OSCON/OSCON20090724.ics
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     1 BEGIN:VCALENDAR
       
     2 X-WR-CALNAME:OSCON 2009
       
     3 VERSION:2.0
       
     4 PRODID:Expectnation
       
     5 CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
       
     6 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
     7 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T091500
       
     8 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T090000
       
     9 DTSTAMP:20090716T203002
       
    10 LOCATION:Exhibit Hall 3
       
    11 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/10458
       
    12 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-09:00--10458
       
    13 SUMMARY:Applying Open Source Principles to Federal Government
       
    14 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Gunnar  Hellekson (Red Hat Government). The cur
       
    15  rent Administration talks the talk in terms of its adoption of new techn
       
    16  ology solutions, access to information, and the call for transparency an
       
    17  d increased citizen participation.  But can it walk the walk?  This keyn
       
    18  ote will address how open source advocates can help the Federal Governme
       
    19  nt unlock the innovative potential of the open source development model.
       
    20 END:VEVENT
       
    21 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
    22 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T140000
       
    23 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T090000
       
    24 DTSTAMP:20090702T000544
       
    25 LOCATION:Meeting Room N
       
    26 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/10251
       
    27 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-09:00--10251
       
    28 SUMMARY:Sunlight Labs Hackathon
       
    29 DESCRIPTION:At the Sunlight Labs hackathon, Sunlight Labs will be workin
       
    30  g with developers on two major projects: 1. Parsing sites at for our 50 
       
    31  state project to get every state legislature in a common data format, an
       
    32  d 2. Adding data into Sunlight's newest project, Congrelate.
       
    33 END:VEVENT
       
    34 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
    35 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T093000
       
    36 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T091500
       
    37 ALTDTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T090000
       
    38 DTSTAMP:20090422T154805
       
    39 LOCATION:Exhibit Hall 3
       
    40 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/9099
       
    41 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-09:15--9099
       
    42 SUMMARY:Fundamentalist Functional Programming
       
    43 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Erik Meijer (Microsoft). This talk argues that 
       
    44  fundamentalist functional programming-that is, radically eliminating all
       
    45   side effects from programming languages, including strict evaluation-is
       
    46   what it takes to conquer the concurrency and parallelism dragon.
       
    47 END:VEVENT
       
    48 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
    49 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T094500
       
    50 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T093000
       
    51 ALTDTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T090000
       
    52 DTSTAMP:20090716T162302
       
    53 LOCATION:Exhibit Hall 3
       
    54 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/10456
       
    55 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-09:30--10456
       
    56 SUMMARY:The Rewilding: A Metaphor
       
    57 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Karl Schroeder. Open source software.  Ecosyste
       
    58  m services, distributed "smart" electrical grids, and sustainable econom
       
    59  ics. Collective intelligence, the Science Commons, and Wikipedia.  What 
       
    60  do all these have in common? They seem to represent a new ethos of "lett
       
    61  ing go" of centralized control--in project management, industrial and ec
       
    62  onomic infrastructure, and culture.
       
    63 END:VEVENT
       
    64 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
    65 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T100000
       
    66 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T094500
       
    67 ALTDTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T090000
       
    68 DTSTAMP:20090601T161557
       
    69 LOCATION:Exhibit Hall 3
       
    70 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/9248
       
    71 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-09:45--9248
       
    72 SUMMARY:Where Next for Openness?
       
    73 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Mark Surman (Mozilla Foundation). Openness and 
       
    74  participation are now a pervasive part of digital life. Firefox. Wikiped
       
    75  ia. Apache. Linux. Millions of Creative Commons pictures on Flickr. We h
       
    76  ave moved mountains. The question is: what's next?
       
    77 END:VEVENT
       
    78 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
    79 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T101500
       
    80 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T100000
       
    81 ALTDTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T090000
       
    82 DTSTAMP:20090325T171901
       
    83 LOCATION:Exhibit Hall 3
       
    84 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/9017
       
    85 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:00--9017
       
    86 SUMMARY:Q & A
       
    87 DESCRIPTION:An open microphone question and answer session with the morn
       
    88  ing's keynote speakers.
       
