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The Fourth Australian Open Source Symposium

From:  Conrad Parker <conrad.parker@auug.org.au>
To:  lwn@lwn.net
Subject:  oz open source symposium: programme and registrations
Date:  Wed, 26 Jun 2002 21:42:24 +1000


Registrations are now open for the fourth Australian Open Source Symposium
(AOSS 4), to be held at UNSW, Sydney on Saturday July 20, 2002. AOSS is an
annual gathering of the Australian Open Source community.

        http://www.auug.org.au/aoss/aoss4/index.html

The Australian Unix Users Group (AUUG Inc.) is proud to announce the
programme for this symposium, including the following presentations:


  Erik de Castro Lopo: The libsndfile test suite.

    Erik will talk about the ideas behind, the implications of and the
    implementation of libsndfile's test suite as well as giving a very
    brief introduction to autogen.

  Matt Chapman: rdesktop

    rdesktop is an open source client for Windows Terminal Services,
    capable of speaking Microsoft's proprietary Remote Desktop Protocol.

  Lucy Chubb, Gelato project: Large page support in the Linux kernel

    The IA64 hardware currently provides support for page sizes of up to
    256MB, but there is limited support to use any of this capability
    within Linux. Lucy will talk about the work in progress within the UNSW
    Gelato project to implement superpages in IA64 Linux.

  Peter Chubb: Bitkeeper

    Come and find out what Peter Chubb means by his current sig, "You are
    lost in a maze of BitKeeper repositories, all almost the same.", as he
    talks his experience with BitKeeper as he works on the Linux source code.

  Duraid Madina: SwapBox

    SwapBox is a network-attached storage device optimized to act as high
    performance swap space.

  Leni Mayo: Serel

    Serel adds synchronisation and integrity-checking to the operating
    system "service startup" phase, allowing a computer's services to
    start in parallel. Without parallelism, "service startup" is typically
    the most time-consuming part of the boot process.

  Peter Miller: SRecord

    The SRecord package is a collection of powerful tools for manipulating
    EPROM load files. Adding more file formats and filters is simple.

  Martin Pool, HP: distcc

    distcc is a program which speeds up software builds by distributing
    the build across multiple machines.

  Martin Schwenke: Big Blue Penguins

    IBM and open source sound like non-overlapping spaces. Martin works
    with IBM's Linux Technology Center in Canberra and tells us what it's
    like inside.

  Liam Widdowson: The tdb Replication System

    The Trivial Database Replication System is an open source database
    engine that allows UNIX systems to utilise a distributed, replicated,
    peer-to-peer DBM style database.


REGISTRATIONS

Registrations are now open. The registration form is available at:

    http://www.auug.org.au/aoss/aoss4/register.pdf

Pricing is as follows:

    Students                $30
    AUUG Members            $60
    Non-members            $100

Note that members of ISOC, SAGE, LUV, BUGS and SLUG, and UNSW staff, are
also eligible for the Members' rate. Prices are in Australian Dollars.

AOSS4 is proudly supported by AUUG Inc, UNSW, the UNSW GELATO project,
SLUG, and BUGS.


ABOUT AUUG Inc.

    http://www.auug.org.au/

AUUG Incorporated is the Australian UNIX(*) and Open Systems Users Group.
AUUG is a national body offering its members access to information on current
and future UNIX and Open Systems technologies.

AUUG's aims, as stated in the constitution, are: "To promote knowledge and
understanding of Open Systems including but not restricted to the UNIX
system, networking, graphics, user interfaces and programming and development
environments, and related standards."

However, Michael Paddon (AUUG President 1994-1998) captured the flavour of
AUUG better when he described it as, "a bunch of people who gather together
to talk about the cool stuff they're doing - preferably over a beer."


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