8:00am
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Registration Opens
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Title:
Registration Opens
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Time:
8:00am
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9:00 – 9:45am
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Title:
Morning Keynote - Hacking for Freedom
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Track:
Culture
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Room:
Sanctuary
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Time:
9:00 – 9:45am
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Excerpt:
The last year has shown the Internet and computers to be a major force for freedom and self-determination around the world. The presenter discusses his work as a hacktivist. Working with Anonymous and Telecomix, he has helped organized protests in support of WikiLeaks, provided communications support to Egypt and the Middle East, and generally fought the good fight.
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Speakers:
Peter Fein
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9:45 – 10:00am
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Coffee Break
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Title:
Coffee Break
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Time:
9:45 – 10:00am
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10:00 – 10:45am
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Title:
Open Source: Saving the World
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Track:
Culture
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Room:
B202/03
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Time:
10:00 – 10:45am
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Excerpt:
Most of us get involved with open source as a way to solve the problems we face on a day-to-day basis. But technology in general, and open source software in particular, also provides the key to solving the more catastrophic problems that people face around the world today.
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Speakers:
Noirin Plunkett
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Title:
Sales-fu
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Track:
Business
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Room:
B204
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Time:
10:00 – 10:45am
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Excerpt:
Tricky to master. Sometimes the last thing you care about. (Let me code already, dammit.) However, a small amount of work on your sales-fu will pay off. So let’s do this thing.
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Speakers:
Amye Scavarda
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Title:
Read the Docs: A Completely Open Source Django Web Site
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Track:
Cooking
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Room:
B301
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Time:
10:00 – 10:45am
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Excerpt:
Read the Docs is a documentation hosting site for the community. It was built in 48 hours in the 2010 Django Dash. In January 2010 it had 100,000 page views, and increases daily. I will talk about all of the code to deploy and run a sizable Django site. We will go through the highlights and interesting parts of the code, as well as some of the lessons learned from the site being open source.
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Speakers:
Eric Holscher
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Lightning Talks
B304
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Title:
Lightning Talks
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Room:
B304
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Time:
10:00 – 10:45am
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11:00 – 11:45am
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Title:
Diary of an Open Source Sysadmin Entrepreur
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Track:
Business
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Room:
B201
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Time:
11:00 – 11:45am
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Excerpt:
Half the story of the building of Puppet Labs and half instruction on how to build your own company, Luke Kanies, the founder of Puppet and Puppet Labs, will tell how he built his company and product and how you can, too.
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Speakers:
Luke Kanies
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Title:
Gearman: From the Worker's Perspective
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Track:
Chemistry
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Room:
B301
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Time:
11:00 – 11:45am
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Excerpt:
Many people view topics like Map/Reduce and queue systems as advanced concepts that require in-depth knowledge and time consuming software setup. Gearman is changing all that by making this barrier to entry as low as possible with an open source, distributed job queuing system.
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Speakers:
Brian Aker
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Noon – 1:30pm
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Lunch
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Title:
Lunch
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Time:
Noon – 1:30pm
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1:30 – 2:15pm
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Title:
Qs on Queues
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Track:
Chemistry
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Room:
B202/03
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Time:
1:30 – 2:15pm
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Excerpt:
Not sure what queuing system to use for your next project? How about the differences between broker vs direct queue services? What is a good fit for cloud vs your own data center? This session gathers information from open source queuing projects to help answer these questions and more. Queues are part of almost every scalable website and application, it’s time to find the best fit for yours.
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Speakers:
Eric Day
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Title:
DNSSEC @ Mozilla
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Track:
Cooking
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Room:
B301
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Time:
1:30 – 2:15pm
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Excerpt:
As the Internet world moves slowly towards implementing DNSSEC, this session aims to start at the basics of DNSSEC and goes on to discuss implementation details as well as best practices, some of the most common mistakes that happen during and after deployments and finally what’s in store for the near future.
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Speakers:
Shyam Mani
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1:30 – 3:15pm
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Title:
Give a Great Tech Talk
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Track:
Culture
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Room:
B304
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Time:
1:30 – 3:15pm
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Excerpt:
Why do so many technical presentations suck? Make sure that yours doesn’t. Josh Berkus and Ian Dees will show you how to share your ideas with your audience by speaking effectively and (when the situation warrants it) showing your code.
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Speakers:
Ian Dees, Josh Berkus
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2:30 – 3:15pm
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Title:
A Dozen Databases in 45 Minutes
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Track:
Cooking
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Room:
B202/03
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Time:
2:30 – 3:15pm
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Excerpt:
What OSS database to use is an important decision, but recently languishing in the shadow of the sexier “what framework should I use” talks – or underplayed as though the battle were only SQL v noSQL. If your understanding of data storage tops out at “Mongo is webscale” or “mysql + memcached = win” then this talk is for you.
