Archive for the ‘LCA’ category

SysAdmin mini-conf CPF extended

September 29th, 2009

I’m helping (a little) organise the SysAdmin mini-conf at linux.conf.au 2010 (Wellington, NZ) and we’re currently in “call for papers” mode.  We’re looking for a range of talks – short, medium, long – cool related things:

Systems Administration, Backups, Security, Troubleshooting, Buying Decisions, Virtualisation, Enterprise Monitoring and Management, Identity Management, Web and Email management, Wiki, Clustering and High Availability, Log Management, Spam and Virus Filtering, VOIP, Ticketing systems, Bootstrapping and automated installation, Configuration Management and packaging.

If you do something cool in one of these areas I think you definitely should submit!  Submissions close 15/10/2009 so get in quick.

Linux.conf.au 2010 – Call for Papers opens

June 29th, 2009

The linux.conf.au (LCA) 2010 call for papers now open! Woot! Woot! etc, etc.

Next year’s LCA from Monday 18 January 2010 to Saturday 23 January 2010 in sunny downtown Wellington, New Zealand.

Speaking as a former organiser (AKA LCA Ghost) I think, in an entirely unbiased way, that it the best Linux/ conference in the world. It covers everything from hardcore kernel hacking to community discussions and legal issues. The best people come, the social events rock and the event always well organised and friendly.

The CFP has opened today and closes the 24th of July, 2009 and its general blurb :


The Papers Committee looking for a broad range of papers spanning everything from programming and software to desktop and userspace to community, government and education but there one essential:

The core of your paper must relate to open source in some way, i.e., if it’s a paper about software then the software has to be licensed under an Open Source license.

The Papers Committee welcome proposals for Papers the following topics:

* Kernel and system topics such as filesystems and embedded devices
* Networking topics such as peer to peer networking, or tuning a TCP/IP stack
* Desktop topics such as office and productivity applications, mobile devices, peripherals, crypto & security and viruses and other malware
* Server topics such as clusters and other supercomputers, databases and grid computing
* Systems administration topics such as maintaining large numbers of machines and disaster recovery
* Programming topics such as software engineering practices and test driven development
* Free Software and Free Culture topics, including licencing and Free and Open approaches outside software
* Free Software usage topics, including home, IT, education, manufacturing, research and government usage.

Most presentations and tutorials will be technical in nature, but proposals for presentations other aspects of Free Software and Free Culture, such as educational and cultural aspects are welcome.

pleased to invite proposals for three types of papers:

* Presentation – 45 minutes
* Tutorials – 1 hour and 45 minutes (short)
* Tutorials – 3 hours and 30 minutes (long)

Presentations are 45 minute slots (including questions) that are typically a one-way lecture from you to the audience – the typical conference presentation. These form the bulk of the available conference slots.

Tutorials are either 1 hour and 45 minutes, or 3 hours and 30 minutes in length, and work best when they are interactive or hands- in nature. Tutorials are expected to have a specific learning outcome for attendees.

To increase the number of people that can view your talk, may video the talks and make them publicly available after . When submitting your proposal you will be asked whether materials relating to your paper can be released under a Creative Commons ShareALike License.

In conclusion – submit a paper – you won’t regret it.

Papers selection/commitee – Linux.conf.au 09 – Hobart, Tasmania

September 14th, 2008

So went down to Hobart in Tasmania to do the papers face-to-face and final section for Linux.conf.au 2009.

I have to say that the submitted papers rock. We’ve got some excellent rock-star speakers who are going to blow peoples socks off. I won’t steal any of the LCA 09 team’s thunder by naming names but it’s pretty cool.

I’ve also been let into the keynote speaker secret and got to say those are pretty cool too.

We also got around to doing the schedule and I think that too well put together and people are going to find it hard to select which sessions they are going to get to during some streams as there are so many great topics.

So stay tuned for further news this… The LCA 09 team will be releasing stuff soon.