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Australian Linux conference seeks papers
2010-07-16
Linux.conf.au announced a Call for Papers for its 12th annual open source Linux conference for developers, to be held in Brisbane, Australia, on Jan 24-29. Linux.conf.au 2011 (lca2011) starts off with two days of mini-conferences, and is followed by three days of main sessions and an "Open Day" of events and presentations that is open to the general public.
Billed as a "fun, informal, seriously technical conference," Linux.conf.au is not only the premier Linux event in Australia and South-East Asia, but has emerged as one of the more influential global conferences of the Linux open source community. Despite its off-the beaten-track location, the event regularly draws the leading luminaries of the Linux world. (Or perhaps it's the time and location that are the key draws -- in January, it's summer in Brisbane, and beautiful Queensland beaches beckon nearby.) The show starts with "Miniconfs" on Monday Jan. 24 and 25, catering to special interests such as the Linux kernel, gaming, wireless security, OpenOffice.org, education, and virtualization. The main conference runs from Jan. 26-28, with each day starting with a keynote consisting of multiple streams of presentations, tutorials, and birds of a feather sessions. The final day, Saturday, Jan. 29 is an open day, free to general public, "where IT experts will be given the opportunity to showcase their products/services in the format of either a display or exhibition," say the organizers. This year's theme is said to be "follow the flow," relating not only to the nearby Brisbane River, but to the growing flow of open source software, whether "at the kernel level or over in libre graphics," say the organizers. The event will also celebrate the 20th anniversa The event organizers are looking for proposals for papers "from all areas of the open source community." Papers may be submitted for presentations (45 minutes), short tutorials (one hour, 45 minutes), or long tutorials (three and a half hours). In addition, community groups may also propose a one-day Miniconf event, say the organizers. UNSW's Robo-Clarinet In 2008, for example, visitors were treated to presentations on OLPC's XO netbook, a Linux-powered solar hot water balloon, and a Linux-based robot clarinet (pictured above). Possible topics are said to include (but are not limited to):
Availability The Linux.conf.au 2011 conference will be held in Brisbane, Australia, on Jan 24-29 at the QUT Gardens Point. The Call for Papers concludes on Aug. 7, and accepted speakers will be notified in September, say the organizers. More information, including further details on paper submissions, may be found here. As a reminder, the O'Reilly Open Source Convention (OSCON) starts up next week in Portland, Oregon, scheduled for July 19-23, and LinuxCon will be held in Boston from August 10-12. Related Stories:
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