Monthly Archives: July 2008

Utah Open Source Conference 2008

I’ve been very busy this last two weeks updating pages and working on finalizing details for UTOSC 2008, held August 28-30, 2008.  For instance, the Fedora booth is coming along nicely.  For a conference of around 400, we should have a pretty good booth turnout.  I had Jeffrey Tadlock, Paul Frields (who’s also keynoting btw) and its possible other NA Ambassadors may attend.  I’m really excited about this development.

In addition, Joe Brockmeier of OpenSUSE will also be keynoting and we’ve got quite a list of presenters on our website.  Our goal is to help open source grow in Utah, and by providing this conference once a year, we can help our local LUGs and open source leaders.  We have approximately 50 presentations, plus events and other fun stuff up our sleeve over this 3 day conference.

One of the great events returning this year is the Guru Labs Troubleshooting Challenge.  We hope to have this event bigger and better this year, with cash prizes for the winner(s).  There will be sign-ups available on Thursday morning at the registration booth and the contest will run all day Friday, crowning a winner Friday night!

Another great return from last year is KnowledgeBlue.  With opensourceTV, they’ll be recording the video for several of our presentations and keynotes.  They’ll be working just like last year (only better) to provide interviews as well with some of the leaders of the open source community.  We expect you all will enjoy the videos as they go up on youtube.  This year, they will focus on multiple angles and getting a good quality presentation from the presenters.

Lastly, I’d like to talk a little bit about Family Day at UTOSC, August 30, 2008.  If you take a look at the presentations on Saturday, you’ll notice a bit of a trend.  With a few exceptions, presentations are intended to help the family. Also, we are working on activities for the kiddies such as an OLPC, videos on MythTV, edubuntu, Fedora Electronics Lab demos and more in our try-it lab.  We’re also working to acquire a moon bounce and sumo suits (for the big kids).  Saturday looks to be a ton of fun.

NOTE: This doesn’t mean that we have enough family stuff, and in fact, we really don’t.  One thing I’d like to see, is a presentation on content filtering for the family.  Something like “Howto use Dan’s Guardian effectively” or a discussion of pfsense, smoothwall or other firewalling/filtering tools.  If you have a presentation you’d like to suggest in this area, please let me know by commenting or emailing me.

I hope to see many of you there as the cost is quite low at $70 and if you are LUG member, its only $35 until August 7 for the early bird pricing.  Read more on our website at http://2008.utosc.com or register directly with eventbrite at http://utosc2008.eventbrite.com.

See you all there.

Herlo

Fedora NA – Regional Ambassadors

One of the things I’ve been working pretty heavily on the past couple weeks is getting more involved in the Fedora Ambassador program.  And let’s just say its been a blast.  I love the new direction of the North American Ambassador program and am excited to be a part of the newly rejuvenated program.

A couple reasons more why I’m extremely excited have to do with the people I’m working with, Alex Maier, GregDek, Jeffrey Tadlock, David Nalley, John Rose and Rashadul Islam among others.  Each of these folks is a leader in their own right, and I’ve especially enjoyed working with David Nalley.

He and I have been working hard to reshape and reinvigorate the NA Ambassadors program.  I suspect others are working tirelessly as well, and I’m excited about that prospect.  David and I are the architects of the new ‘Regional Ambassadors’ in North America.  The idea is to work in our respective regions to get a Fedora Ambassador in every State/Province.  Once we’ve done that, we’ll start working toward major metropolitan areas.  The regional ambassadors currently assigned are:

  • Eastern US: David Nalley
  • Central US: John Rose
  • Western US: Clint Savage
  • Canada: Rashadul Islam

This doesn’t mean that we’ve limited the regions to these areas, just that they are a good start.  Regional ambassadors will be the central point of contact, distribution of swag, etc. for each ambassador in that region.  The goal is to make it easier for Ambassadors to go out to events and promote Fedora.  Regional ambassadors will also be responsible for mentoring, providing tools, media, swag, etc. for each ambassador.  All the things needed to make Fedora look like the world class organization it has become.

In the next week or so, I’ll be sending out an email to all of the Ambassadors I can find in the western US.  If you don’t get an email from me soon, feel free to email me and we’ll get you going.  The plan is to get your opinions, have you start coming to meetings and join the mailing list.  Participate where you can, and we’ll help you grow your state/province/city.

As NA Ambassadors, we’ve set new goals too, here’s the bullet points:

  • Contacting existing Ambassadors
  • Mentoring new and existing Ambassadors
    • Help to remember why they joined ambassadors in the first place
  • Delivering media in a more timely and better process
  • Working closely with FAMSCo to get a good budget to help NA Ambassadors expected growth

We’ll be discussing much of this at our next NA Ambassadors meeting, as well as progress on contacting all of the current ambassadors.  If you are interested in participating, join us at #fedora-meeting on Wednesday July 30 @ 1am UTC (Tuesday 9pm EDT).  Current agenda and task list are being formed now, so feel free to contribute.

Cheers,

Herlo

What I’ve been up to lately.

Well, its been more than two weeks since my last post about FUDCon.  I figure its high time I posted something about what’s been going on in my neck of the woods.  Things have been quite busy and are bound to continue at this phrenetic pace for a bit longer.

DarkIce – Audio Streaming

I’ve been working this past week on getting darkice packaged for Fedora.  Darkice is a front end audio recording tool for streaming servers like Icecast.  I much prefer it over ices and any other streaming client I’ve tried.  It does have bits for mp3/mp2/faac as well as ogg/vorbis, so I’ll be packaging it for only the latter.

It seems rpmbuild is a bit more cryptic from my last foray into building RPMs and I have to hunt a little harder for the libs and the binaries.  Its coming along nicely, now that I have my virtual machine back in place.  I’m also hoping that darkice will be easy to integrate into Fedora Talk as I’ve never dealt with the asterisk end before.

Utah Open Source Conference

This past weekend, we spent a good bit of time reviewing and selecting presentations for the Utah Open Source Conference.  I am the head organizer and founder of this all volunteer conference. In fact, our very own FPL, Paul Frields will be keynoting on Thursday evening.  Keep an eye on this blog for future updates about the conference.

A New Interest

I’ve recently started to see someone of the female persuasion.  Many of my friends have met her, and I’m guessing they like her as I do (well, not quite as much).  Here’s hoping things go well with Jennifer

There’s more here, and I’ll try to be more vocal about it as I think its good to share.

Cheers,

Herlo