 2293 | </links> |
| 2294 | </event> |
| 2295 | <event id="866"> |
3110 | | <abstract>1.- Definition of ModularIT |
3111 | | 2.- Description |
3112 | | 2.1.- Technologies involved |
3113 | | 2.2.- Procedures: instalaltion, management, update, etc. |
3114 | | 3.- ModularIT community project</abstract> |
3115 | | <description>ModularIT is a virtuliced and distributed modular services architecture based on free software. This project has been released for the spanish community at the beginning of 2008 and by January 2010 it will be translated to english. Right now it is downloadable and before the end of the year we will begin to develop the project through a public SVN. |
3116 | | |
3117 | | ModularIT is the result of 10 years of hard working from Grupo CPD (www.grupocpd.com) with free software systems and network services. we are a free software companies network from the Canary Islands, Spain. we are interested in presenting the project at FOSDEM. |
3118 | | |
3119 | | You can find more information (only in spanish until december) by clicking these links: |
3120 | | |
3121 | | http://www.modularit.org |
3122 | | |
3123 | | http://www.grupocpd.com/QueHacemos/modularit/PloneArticle_view</description> |
3124 | | <persons> |
3125 | | <person id="491">Agustín Benito</person> |
3126 | | </persons> |
3127 | | <links> |
3128 | | <link href="http://www.modularit.org">http://www.modularit.org</link> |
3129 | | </links> |
3130 | | </event> |
3131 | | <event id="518"> |
| 2305 | <abstract>I propose to show OpenObject in action, how you can customize or develop new modules for OpenERP. It includes: the object and view editor, the workflow editor and the report designer.</abstract> |
| 2306 | <description>OpenERP is a modern Enterprise Management Software, released under the AGPL license, and featuring CRM, HR, Sales, Accounting, Manufacturing, Stock. It is based on OpenObject, a modular, scalable, and intuitive Rapid Application Development (RAD) framework written in Python. |
| 2307 | |
| 2308 | OpenObject features a complete and modular toolbox for quickly building applications: integrated Object-Relationship Mapping (ORM) support, template-based Model-View-Controller (MVC) interfaces, a report generation system, automated internationalization, and much more.</description> |
| 2309 | <persons> |
| 2310 | <person id="708">Fabien Pinckaers</person> |
| 2311 | </persons> |
| 2312 | <links> |
| 2313 | <link href="http://openerp.com">http://openerp.com</link> |
| 2314 | </links> |
| 2315 | </event> |
| 2316 | <event id="855"> |
3181 | | <abstract>The talk introduces the game FreedroidRPG, insisting on it being mature and fully playable. |
3182 | | We will see what features FreedroidRPG provides, present a few screenshots, explain our |
3183 | | interest in having an immersive ambience through dialogs, music and graphics, and mention the |
3184 | | unusual history of the game (it started off as a 2D arcade game before evolving into a full featured |
3185 | | RPG similar to Diablo). We will explain where we need help from the community. A demo will not be |
3186 | | possible in the timeframe of a lightning talk, but a little video may be played.</abstract> |
3187 | | <description>FreedroidRPG is a mature open source sci-fi isometric role playing game. It |
3188 | | strives at providing an immersive ambience backed by refined graphics and |
3189 | | music tracks. Besides the hack'n'slash action phases, dialogs with dozens of |
3190 | | NPCs take care of storytelling. The player can fight with melee or ranged |
3191 | | weapons, take control of his enemies by hacking, and remotely execute code on |
3192 | | enemy robots.</description> |
3193 | | <persons> |
3194 | | <person id="493">Arthur Huillet</person> |
3195 | | </persons> |
3196 | | <links> |
3197 | | <link href="http://www.freedroid.org/">http://www.freedroid.org/</link> |
3198 | | </links> |
3199 | | </event> |
3200 | | <event id="520"> |
| 2366 | <abstract>*** NOTE: THIS IS NOT A TALK ABOUT MYSQL - IT'S ABOUT GENERAL ATTITUDE TOWARDS NEW TECHNOLOGIES - I have presented this talk at two open source events where it was received enthusiastically *** |
| 2367 | If you don't know them, they will hurt you. No matter how expert you are, there are holes in your knowledge, and when things go wrong you usually blame what you know the least. So the culprit could be that database, the regular expression engine, the XML parser, the thread engine. What if the problem is between the chair and the keyboard instead? This talk will give you some general insight on the art of software development, encouraging users to rant less and improve their own practice.</abstract> |
