Mailinglist Archive: opensuse (4054 mails)
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openSUSE @ FOSDEM 2006!
- From: Christoph Thiel <cthiel@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 13 Jan 2006 19:49:09 +0100 (CET)
- Message-id: <Pine.LNX.4.64.0601131840120.1377@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Hello everyone,
the sixth Free and Open source Software Developers' European Meeting
(commonly known as FOSDEM, http://www.fosdem.org/) will take place during
the last week-end (25&26) of February 2006 in the city of Brussels,
Belgium. It's an annual 2-day event hosting talks, tutorials, and booths
for the free software/open source community. It is organized by volunteers
at the Université Libre de Bruxelles in Belgium. Access to all parts of
FOSDEM is _free of charge_ (but donations and sponsors are welcome to help
fund the event).
The openSUSE project will be participating at FOSDEM with an openSUSE
'DevRoom' (Developer Room) and a small booth. This week we had a meeting
to further coordinate our FOSDEM participance. The outcome is a tentative
schedule for the DevRoom, which we would like to share with you. Your
feedback on this would be very much appreciated! Did we miss to address a
certain topic?
Please note that this schedule isn't cast in stone in any way yet -- so if
you would like to contribute to our DevRoom (e.g. by delivering a talk or
by giving a tutorial), raise your hand NOW (or contact me off-list).
I'v just updated http://www.opensuse.org/FOSDEM, which has all the
information on openSUSE @ FOSDEM 2006. (If any wiki god is listening: Any
style improvement to that page would be very welcome!)
That's it for the moment, time to proceed to the actual schedule:
Saturday, February 25th
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
13:00 - 14:00 openSUSE--Motivation, Goals, and Opportunities
(Sonja Krause-Harder, adrian? / michl? / cthiel?)
Why did Novell start the openSUSE project? What is
different from other projects? Get a short overview of our
motivations and plans for the future of the openSUSE
project as well as hear your opinions and discuss where
openSUSE can go in the future with you.
14:00 - 15:00 Introducing the openSUSE Build Service
(Adrian Schroeter, Cornelius Schumacher, Andreas Bauer)
Learn how the openSUSE Build Service works and helps you
build packages. Get an overview of the tools and
functionalities that the openSUSE Build Service offers.
15:00 - 16:00 SUSE Linux Power Management--One Step Ahead!
(Timo Hoenig, Holger Macht)
Power management for SUSE Linux. Suspending the whole
system was the first step. Now it is time for runtime
power management to paralyze devices that shorten your
battery life time on the road.
16:00 - 17:00 SUSE Linux 10.2--Quo vadis?
(Michael Loeffler, Christoph Thiel)
What's new and cool in SUSE Linux 10.1? What are the
features and highlights? We answer these questions and
discuss goals and focuses for SUSE Linux 10.2 and beyond.
17:00 - 17:30 Q & A
Sunday, February 26th
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
09:00 - 10:00 Developer Breakfast
10:00 - 11:00 Packaging Tutorial--The Bricks We Build With
(Hendrik Vogelsang, Marcus Rueckert)
The journey from a spec file to a distribution. An
introduction to RPM packaging for openSUSE and the tasks
that come with it.
11:00 - 12:00 Cross-Distribution Building with the openSUSE Build Service
(Michael Schroeder)
The openSUSE Build Service is not only limited to build
packages for SUSE Linux, but offers the possibility to
build a package for other distributions (such as Mandriva,
Fedora, or even Debian). This talk presents methods to
make packages built for multiple distributions.
12:00 - 12:30 "Speed Talks" (various topics)
This slot is reserved to present various topics in 5-10
minute talks.
12:30 - 14:00 Writing Your Own YaST Module in a Few Hours
(Stefan Hundhammer)
Powerful configuration options are what set many OS
projects apart from commercial software. Why not go all
the way and offer an easy-to-use GUI for configuration--on
top of existing configuration files? YaST provides a
powerful framework to do just that and it is simple and
efficient enough to write your own YaST module.
14:00 - 15:00 The SUSE Security Process
(Marcus Meissner)
This lecture gives an introduction into the work of the
SUSE Security Team. If you ever wanted to know how SUSE
approaches releasing security updates or looking at new
security critical packages, this is the place to listen
and ask questions.
15:00 - 16:00 SUSE Linux LiveCD Tutorial
(Torsten Duwe)
This tutorial introduces the SUSE Linux LiveCD script,
which transforms a SUSE Linux installation source into a
CD or DVD image that hosts a live version of SUSE Linux,
which can be used without the need to install it onto a
hard disk first.
