LibrePlanet: Conference/2010

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# Anand Babu Periasamy ([http://www.unlocksmith.org GNU Maintainer, FSF-India Board Member])
 
# Anand Babu Periasamy ([http://www.unlocksmith.org GNU Maintainer, FSF-India Board Member])
 
# [[User:mcornick|Mark Cornick]] (Greenbelt, MD)
 
# [[User:mcornick|Mark Cornick]] (Greenbelt, MD)
 +
# Marlyn Tadros, Stephen Rudolfi, Jessica Waldrip - New England Institute of Art (Brookline, MA)
  
 
==Payment for non-members==
 
==Payment for non-members==

Revision as of 20:38, 25 January 2010


LibrePlanet 2010



The LibrePlanet Conference will be held March 19th-21st in Cambridge, Massachusetts, at the Harvard University Science Center.

Why you should attend:

  • Learn about the latest developments with the GNU operating system
  • Workshops, presentations and lightning talks from key free software projects
  • Participate in group hacking projects or campaign discussions -- bring your laptop
  • Learn about practical steps in free software advocacy.

This year we'll also be hosting a GNU Hackers Meeting and a track featuring presentations from women in free software, see increasing women's participation in free software. Plus we will have an address from the GNU project founder and FSF Board president Richard M. Stallman.

If you would like to propose a workshop, presentation or lighting talk about a free software project you are involed in we will be accepting proposals until January 31st. Please add your proposal under Workshops and Presentations below as well as sending mail to membership@fsf.org.

We have space for only 250 attendees, so please register soon to secure your place! FSF members attend for free with non-members paying $60 -- so why not become a member? Everyone who attends receives a LibrePlanet 2010 t-shirt.

LibrePlanet aims to deliver a conference that you the attendees want. If you've got something you want to hack on or a workshop you'd like to see or a presentation you would like to give, let us know! You can add your ideas to this wiki page, visit us in #libreplanet on freenode or email us at membership@fsf.org with your proposal.

Event schedule

Thursday, March 18th (Evening) -- Informal dinner and drinks among the people in town so far, and an initial introduction for GNU maintainers and developers attending the GNU Hackers Meeting.

Friday, March 19th -- Hands-on hacking, bug-squashing, and documentation work on projects which will be announced in advance (please bring a laptop), simultaneous with a full day of GNU Hackers Meeting events and workshops covering free software advocacy

Saturday, March 20th -- Address by RMS, and keynotes from other free software and GNU speakers with presentations on key free software projects

Saturday Evening, March 20th -- The LibrePlanet social

Sunday, March 21st -- Lightning talks and presentations by attendees covering free software projects, practical steps in advocacy and diversity, and a GNU track with maintainers presenting on both their own projects and ideas for improving GNU overall

Who's coming

(RSVP by adding your name here. Ideally, create a user page for yourself using the template.)

Attendees

If you'd rather not be listed here, please RSVP by sending an email to membership@fsf.org instead, thanks!

  1. Bob Call User:Eight190 (Tyngsborough, MA)
  2. Deborah Nicholson User:deborah (Boston, MA)
  3. Richard Stallman
  4. Peter Brown (Boston, MA)
  5. Mako Hill (Somerville, MA)
  6. John Sullivan
  7. Matt Lee (Boston, MA)
  8. Brett Smith (Somerville, MA)
  9. Kelly Hopkins User:thesoprano (Boston, MA)
  10. Jasimin Huang (Boston, MA)
  11. Donald Robertson (Watertown, MA)
  12. Peter Olson (Watertown, MA)
  13. Danny Clark (User:dclark) (Cambridge, MA)
  14. Bulent Basaran (bulent at member.fsf.org)
  15. Craig Andrews
  16. Jason Woofenden (Cambridge, MA)
  17. Steve Revilak (Arlington, MA)
  18. Christine Spang (Cambridge, MA)
  19. Clara Raubertas (Cambridge, MA)
  20. Felipe Sanches (São Paulo, SP - Brazil) -- GNU LibreDWG mantainer; Inkscape developer
  21. Chong Yidong (New Haven, CT) -- GNU Emacs maintainer
  22. Andrew Lewman
  23. Jason Self User:Jself (Seattle, WA)
  24. Gregory Maxwell (Washington DC)
  25. Kat Walsh (Washington DC)
  26. Robinson Tryon (VT)
  27. Bob Vogel (East Lyme, CT)
  28. Ted Smith (DC)
  29. Laura Sheys (DC)
  30. Rodrigo Rodrigues da Silva (São Paulo, Brazil) -- GNU LibreDWG maintainer
  31. Steven DuBois (Fairhaven, MA)
  32. Will Kahn-Greene (Chelmsford, MA) -- Miro developer
  33. John Gilmore -- GNU
  34. Brian Gough (GNU maintainer)
  35. Christopher Webber (Chicago, IL) -- Creative Commons programmer
  36. Carol Smith (San Francisco, CA)
  37. Asheesh Laroia (probably) (former CC programmer; working on openhatch.org) (Philadelphia, PA)
  38. Joshua Gay
  39. Sarah Adelaida McIntire (Amherst, Ma)
  40. Jon Phillips (SF/Beijing) -- http://status.net
  41. Dennis Kibbe User:dennisk (Phoenix, AZ)
  42. Chris Fernandez (Boston, Ma) -- http://binaryfreedom.info -- http://cfernandez.binaryfreedom.info
  43. Karl Fogel (New York, NY) -- http://www.red-bean.com/kfogel
  44. Arthur Torrey User:Gooserid (North Billerica, MA)
  45. Giuseppe Scrivano (GNU maintainer)
  46. John W. Eaton (GNU Octave maintainer)
  47. Luis Villa (San Francisco) -- IAAL
  48. Kurt B. Kaiser (Wolfeboro, NH)
  49. Konstantinos (Ntino) Krampis (Rockville,MD)
  50. Matthew Craig (Rye, NH)
  51. Marina Zhurakhinskaya (Cambridge, MA) - GNOME Shell developer
  52. Hannah Wallach (Amherst, MA) - Debian Women, GNOME WSOP
  53. Karen Sandler (NY) - Software Freedom Law Center
  54. Leslie Hawthorn - Google
  55. Walter Bender (MA)
  56. William Fielder (Rock Hall, MD)
  57. Jiaxing Zhang (Boston, MA)
  58. Rich Hilliard (League for Programming Freedom)
  59. Scott Walck (Annville, PA)
  60. David Sugar (GNU Maintainer)
  61. Bradley M. Kuhn
  62. Ward Vandewege (Somerville, MA)
  63. Eric Blossom (GNU Radio Maintainer)
  64. Anand Babu Periasamy (GNU Maintainer, FSF-India Board Member)
  65. Mark Cornick (Greenbelt, MD)
  66. Marlyn Tadros, Stephen Rudolfi, Jessica Waldrip - New England Institute of Art (Brookline, MA)