| 2368 | <description>The most popular open source database in the world *** NOTE that this talk is not about MySQL ***</description> |
| 2369 | <persons> |
| 2370 | <person id="694">Giuseppe Maxia</person> |
| 2371 | </persons> |
| 2372 | <links> |
| 2373 | <link href="http://mysql.org">http://mysql.org</link> |
| 2374 | </links> |
| 2375 | </event> |
| 2376 | <event id="857"> |
3210 | | <abstract>Too many game engines expect you to use their code exclusively. But no games company will replace their entire technology with an open source engine, just to utilise one component. Consequently, the only open source technology generally used in professional games are those that come as individual libraries - like Lua, or ODE. |
3211 | | |
3212 | | In his talk, Steven covers the reason for why monolithic architectures are no good for games development, how to avoid them, and the alternatives - at both a technical and man management level. |
3213 | | |
3214 | | He covers the principles behind creating interfaces and loosely-couple modules to ensure flexibility, and how to introduce new modules and platforms into the mix. Distinctions are also made between commonly-confused terms such as "engine", "drivers", "domains", "platforms" and "libraries." |
3215 | | |
3216 | | Finally, an overview of the practical solutions are given, using the SGX Engine as a example covering audio, graphics, input, and scripting.</abstract> |
3217 | | <description>SGX is a 3D graphics engine, based around of series of null drivers and loosely-coupled modules to facilitate an infinitely upgradable engine. It is primarily suited to games and digital TV backdrops, and runs under Windows and Linux, using OpenGL. It is also one of the few Open Source engines to be used in commercial products.</description> |
3218 | | <persons> |
3219 | | <person id="455">Steven Goodwin</person> |
3220 | | </persons> |
3221 | | <links> |
3222 | | <link href="http://www.sgxengine.com">http://www.sgxengine.com</link> |
3223 | | </links> |
3224 | | </event> |
3225 | | <event id="521"> |
| 2386 | <abstract>Take a regular old-fashioned linear schoolbook, and then imagine each chapter having alternative versions specifically tailored for the reader. |
| 2387 | |
| 2388 | |
| 2389 | |
| 2390 | You get a book that works both for pupils that read slow and pupils that zip through the text faster than their classmates. Add alternatives for the teacher (pedagogical methods, teaching style), the school (variations on which chapters should be in-depth or which topics should be prioritized) and the parents (a topic summary to read before helping with homework) - and you end up with a book that can only be made using free software development methods. |
| 2391 | |
| 2392 | |
| 2393 | |
| 2394 | Kaizendo.org - from Kaizen-do, "the way of incremental improvement" - is a project for making these books possible. We have just started, and we need people who would like to help! :)</abstract> |
| 2395 | <description>Take your regular old-fashioned linear schoolbook and imagine each chapter having alternative versions specifically tailored for the reader. |
| 2396 | |
| 2397 | |
| 2398 | |
| 2399 | You'll have book that works both for pupils that read slow and pupils that zip through the text faster than their classmates. Add alternatives for the teacher (supporting different pedagogical methods, teaching styles), the school (variations on which chapters should be in-depth or which topics should be prioritized) and the parents (a topic summary to read before helping with homework.) |
| 2400 | |
| 2401 | |
| 2402 | |
| 2403 | And you'll have a book that can only be made using free software development methods. |
| 2404 | |
| 2405 | |
| 2406 | |
| 2407 | Kaizendo.org - from Kaizen-do, "the way of incremental improvement" - is a project for making these books possible. We have just started, and we need people who would like to help! :)</description> |
| 2408 | <persons> |
| 2409 | <person id="695">Salve Nilsen</person> |
| 2410 | </persons> |
| 2411 | <links> |
| 2412 | <link href="http://kaizendo.org/">http://kaizendo.org/</link> |
| 2413 | </links> |
| 2414 | </event> |
| 2415 | <event id="858"> |
3235 | | <abstract>With the first stable 1.0 release in the pipeline, it's time to introduce MuseScore to future users and developers. MuseScore is currently the leading free alternative to commercial score writing software like Sibelius and Finale. With over 50.000 downloads, it has quite some adoption already, but in order to convince music schools world wide, MuseScore's current development team should become a little stronger. FOSDEM 09 will be the first event world wide where MuseScore will be presented</abstract> |
