Event

Ubuntu Chicago and Ubuntu development classes

Right now I am working with the members of the Ubuntu Chicago LoCo team on creating a solid proposal for developing “Ubuntu Development Courses” that members of the Chicago community will lead. Right now we are looking for those that are in the Chicago land are that may be interested in such events. As it stands, I have come up with a basic, college-like, course layout.

Ubuntu Development 101 - Familiarization of Ubuntu development tools
This session will provide the attendees with a breakdown and brief run-through of the tools involved with Ubuntu development. These tools would include: Launchpad, mailing lists, IRC, development applications and scripts, and more.

Ubuntu Development 102 - Bug Triage
This session will provide the attendees with the knowledge necessary to help triage Ubuntu bugs. Attendees will learn the basics as well as some of the advanced topics with triaging bugs on Launchpad.

Source: nixternal

Qt Seminar in Chicago

If you are located in or near the Chicago land area, this Thursday, May 1, 2008, ICS will be holding a Qt Quickstart seminar. Registration is free and there is the ability to register for upcoming Qt Quickstarts in May for the Detroit, Michigan area as well as the Washington, D.C. area.

Thursday’s event here in Chicago is broken down as such: (Times are Central Standard Time (CST))

Location:

Doubletree Hotel Chicago Oak Brook
1909 Spring Road
Oak Brook, IL 60523

  • 08:30 - 09:00 - Registration & Continental Breakfast
  • 09:00 - 12:00 - Desktop Applications
  • 12:30 - 16:00 - Embedded Linux Applications

Hope to see you there!

Source: nixternal

First day of OpenWeek completed successfully

Wow, what a day! Jorge Castro did a smashing job getting the OpenWeek setup this time around. I was totally impressed and intrigued with today’s talks and watched everyone of them. The participants were amazing! I saw some of the most thought out questions, comments, and ideas today that totally blew me away.

I gave the Kubuntu Development talk today that had the greatest participation I have ever had in my previous OpenWeek talks. Great questions and interaction by everyone present! Thanks for making today such a success and I hope you all continue checking the talks out this entire week. On Wednesday, April 30 at 20:00 UTC, I will give an introduction to KDE 4 and its future and on Friday, May 2 at 21:00 UTC, I will give a talk about the Ubuntu Documentation Project. If you are interested in either talk, I sure hope you show up! For those of you who have been wondering how to contribute, I urge you to really check out the Documentation talk, as it is one of the easier ways for you to get involved.

Source: nixternal

Penguicon or bust!

Tomorrow afternoon Jeff, Gabriel (if he is feeling better), and I will set out from Chicago to Troy, Michigan for Penguicon. Looks like I will be hanging out with the Ubuntu Michigan crowd for the weekend, listening to some talks, drinking Jorge’s and Jono’s beer when they aren’t looking. Hey, I am a starving student, flat out broke. I have $20 in my name right now and searching for more before leaving tomorrow :) I don’t even have a place to stay yet, but I think Jorge said it best, who sleeps at a geek fest :)

Anyways, if you are heading to Penguicon, drop me a note here in the comments and if you want to buy me beer, food, or just hang out during the weekend, let me know :)

Source: nixternal

Benkler, Jenkins, Sunstein: The good, the bad, the ugly

(Note that the order of names in the title is not meant to imply a specific relationship to the adjectives in the subtitle. I went with alphabetical.)

Last night I grabbed the red line over to MIT after work and saw a wonderful event put on by the MIT Communications Forum, entitled: Our World Digitized: The Good, the Bad, the Ugly.

Audio from the event (Real Audio format) has already been posted, so if you find my chaotic “liveblogging” style notes below interesting, be sure to check it out. (They will post video on the seminar page soon as well).

My *very rough* notes:
———-

HJ: This is not about the Utopian versus the Dystopian - it’s about what criteria can we even use to measure the success or failure of online democracy.

Free Software Conference

If you are in or around Chicago tomorrow, Friday the 4th and Saturday the 5th, the University of Illinois at Chicago is holding their 2nd annual Flourish Conference. There will be speakers, hack-a-thons, a mini BarCamp, and more. Registration starts at 9am. Tomorrows first talk is Bruce Perens followed by John ‘Maddog’ Hall. I just got wind at the panel talk tomorrow, there will be a Microsoft representative on the board taking questions. Oh boy do I feel bad for him! Anyways, if you plan on coming, try and register on the website to save you $10 at the door. If you have to pay $10, it is a decent deal considering some of the swag you might be able to walk away with as well as a continental breakfast. If I get there before you though, I will eat all of the food!

So, I hope to see you there tomorrow. If you go, just ask around for me if you don’t know who I am, that is of course if you feel like meeting up. And don’t forget your GPG keys! On Saturday I will be giving a talk on the KDE community as well as an overview of KDE 4.

Source: nixternal

EVENT: Education Web Professional National Conference

edwebpros.jpg

Educational web managers are often lonely, misunderstood geeks who are crucial members of the communications staff but get unfairly lumped in with IT.

These dedicated souls must synthesize content for a variety of audiences (faculty, administration, parents, alumni, students) while also single-handedly updating calendars, uploading forms, and managing schedules.