    89 END:VEVENT
       
    90 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
    91 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
    92 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
    93 DTSTAMP:20090311T020212
       
    94 LOCATION:Exhibit Hall 3
       
    95 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8165
       
    96 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--8165
       
    97 SUMMARY:The Art of Klingon Programming
       
    98 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Paul Fenwick (Perl Training Australia). A good 
       
    99  programmer needs many qualities: intelligence, foresight, dedication, an
       
   100  d the ability to fight off a hundred angry targh armed only with your ba
       
   101  t'leth. On Qo'noS, software developers undertake an intensive course in 
       
   102  combat programming before they are cleared for active duty. Join Paul Fe
       
   103  nwick as he examines how Perl's new autodie pragma can bring you the ver
       
   104  y best of Klingon programming.
       
   105 END:VEVENT
       
   106 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   107 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
   108 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
   109 DTSTAMP:20090714T182503
       
   110 LOCATION:Ballroom A1
       
   111 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8862
       
   112 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--8862
       
   113 SUMMARY:Recent Advances in the Linux Kernel Resource Management
       
   114 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Kirill Kolyshkin (OpenVZ). The talk outlines th
       
   115  e standard Linux kernel mechanisms for controlling resources (such as CP
       
   116  U, RAM, disk) and reveals their shortcomings. It explains what are conta
       
   117  iners and why resource management is important for those. A new Linux ke
       
   118  rnel features -- cgroups and memory controller -- are explained in detai
       
   119  ls, with some tricky implementation details and a look into what else ha
       
   120  s yet to be done.
       
   121 END:VEVENT
       
   122 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   123 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
   124 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
   125 DTSTAMP:20090320T170912
       
   126 LOCATION:Ballroom A2
       
   127 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8395
       
   128 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--8395
       
   129 SUMMARY:Open APIs of The New York Times
       
   130 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Derek Gottfrid (The New York Times). We have em
       
   131  barked on a mission to share more of what we do on the development side 
       
   132  of The Times. So far, we’ve done that via conference presentations, open
       
   133  -source software, blog posts and (most recently and probably most import
       
   134  antly) our APIs. We see our site as more than just a source of news and 
       
   135  information: it’s a platform on which news and information become buildi
       
   136  ng blocks.
       
   137 END:VEVENT
       
   138 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   139 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
   140 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
   141 DTSTAMP:20090310T213213
       
   142 LOCATION:Ballroom A3/A6
       
   143 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8376
       
   144 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--8376
       
   145 SUMMARY:Forking Encouraged: Folk Programming, Open Source, and Social So
       
   146  ftware Development
       
   147 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Kirrily Robert (Metaweb), Yoz Grahame (Linden L
       
   148  ab), Jason Douglas (Metaweb). The term "Folk Computing" was coined 20+ y
       
   149  ears ago to describe how people learn to program by copying and experime
       
   150  ntation.  Learn how open source licenses, hosted development environment
       
   151  s, and other folk programming concepts lower barriers to entry and help 
       
   152  people get up to speed as coders.  We'll also be showing off some modern
       
   153   folk programming platforms, from Yahoo Pipes to the OLPC and beyond.
       
   154 END:VEVENT
       
   155 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   156 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
   157 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
   158 DTSTAMP:20090604T162038
       
   159 LOCATION:Ballroom A4/A5
       
   160 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/9093
       
   161 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--9093
       
   162 SUMMARY:Democratizing the Cloud Using the LiveLabs Reactive Framework
       
   163 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Erik Meijer (Microsoft). By leveraging the fact
       
   164   that the iterator and the subject/observer design pattern are dual, we 
       
   165  show how LINQ query comprehensions and imperative iterators and foreach 
       
   166  loops, provide a compositional programming model for reactive and distri
       
   167  buted programming.
       