3236 | | <description>MuseScore is a free and open source music scorewriter. MuseScore is a WYSIWYG editor, complete with support for score playback and import/export of MusicXML and standard MIDI files. Percussion notation is supported, as is direct printing from the program. The program has a clean user interface, with fast note editing input with mouse, keyboard or MIDI. MuseScore has binaries available for Linux, Windows and Mac, and is available in more than 10 languages.</description> |
3237 | | <persons> |
3238 | | <person id="310">Thomas Bonte</person> |
3239 | | </persons> |
3240 | | <links> |
3241 | | <link href="http://musescore.org">http://musescore.org</link> |
3242 | | </links> |
3243 | | </event> |
3244 | | <event id="527"> |
| 2425 | <abstract>CESLA has launched "The wiki for open technologies " project. This project is addressed to the open source community and to the Internet world on the whole to allow collaboration between different groups and organizations. |
| 2426 | |
| 2427 | The talk will cover the following topics: |
| 2428 | |
| 2429 | * Thewiki4opentech policy and goals |
| 2430 | * What is different in the technological wiki? |
| 2431 | * How to contribute. |
| 2432 | * Benefits for contributors and for the open source community.</abstract> |
| 2433 | <description>The Wiki for Open Technologies is an Internet site where you can find technical information and discuss about projects and ideas. Also you can edit almost all of the pages on this site and place new ones. |
| 2434 | This wiki is a project managed by CESLA, the Free Software & Open Content Association of Aragon, Spain. With this project CESLA intends to create a technological content reference for everybody. |
| 2435 | |
| 2436 | Thewiki4opentech team is working to provide the open source community with a useful tool. This project is based on Mediawiki and implements some improvements to syndicate content with the same or compatible license. A vertical search engine, included in the wiki, allows searching in the most prestigious open source pages. Thewiki4opentech own content, the syndicated content from other wikis and the search engine cover most of the open source technical information so the community will be able to find the most relevant information and the main trends related to a topic |
| 2437 | |
| 2438 | Projects are saved as a whole and topics are sorted in tags and not just as an article, this wiki is a site where projects are well documented and classified. All improvements around projects follow the objective of empowering open source initiatives and innovation in the open source community</description> |
| 2439 | <persons> |
| 2440 | <person id="696">Oscar Puyal</person> |
| 2441 | </persons> |
| 2442 | <links> |
| 2443 | <link href="http://thewiki4opentech.org">http://thewiki4opentech.org</link> |
| 2444 | </links> |
| 2445 | </event> |
| 2446 | <event id="859"> |
3297 | | <abstract>The new wysiwyg editor developed by the XWiki team is a cross-browser, GWT-based, stand-alone editing tool that solves a number of known problems in other editors, and brings exciting new features such as concurrent realtime editing. Currently in a beta stage, it was bundled in XWiki Enterprise 1.7 and will become the default editor in the next XWiki release.</abstract> |
3298 | | <description>XWiki is a platform for developing collaborative web applications using the wiki paradigm.</description> |
3299 | | <persons> |
3300 | | <person id="497">Anca Luca</person> |
3301 | | </persons> |
3302 | | <links> |
3303 | | <link href="http://www.xwiki.org">http://www.xwiki.org</link> |
3304 | | </links> |
3305 | | </event> |
3306 | | <event id="524"> |
| 2506 | <abstract>Bugs are pervasive in code. And when one finds one bug there are often |
| 2507 | others of the same type lurking in other parts of the code base. The |
| 2508 | difficulty then is how to find them efficiently within thousands or |
| 2509 | millions of lines of code. |
| 2510 | |
| 2511 | At the University of Copenhagen, in collaboration with researchers in Paris |
| 2512 | and Aalborg, we have been developing the Coccinelle program matching and |
| 2513 | transformation engine (http://coccinelle.lip6.fr). Coccinelle provides a |
| 2514 | language, SmPL (semantic patch language), for writing complex code patterns |
| 2515 | that may perform simple searching or that can be annotated with |
| 2516 | transformation information. A novelty of Coccinelle is that these patterns |
| 2517 | look very similar to ordinary source code. Nevertheless, SmPL patterns can |
