fedora contributor conferencerezza.hofyland.cz/fedora/flock/flock.pdf · fedora planet...
TRANSCRIPT
Fedora Contributor ConferenceAugust 9 - 12, Charleston, South Carolina
For eight years, Fedora users and developers have gathered at an
event named for them, the Fedora Users and Developers Conference
(FUDCon). But we’ve grown, and it’s time for a new approach: Flock.
We're glad you've joined us for the first of what we hope will be many
more.
Flock is a brand-new conference where Fedora contributors can come
together, discuss new ideas, bring them to reality, and continue to
promote the core values of the Fedora community: Freedom, Friends,
Features, and First.
Fedora and the people who participate in the project (that's you!)
encompass so much more than just an interest in Linux. Flock is where
you'll meet other members of the community who share whatever
your interest is, whether it’s the kernel or the cloud, hardware or UX
design. We also want to embrace and invite the growing open
hardware community--such as our keynote speaker Aeva Palecek--so
that we can learn from one another and create better things together.
The Fedora community is broad, and we unfortunately can't all be
here. Please share online what you do and learn at Flock. Blog, dent,
tweet, join #fedora-flock on IRC... however you like to share, please
spread what you learn over the next few days.
Finally, we hope you have a wonderful time in Charleston, but when
you get home, keep an eye out for a call for bids for next year's Flock
location, which will be held in Europe!
Ruth Suehle | Tom Callaway | Josh Boyer | Robyn Bergeron
Flock Planning Committee
Welcome to Flock
2
Please blog about Flock, and if you haven't already, add your blog to
Fedora Planet (planet.fedoraproject.org). Learn how at ur1.ca/eo3zl.
If you are new to Fedora, feel free to ask someone (in IRC if you're
not even sure whom to ask!), and we'll be happy to help.
If you were subsidized to come to Flock, we ask that you add yourself
to Fedora Planet and write at least one blog post about the event.
We'll be asking for your links later.
Take Flock Online
blogging
Microblogging is a great way to promote Flock as well as Fedora.
You'll also see updates that way and find out where interesting things
are happening. Use the hashtag #flocktofedora and follow @fedora on
identi.ca, Twitter, Facebook (facebook.com/TheFedoraProject), and
Google+ (gplus.to/fedoraproject).
microblogging
Our main IRC channel for the event is #fedora-flock. If you are taking
notes for a session, please report the session name and channel to
that channel. If you are using Gobby or Etherpad, note that in the
main channel as well. Each conference room's channel is
#fedora-flock-<roomnumber>, for example, #fedora-flock-109 for
room ECTR 109.
IRC
3
4
In an emergency, CALL 911. If you can, also have someone contact an
event organizer.
The College of Charleston campus has 43 orange emergency call
boxes that will contact campus police. To use one, push in the call
button and release, which will notify the dispatcher of your location.
To talk the dispatcher, hold the button down. Release the button to
listen. There is a map of call box locations at parkingservices.cofc.edu/
docs/map-only.pdf
The nearest hospital is the Medical University of South Carolina
Hospital, 171 Ashley Ave, (843) 792-1414. The emergency room is at 96
Jonathan Lucas Street.
Need Help?
emergencies
If you need help quickly, you can find Ruth Suehle (suehle), Tom
Callaway (spot), or Josh Boyer (jwb) on irc.freenode.net in #flock-
help. You can also text or call Ruth at (567) 429-1701 or Tom at (617)
899 8445
get help from Flock staff
Flock is a conference that brings together members of the Fedora
community, new and old, professional and volunteer, from all over the
world. Diversity is one of our huge strengths, but it can also lead to
communication issues and unhappiness. Attendees are required to be
considerate and respectful of each other. This includes, but is not
limited to:
Refraining from rude behavior
Refraining from any sort of harassment or discrimination (based on
ethnic background, religion, gender, sexuality, body shape, disability,
geographic location, sports team, preferred operating system, or
anything else for that matter)
Obeying local laws
Attendees who are in violation of this policy may be subject to
removal and banning from Flock (and future Fedora events). Whether
an attendee is in violation is at the sole discretion of the conference
staff.
Anyone with a possible concern relating to the code of conduct is
encouraged to either email the Flock conference staff
([email protected]) or talk directly to a Flock conference
staff member. Flock staff members have a special "STAFF" identifier
on their event badges.
