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FUDConRaleigh2008

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FUDCon Raleigh 2008 :: 11-13 January 2008 :: Raleigh, NC (exact location TBA)

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FUDCon? Bar Camp? Read this First!

 

FUDCon stands for Fedora User and Developer Conference.

 

FUDCon Raleigh 2008 will be held as a Bar Camp. A Bar Camp is an "un-conference" where people interested in a wide range of issues come together to teach and learn. Unfamiliar with the un-conference format? Here's the idea in a nutshell. Rather than having scheduled speakers, everyone pitches sessions the morning of the Bar Camp. Those sessions are put on a schedule, and lots of little groups form for intense group learning. Everyone is expected to teach, to talk, to participate. Yeah, it's different from a regular conference - but it works!

 

The idea of an un-conference came together when people realized the best times they were having at conferences were the times between sessions - where people with like interests could meet ad hoc. The goal of Bar Camp is to facilitate this type of interaction for an entire day. We supply the food, the space, the wireless, the projectors - you show up to teach and learn.

 

For reference, here is last year's FUDCon Bar Camp page -- http://barcamp.org/FudconBoston2007




ATTENDEES

 

Planning on attending? PLEASE edit this page and add your name/title/affiliation as you'd like to see it on your badge.

 

We will get final confirmation as we approach the event itself. Note: we have a limit of 150 participants, but we will create a wait list if necessary.

 

Current Attendees

  1. Max Spevack, Fedora Project Leader, FUDCon organizer.
  2. Greg De Koenigsberg, Red Hat Community Manager, FUDCon organizer, former Fedora Board member.
  3. Bill Nottingham, Fedora Board member
  4. Seth Vidal, Fedora Board member
  5. Jesse Keating, Fedora Release Engineer, package ninja
  6. Mike McGrath, Fedora Infrastructure Leader
  7. Warren Togami, Fedora Founder, FESCo Member, Rel-Eng, LTSP
  8. Kevin Fenzi, FESCo member, cvsadmin, package-maintainer
  9. Robert 'Bob' Jensen, Fedora Unity founder
  10. Matthew Miller, Boston University Linux Project, random package maintainer, mailing-list whiner, etc.
  11. Ricky Zhou, Fedora Infrastructure/Websites
  12. Michael DeHaan, Cobbler, Func, RH Emerging Technologies Group
  13. Dave Jones, kernel hacker, eater of cheetos.
  14. Tom \"spot\" Callaway, FESCo member, FPC member, Fedora Board candidate, cvsadmin, package maintainer, ninja, ninja rap, go ninja, go ninja, go ninja, go!
  15. Dennis Gilmore, FESCo, Infrastructure, Board, OLPC, and SPARC
  16. Kyle McMartin, kernel hacker, international hacker of mystery
  17. Phillip Rhodes, AggroNinja, Chief Architect - OpenQabal
  18. G.Wolfe Woodbury, tester, enthusiast
  19. Nalin Dahyabhai, developer
  20. Nitin Dahyabhai, developer
  21. Paul W. Frields, Fedora Documentation paratrooper, ninja wannabe, and general gadabout
  22. Jeroen van Meeuwen, Fedora
  23. Jesus M. Rodriguez, developer/user
  24. Ben Williams, Fedora Unity Contributor
  25. Matt Domsch, Fedora Board member, Mirror Wrangler, troublemaker
  26. Will Woods, Fedora QA Lead, bug herder, ne'er-do-well
  27. Paul Wouters, Package Maintainer of crypto and dns related packages, DNSSEC/IPsec/OTR advocate
  28. Mark Hamrick, tester, user
  29. Brenton Leanhardt, developer/user
  30. Steve 'Ashcrow' Milner, developer, package maintainer, user
  31. Karsten Wade, Board bizi, Docs dude, shootin' that trouble
  32. Jef Spaleta, Fedora Board member
  33. Russell Harrison, tester, user
  34. Clint Savage, Fedora-Tutorials.com
  35. Chris Tyler, Seneca College, Fedora Daily Package
  36. Will Cohen, developer
  37. Luke Macken, Fedora developer
  38. Jared Smith author, trainer, Asterisk evangelist, IT commando
  39. Andy Gospodarek, kernel developer
  40. Josef Bacik, kernel developer
  41. Karl Abbott, developer/user
  42. Mike McLean, Koji developer
  43. Scott Henson, package maintainer, user
  44. Tim Kiernan, digital media designer
  45. Robin Norwood, Fedora developer
  46. Chris Church, Fedora user, Python lover
  47. Adrian Likins, developer
  48. Molly Tamarkin, Fedora user, outgoing IT dean (Duke), incoming CTO (Univ. Puget Sound)
  49. John Babich, Volunteer, Fedora Project (tentative)
  50. Jason Tibbitts, FESCo member, FPC member, cvsadmin, package reviewer
  51. David Woodhouse, FESCo, PowerPC, OLPC, Promoter of Violence.
  52. Adam Dutko, package maintainer, writer, developer/user
  53. Bascha Harris editor-type geek, Red Hat Magazine
  54. Kevin Sonney programmer/visionary, Percolate
  55. Scott Zekanis sysadmin/head honcho, Percolate
  56. Joe Komenda QA Engineer/Cartoonist, Percolate
  57. Matt Frye business dude, Percolate
  58. John Eckersberg, user and fledgling developer
  59. Chris Negus, Linux author
  60. Garrod Alwood, Fedora user
  61. Your name goes here


