openSUSE Conference 2011

The third openSUSE Conference, osc11, kicks off on Sunday September 11, 2011 in Nuremberg, Germany. Under the motto RWX³ all Free and Open Source Software enthusiasts are invited to come together for four days to learn, hack and to have a lot of fun. The program will cover a variety topics with an emphasis on interaction between participants. The conference is free of charge and open to anyone!

OSC – The annual meeting of the community
The conference is the yearly get-together of the openSUSE community to give its people a chance to meet face to face, talk to and inspire each other. Having the chance to chat on the hallway, to quickly throw some ideas together on a whiteboard or to watch over each others shoulders while hacking can easily substitute endless chat sessions, thousand-mail threads on a mailing list and tiresome telephone calls. Being together in one room, even in this day and age, beats every other collaboration method and is what forges cohesion and friendships. That is why the openSUSE Project tries to get together this conference every year for its contributors. But not only for them, the conference is also for anyone using, working with or taking advantage of the project. No matter if you use our technology, if you are one of our many friends from free and open source upstream projects or if you contribute to another GNU/Linux distribution this conference is for you.

Find more information about the conference, the program and the location at
openSUSE Conference | Nürnberg, Germany | 11. to 14. September 2011

The Program – Everybody has to read, write and execute
Last year, the conference had the motto ‘Collaboration Across Borders’ and brought together an international crowd from many communities. This year we shift our attention a bit deeper, aiming for hands-on discussions to get work done. Smaller, more focused meetings with a strong “read-write” attitude are at the core of the conference. Hence the subtitle of RWX³, commonly known as the UNIX acronym for “Read, Write, Execute” – three times, for you, your community and the rest of the world!

The highlights, like every year, are the keynotes that kick of each day. This year our community manager Jos, kernel hacker Greg KH and Michael Miller, marketing vice president of SUSE will give the honors. Of course the general program also has a lot of highlights in the distribution, community and technology tracks.

Our distribution is, naturally, one of the topics which receives a lot of focus at our conference. Learn from Stefan Seyfried how to run the coolest bleeding edge stuff from the development tree while still retaining a reliable system that you can use for daily work. Let the Boosters teach you how to leave your own footprints in the distribution by becoming an contributor. Or get creative and work with other designers on the artwork for the desktops and applications 12.1 then and there.

Also the “soft topics” in (Free-) software engineering will get their share of attention. Lydia Pintscher gives a workshop to discuss a number of topics that often cause social problems in technical communities and Henne Vogelsang introduces you to the basics of citizen journalism so you can improve your blogging skills. Or how about you help to shape the future of the Ambassador program in a workshop with Kostas Koudaras and Manu Gupta?

Another cluster of topics will evolve around new technology that will bring FOSS and openSUSE forward. Robert Schweikert will give you an introduction to the basics of a cloud and an overview of the cloud projects in the Open Build Service. Brush up your debugging skills in a gdb workshop with Jürgen Weigert or tag along for the journey of an I/O request through the kernel block layer with Suresh Jayaraman.

All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. So how about you visit the legen, wait for it…., dary social event on Monday at “The Geek – Saloon and Dance Hall“, see some great musicians from the Fat Orange Collective live on the main stage or how about you let Winfried Appelt show you highlights of his collection of over 800 ancient calculating machines?

And let’s trow in a teaser. There will be a contest related to openSUSE and yet Unidentified Flying Objects, with those UFO’s as prize!!!

Find more information about the program, the keynotes, speakers and the social events at
openSUSE Conference | Nürnberg, Germany | 11. to 14. September 2011

The Location – Work & Play
After two years at the Berufsförderungswerk in the outskirts of Nürnberg, we have found a new location smack in the middle of the city. 10 minutes away from the center of Nürnberg, in a former production area of the Allgemeine Elektricitäts-Gesellschaft (AEG), the conference will be hosted by the Zentrifuge. The Zentrifuge is a project that networks cultural interested and creative people in the region. The whole location has a special atmosphere of an old industrial plant, mixed with art and creativity. The perfect balance between work and play which we always aim for at the conference.

Nürnberg with a population of 500,000 is the nucleus of the metropolitan region Franconia at the heart of Europe. Located in southern Germany, it is midway between Munich and Frankfurt and therefor easily reachable by road, rail and air. As a tourist city, known for the Nuremberg Trials and famous for the Christmas Market, Nürnberg has a very good tourist office which will help you with all your needs. The office also provides an accommodation portal on the web which should be your starting point to find a place to stay.

Find more information about the location, how to get there and where to stay at
openSUSE Conference | Nürnberg, Germany | 11. to 14. September 2011

So where do I sign up?
Just register today and swing by the venue at the 11th. And once you’ve signed up spread the word about it and tell all your friends! We’ve prepared some artwork for you to do that.