16:00 - 17:30 Q & A
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Have a nice weekend
Christoph
the sixth Free and Open source Software Developers' European Meeting
(commonly known as FOSDEM, http://www.fosdem.org/) will take place during
the last week-end (25&26) of February 2006 in the city of Brussels,
Belgium. It's an annual 2-day event hosting talks, tutorials, and booths
for the free software/open source community. It is organized by volunteers
at the Université Libre de Bruxelles in Belgium. Access to all parts of
FOSDEM is _free of charge_ (but donations and sponsors are welcome to help
fund the event).
The openSUSE project will be participating at FOSDEM with an openSUSE
'DevRoom' (Developer Room) and a small booth. This week we had a meeting
to further coordinate our FOSDEM participance. The outcome is a tentative
schedule for the DevRoom, which we would like to share with you. Your
feedback on this would be very much appreciated! Did we miss to address a
certain topic?
Please note that this schedule isn't cast in stone in any way yet -- so if
you would like to contribute to our DevRoom (e.g. by delivering a talk or
by giving a tutorial), raise your hand NOW (or contact me off-list).
I'v just updated http://www.opensuse.org/FOSDEM, which has all the
information on openSUSE @ FOSDEM 2006. (If any wiki god is listening: Any
style improvement to that page would be very welcome!)
That's it for the moment, time to proceed to the actual schedule:
Saturday, February 25th
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
13:00 - 14:00 openSUSE--Motivation, Goals, and Opportunities
(Sonja Krause-Harder, adrian? / michl? / cthiel?)
Why did Novell start the openSUSE project? What is
different from other projects? Get a short overview of our
motivations and plans for the future of the openSUSE
project as well as hear your opinions and discuss where
openSUSE can go in the future with you.
14:00 - 15:00 Introducing the openSUSE Build Service
(Adrian Schroeter, Cornelius Schumacher, Andreas Bauer)
Learn how the openSUSE Build Service works and helps you
build packages. Get an overview of the tools and
functionalities that the openSUSE Build Service offers.
15:00 - 16:00 SUSE Linux Power Management--One Step Ahead!
(Timo Hoenig, Holger Macht)
Power management for SUSE Linux. Suspending the whole
system was the first step. Now it is time for runtime
power management to paralyze devices that shorten your
battery life time on the road.
16:00 - 17:00 SUSE Linux 10.2--Quo vadis?
(Michael Loeffler, Christoph Thiel)
What's new and cool in SUSE Linux 10.1? What are the
features and highlights? We answer these questions and
discuss goals and focuses for SUSE Linux 10.2 and beyond.
17:00 - 17:30 Q & A
Sunday, February 26th
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
09:00 - 10:00 Developer Breakfast
10:00 - 11:00 Packaging Tutorial--The Bricks We Build With
(Hendrik Vogelsang, Marcus Rueckert)
The journey from a spec file to a distribution. An
introduction to RPM packaging for openSUSE and the tasks
that come with it.
11:00 - 12:00 Cross-Distribution Building with the openSUSE Build Service
(Michael Schroeder)
The openSUSE Build Service is not only limited to build
packages for SUSE Linux, but offers the possibility to
build a package for other distributions (such as Mandriva,
Fedora, or even Debian). This talk presents methods to
make packages built for multiple distributions.
12:00 - 12:30 "Speed Talks" (various topics)
This slot is reserved to present various topics in 5-10
minute talks.
12:30 - 14:00 Writing Your Own YaST Module in a Few Hours
(Stefan Hundhammer)
Powerful configuration options are what set many OS
projects apart from commercial software. Why not go all
the way and offer an easy-to-use GUI for configuration--on
top of existing configuration files? YaST provides a
powerful framework to do just that and it is simple and
efficient enough to write your own YaST module.
14:00 - 15:00 The SUSE Security Process
(Marcus Meissner)
This lecture gives an introduction into the work of the
SUSE Security Team. If you ever wanted to know how SUSE
approaches releasing security updates or looking at new
security critical packages, this is the place to listen
and ask questions.
15:00 - 16:00 SUSE Linux LiveCD Tutorial
(Torsten Duwe)
This tutorial introduces the SUSE Linux LiveCD script,
which transforms a SUSE Linux installation source into a
CD or DVD image that hosts a live version of SUSE Linux,
which can be used without the need to install it onto a
hard disk first.
16:00 - 17:30 Q & A
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Have a nice weekend
Christoph
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