SESSIONS

 

Got an idea for a session? Don't be shy... add it here.

(If you are interested in leading a session add your name afterwards).

 

Session Proposals with Owners

  • Annual Fedora State of the Union talk -- Max Spevack
  • Running Fedora from a USB key -- Max Spevack
  • Mass-Deploying Fedora with Cobbler -- Michael DeHaan
  • Func, the Fedora Unified Network Controller -- Michael DeHaan (&others?)
  • From code to an RPM -- simple packaging tutorial for dummies -- Tom "spot" Callaway
  • Perl direction (5.10 and beyond) -- Tom "spot" Callaway and Robin Norwood (and others (add your name here)?)
  • Secondary Architectures in F-9 -- Tom "spot" Callaway and Dennis Gilmore (and others(add your name here)?)
  • Developer Guide Reboot -- Paul W. Frields
  • MirrorManager: Getting the bits out -- Matt Domsch
  • Inaugural meeting of the Fedora Mirror Wranglers -- Matt Domsch
  • Integrating DNSSEC -- Proposal and Demonstration of DNSSEC aware software -- Paul Wouters
  • Customizing Fedora Installation Media -- Jeroen van Meeuwen
  • Jigdo/pyJigdo releases -- Jeroen van Meeuwen
  • Anaconda updates during release cycles -- Jeroen van Meeuwen
  • Expiring Updates, Distributing Sources -- Jeroen van Meeuwen
  • Planning Fedora's Summer Coding Projects - Karsten Wade
  • Open Source Development Courses -- Will Cohen
  • Asterisk: What is it, and what can it do for me -- Jared Smith
  • You Too Can Write a Book in XML: An Introduction to Docbook -- Paul W. Frields and Jared Smith
  • GPG Keysigning - see below -- Matt Domsch
  • PackageKit -- Robin Norwood
  • Vidpress -- Kevin Sonney, GDK, and James McDermott
  • Plugging Students into Open Source Communities -- Chris Tyler
  • Fedora Account System 2 -- Mike McGrath
  • K12Linux:Thin Client Support in Fedora -- Warren Togami and Eric Harrison
  • Firmware-Tools: Updating your BIOS and Firmware in Fedora -- Matt Domsch
  • Others? Don't be shy -- put them here.

 

Sessions that Would Be Nice, but need owners. Claim one, and move it up!

 

  • Others? Don't be shy -- put them here.

 

GPG Keysigning

 

Meet Fedora people face-to-face. Taunt each other over their passport/driver's license photos. Add yourself to the Web of Trust or increase your ranking.

  • Mandatory: Create a GPG keypair for yourself (if you haven't already)
  • Optional: add your user@fedoraproject.org uid to your keypair
  • Mandatory: Print or write down your key fingerprint and bring it with you. You'll have to confirm at the signing that the list is correct for your key.
  • Mandatory: Send your key before the event to the subkeys.pgp.net keyserver. Get your KEYID from your keyring as the part following the 1024D/ as follows:

 

gpg --list-secret-keys | grep ^sec

 

For Matt, this is 92F0FC09. Yours will be different.