| 2518 | be made generic using pattern variables, and are matched according to the |
| 2519 | semantics of the source code rather than the line-by-line syntax, and hence |
| 2520 | we have given them the name semantic patches. |
| 2521 | |
| 2522 | In this talk, we will introduce Coccinelle and the SmPL language, and then |
| 2523 | illustrate its use with examples based on bugs that we have found and fixed |
| 2524 | in Linux kernel code. In particular, we will focus on how the source-code |
| 2525 | like language makes it easy to customize the bug finding process to very |
| 2526 | specific problems and to fine-tune semantic patches to reduce the number of |
| 2527 | false positives, which plague automated bug finding tools. To date, over |
| 2528 | 400 patches derived from the use of Coccinelle have been accepted into the |
| 2529 | Linux kernel source tree.</abstract> |
| 2530 | <description>Coccinelle is a program matching and transformation system targeting C code. |
| 2531 | Coccinelle provides a language, SmPL (semantic patch language), for writing |
| 2532 | complex code patterns that may perform simple searching or that can be |
| 2533 | annotated with transformation information. A novelty of Coccinelle is that |
| 2534 | these patterns look very similar to ordinary source code. Nevertheless, SmPL |
| 2535 | patterns can be made generic using pattern variables, and are matched according |
| 2536 | to the semantics of the source code rather than the line-by-line syntax. |
| 2537 | |
| 2538 | In developing Coccinelle, we have particularly targeted Linux kernel code. |
| 2539 | Nevertheless, Coccinelle has been applied in the context of other open source |
| 2540 | software projects, such as OpenSSL and Wine. To date, over 400 patches derived |
| 2541 | from the use of Coccinelle have been accepted into the Linux kernel source tree.</description> |
| 2542 | <persons> |
| 2543 | <person id="698">Julia Lawall</person> |
| 2544 | </persons> |
| 2545 | <links> |
| 2546 | <link href="http://coccinelle.lip6.fr">http://coccinelle.lip6.fr</link> |
| 2547 | </links> |
| 2548 | </event> |
| 2549 | <event id="862"> |
3316 | | <abstract>TikiWiki is a powerful, multilingual Wiki, Content Management System (CMS) and Groupware. Translated to 35 languages, and with an install base of tens of thousands, over 200 people have contributed to the source code and it provides hundreds of built-in features to create all sorts of web sites, intranets and extranets, including support.mozilla.com. |
3317 | | |
3318 | | The community eats its own DogFood and applies the "Wiki Way" to software development. Written in PHP, it is released as free software (LGPL). TikiWiki is at the crossroads between Wikis and CMS/Groupware. It is so much more than just a wiki. |
3319 | | |
3320 | | Most wikis are pure wikis. However, is that sufficient? "He who is good with a hammer thinks the world is a nail". While a wiki is a great tool, it is not optimal in many situations. For some things, forums, issue trackers, blogs, etc. are better. That's why there are hundreds of Content Management Systems (CMS) out there. However, many CMS systems are focused on classic publishing, rather than community and collaboration. |
3321 | | |
3322 | | In TikiWiki, the wiki way is found throughout the application. For example, the wiki syntax works in the forums, and in structured data trackers. Major features of TikiWiki include news articles, forums, newsletters, blogs, a file/image gallery, structured data trackers, translation, polls, calendar, Mobile Tiki (PDA and WAP access), RSS feeds, a category system, a theme control center, and more. |
3323 | | |
3324 | | When would you need a wiki that is bundled with other features? Find out for yourself in this session what makes TikiWiki unique.</abstract> |
3325 | | <description>TikiWiki CMS/Groupware is a full-featured, tightly integrated, open source, multilingual, all-in-one Wiki-CMS-Groupware, written in PHP and actively developed by a very large international community. Major features include articles, forums, newsletters, blogs, a file/image gallery, a wiki, bug & issue tracker (form generator), a calendar, RSS feeds, a category system, tags, a workflow engine, an advanced user, group and permission system and more.</description> |
3326 | | <persons> |
3327 | | <person id="498">Marc Laporte</person> |
3328 | | </persons> |
3329 | | <links> |
3330 | | <link href="http://TikiWiki.org">http://TikiWiki.org</link> |
