Showing posts with label linuxfestnorthwest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label linuxfestnorthwest. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Donate to LGM! (and other conference-related items)

For the 1% of Open Source software enthusiasts who haven't yet seen this yet: Donate to support the development of free/libre/open source graphics software by helping developers meet in real time, in person, (etc.) at the Libre Graphics Meeting 2008! I'm a big fan of Inkscape, because it lets me, as someone who is not very artistic (nor has very good (precise) hand-eye coordination) to create and manipulate logos and icons with ease. My graphics programming skills are essentially non-existent, so I figured that I could be more useful by donating some cash to help a developer of one of the participating projects travel to the meeting.

And here's the shiny (but not flash-shiny) information-rich button that they're using to show how much more money they need to reach their goal: Click here to lend your support to the Libre Graphics Meeting and make a donation at www.pledgie.com ! (I should note for the American-income-tax-minded that this is a tax-deductable donation.)

On a somewhat related note, I'm planning on going to LinuxFest Northwest 2008. Fortunately for me, both the conference and the transportation is free. People who have either followed me for at least a year or have read through the archives know that I went last year. I plan on going on Saturday again (this year, April 26), and I'm bringing my XO laptop with me. If things work out right (i.e., my stupid printer decides to work), I'll have a nice, big Awn icon (again, thank you Inkscape!) taped to my bag. It'll be an interesting experiment to see who recognizes it.

Monday, April 30, 2007

Report: Linuxfest Northwest, Saturday

After hearing about it from a friend (specificallly, that I could get there for free courtesy of Pogo Linux), I decided to go to an actual Linux...fest... and take in the nerd atmosphere without getting some sort of otaku or gamer disease. Unfortunately, I could only go on Saturday. I would have loved to hear Brad Fitzpatrick talk about how LiveJournal scales their databases, among other things.

The bus left promptly at 8:06AM. The movie they were showing on those little screens scattered throughout the bus was the X-Files movie, which I have no intention of watching, so I caught up on some reading for one of my classes. One amusing thing that I noticed on the way up was that there was a "Lychee Buffet" restaurant at the freeway exit for the college. If you think about it, it sounds rather disturbing.

I had roughly 15 minutes between the time that the bus arrived and the first presentations. In that time, I got a bunch of CDs from the Ubuntu and Oracle tables (it was like the Oracle table was having a fire sale - I got an Oracle DVD and an Oracle Linux DVD), and some stickers from the FSF table, including the "Bad Vista" one.

The first talk that I heard was on copyright and open source, by Karl Fogel (of CVS/SVN fame). It was really interesting, given my affinity for history (especially regarding science and technology). He talked about the parallels between the era of the printing press and the present-day. I didn't realize that copyright (or proto-copyright) was created as a censorship/printing restriction tool by the official guild of printers.

The second talk I attended was on strong authentication, in particular multi-factor authentication. It was very informative, especially in regards to how those one-time password keyfobs work.

Presentation number three was about practical honeypots. I wasn't really impressed with it overall. It was rather high-level, and the presenter admitted that he had only started working on it that morning. A lot of it seemed like common sense, like being preemptive, only concentrating on exploits that are relevant to your particular systems, etc.

The last talk I observed was on scaling web services, by a lead developer from Real Networks. He reminded me of Penn from Penn & Teller. It was a very engaging talk, and it gave me a new perspective on scalability, that is, it's essentially an organizational problem, as opposed to a technological problem.

A closing thought: I would have loved to have gotten one of those stuffed SuSE lizards...it would have fit in well with the Tux I got in Canada several years ago.