   168 END:VEVENT
       
   169 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   170 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
   171 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
   172 DTSTAMP:20090415T180459
       
   173 LOCATION:Ballroom A7
       
   174 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8335
       
   175 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--8335
       
   176 SUMMARY:The Bee: UNICEF's Portable Infrastructure for Emergency Communic
       
   177  ations
       
   178 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Seth  Herr (UNICEF), Merrick Schaefer (UNICEF).
       
   179   The Bee is an emergency communications system utilizing innovative open
       
   180  -source hardware and software. The Bee can be deployed anywhere in the w
       
   181  orld, can navigate power and connectivity challenges, and can be checked
       
   182   as baggage on commercial airlines. It's rugged, customizable, and desig
       
   183  ned to contribute to the community long after the crisis has passed.
       
   184 END:VEVENT
       
   185 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   186 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
   187 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
   188 DTSTAMP:20090318T002433
       
   189 LOCATION:Ballroom A8
       
   190 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/7936
       
   191 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--7936
       
   192 SUMMARY:Goal Driven Performance Application
       
   193 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Peter Zaitsev (MySQL Performance Blog). So you 
       
   194  have ambiguous task to optimize Web Site Performance and you have few re
       
   195  sources and time available. How to make the biggest impact with them ? T
       
   196  his presentation gives you insight in methodology show practical tips an
       
   197  d tools for web site performance optimization.
       
   198 END:VEVENT
       
   199 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   200 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
   201 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
   202 DTSTAMP:20090310T214156
       
   203 LOCATION:Meeting Room B1/B4
       
   204 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/7949
       
   205 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--7949
       
   206 SUMMARY:Moving into the Cloud
       
   207 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Bernard Golden (HyperStratus). Many new applica
       
   208  tions are being created to take advantage of cloud computing. But what a
       
   209  bout the enormous installed base of existing apps? How can those leverag
       
   210  e cloud computing? This presentation describes migrating an existing app
       
   211  lication into Amazon's EC2, and covers the technical, organizational, an
       
   212  d financial aspects of migration.
       
   213 END:VEVENT
       
   214 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   215 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
   216 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
   217 DTSTAMP:20090406T150441
       
   218 LOCATION:Meeting Room B2
       
   219 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8856
       
   220 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--8856
       
   221 SUMMARY:The HTML 5 Experiments
       
   222 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Bruce Lawson (Opera Software ASA). A pragmatic 
       
   223  look at HTML 5 by experimenting with converting a real site to HTML 5 - 
       
   224  how does it work? Where it useful and where is it annoying? How is suppo
       
   225  rt in current browsers?
       
   226 END:VEVENT
       
   227 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   228 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
   229 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
   230 DTSTAMP:20090505T214002
       
   231 LOCATION:Meeting Room B3
       
   232 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8190
       
   233 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--8190
       
   234 SUMMARY:What's in a Name: Can Trademarks be Helpful to Free Software Pro
       
   235  jects?
       
   236 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Karen Sandler (Software Freedom Law Center), Si
       
   237  mon  Phipps (Sun Microsystems), Gervase Markham (Mozilla Foundation), La
       
   238  rry Augustin (SugarCRM), Chris Messina (OpenID Foundation). Trademark la
       
   239  w is designed to prevent confusion in the market place but understanding
       
   240   how it can benefit the FOSS community can often be confusing. This pane
       
   241  l will discuss whether it is useful to register a trademark and, if so, 
       
   242  how to permit its use by others. Various policies and enforcement strate
       
   243  gies will be evaluated from  corporate and non-profit perspectives, ofte
       
   244  n in strong disagreement.
       
   245 END:VEVENT
       
   246 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   247 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
   248 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
   249 DTSTAMP:20090310T223011
       
   250 LOCATION:Meeting Room J1/J4
       
   251 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/7985
       
   252 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--7985
       
   253 SUMMARY:The Freedom to Cure Cancer: Open Source Software in Genomics
       
   254 DESCRIPTION:Presented by David Dooling (The Genome Center at Washington 
       
   255  University in St. Louis). It has long been know that free/libre/open sou
       
   256  rce software (FLOSS), especially GNU/Linux and Perl, played a major role
       
   257   in the Human Genome Project. This presentation will discuss the use and
       
   258   development of FLOSS in the post-genomics era, focusing on its pervasiv
       
   259  e use in sequencing the first cancer genome at The Genome Center at Wash
       
   260  ington University in St. Louis.
       