| 2559 | <abstract>This talk will introduce UmlCanvas in all its appearances: a Javascript library, a hosting service and soon a collaborative platform enabling "Social Modeling". We will illustrate what is possible with the current release and what we're up to in the near future. The talk will give the audience enough information for them to understand the UmlCanvas concepts, go to the UmlCanvas website and start creating online embeddable diagrams right away.</abstract> |
| 2560 | <description>UmlCanvas is a Javascript library that turns an HTML5 Canvas element into a dynamic and interactive UML diagram editor and presentation tool ... on every HTML page, on and off the web. |
| 2561 | UmlCanvas also offers a hosting service that puts your diagrams online. Design your diagram once, include it in many HTML-based formats: your own pages, your blog, feed readers and even Google Wave. |
| 2562 | Integrating CASE tools and hosted UmlCanvas, creates a collaborative platform that enable modelers to step out of the closed environment of their desktops and extend their modeling into the social web.</description> |
| 2563 | <persons> |
| 2564 | <person id="699">Christophe Van Ginneken</person> |
| 2565 | </persons> |
| 2566 | <links> |
| 2567 | <link href="http://umlcanvas.org">http://umlcanvas.org</link> |
| 2568 | </links> |
| 2569 | </event> |
| 2570 | <event id="863"> |
| 2571 | <start>16:15</start> |
| 2572 | <duration>00:15</duration> |
| 2573 | <room>Ferrer</room> |
| 2574 | <tag>jpoker</tag> |
| 2575 | <title>jpoker: a pure javascript poker client</title> |
| 2576 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 2577 | <track>Lightning Talks</track> |
| 2578 | <type>Lightning-Talk</type> |
| 2579 | <language>English</language> |
| 2580 | <abstract>jpoker is a poker room client running in the web browser. Unlike its java or flash plugins, it is fully customizable using standard HTML, CSS and images. In less than 3,000 LOC, it provides a poker table, support for multi table tournaments, lobby, user login, user account registration and edition, tournament details and registration, server status and more.</abstract> |
| 2581 | <description>jpoker is a javascript client for playing online poker.</description> |
| 2582 | <persons> |
| 2583 | <person id="700">Johan Euphrosine</person> |
| 2584 | </persons> |
| 2585 | <links> |
| 2586 | <link href="http://jspoker.pokersource.info">http://jspoker.pokersource.info</link> |
| 2595 | <duration>00:15</duration> |
| 2596 | <room>H.1301</room> |
| 2597 | <tag>moz_welcome_sunday</tag> |
| 2598 | <title>Welcome to the Mozilla devroom</title> |
| 2599 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 2600 | <track>Mozilla</track> |
| 2601 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 2602 | <language>English</language> |
| 2603 | <abstract></abstract> |
| 2604 | <description></description> |
| 2605 | <persons> |
| 2606 | <person id="344">Tristan Nitot</person> |
| 2607 | </persons> |
| 2608 | <links> |
| 2609 | </links> |
| 2610 | </event> |
| 2611 | <event id="941"> |
| 2612 | <start>09:15</start> |
| 2613 | <duration>00:30</duration> |
| 2614 | <room>H.1301</room> |
| 2615 | <tag>moz_oss_meetups</tag> |
| 2616 | <title>Open Source Meetups</title> |
| 2617 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 2618 | <track>Mozilla</track> |
| 2619 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 2620 | <language>English</language> |
| 2621 | <abstract>Most people use open source software day by day. A fact that most of them do not know: Often, this free software is being developed, documented, marketed and improved by volunteers in their free time. Many open source projects work on fostering the idea of free software and open content, and a lot of users benefit from their efforts. Other than with proprietary software, users can get in direct touch with the communities via blogs, IRC channels, mailing lists or forums.</abstract> |
| 2622 | <description>Despite the modern way of communicating, personal contact still is the best way to get to know each other. Meeting the people behind the names in reality is a great experience, and helps users of finding their way into open source communites to engage themselves. Therefore, Mozilla and OpenOffice.org jointly organize the so-called "Open-Source-Treffen" ("Open Source Meetings") to help open source projects in meeting their end-users and vice versa. Members of the community can get in touch with their users to gather valuable feedback, and open source adopters meet other supporters from their area. |
