Scheduled FUDCon APAC 2015 social media posts
Posted on Social Media
- 15/05/2015
- Planning to attend FUDCon? Share this cool design with your friends! Check https://jurankdankkal.fedorapeople.org/FUDCon/FUDConPune2015/final/goingto/iamgoingto.png #fudconin15
- 16/05/2015
- To volunteer for FUDCon join the FUDCon Planning Mailing List (https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/fudcon-planning) and see how you may contribute! #fudconin15
- 17/05/2015
- Join the FUDCon APAC 2015 event on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/events/740572616064045/) #fudconin15
Topic : Running Project Atomic and Docker on Fedora
Speakers : Aditya Patawari and Lalatendu Mohanty
Aditya Patawari is the Lead of Systems Engineering at BrowserStack.com. He loves playing around with Enterprise Linux, Ansible, Puppet, Nagios, Python, Cloud (AWS and OpenStack) both as a part of his work and out of interest.
Lalatendu Mohanty is a Free and Open Source Software enthusiast and advocate. He is currently working as Senior Software Engineer-containers at Red Hat.
At FUDCon 2015, Aditya and Lalatendu are going to talk about why Docker can be a better choice than LXC and virtual machines in many scenarios.
Topic : Workshop on UTRRS
Speakers : Satyabrata Maitra, Rajesh Ranjan, Bhushan Barve
Rajesh Ranjan has more than a decade of work in FOSS communities of localization and a background in journalism. He is the founder of the FUEL Project which as received various awards and recognition.
Bhushan Bharve is an active contributor to testing of language technologies. Bhushan is presently working at Red Hat.
Along with Satyabrata Maitra, they will be showing the ease of internationalization testing and contributing feedback by using the UTRRS framework.
Topic : Improving thread synchronization in GlusterD (Daemon for Glusterfs) using Userspace RCU (Read-copy-update)
Speaker : Atin Mukherjee
Atin has deep experience across domains like Telecom, BFSI etc. He is presently working on Gluster, the Open Source distributed scaled storage. Atin's focus is on the Gluster daemon.
Scheduled for Social Media
- 21/05/2015
- Connect with Fedora developers through LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/grp/home?gid=8240994)
Suchakra Sharma
"FUDCon APAC 2015 : Our Speaker"
Suchakra Sharma Talking on "Form Zero to Hero in Kernel Module Development"
In short, you will create a small network packet filtering kernel module for a simple use case such a filtering based on the device or length or the type of network packet.
Boi: Suchakra is a PhD student at Ecole Polytechnique de Montreal. He researches on JIT compilers and tracing tools full-time and loves to do UX/UI and design stuff when he is free. He is involved with Fedora as a packager and designer. You can know more about him at http://suchakra.in and https://suchakra.wordpress.com/about/
Twitter: @suchakra
Topic : Introduction to GlusterFS and its features
Speaker : Deepak Shetty, Atin Mukherjee
GlusterFS is an open source, clustered file system capable of scaling to several petabytes and handling thousands of clients. If you are someone who is interested to learn GlusterFS and its features, this workshop is for you. Deepak Shetty, Principal Software Engineer at Red Hat along with Atin Mukherjee, Senior S/W Engineer at Red Hat will guide the audience through the install-configure-setup of GlusterFS, putting up workloads and management of the deployment.
Topic : Introduction to kdump and kernel crash analysis
Speaker : Buland Singh and Gopal Tiwari
In the event of a system crash, kdump creates a memory image (vmcore) that can help in determining the cause of the crash and Crash utility allows you to determine the cause of the system crash by analyzing the core dump. Learn more about it from Buland Singh,a FOSS contributor working as an Associate Software Maintenance Engineer and Gopal Tiwari who is a Sr. Software maintenance Engineer at RHIPL.
Topic : Lessons learned from Bijra project
Speaker : KAZI NIZAMUDDIN
The head master of the Bijra High School, Kazi Nizamuddin, will share the story of Bijra project. He was the first person to recognize the benefits of having FOSS communities help in the school curriculum and worked with dgplug to bring the project to life. In 2007, the Birja project was initiated with help from Mr. Indranil Dasgupta from L2C2 Technologies,and Prof. Ashok Ranjan Thakur from WBUT. If you are a FOSS contributor or you are someone still not convinced on why you should contribute to FOSS, join this talk to know how a contributor's simple work effects the life of remote Indian students.
Topic: Achieving Community Goals with Fedora
Speaker: Tenzin Chokden
Tenzin works as a Malware Analyst for Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) exiled Tibetan Government. He is an open source enthusiast, a contributor to the Fedora Security Lab and uses open source tools in his personal and professional life. Tenzin, through his session, will introduce users to ways of using Open Source to improve their security-controls, mitigate attacks and build a community using the power of open source communities.
Topic: Automating Infrastructure by Foreman and Katello
Speaker: Sachin Ghai
Sachin has been a long term contributor to the Katello and Foreman projects upstream. He will introduce the concept of 'content management' using Katello; provisioning bare metal infrastructure, creating and managing instances across clouds; and a demonstration of Fedora installation using Foreman
Topic: Compiling Linux Kernel & Submit first patch
Speaker: Mayur Patil
Mayur is an Assistant Professor at MIT Academy of Engineering, Alandi(D). He is a Github activist who also contributes to the open source projects: Linux Kernel and Apache Cassandra. Through his workshop, you will, get an overview of Linux Kernel, learn tools to build Kernel, compile Linux Kernel in Fedora/CentOS, write a sample device driver and Send that driver as a patch to Mailing List.