Code of Conduct
5
Join us from 7-9 p.m. in the beautiful courtyard of the Blind Tiger Pub.
We’ll get you acquainted with Charleston with pulled pork biscuits and
shrimp ‘n grits, among other tasty delights.
Evening Events
Friday, August 9Blind Tiger Pub
36-38 Broad St, Charleston
Saturday evening from 7-10, we’ll be at nearby Mynt for food and
drinks and fun! We’ll have it to ourselves from 7-10 p.m., after which
the bar will open, and you’re welcome to stay on your own if you like.
Please note their dress code: No athletic shoes, hats, baggy clothes, or
jerseys. Sleeves required (yes, short sleeves are fine).
Our farewell party will be from 7-11 p.m. at the South Carolina
Aquarium, the harborfront home to more than 10,000 plants and
animals and featuring the Great Ocean Tank, a 42'-tall, 385,000-
gallon tank with more than 300 animals. Local brews and food will be
provided, and you'll have the freedom to explore the aquarium.
Saturday, August 10
Sunday, August 11
Mynt135 Calhoun St, Charleston
South Carolina Aquarium100 Aquarium Wharf, Charleston
6
Coffee is available each morning in the sponsor room at 8:30 a.m.
Lunch break is each day at 12:50 p.m. Consult the map at
ur1.ca/etutq for a list of locations where you can use the meal card
you received at registration.
Afternoon snacks are available in the sponsor room at 2:30 p.m.
The quiet room is in room ECTR102 for quiet meditation and
reflection (aka hacking without noise).
The sponsor hall (room ECTR111) is open daily from 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
Get the full schedule online, where you can make a personal
schedule: flock2013.sched.org or with this .ics file:
flock2013.sched.org/all.ics or on mobile: flock2013.sched.org/mobile
1/2 Page Ad
General Schedule Info
7
In Memory of Seth Vidal
Seth Kelby Vidal, a ruggedly handsome cyclist and open source
software guru was killed Monday, July 8, 2013. He was 36 years old.
Seth described himself as a misanthropic humanist. To those who love
him, he was a brother, partner, son, mentor, indefatigable
curmudgeon, loyal friend and champion for good who believed
deeply in community, and worked to improve every one that he was a
part of. A constant contrarian and invaluable resource, Seth could
build a bike, recommend a restaurant, and upgrade your technology.
Seth knew the names of every canine in the neighborhood, and most
of their people. He was a brilliant, kind, compassionate, generous, and
caring young man whose abilities and knowledge in his field were
beyond comprehension. He was known worldwide, and often spoke
at conferences in the US and abroad. A wicked storyteller and the
consummate traveling companion, he would unabashedly regale road
trip cohorts with song. The world will be considerably quieter in his
absence.
10
Regional Map
Charleston Airport (CHS)Charleston Airport (CHS)
FlockFlock
Local Area Map
Francis Marion Hotel
Francis Marion Hotel
Hampton Inn Charleston
Hampton Inn Charleston
Flock Venu(Education Center
Building)
Flock Venue(Education Center
Building)
Mynt(Saturday party)Mynt(Saturday party)
Blind Tiger Pub(Friday party)Blind Tiger Pub(Friday party)
South Carolina Aquarium(Sunday party)South Carolina Aquarium(Sunday party)
go to http://goo.gl/maps/uoBd4 for a google map with markers listing all nearby lunch places
go to http://goo.gl/maps/uoBd4 for a google map with markers listing all nearby lunch places
11
12
Venue Map
George Street
Gle
be
Str
ee
t
Wentworth Street
St P
hilip
Stre
et
Education Center Building(Most Sessions, Vendor Room,Snacks, Quiet Room)
Stern Center BuildingSecond Floor Ballroom(Keynotes & AuditoriumSessions)
13
Quiet Room
ECTR101ECTR120
ECTR114
ECTR115
ECTR112
Sponsor +
SnackRoom
ECTR109ECTR107
ECTR103
ECTR212 is the only room on the second level
StaffRoom
Education Center Building
Friday Schedule
The Highly Esteemed Fedora Project Leader's World-Famous State of Fedora Address, followed by the Flock group photo.Speaker: Robyn Bergeron
Main Auditorium - 9 a.m. (Coffee at 8:30 in the sponsor room)
Friday session one - 10 a.m.