 

Then send your key to the keyserver with:

 

gpg --keyserver subkeys.pgp.net --send-keys KEYID

 

  • Mandatory: Send your key before the event to fudcon-keys at domsch.com as follows:

 

gpg --fingerprint foo@bar.com | mail -s "foo@bar.com key" fudcon-keys@domsch.com

  • Mandatory: Bring a government-issued picture ID of yourself

 

After the Keysigning

Following the keysigning, you'll need to actually sign people's keys. The easiest way to do this is to use caff which is conveniently packaged in the Fedora pgp-tools package. caff lets you sign a number of keys at once, and will then email each recepient their signed key, encrypted with their key (actually, it sends one email per UID on the target key, so those people with 10 UIDs on their key will get 10 emails from caff, but that's OK - it makes sure they control that email address too). They must know their own passphrase to retrieve their signed key, which they can then import into their gpg keyring and upload to the keyserver subkeys.pgp.net.


HACKFEST, 12-13 JANUARY

 

Hackfest sessions

 

WE CURRENTLY NEED PEOPLE TO PLAN HACKFEST SESSIONS. Last year we had sessions on packaging, infrastructure, yum, OLPC, QA, and Live CD.

 

For those who are able to stay over the weekend, we will be running hackfest sessions on Saturday and Sunday. Please, if you intend to participate, contact the leader of each session for more information about how you can help.

 

Core/Extras Merge Package Review

  • Session Leader: TBD
  • General Plan: finish the package review from all packages previously in Core

 

Package review process brainstorm

  • Session Leader: Jason Tibbitts
  • General Plan: try to come up with ideas for streamlining the package review process. What we put together quickly with the onset of the merge review tide has worked but to many is excessively baroque. Please bring your ideas.

 

Hackfest Session

  • Session Leader: YOUR NAME
  • Contact info: YOUR INFO
  • General Plan: link to a page somewhere with the hackfest plan


EVENT DETAILS

 

FUDCon Raleigh 2008

 

  • Date and time, FUDCon: Friday 11 January, 8:30 AM-6PM, Hackfest: Sat 12 (9AM-8PM)- Sun 13 (9AM-2PM).
  • Location: TBA in Raleigh, NC.
  • Food: Breakfast and box lunches provided on Friday.

 

January 11th: FUDPub Raleigh 2008

 

  • Please join us for drinks after the final session on Friday. Location TBA. Please be aware that the legal drinking age in North Carolina is 21.


IMPORTANT INFORMATION

 

What We Need

  • Power strips and extension cords. If you have them, bring them.
  • Video recording equipment. We'd like lots of footage, and we'd like to see it on YouTube.

 

Wireless Network Information

  • This will be configured to be open and generally completely unsecured for the areas we'll be in for the duration of the event. SSID is "Fedora".


 

SCHEDULE

 

Preliminary Schedule for FUDCon Friday

 

8:00-8:30Pre-registration
8:30-9:00Registration and Breakfast, Coffee
9:00-9:15Opening talk
9:15-10:00Session pitches, social time
10:00-10:50Session 1
11:00-11:50Session 2
12:00-1:30Lunch
1:30-2:20Session 3
2:30-3:20Session 4
3:30-4:20Session 5
4:30-5:20Fedora State of the Union
5:30-5:45Wrap-up
5:45-6:00Clean up


TRAVEL

 

Air Travel

  • The local airport is RDU.

 

Hotel Accommodations

  • We have a group rate at the Brownstone Hotel -- http://www.brownstonehotel.com
  • On their reservations page, click on the "corporate, group, and IATA identification" section and enter the code RED (in capital letters).
  • It is possible to get either single or double rooms. We have a block of 20 rooms reserved for Thursday - Saturday night. If there are a few people who need different nights, that is not a problem.


CONTACT INFO

 

  • Questions? Email Max Spevack and Greg De Koenigsberg
  • Join the Fedora marketing mailing list
  • Chat about FUDCon Raleigh 2008 on IRC: irc.freenode.net, #fedora-mktg