[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[sheflug] Linux 2006 Conference and Tutorials, Brighton, 29 June - 2
Hi
Thought someone might want to read the announcement from the UKUUG...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Linux 2006 Conference & Tutorials, Brighton, Thur 29th June - Sun 2nd
July
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Full details at http://www.ukuug.org/events/linux2006/
* Early-bird discount is available only until Thursday 8th June *
The event begins with a choice of tutorials on Thursday.
Then the twin-track 3-day conference runs from Friday to Sunday.
Tutorials on Thursday 29th June
-------------------------------
Full-day: Building and Maintaining Software Packages with RPM - Jos
Vos
Morning: Optimising MySQL Databases - Mark Leith (MySQL)
Afternoon: Using SystemTap and kdump to diagnose kernel-related
problems - Richard Moore (IBM)
Introductory talks: Saturday 1st July
-------------------------------------
This section of the conference is aimed at people who are relatively
new to linux and is free of charge. Lunch is included if you
register on the website before Thursday 15th June. Programme so far:
* An introduction to Networking - Antony Stone
* Getting Started with Apache - Jim Kissel (OSM Ltd.)
* Securing Linux - Nils Magnus
* What are all these distributions and how should I choose one?
- Stuart Yeates (OSS Watch)
* Creating DVD videos on Linux and Unix systems - Ben Hutchings
Further talks to be confirmed - watch the website.
Provisional Conference Programme: Friday 30th June - Sunday 2nd July
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Advocacy
* Towards an All-Party Parliamentary Open Source Group - Leslie
Fletcher
* State of Play: Free Software, ready or not? - Luke Kenneth Casson
Leighton
* Introduction to the politics of Linux - Andrew Nicolson
(S'hampton Inst)
* Advocating Linux - Jono Bacon (OpenAdvantage/LUGRadio)
Case Studies
* Apache at The Register: Building a Large Website from mod_rewrite
and mod_include - Aaron Crane
* 30 million and counting: An insight into a enterprise level open
source systems - Neil McGovern (Fotopic.net)
* How does OSS stack up? - Mark Taylor & Duncan Gibb (Sirius
Corporation)
* The State of Open Source in Higher and Further Education - Stuart
Yeates
* OpenStreetMap: The First Year - Steve Coast
* Linux at Home - John Pinner (Clockwork Software Systems)
* User Controlled Virtual Curtains - Torsten Spindler (ETH Zurich)
Clustering and Virtualisation
* Linux HA v2: One CRM to rule them all - Lars Marowsky-Bree (SuSE
Labs)
* How Hardware Supported Virtualization in Xen works - Mats
Petersson (AMD)
* A low-cost Linux based graphics cluster for cultural
visualisation in
virtual environments - Aidan Delaney (University of Brighton)
Desktop and Applications
* Desktop Linux Innovation at Novell - Ted Haeger (Novell)
* SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop: Under the Hood - Ted Haeger
(Novell)
* (Free)NX - Remote Desktop Access, Present and Future - Fabian
Franz
* OpenOffice.org beyond 2.0... - Michael Meeks (Novell)
* Kubuntu Dapper and KDE 4: The GNU/Linux Desktop
- Jonathan Riddell (Canonical)
* MySQL Roadmap - Mark Leith (MySQL)
* Settling on decent Python Web Technologies - Luke Kenneth Casson
Leighton
Grid
* ROOT and PROOF - Ruediger Berlich (Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe)
* The Interactive Europen Grid project (int.eu.grid) - Marcus Hardt
Kernel
* Porting uCLinux on a Coldfire processor: Writing Frame Buffer
Drivers
- Craig Duffy & Edwin Langley (Bristol UWE)
* Flash memories and MTD Subsystem under Linux
Networking and Internet Software Group - C-DAC, Pune University
* The Linux Error Detection and Correction subsystem (EDAC) - Tim
Small
Platforms
* Hardware hacking on a budget; the Amstrad E3 - Jonathan McDowell
Productivity
* Sed: more than just s/foo/bar/ - Tethys
The programme is subject to change - check website for up-to-date
information.
If you book on or before Thursday 8th June you can take advantage of
the Early Bird rates e.g. 65 pounds for the 3-day conference instead
of £100 or just 25 pounds for students. (If you're not already a
UKUUG member, you'll need to add the membership fee to this - details
on website.) Conference rates also include a ticket for the
Conference Dinner on Friday evening (subject to capacity), sponsored
by The Positive Internet Company, and a copy of the conference CD
sponsored by Novell.
There are also still opportunities for sponsors and exhibitors:
contact office [at] ukuug.org for details.
Web: http://www.ukuug.org/events/linux2006/
Email: office [at] ukuug.org
Tel: +44 1763 273 475
--------------------------------------------------------------------
| Event sponsored by Novell, The Positive Internet Company and IBM |
--------------------------------------------------------------------
--
Richard
___________________________________________________________________
Sheffield Linux User's Group -
http://www.sheflug.co.uk/mailfaq.html
GNU the choice of a complete generation.