   261 END:VEVENT
       
   262 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   263 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
   264 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
   265 DTSTAMP:20090313T181028
       
   266 LOCATION:Meeting Room J2
       
   267 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/7946
       
   268 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--7946
       
   269 SUMMARY:Conventional Thinking, a guide to database naming standards
       
   270 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Robert Treat (OmniTI). Everyone agrees that we 
       
   271  need coding standards, but they often overlook the need to define a nami
       
   272  ng standard for thier SQL and database related items. This talk we not b
       
   273  e a top-down explination of "the right way to do it", but rather we'll e
       
   274  xplore the key issues you need to be aware of, from all sides,  and help
       
   275   you determine the right standards for your organization.
       
   276 END:VEVENT
       
   277 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   278 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113000
       
   279 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T104500
       
   280 DTSTAMP:20090311T000332
       
   281 LOCATION:Meeting Room J3
       
   282 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/7623
       
   283 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-10:45--7623
       
   284 SUMMARY:The JSON Saga
       
   285 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Douglas Crockford (Yahoo! Inc.). How JSON overc
       
   286  ame intolerance, inurement, and death threats to become the preferred da
       
   287  ta interchange format.
       
   288 END:VEVENT
       
   289 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   290 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   291 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   292 DTSTAMP:20090422T230607
       
   293 LOCATION:Exhibit Hall 3
       
   294 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8060
       
   295 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--8060
       
   296 SUMMARY:The Conway Channel
       
   297 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Damian Conway (Thoughtstream). The usual smorga
       
   298  sbord of new and improbably useful modules beamed straight into your min
       
   299  d from the secret island hideaway of Perl's own Dr Evil.
       
   300 END:VEVENT
       
   301 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   302 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   303 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   304 DTSTAMP:20090310T230330
       
   305 LOCATION:Ballroom A1
       
   306 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8452
       
   307 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--8452
       
   308 SUMMARY:How Green Is Our City? The Urban Forest Mapping Project
       
   309 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Kelaine Vargas (Urban Forest Map). The Urban Fo
       
   310  rest Mapping Project will map every tree in San Francisco using online i
       
   311  nput from community members as well as official data, and calculate the 
       
   312  ecosystem services the urban forest is providing. This web-based, open-s
       
   313  ource application makes use of crowd-sourced data from "citizen scientis
       
   314  ts" to help us use our urban natural resources to increase sustainabilit
       
   315  y.
       
   316 END:VEVENT
       
   317 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   318 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   319 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   320 DTSTAMP:20090312T021906
       
   321 LOCATION:Ballroom A2
       
   322 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8153
       
   323 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--8153
       
   324 SUMMARY:NPR, Open Content and API's
       
   325 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Daniel Jacobson (National Public Radio). It has
       
   326   been a year since NPR's public API launched (announced at OSCON 2008). 
       
   327   This session will explore how the marketplace has changed for media org
       
   328  anizations over the last year, how API's have played a role in that chan
       
   329  ge, and what the future looks like for NPR, its API, and other media org
       
   330  anizations.
       
   331 END:VEVENT
       
   332 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   333 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   334 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   335 DTSTAMP:20090310T215150
       
   336 LOCATION:Ballroom A3/A6
       
   337 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/7841
       
   338 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--7841
       
   339 SUMMARY:Practical Computerized Home Automation
       
   340 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Bruce Momjian (EnterpriseDB), Matthew Momjian (
       
   341  Student). You can control devices in your home from your computer with n
       
   342  o new wiring. This session covers controlling lights, bells, and motors 
       
   343  using open source software.    Wireless remotes can also control devices
       
   344  .  Sensors can provide information about motion, sunset, temperature.  C
       
   345  apturing caller id and auto-dialing is also covered.
       