Payment for non-members

The conference is free for members, but costs $60 for non-members. Membership is $120 for the year -- just $60 for students. Join or just pay for the conference.

Communicating with other conference-goers

Follow conference microblogging with the !libreplanet group at http://identi.ca.

Or join us in #libreplanet on the Freenode IRC network.

Directions

We're back in the Harvard Science Center, which is easily accessible from Harvard Square in Cambridge, MA. The red arrows will bring you in from either of the two northern exits from the Harvard Square T-stop.

http://static.fsf.org/fsforg/img/harvardsquaremapwitharrows.png

Parking suggestions and directions for getting to Harvard as a whole are available on Harvard's web site.

However, if you are driving to the Boston area, your best bet is probably to park in one place (like your hotel) and use public transportation to get around while you are here. Scroll down the page for more information on available public transportation.


Getting to Harvard Square via the MBTA (aka "The T")

  1. Subway: Take the Red Line to the Harvard Square Station, which is a short walk from the campus. You can map out the building's location using its street address: 1 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA or looking for it from Harvard Yard.
  2. Bus: Routes #66 (Allston), #71 (Watertown), #73 (Belmont), #68 (MIT East Campus), #69 (Lechmere), #72 (North Cambridge), #74 (Belmont), #76 (Belmont), #77 (Arlington), #78 (Arlmont), #86 (Somerville), #96 (Medford), and #1 (South Boston) all go to Harvard Square.

Airport Information

The closest airport is Boston Logan International Airport (BOS). From any airport terminal, look for signs for the Silver Line T stop. The Silver Line is a subway line that is actually a bus. Take the Silver Line to the South Station stop on the Red line. From there, follow the directions for the subway to Harvard.

Accommodations

Here are some suggestions, but if you've found an even better deal -- please post it!

  • Harvard Square Hotel is very close and economical for a Harvard Square hotel. ($179 plus tax of 12.45% per night)

Hostels

These are about 5km from the conference venue, but have prices of $50 or less.

Other hostels a little further out can be found at HostelWorld.com.

Room Sharing with Other Attendees

Please say if you're coming for all three days or which days you're coming if you are only joining us for part of the time.

Bulent Basaran coming for three days.

Jason Self User:Jself coming for all three days and is open to sharing for all or just some of the days. Contact info on my user page.

Workshops and Presentations

We will be accepting presentation proposals until January 31st. Please add your presentation title here and send a short descriptive text to membership@fsf.org.

Ideas for workshops and presentations you would like to deliver:

Workshop about how non-profits can solely use free software to promote freedom and save money for their mission. Tor Project or the FSF could talk about how they do this successfully.

or

Ideas for workshops and presentations you would like LibrePlanet to have organized:

Hackday

Ideas for Friday's hackday should go here, thanks!

FSF Privacy Key Updating

Three ideas for autonomo.us related hacking ( Bkuhn 23:34, 20 January 2010 (UTC) ):

  • a truly distributed url shortener. It's a simple idea. CouchDB backend. each site replicates the other. So, if you have foo.ba and bar.ba, you can make foo.ba/SHORT1, which will also be bar.ba/foo.ba/SHORT1, which won't be the same as bar.ba/SHORT1. In other words, URLs are all short and unique, but they can be verified and recovered from another site.
  • A yocto-reader backend. (yocto-reader is a Google Reader clone. The front-end GUI is basically done but it has no backend.)
  • Use status.net notices as a blog commentor system. A blog post links to a conversation on identica, which are the comments for that blog post. What needs writing is javascript to embed the identica posts onto the blog site so that it's semi-seamless.

If you are interested in hacking on these things, contact bkuhn or the autonomous list.

Free and Open Machine

This should be an on going project to suggest congenial manufacturers, support people starting out, and to provide a path to easy configuration and good performance. Personally, I think FSF should be able to sell a fully configured machine off the shelf.

We should identify components for a machine that would best free us. Last year there was this suggestion: Open Machine

Looking for consensus and expert opinion on the following:

  • CPU
  • Motherboard and BIOS (someone from CoreBoot interested ?)
  • Drives
  • Graphics
  • Wireless
  • Audio components
  • Distributions

Edit this page to include your name and email address with your ideas or contact vogelrl at members dot fsf dot org.

Manufacturer participation appreciated.

Sunday's Tracks

Ideas for tracks here

Increasing women's participation in free software