linux.conf.au payments (attention earlybirds)
Just spreading the word, since neither Andrew nor I received an email
invoice for our registration: credit card payments for linux.conf.au are now
being accepted. (We did get the
announcement, but previous conference experience—ACL, HCSNet—this year has
unfortunately taught me that registration information is not sent out using
titles like Countdown to linux.conf.au 2007: 48 DAYS TO GO
, those kind
of titles now indicate to me we've updated the website!
and now we
have a directory of attendees!
, ie, not action items. So, I didn't actually
read it. Oops.)
People who got the earlybird price (which closed Nov 15) must pay
by December 8. You can also still register now and get the
regular price, although as the announcement (also) pointed out, if you want to
stay on campus in the pre-arranged accommodation, or you want to go to the
dinner, register soon. (It's unpredictable how full they really are, until they
start re-opening spots that people haven't paid for. But 450 attendees who
haven't put down money yet is still a goodly number when I believe the aim is
800.)
(entry)
Advogato, a little bit different
As an update to my note about
advogato.org's mooted closure, the new maintainer Steven Rainwater emailed
me to let me know about the all new, inclusive Advogato: they've added an
aggregator. If you have an Advogato account, you can now return to the recentlog by going to your account settings, ticking the
Syndicate your blog from another site?
box and then putting an RSS or
Atom feed in.
(entry)
Logging into the OSDC wireless network
I have a wireless login script for attendees of OSDC who use Ubuntu, Debian,
or anything else that can run scripts on connecting to a network and has
essentially the same iwconfig output:
eth1 IEEE 802.11g ESSID:"Monash-Conference-Net"
Mode:Managed Frequency:2.437 GHz Access Point: 00:13:7F:9D:36:C0
To save some tiny amount of time when connecting to the wireless, stick my
osdc-login script in your /etc/network/if-up.d directory or equivalent
and give it similar permissions to what's already in there. You can get the
latest version of the script at http://users.puzzling.org/users/mary/bzr/monashlogin/osdc-login,
or through Bazaar, with the repository at
http://users.puzzling.org/users/mary/bzr/monashlogin/. It's very
small, but feel free to send me improvements (although if using Bazaar, please
don't check in a version containing the real username and password).
You need to replace INSERTCONFERENCELOGINHERE with the appropriate
username and INSERTCONFERENCEPWHERE with the password. By running the
script you will be agreeing to Monash's terms of service, which are here.
(entry)
My talk at OSDC: the Planet Feed Reader
I gave a thirty minute presentation at the Open Source Developers' Conference yesterday
about the Planet software and the
associated communities and conventions, focusing more on the latter since one
of my reviewers suggested that the social aspects are more interesting than the
code. My slides
[PDF format, 2.1MB] are now available for the amusement of the wider
public.
Much of the discussion of history was a recap of my Planet Free Software
essay and the discussion of Planet conventions was a loose recap of accumulated
wisdom, including:
- using bloggers' real names, or at least the ones which they attach to email
(usually real names) in addition to common IRC/IM handles is useful for putting
faces to blog entries to contributions;
- once the convention of using real faces and real names is established,
people get upset when the conventions are broken (quoth Luis
Villa:
I’m not sure who/what this
ubuntu-demon is, but ‘random animated head without a name meandering about
doing a lot of engineering work to fix a problem that should not exist’ was not
what I was looking for when I was looking for information on planet
ubuntu
); and
- life blogging is of interest to an extent, many developers would actually
like to feel that they're friends with each other, but the John Fleck case on
Planet GNOME shows that there are limits.
Much of the rest was due to Luis Villa's essay
on blogging in the corporate open source context, but as I wasn't allowed
to set assigned reading to the audience I was able to pad out by half an hour
by including that content.
Mostly it was a fun experiment in doing slides in a format other than six
bullet points per slide, six slides per section, six sections per talk format;
incorporating badly rescaled images in various places; and using Beamer so I was surprised to
end up hosting a Planet BoF (Birds of a Feather) session, discussing it from
the point of view of someone running a Planet (the editor). Some of the topics
that came up were:
- trying to start communities via Planet sites, rather than
enhancing them, by, say, starting a environmental politics Planet;
- the possibility of introducing some of the newer blog ideas to the Free
Software world (like carnivals);
- allowing a community to edit a Planet, and editorial policies in general;
- potential problems with aggregating libellous or illegal content (another
reason some editors apparently insist on real names);
- alternative aggregators;
- banning RSS in favour of Atom;
- whether it is possible or wise to filter people's feeds without their consent;
- moving to the Venus branch of Planet; and
- making Venus trunk.
I may propose a blogging BoF at linux.conf.au and, if I do so, I'll even
plan some discussion points, which will make it less random.
(entry)
Links to Women in Free Software groups
I gave a 5 minute lightning talk at OSDC entitled Women in FOSS
groups
(meaning groups for women involved in Free Software, rather than
about women in Free Software groups, I could have done a better title I know).
It was mostly an attempt to jam Adam Kennedy's lightning talk about Acme::Playmate,
which featured lingerie shots of women (and maybe topless shots, I didn't want
to watch it, being quite firmly and viscerally of the belief that there's a
very small amount of sexual desire I like at my open source conferences). So
mine featured pictures of women, fully clothed, with labels like Linux
user
and AI researcher
.
For more on Kennedy's talk, see Richard Jones' entry
about it: Jones was the chair of the session that Kennedy gave his talk in.
I'm not putting my slides up for a few reasons: bits of them only make sense
in the context of that particular jam; other bits only make sense if you hear
me say the words that went along with them; and finally while I got permission
to use them in the talk, I didn't get permission from all the women whose
pictures I used to stick said pictures on the 'net.
However, the last couple of slides were a list of links to groups for women
using and developing Free Software, and Paul asked if I could provide them in a place
where people would have a chance to write them down. Fortunately, these were
even prepared earlier:
- LinuxChix's list
of groups for women in computing generally; and
- LinuxChix's
list of groups for women developing Free Software (and Free Culture, in
the case of WikiChix).
(entry)