GUADEC 2013 Begins in Brno, Czech Republic

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It’s off the IRC channels and mailing lists and into the halls of the Brno University of Technology for over 200 GNOME users and developers this week. GUADEC, GNOME’s annual European conference, kicks off today in sunny Brno where members of the GNOME community are convening to discuss and develop GNOME technologies, meeting old friends and make new ones.

GUADEC 2013 will take place August 1 through August 8 with 4 keynotes, 80 presentations and 4 working days of hackfests and BoF (Birds of a Feather) sessions. Stay tuned for our daily digests of the events happening across the conference.

Read more in our press release.

[Image by Jan Symon (Jan Symon) [CC-BY-SA-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons]

GUADEC 2013 Starts Tomorrow

By Jan Symon (Jan Symon) [CC-BY-SA-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons
By Jan Symon (Jan Symon) [CC-BY-SA-3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Members of the GNOME project are gathering in Brno, Czech Republic, for their annual European conference (GUADEC). The event starts on Thursday 1 August. There will be four core days of presentations, including talks on Linux gaming, Wayland, design, GTK+, documentation, LibreOffice, application sandboxing, and much much more. The full schedule can be found on the GUADEC website.

This is the main GNOME event of the year and, as with every year, is set to be educational, inspiring and a lot of fun.

For those who are already in Brno, a welcome event is being held today Ventana Café between 16:00 and 21:00. This is right across the the street from this year’s venue at the Faculty of Information Technology. Drinks and snacks will be provided, and conference badges will be handed out.

If you won’t be at GUADEC this year, don’t worry: you can follow all the action online. There will be regular reports on gnome.org (subscribe here). You can also keep track of the conference on Twitter, Facebook and Google Plus. Just follow the GNOME account, and look out for the hashtag.

GUADEC Keynote Speaker: Cathy Malmrose

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Cathy Malmrose discovered Free Software in 2007, when her son showed her Ubuntu. She realized that she could build computers optimized for GNU/Linux, and now runs ZaReason, a company which sells computers preloaded with Linux. Now ZaReason has opened its first shop in Berkley, CA and is poised to launch ZaTab, a Linux tablet.

We are lucky to have Cathy speaking at this year’s GUADEC conference, and she recently took the time to speak to us about ZaReason and the upcoming conference.

Zareason states that it aims to showcase GNU/Linux as the superior operating system. What are your thoughts about the ethics of free operating systems and providing hardware that just works out of the box for customers?

I am not an idealist. Free and open just makes sense. In so many aspects of life, lockdown only leads to longterm misery.

Take the food industry for example. If we allowed the manufacturers to do their work behind closed doors, can you imagine the types of things they would put in our food to save money? Even with the food industry being open, there are still problems. Think pink sludge (scraps of meat treated with ammonia) or grocery store items with a list of ingredients that read like a chemical biology textbook. At least with legally mandated openness they have to tell us what they put in the food so we can make an informed choice.

Some people compare the electronics industry to other sectors (such as the auto industry) and advocate for closed source using safety and security as their main reasoning. While I can see their point, I believe that proprietary development is short-sighted. My personal experience has been that the decision to make code proprietary always comes from a money-first position. Bad decisions are made when money rules over the long-term well-being of the code base.

I believe that free and open is the easiest and most effective way to keep our hardware working properly (and keep it honestly secure). Long-term.

What can we expect from your keynote at GUADEC?

I have given it a lot of though re: “What could we talk about that would result in further growth and acceptance of GNOME as world-class, something that could benefit people in general?” I will give OEM-level insight + some non-developer user-level insight of future GNOME users. Half will be practical, next-step information and half will be long-term view. Hopefully it will get developers and GNOME Foundation team members thinking about (and answering) questions for the community and the public at large.

Also, I like to do a Trivia test at the end of each talk I give. I usually ask questions about women in early computing. It helps people be more aware of women’s contributions in the early years, something many people wouldn’t even listen to otherwise. I will be giving away a few Tux keyboards (as many as will fit in my luggage, probably just two). I have done the Trivia thing at a dozen other talks, both big and small and it is always fun. It’s corny but I love it.

What do you expect from GUADEC?

I expect to meet lots of great people. I want to hear insights and opinions from the GNOME community.