Find more banners, badges and counters at
openSUSE Conference | Nürnberg, Germany | 11. to 14. September 2011

We hope that you are intrigued by the community, program and the location. Come and visit us, we are looking forward to see all of you in September!

For those who can’t make a trip to Nuremberg I would love to see this presentation documented and shared with the community.

On 08/17/2011 10:16 PM, mdinon wrote:
>
> For those who can’t make a trip to Nuremberg I would love to see this
> presentation documented and shared with the community.

along with all the others!


DD
openSUSE®, the “German Engineered Automobile” of operating systems!

Am 18.08.2011 08:18, schrieb DenverD:
> openSUSE®, the “German Engineered Automobile” of operating systems!

Das stimmt so nicht mehr. Bei SuSE war man sich sicher das die
wentlichen Teile funktionirten. Seit dem es openSUSE ist und die Amis es
in den Händen haben, ist es so buggy geworden, das man sich mit grausen
abwendet Ich habe SUSE nun nach ein paar Jahren wieder ausprobiert und
muss sagen: Nein Danke. Es geht wieder zurück zu den Südafrikanern, das
funktioniert es. Ist zwar nicht alles Gold aber es ist durchdacht und
anwenderfreundlich.

Bei openSUSE ist zum Beispiel alles was mit USB zu tun hat Murks.

On Fri, 26 Aug 2011 18:58:55 +0000, rm42195 wrote:

> Das stimmt so nicht mehr. Bei SuSE war man sich sicher das die
> wentlichen Teile funktionirten. Seit dem es openSUSE ist und die Amis es
> in den Händen haben, ist es so buggy geworden, das man sich mit grausen
> abwendet Ich habe SUSE nun nach ein paar Jahren wieder ausprobiert und
> muss sagen: Nein Danke. Es geht wieder zurück zu den Südafrikanern, das
> funktioniert es. Ist zwar nicht alles Gold aber es ist durchdacht und
> anwenderfreundlich.

Actually, most of the SUSE development stayed in Germany while SUSE was
owned by Novell.

> Bei openSUSE ist zum Beispiel alles was mit USB zu tun hat Murks.

Perhaps you should ask for some assistance with your USB issues; on my 3
openSUSE systems, I have absolutely no problems with USB.

Jim

Jim Henderson
openSUSE Forums Administrator
Forum Use Terms & Conditions at http://tinyurl.com/openSUSE-T-C

Am 27.08.2011 00:18, schrieb Jim Henderson:
> On Fri, 26 Aug 2011 18:58:55 +0000, rm42195 wrote:
>
>> Das stimmt so nicht mehr. Bei SuSE war man sich sicher das die
>> wentlichen Teile funktionirten. Seit dem es openSUSE ist und die Amis es
>> in den Händen haben, ist es so buggy geworden, das man sich mit grausen
>> abwendet Ich habe SUSE nun nach ein paar Jahren wieder ausprobiert und
>> muss sagen: Nein Danke. Es geht wieder zurück zu den Südafrikanern, das
>> funktioniert es. Ist zwar nicht alles Gold aber es ist durchdacht und
>> anwenderfreundlich.
>
> Actually, most of the SUSE development stayed in Germany while SUSE was
> owned by Novell.
>
>> Bei openSUSE ist zum Beispiel alles was mit USB zu tun hat Murks.
>
> Perhaps you should ask for some assistance with your USB issues; on my 3
> openSUSE systems, I have absolutely no problems with USB.
>
> Jim

In all of my two systems with openSUSE: if you delete a file from a usb
drive. it will be moved into the folder .trash1000. But in the trash
icon in KDE or Gnome deletet Dokuments or Files will not be shown.

It is not possible to print documents. In the cups log file you can see
“The document is send to printer” but nothing happened. I must start a
vm with ubuntu to print my documents, there it is no problem.

On Sat, 27 Aug 2011 04:41:39 +0000, rm42195 wrote:

> In all of my two systems with openSUSE: if you delete a file from a usb
> drive. it will be moved into the folder .trash1000. But in the trash
> icon in KDE or Gnome deletet Dokuments or Files will not be shown.

I don’t have a problem with this on GNOME on any of my systems. Rather
than ask about it here, you should post a question for each of these
issues in an appropriate forum (the announcements forum, which is where
we are right now, is not the appropriate place to get assistance).

> It is not possible to print documents. In the cups log file you can see
> “The document is send to printer” but nothing happened. I must start a
> vm with ubuntu to print my documents, there it is no problem.

Similarly, I print from my openSUSE systems all the time, no problems
here at all.

Jim

Jim Henderson
openSUSE Forums Administrator
Forum Use Terms & Conditions at http://tinyurl.com/openSUSE-T-C