Auditorium #infrastructure
Fedmsg - Fedora Infrastructure's Real-time Messaging System by Ralph Bean
ECTR101 #developer #packaging
Creating an RPM From Scratchby Itamar Reis Peixoto
ECTR103 #infrastructure
"Ask Fedora" Updateby Rahul Sundaram
ECTR109 #ARM
Fedora ARM State of the Unionby Peter Robinson
ECTR115 #kernel
A Tour of Linux Portabilityby Kyle McMartin
14
ECTR107 #future
Evolution of a Linux Distributionand Its Ecosystem by Subhendu Ghosh
ECTR112 #security
State of Security in Fedoraby Dan Walsh
ECTR120
Is "Cloud" Something Beyond A Buzzword, And Should Fedora Care? by Matthew Miller
#cloud
ECTR212 #education
Education With Fedora by Johel Heraclio Batista Cardenas
Friday session two - 11 a.m.
Friday session three - 12 p.m.
Auditorium #ARM
ARM Architecture 101by Jon Masters
Auditorium #community #future
Why Fedora Sucks!by Christoph Wickert
ECTR101 #developer #infrastructure
Darkserver: Current and Future Roadmapby Kushal Das
ECTR103 #infrastructure
Hyperkitty: The New Mailing List UIby Aurélien Bompard
ECTR109 #ARM #developer
Porting Fedora to 64-bit ARMby Jon Masters
ECTR115 #kernel
State of the Fedora Kernelby Josh Boyer
ECTR212 #education
Fedora College by Eduardo Echeverria
ECTR107 #future
Installer Redesign and Rewrite Retrospectiveby David Cantrell
ECTR112 #security
FreeIPA Two Factor Authenticationby Nathaniel McCallum
ECTR120
Putting the PaaS in Fedora by Steven Citron-Pousty
#cloud
ECTR101 #developer
Agility and FOSSby Haïkel Guémar
ECTR103 #infrastructure # developer
Bugzillaby Emmanuel Seyman
ECTR109 #ARM #future
Future of the Datacenterby Dennis Gilmore
ECTR115 #kernel
KERNEL BUG TRIAGE LIVE!by Dave Jones
ECTR212 #future #packaging
Fedora Software Center by Richard Hughes
ECTR107 #ambassador
Fedora Ambassadors - State of the Unionby Jiří Eischmann
ECTR112 #marketing
P****** - Product Naming in Global Communities by Chris Tyler
ECTR120
Bringing Hadoop to Fedora by Peter MacKinnon
#cloud
15
Friday session four - 2 p.m.
Friday session five - 4 p.m.
Auditorium #future
Fedora Revamp - Next Stepsby Miloslav Trmač
Auditorium #future
The Fedora Crystal Ball: Where Are We Going For The Next Five Years? by Stephen Gallagher
ECTR101 #developer #python
Making Fedora python3-Readyby Toshio Kuratomi
ECTR103 #infrastructure
Highly Available Databasesby Kevin Fenzi
ECTR109 #ARM
How Do I Use ARM Computers In The "Real World"? by Peter Robinson
ECTR115 #developer
Fedora Mobile Appsby Ricky Elrod
ECTR114 #developer
Building Apps with NodeWebKit by Thomas WIlson
ECTR107
Fedora Release Engineeringby Dennis Gilmore
#infrastructure
ECTR112 #security
Fedora Security Labby Fabian Affolter
ECTR120
Future of Supplemental Wallpapers by Sirko Kemter
#design
ECTR101 #developer #documentation
Document Your Codeby Kushal Das
ECTR103 #infrastructure #developer
HyperKitty Hackfestby Aurélien Bompard
ECTR114 #desktop
Alternative Desktops: Unite!by Christoph Wickert
ECTR115 #developer
Get Go-ingby Vincent Batts
ECTR107 #developer
Programming in Haskellby Garrett Mitchener
ECTR112 #marketing
Fedora Marketing Hackfestby Maria Tatica Leandro
ECTR120
DOAP in fedora-packages by Pierre-Yves Chibon
#cloud
16
ECTR114 #clevergirl
velociraptor
full Page Ad
18
Saturday Schedule
The 3D printing community is the largest and fastest growing part of the libre hardware community. With this rapid expansion, the need for better tooling is becoming evident, both to improve accessibility to every day users and to empower new contributors. Fedora is the first and only major GNU/Linux distribution to package most of the free software tooling used in 3D printing today, which is an important step, but the tools themselves need to be improved further.