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Speakers:
Eric Redmond
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Title:
OSWALD: Lessons from and for the Open Hardware Movement
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Track:
Chemistry
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Room:
B301
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Time:
2:30 – 3:15pm
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Excerpt:
Envisioned as a cutting-edge computing platform that would encourage students to tinker with all the latest developments in the mobile space without fear of breaking their own gadgets, the initial version of the OSWALD project out of OSU failed in several key areas. In this talk, Tim will explore lessons learned from OSWALD and how they can help the open hardware and open education communities.
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Speakers:
Tim Harder
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Title:
Pulling the Plug
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Track:
Business
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Room:
B302/03
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Time:
2:30 – 3:15pm
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Excerpt:
In order to keep a tree healthy, you have to prune its branches. This too is the case with an organization’s websites and projects. Let’s look at how Mozilla handles the end-of-life portion of a website’s life-cycle.
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Speakers:
Ryan Snyder
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3:15 – 3:45pm
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Afternoon Tea
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Title:
Afternoon Tea
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Time:
3:15 – 3:45pm
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3:45 – 4:30pm
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Title:
Massively Scaling Django for a Global Audience with Playdoh
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Track:
Cooking
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Room:
B201
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Time:
3:45 – 4:30pm
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Excerpt:
Django is a great web application framework that allows for rapid web app development out of the box. Since Mozilla picked up Django in 2009, they’ve started over a dozen Django-based projects. For these sites to scale to an international audience of millions of users, bells and whistles were needed that a stock Django instance does not offer.
Playdoh combines the experience of these projects into a template that contains various fixes and add-ons to make professional Django apps fast, featuring aggressive caching, instant localization support, and bullet-proof security.
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Speakers:
Frederic Wenzel
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Title:
Hardware/Software Integration with Txtzyme
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Track:
Hacks
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Room:
B204
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Time:
3:45 – 4:30pm
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Excerpt:
Hardware running Txtzyme will play well with the shell and other interactive environments. We’ll explain the Txtzyme language and show hardware integration examples using bash, perl, ruby, java and javascript.
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Speakers:
Ward Cunningham
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Title:
Drupal Distributions, an Open Source Product Model
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Track:
Business
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Room:
B301
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Time:
3:45 – 4:30pm
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Excerpt:
Drupal has the ability to bundle contributed modules, configurations and settings, and custom code into a single package that can be easily installed and further configured by end users. The end result is an application-in-a-box focused on a specific set of requirements. Now that you or your business has invested hundreds or even thousands of hours creating your masterpiece, what do you do with it?
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Speakers:
Lev Tsypin
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Title:
"Why did you do that?" You're more automated than you think.
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Track:
Culture
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Room:
B302/03
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Time:
3:45 – 4:30pm
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Excerpt:
Your brain is really good at surviving in neolithic Africa, but not because of our powers of higher levels of thought; they’re much too slow. Humans are so successful as a species because we’re champions at automating things, including our own thoughts and behaviours.
What’s fascinating is that we’re profoundly unaware of just how much our own lives run on automatic, and just how much our own behaviour is influenced by external factors. Join internationally acclaimed speaker Paul Fenwick as we examine the fascinating world of the human mind.
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Speakers:
Paul Fenwick
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4:45 – 5:30pm
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Title:
Kick Asana
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Track:
Culture
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Room:
B202/03
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Time:
4:45 – 5:30pm
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Excerpt:
“Yoga for Geeks”, sometimes known as “Yoga for Long-Haul Travelers”, returns to Open Source Bridge! Come with your stiff shoulders, sore wrists, tight hips and aching back. Leave with ideas on how to incorporate 5 minutes of practice into your busy day to care for your body and mind.
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Speakers:
Sherri Koehler
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5:00 – 8:00pm
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7:00 – 8:30pm
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6:00 – 9:00pm
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8:30 – 10:00pm
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9:00pm through Wednesday, June 22 at Midnight
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Title:
Hardware - Dorkbot, FPGAs, etc. (B)
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Track:
Hacker Lounge
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Room:
Hacker Lounge
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Time:
9:00pm through Wednesday, June 22 at Midnight
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Excerpt:
The local Dorkbot PDX Hardware community as well as conference speakers Phil Tomson, Thomas Lockney and others will be there to try out FPGAs, and whatever other iron & blinkie lights their wonderfully fiendish minds care to tinker upon.
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Title:
LinqToRDF/dotNetRDF Hackathon
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Track:
Hacker Lounge
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Room:
Hacker Lounge
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Time:
9:00pm through Wednesday, June 22 at Midnight
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Excerpt:
Hackthon for Linq To RDF and dotNetRDF. Troy Howard and Eric Sterling will be there trying to resurrect Linq To RDF, help out dotNetRDF and just generally geek out on SPARQL, OWL, RDF, the Semantic Web, and how to work with this stuff in the .NET framework. Bring your questions, opinions, insight, and hacking skills!
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