Topic: "Selling" Open Source 101
Speaker: Izhar Firdaus
Izhar is a Fedora Ambassador who has been contributing to the Fedora Project since 2007. He is currently working as a Solution Architect in ABYRES, a Malaysian Open Source System Integrator, providing solutions for products from Red Hat, Hortonworks and other Open Source principles. His session is about Open Source businesses and how you can initiate your own business providing support and professional services for your Open Source expertise. He will also talk about his failures at a previous company and his learnings from the past years about the business operations of two major Open Source vendors: Red Hat and Hortonworks.
Topic: Android Development on Fed ora 21
Speaker: Mohan Prakash
Mohan Prakash is a teacher, Java programmer and a social activist. He runs a private institution where he teaches Mathematics and Computers. In his free time, he contributes to the Fedora Project. Through his talk, he will introduce the audience to Android and its architecture, speak about the components of an Android application, requirements for Android Development in Fedora 21, instructions to install Android Studio, show how to build a simple application and run it on a real device, discuss the advantages of Android development in Fedora 21.
Topic: Documentation: It's Important and Difficult
Speaker: Nigel Babu
Nigel is a Web Developer and Sysadmin based in Delhi, India. He loves building web applications in Python. He works for Open Knowledge as a Senior Sysadmin and Developer. In his free time, he contributes to Mozilla. Through his session, Nigel will share the ideas discussed in the "Write the Docs" conference that he attended in Berlin. He will also share his experience and learnings from the CKAN project that made their documentation far better than what it was.
Topic: Haskell is good for you
Speaker: Jens Petersen
Jens Petersen has been involved in the Haskell Development Community for many years and started the Fedora Haskell project and SIG. He works for Red Hat taking care of the i18n Engineering team. In his talk he will introduce the Haskell functional programming language, explain with examples how it can help you become a better programmer, discuss compiler performance and how Haskell is good at concurrency and parallel programming, talk about the Fedora Haskell SIG, its work and how to contribute, discuss well-known Haskell projects: Hakyll, pandoc, Warp and Yesod, XMonad, Yi and shell-scripting. He will also speak about the resources for learning Haskell and joining the community.
Topic: Introduction to DNSSEC - F22 feature
Speaker: PJP
P J P is a long-time Fedora contributor, package maintainer and an Ambassador. He is a Security Engineer at Red Hat and also spends time on the Fedora Security Team (FST) activities. Domain Name System SeCurity Extensions(DNSSEC) is a set of standards defined to extend the Domain Name System(DNS) protocol, to securely exchange information between DNS clients & servers. Through his session, he aims to introduce the audience to the nitty-gritties of the domain name system (DNS), its pitfalls, its security, its utility and importance to the users.
Topic: Introduction to nftables
Speaker: Swapnil Nagarkar
Swapnil works as a Software Maintenance Engineer, Networking for Red Hat. nftables is a project that provides packet filtering and packet classification on Linux, and it is intended to replace existing iptables, ip6tables, arptables and ebtables frameworks. nftables is a combination of a Linux kernel engine and a userspace utility. Through his session, Swapnil will introduce you to the limitations of iptables and also speak about its advantages over iptables.
Topic: Lessons from building open source communities top-down vs bottom-up
Speaker: Kiran Jonnalagadda
Kiran spent a decade as a career tourist, preaching the virtues of open source in multiple industries, before getting mixed up with the startup crowd and founding HasGeek. Through his talk, Kiran will explain the difference between building the open source communities top-down (HasGeek story) as compared to those built the bottom-up (Hasjob story) way. He will also explain why the bottom-up way doesn't mean no control and how can you use these ideas in your community.
Topic: Nuts and Bolts of Fedora Internationalization, Globalization
Speaker: Pravin Satpute
Pravin has been working in the field of internationalization for the past 10 years. He works in all aspects of i18n i.e. Input, Storage and Display. He is the Project Lead for the Lohit and Liberation fonts’ family. In his session, Pravin will help you understand the core concept of internationalization and help you create a foundation for developing applications adaptable to requirement of non-English languages.
Topic: Open security for Open Source
Speaker: Huzaifa Sidhpurwala
Huzaifa is a Senior Product Security Engineer with Red Hat. He is a part of several upstream open source teams like Mozilla, PHP, Python, LibreOffice, etc. He has been a Fedora contributor for 7 years. Huzaifa, through his session, will explain how co-operative handling of security bugs benefits all and what makes open source possibly more secure than closed-source software. He shall also speak about the current problems faced handling security issues collectively and about the Fedora Security team.
Topic: Fedora Badges by Tao Zhao/Alick
Speaker: Tao Zhao
Tao Zhao also known as Alick in the Fedora community is a student at Tsinghua University, China. He is an active Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) user, contributor and promoter. He serves as a Fedora ambassador for various online and offline activities of Fedora Zhongwen (Chinese) User Group (FZUG). In this session, Tao will explain the concept of Fedora badges, give tips on earning Fedora badges and also share some contribution ideas.
Topic: Community Architecture - a different perspective
Speaker: Sankarshan Mukhopadhayay
Sankarshan has been an active member of the Fedora community in various roles including a brief stint as a Fedora Ambassador. Through this interactive session, Sankarshan will discuss the existing approaches of participation in the Fedora community and new methods for building a community that fosters & lives the Fedora values. Sankarshan will also discuss, how increased collaboration and transparency can attract participation from like-minded individuals contributing in similar communities. The talk is expected to involve sharing of experiences and stories on how the existing community members have been able to work together and learn from each other, to make the Fedora Community an amazing place to be.