This talk discusses the current state of free software in the context of libre hardware 3D printing--new developments, opportunities for further involvement, and areas of concern. The talk will also include a demonstration of hardware from Lulzbot--the makers of the only 3D printers that carry the FSF's "Respects Your Freedom" certification.Speaker: Aeva Palcek
Keynote: Lulzbot and 3D Printing, Main Auditorium, 9 a.m.
Saturday session one - 10 a.m.
Auditorium #ARM
Pidora 18 (Raspberry Pi Fedora Remix)by Andrew Oatley-Willis
ECTR101 #developer
Using Fedora for Developing Things Other Than Fedora by Langdon White
ECTR103 #infrastructure
Fedora at Yahoo!by Arun S A G
ECTR112 #security
SELinux for Mere Mortalsby Thomas Cameron
ECTR115 #kernel
Kernel Regression Testing for Fun and Profitby Justin Forbes
ECTR109 #arm
Virtualization on ARMby John Dulaney
ECTR114 #developer
Gource: Telling Stories via Source Codeby Suzanne Reed
ECTR120 #cloud
19
Federated & Free: Distributed and Decentralized Applications on OpenShift by Ryan Jarvinen
Auditorium #infrastructure
Fedora Badgesby Ralph Bean and David Gay
ECTR101 #developer
Make Games Using Free-as-in-FreedomArt and Audio by Iwan Gabovitch
ECTR103 #infrastructure
Fedora Passwords (Then and Now)by Stephen Smoogen
ECTR112 #security
What's New with SELinuxby Dan Walsh
ECTR115 #kernel
BTRFS - Cool Butterby John Dulaney
ECTR109 #infrastructure
A Hot Rodder's Guide to Maximum Performance LAMP by Jeremy Sands
ECTR114 #developer #packaging
What's New in Software Management?by Jan Zeleny
ECTR120 #cloud
Scale or Fail - Give Your App the Speed It Needs in the Cloud by Steven Citron-Pousty
ECT107 #future
An Architecture For a More Agile Fedoraby Matthew Miller
Saturday session three - 12 p.m.
Auditorium #cloud #future
OpenShift, Fedora, and the Future ofPackaged Web Apps by Andy Grimm
Saturday session two - 11 a.m.
ECTR101 #developer
KVM and Virtio Introductionby Nitesh Narayan Lal
ECTR103 #packaging
Submitting Updates via Bodhi: How (And Why!) to Do It Properly by Adam Williamson
ECTR112 #security
Hardening Apacheby Eduardo Echeverria
ECTR115 #kernel
Kernel Fuzz Testingby Dave Jones
ECTR109 #games
Mozilla Open Badges in Sugar on OLPCby Ryan Stush
ECTR114 #packaging
AWS, Private Cloud, and Open Sourceby Greg DeKoenigsberg
ECTR120 #cloud #developer
pcp+systemtap: Performance Monitoring for Workstations and Networks by Frank Ch. Eigler
ECT107 #testing
Task Automation in Fedora QAby Tim Flink
20
Saturday session five - 4 p.m.
Saturday session four - 2 p.m.
Auditorium #lightning!
Lightning Demos
ECTR101 #packaging
Systemd Integration into Fedoraby Jóhann B. Guðmundsson
ECTR103 #infrastructure
Oauthby Patrick Uiterwijk
ECTR112 #infrastructure
Dataviewer Hackfestby Ian Weller
ECTR115
Ham Radio VE Session
ECTR109 #ARM #documentation
ARM Documentation Hackfestby Jared Smith
ECTR114 #developer
The Totally New Fedora Changes Processby Stephen Gallagher & Jaroslav Řezník
ECTR120 #cloud
OpenStack Test Eventby Kashyap Chamarthy
ECT107 #infrastructure #testing
Task Automation Hackingby Jeremy Sands
Auditorium #lightning!
Lightning Talks
ECTR101 #developer
Rebase You Git!by Haïkel Guémar
ECTR103 #infrastructure
pkgdb2 by Pierre-Yves Chibon
ECTR112 #games
Creating 3D Racing Game Maps With GIMPand Inkscape by Iwan Gabovitch
ECTR107 #design #pants
Inkscape Workshopby Ryan Lerch
ECTR109 #ARM
21
How to bring up a new ARM board with Fedora by Peter Robinson
ECTR114 #developer
Sugar and OLPC Birds of a Featherby Casey DeLorme
ECTR120 #VOIP
Fedora VOIP Sprint by David Sugar
Sunday Schedule
Session one - 10 a.m.