   346 END:VEVENT
       
   347 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   348 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   349 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   350 DTSTAMP:20090310T214824
       
   351 LOCATION:Ballroom A4/A5
       
   352 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8408
       
   353 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--8408
       
   354 SUMMARY:Stream Fusion: Beautiful Performance in Haskell
       
   355 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Bryan O'Sullivan (Serpentine Green Design). The
       
   356   Haskell language makes it possible to write elegant code while achievin
       
   357  g top-notch performance. We'll introduce you to the features that make f
       
   358  ast code possible, focusing on one of the newest and most exciting techn
       
   359  iques for number crunching and text processing: stream fusion.
       
   360 END:VEVENT
       
   361 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   362 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   363 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   364 DTSTAMP:20090311T235210
       
   365 LOCATION:Ballroom A7
       
   366 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8442
       
   367 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--8442
       
   368 SUMMARY:Security Without Disruption: Ksplice Kernel Updates
       
   369 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Jeff Arnold (Ksplice, Inc.). Today, every mains
       
   370  tream operating system in the world requires regular reboots in order to
       
   371   be up to date and secure.  Since reboots cause downtime and disruption,
       
   372   people are forced into the uncomfortable dilemma of choosing between se
       
   373  curity and convenience. New open source technology out of MIT, called Ks
       
   374  plice, enables running systems to stay secure without the disruption of 
       
   375  rebooting.
       
   376 END:VEVENT
       
   377 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   378 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   379 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   380 DTSTAMP:20090310T213836
       
   381 LOCATION:Ballroom A8
       
   382 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8426
       
   383 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--8426
       
   384 SUMMARY:High Performance APC
       
   385 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Brian Shire (Facebook, Inc.), Graham Kelly (Fac
       
   386  ebook, Inc.). The Alternative PHP Cache is an opcode and variable cache 
       
   387  for PHP that can be used to improve PHP performance, scalability, and en
       
   388  d user experience.
       
   389 END:VEVENT
       
   390 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   391 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   392 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   393 DTSTAMP:20090310T231026
       
   394 LOCATION:Meeting Room B1/B4
       
   395 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8563
       
   396 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--8563
       
   397 SUMMARY:Scan Open Source Report 2008 and the Architecture Library
       
   398 DESCRIPTION:Presented by David Maxwell (Coverity, Inc.). This talk will 
       
   399  present the 2008 results from the Scan Project, a Department of Homeland
       
   400   Security open source initiative run by Coverity, designed to improve th
       
   401  e quality and security of popular open source projects used to power gov
       
   402  ernment and private websites.
       
   403 END:VEVENT
       
   404 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   405 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   406 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   407 DTSTAMP:20090311T050608
       
   408 LOCATION:Meeting Room B2
       
   409 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/8331
       
   410 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--8331
       
   411 SUMMARY:Crash Reporting: Mozilla's Open Source Solution
       
   412 DESCRIPTION:Presented by K Lars  Lohn (Mozilla Corporation), Ted Mielcza
       
   413  rek (Mozilla Corporation), Austin King (Mozila Corporation). Mozilla's o
       
   414  pen source crash reporting system premiered in Firefox 3.0.  Combining t
       
   415  he Google Breakpad and Mozilla Socorro projects, Mozilla has created a s
       
   416  ystem that allows millions of  client applications to report crashes bac
       
   417  k to a central location for analysis. This talk is intended for people i
       
   418  nterested in how the new Firefox crash reporting works and how it is app
       
   419  licable to other projects.
       
   420 END:VEVENT
       
   421 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   422 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   423 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   424 DTSTAMP:20090624T070410
       
   425 LOCATION:Meeting Room B3
       
   426 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/9257
       
   427 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--9257
       
   428 SUMMARY:Automating the Cloud with Chef
       
   429 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Adam Jacob (Opscode). Infrastructure is code - 
       
   430  the separation between how you manage your infrastructure and how you bu
       
   431  ild your applications is disappearing.  Adam Jacob, CTO of Opscode and p
       
   432  rimary author of Chef, will teach you what this means in practice - thro
       
   433  ugh showing how to deploy real-world applications with Chef on EC2.
       
