Please log in to use the personal scheduler
Schedule: Ubuntu sessions
Location: Meeting Room B3
Ubuntu One isn't just a set of services for Ubuntu, it's a platform for you to build your own services too. Stuart Langridge explains the APIs Ubuntu One offers to developers and shows some examples of applications you could build that take advantage of storage in the cloud and synchronised databases for your apps: build your own on the desktop or the web to work collaboratively with Ubuntu One.
Read more.
Location: Meeting Room J1/J4
In his new talk Building Belonging, Jono Bacon explores the underlying recipe behind what makes great community and talks about many of the concepts that he and his team have used as part of the Ubuntu community. The presentation takes a fun, amusing and anecdote laden tour-de-force of community in a way that any community can implement. Be sure to be there!
Read more.
Location: Meeting Room B3
It is not an easy task to integrate an OpenSource solution in an enterprise. We'll show you how you can turn a successful OS project into an enterprise-grade product.
We'll share our experience with industrialization and virtualization of a big OS project, how we built ubuntu packages, how we included our project in the Ubuntu distribution and how we use virtualization to develop our product.
Read more.
Location: Meeting Room J1/J4
A discussion and demonstration on building and managing a private cloud using Ubuntu Server, and Eucalyptus
Read more.
Location: Meeting Room B3
While you might not be able to tell at a glance, a lot has changed behind the scenes on a modern Ubuntu system. For instance, did you know Ubuntu is phasing out System V init and has already replaced the init binary? In this talk Kyle discusses the current changes Ubuntu is making to what we might consider the traditional Linux system.
Read more.
Location: Meeting Room B3
A recent survey conducted by the Ubuntu Server community jointly with Canonical and Redmonk delivers some great insights on why more and more enterprises are choosing Ubuntu Server Edition for their deployments and what workloads are being used. This talk will discuss the survey findings and propose some conclusions.
Read more.
Location: Meeting Room B3
So you've just finished writing the next big thing, but how do you convince people to use it and build community around it? This talk will illustrate how to use Ubuntu's Launchpad to distribute open source applications. Launchpad is project hosting with unique features that facilitate simple installations and upgrades leveraging the standard Debian distribution stack.
Read more.
In today's computing world, it can often feel like we are drowning in wave after wave of new trends such as mashups, service oriented architecture and cloud computing. This sea of concepts are simply the manifestation of an underlying change in IT. In this session we will explore what is happening and why open source is the dominant model for the future.
Read more.
Location: Meeting Room B2
As Ubuntu environments grow, the complexity of managing packages and updating systems quickly outgrows the ability of a sys admin to easily manage servers and desktops with manual commands and scripts. This talk will explore some of the technologies that Ubuntu admins can use to manage their Ubuntu environments and how these can be extended to managing Cloud environments.
Read more.
Location: Meeting Room B3
Study gains and losses in how Launchpad, a collaboration web service for the open-source community, used a Python component library from Zope 3 to help manage a large project. Discuss when the approach might be appropriate. Code examples include automatic REST web service generation. Demonstrate how the component architecture might be leveraged in popular frameworks such as Django.
Read more.
Location: Meeting Room B3
Infrastructure is code - the separation between how you manage your
infrastructure and how you build your applications is disappearing. Adam
Jacob, CTO of Opscode and primary author of Chef, will teach you what this means
in practice - through showing how to deploy real-world applications
with Chef on EC2.
Read more.