Auditorium #future #packaging
Changing the Default Updates Modelby Tom Callaway
ECTR101 #developer #packaging
User Build Toolsby Kyle McMartin
ECTR103 #developer
Code Review for Fedora Appsby Ricky Elrod
ECTR109 #ambassador
Fedora Project Ambassadors: Collaborate,Design, Engage by Christos Bacharakis
ECTR114 #future
Fedora vs. the Semantic Webby Pierre-Yves Chibon
ECTR107 #developer
User Testing for the Rest of USby Emily Dirsh
ECTR112 #security
Secure Linux Containersby Dan Walsh
ECTR120 #cloud
Hyperscale Cloud Management with OpenStack by Chris Tyler
22
Cantarell is the default UI font in GNOME3. The founder of the project, Dave Crossland, details his work during the last few years to cultivate a free culture of typography, and reveals a new model of crowdfunding that he hopes will enable more people to work on their projects full time.
Keynote: Making Free Fonts Full Time -- Main Auditorium, 9 a.m.
Use the coupon code "FLOCK" to get 10% off everything in the adafruit store that is in
stock. Expires Aug 31 2013
www.adafruit.com
Flock Special
Auditorium #infrastructure
Ansibleby Michael DeHaan
ECTR101 #infrastructure #testing
Scaling Integration Testing with Beakerby Nick Coughlan
ECTR103 #infrastructure #packaging
The Life of a Packageby Kevin Fenzi
ECTR109 #ambassador
Fedora Ambassadors Census by Christoph Wickert
ECTR114 #developer #infrastructure
Unifying Admistration with OpenLMIby Stephen Gallagher
ECTR107 #future #kernel
The State of OrangeFSby Boyd Wilson
ECTR112 #infrastructure
Measuring the Fedora Community with Censusby Nathaniel McCallum
ECTR120 #cloud
See the Light: SDN, OpenDaylight, Open vSwitch, and Fedora by Robyn Bergeron
23
Sunday Session Three - 12 p.m.
Sunday Session Two - 11 a.m.
Auditorium #games
Gaming on Fedoraby Rákosi Gergely
ECTR101 #desktop
About MATE Desktopby Dan Mashal
ECTR103 #infrastructure
OpenID in the Fedora Servicesby Patrick Uiterwijk
ECTR109 #ambassador
Ambassadors Work in a Region: Annual Planning by Truong Anh Tuan
ECTR114 #marketing
Fedora Videosby Nitesh Narayan Lal
ECTR107 #VOIP
Making Distributed VIOP Work (And Work Well)by Jared Smith
ECTR112 #security
PKI Made Easy: Managing Certificates with Dogtag by Ade Lee
ECTR120 #cloud
Polyglot Spatial with FOSS in the Cloudby Steven Citron-Pousty
Sunday session four - 2 p.m.
Sunday 4 p.m. - Conference Recap with FESCo
Come and say hello to the members of your Fedora Engineering Steering Committee. Please leave the tomatoes at home.
Auditorium #community
Fedora Women Programby Maria Tatica Leandro
ECTR101 #desktop #developer
Graduating to GUI: PyGObject for Beginnersby Paul Frields
ECTR103 #infrastructure
Bohdi 2.0 Hackfestby Luke Macken
ECTR109 #infrastructure
Fedocalby Pierre-Yves Chibon
ECTR114 #developer
OpenLMI Manafeability Hackfestby Stephen Gallagher
ECTR107 #packaging #python
Updated Python Guidelinesby Toshio Kuratomi
ECTR112 #infrastructure
Census Hackfestby Nathaniel McCallum
ECTR120 #security
Fedora Security Lab Test Benchby Fabian Affolter
24
25
Sponsors
Platinum
Gold Silver
Bronze
Notes
Notes
get the flock 2013 badge
References to businesses in this booklet are provided as a convenience and do not indicate or
imply endorsement by the Fedora Project or any of Flock's sponsors.
This booklet, except for the advertisements and any trademarked logos, is licensed under the
Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this
license, visit ur1.ca/2qvj4
The Bird Image on the Flock T-Shirt was created from the following photograph
http://www.flickr.com/photos/24161110@N00/774773334/
The maps used in this booklet are from http://maps.stamen.com
A very special thanks to the College of Charleston.