| 2623 | In the German city of Munich, the "Open-Source-Treffen" have been taking place regularly, and the idea is to spread the word for other areas, engaging community members to set up more meetings. Carsten Book of Mozilla and Florian Effenberger of OpenOffice.org, founders of the "Open-Source-Treffen", introduce their vision and tell about the previous experiences. Audience for this talk are open source communities wishing to set up their own meetings as well as interested users who love to learn more about the idea.</description> |
| 2624 | <persons> |
| 2625 | <person id="466">Carsten Book</person> |
| 2626 | <person id="745">Florian Effenberger</person> |
| 2627 | </persons> |
| 2628 | <links> |
| 2629 | </links> |
| 2630 | </event> |
| 2631 | <event id="942"> |
| 2632 | <start>09:45</start> |
| 2633 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 2634 | <room>H.1301</room> |
| 2635 | <tag>moz_mozmill</tag> |
| 2636 | <title>Mozmill</title> |
| 2637 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 2638 | <track>Mozilla</track> |
| 2639 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 2640 | <language>English</language> |
| 2641 | <abstract>Automated functional testing</abstract> |
| 2642 | <description></description> |
| 2643 | <persons> |
| 2644 | <person id="746">Henry Skupin</person> |
| 2645 | </persons> |
| 2646 | <links> |
| 2647 | </links> |
| 2648 | </event> |
| 2649 | <event id="943"> |
| 2650 | <start>10:30</start> |
| 2651 | <duration>00:45</duration> |
| 2652 | <room>H.1301</room> |
| 2653 | <tag>moz_l20n</tag> |
| 2654 | <title>L20n</title> |
| 2655 | <subtitle></subtitle> |
| 2656 | <track>Mozilla</track> |
| 2657 | <type>Podium</type> |
| 2658 | <language>English</language> |
| 2659 | <abstract>L20n is the codename for a localization architecture taking existing approaches one step further.</abstract> |
| 2660 | <description>The name stands for l10n 2. This sesion will be targeted at tool authors and their users, localizers, on how we can keep simple things simple and expose the power of l20n at the same time.</description> |
| 2661 | <persons> |
| 2662 | <person id="174">Axel Hecht</person> |
| 2663 | </persons> |
| 2664 | <links> |
| 2665 | <link href="https://wiki.mozilla.org/L20n">https://wiki.mozilla.org/L20n</link> |
| 2666 | </links> |
| 2667 | </event> |
| 2668 | <event id="944"> |
| 2669 | <start>12:00</start> |
3338 | | <room>Lameere</room> |
3339 | | <tag>emb_hackable_1</tag> |
3340 | | <title>Development on the Openmoko with hackable:1</title> |
3341 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
3342 | | <track>Embedded</track> |
3343 | | <type>Podium</type> |
3344 | | <language>English</language> |
3345 | | <abstract>[http://www.hackable1.org/ Hackable:1] is a community distribution for hackable devices like the Openmoko Neo Freerunner. |
3346 | | It is based on Debian and implements the GNOME Mobile platform.</abstract> |
3347 | | <description>This workshop introduces development for the Freerunner using the hackable:1 software distribution.</description> |
3348 | | <persons> |
3349 | | <person id="651">Pierre Pronchery</person> |
3350 | | </persons> |
3351 | | <links> |
3352 | | </links> |
3353 | | </event> |
3354 | | <event id="740"> |
3355 | | <start>10:00</start> |
3356 | | <duration>01:00</duration> |
3357 | | <room>Lameere</room> |
3358 | | <tag>emb_solar_control</tag> |
3359 | | <title>Solar Control with 1-wire Open Hardware</title> |
3360 | | <subtitle></subtitle> |
3361 | | <track>Embedded</track> |
3362 | | <type>Podium</type> |
3363 | | <language>English</language> |
3364 | | <abstract>Solar hot water systems in particular, and home control in general, provide excellent opportunities for fun geeking. Conventional control is done with various boxes, each of which is very stupid. Everything is proprietary and mostly incompatible with other manufacturers. |
3365 | | |
3366 | | Wookey decided that a better solution was one smart controller using open technologies, which could do cool stuff like on-line energy logging.</abstract> |
3367 | | <description>He will explain enough about plumbing that the rest of the talk makes sense, then cover the practicalities of the necessary mix of IO: (I2C, 1-wire, digital IO, switching, displays), Software (logging, control scripting, user feedback) and Hardware (Balloonboard+IO). |
3368 | | |
3369 | | When he's finished you should have enough knowledge to go away and put together your own versatile controller (and solar system), and have an appreciation of the potential of this technology, as well as what work is still needded to make it accessible beyond the world of embedded Linux engineers.</description> |
3370 | | <persons> |
3371 | | <person id="72">Wookey</person> |
3372 | | </persons> |
3373 | | <links> |
3374 | | </links> |
3375 | | </event> |
3376 | | <event id="741"> |
3377 | | |