   434 END:VEVENT
       
   435 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   436 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   437 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   438 DTSTAMP:20090311T032948
       
   439 LOCATION:Meeting Room J1/J4
       
   440 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/7889
       
   441 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--7889
       
   442 SUMMARY:Sex, Drugs and XMPP
       
   443 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Paul Scott (University of the Western Cape). XM
       
   444  PP is a cheap, low bandwidth alternative to the web in bandwidth poor co
       
   445  untries. This talk will show how we have used XMPP networks to address s
       
   446  ocial problems like gansterism, drug abuse and HIV AIDS.
       
   447 END:VEVENT
       
   448 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   449 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   450 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   451 DTSTAMP:20090310T221803
       
   452 LOCATION:Meeting Room J2
       
   453 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/7955
       
   454 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--7955
       
   455 SUMMARY:What Every Developer Should Know About Database Scalability
       
   456 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Jonathan Ellis (Rackspace Hosting). Replication
       
   457  .  Partitioning.  Relational databases.  Bigtable.  Dynamo. There is no 
       
   458  one-size-fits-all approach to scaling your database, and the CAP theorem
       
   459   proved that there never will be.  This talk will explain the advantages
       
   460   and limits of the approaches to scaling traditional relational database
       
   461  s, as well as the tradeoffs made by the designers of newer systems like 
       
   462  Google's Bigtable.
       
   463 END:VEVENT
       
   464 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   465 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T122000
       
   466 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T113500
       
   467 DTSTAMP:20090313T053329
       
   468 LOCATION:Meeting Room J3
       
   469 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/7850
       
   470 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-11:35--7850
       
   471 SUMMARY:Building and Running An Open-Source Community: The FreeBSD Proje
       
   472  ct
       
   473 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Marshall Kirk McKusick (Marshall Kirk McKusick 
       
   474  Consultancy). This talk will tell the story of the the FreeBSD project w
       
   475  hich started from the open-source release of 4.4BSD-Lite from the Univer
       
   476  sity of California at Berkeley.  The FreeBSD project patterned its initi
       
   477  al community structure on the development structure built up at Berkeley
       
   478  .
       
   479 END:VEVENT
       
   480 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   481 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T133000
       
   482 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T123000
       
   483 DTSTAMP:20090716T165536
       
   484 LOCATION:Exhibit Hall 3
       
   485 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/10416
       
   486 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-12:30--10416
       
   487 SUMMARY:Moblin, Chrome, Android, Ubuntu, etc: What's the Deal with Linux
       
   488   on the Desktop?
       
   489 DESCRIPTION:Presented by Jim Zemlin (The Linux Foundation). Join Jim Zem
       
   490  lin as he takes a look back at the big moves that drove Linux to dominat
       
   491  e the server and super computing markets and how we are seeing similar t
       
   492  rends start now in the desktop.
       
   493 END:VEVENT
       
   494 BEGIN:VEVENT
       
   495 DTEND;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T140000
       
   496 DTSTART;TZID=US/Pacific:20090724T133000
       
   497 DTSTAMP:20090710T164522
       
   498 LOCATION:Concourse Two
       
   499 URL:http://en.oreilly.com/oscon2009/public/schedule/detail/10409
       
   500 UID:http://conferences.oreilly.com/oscon--s2009-07-24-13:30--10409
       
   501 SUMMARY:Closing Reception
       
   502 DESCRIPTION:Join us at the "build your own Hamburger bar".  Enjoy burger
       
   503  s, veggie crudites, soda pop, and water.  Take this opportunity to netwo
       
   504  rk one last time at this closing event. Say thank you and exchange conta
       
   505  ct information until next year.
       
   506 END:VEVENT