We at GNOME are committed to making Free Software world as inclusive as possible to women. Have you encountered challenges as a successful women in Free Software?

To be honest, I don’t give it much thought. I have been lucky to work with men who are respectful and generous. Of course people I meet often assume I don’t know much, but that usually helps me learn more in the end.

My view on encouraging more women to enter the tech sector is simply to encourage “a programmer’s way of thinking.” In much of what I read for my daughter, girls are often encouraged to: 1. ask a friend for help (rather than solve it herself), 2. complain, or 3. give up.We need to teach our girls and women to switch their thought processes to: 1. hammer the problem yourself until you understand it, 2. don’t complain, just make your best guess, and 3. be so persistent that you wouldn’t even consider giving up as an option. It doesn’t have to be their main way of approaching the world, but a person has to be capable of it. Until a person, female or male, can think like a coder, there’s not much use in encouraging them to enter the tech sector.

As a product reseller, what would you like to see from GNOME?

First, I cringe at the thought of being a “product reseller” for many, many reasons. I hope you don’t mind if I reframe the question?

What do you think we all could do to better position GNOME and other Free Software as something desirable, high-end? Essentially still the same question but without the reseller concept. Quick rant on reseller concept: a reseller simply repackages something for the public. We do so much more than just pre-load a distro!! When people say that’s all we do, it dismisses all our hard work in other areas and wow, that doesn’t feel good. Since the goal is to motivate each other to do good things, I like to stay away from that concept as much as possible and just focus on building cool stuff. Thanks.

The free and open community has had many turning points but the current one, secure boot, hits “below the belt” at the OEM level. I believe GNOME is the best positioned out of anyone in the F/LOSS community. There is so much potential and strength in what the GNOME Foundation + developers have built.

I can easily picture a future where the GNOME distro ships on many different types of devices, laptops, tablets, desktops, servers, the works. Full distro, full package, nothing to hinder use by the other 99% of society. My ideal end goal would be to hear someone say, “Yeah, I use GNOME,” with a level of pride, admiration, and adoration-for-quality that a Mac fanboy would use (if Mac fanboys were cool).

What are you looking forward to most about GUADEC?

Not sure. Everything?

Find out more about Cathy and ZaReason at  zareason.com and come to GUADEC to meet her in person!

GUADEC Keynote Speaker: Ethan Lee

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You might know Ethan Lee, also known as flibitijibibo, from his work porting games as Super Hexagon and Proteus to Linux, or from his big collection of game soundtracks. Ethan is currently working on a new exciting project, which soon will be shipped: FEZ for Linux, a game that people might have seen in Indie Game: The Movie.

Ethan is also one of this year’s GUADEC keynote speakers, and the first we’re going to meet during this series of interviews.

Q: Hi Ethan! Your work in porting games to Linux is really impressive! Which road brought you there?

A: The short answer: Presumably the road that Mr. Bean takes to get to each of his adventures. I started out as a music educator, and 4 years later I am now here. Explain that! 😛

The long answer: I started doing music education when I was in high school, since that seemed like a “stable” career, then I decided to take a shot at music production when I went to college. After about 2 years of that I got a bit bored and started working on a game engine, with emphasis on audio tech. I would “ship” a tech demo a year later to crickets and white noise, but I sent that demo to Eden Industries asking if they wanted my audio tech in their game, and they said yes. Of course, instead of doing that, I ended up porting the game, and that caused the eventual portfolio you see today.

As for simply _using_ Linux, I really only started using it around Fall of 2010. I had poked around it with virtual machines when I was younger, but I only ever took it seriously once I was in college and had the time to invest in learning my way around it.

Q: What can we expect from your keynote at GUADEC?

A: I’m still not entirely sure myself. All I can be sure of at the moment is that there won’t be slides. Maybe like, one or two. If I do something with the screen, it’ll probably be a bit more involved than that…

Q: What do you expect from GUADEC?

A: No idea! I’m usually going to stuff like MAGFest, so when I got an invitation to GUADEC I had to look it up and find the schedule from 2012… then I almost went “oh, no!” as my field of interest seemed a bit “dumb” compared to what everyone else has been doing at GUADEC. That might make the keynote interesting for everyone else though. So I suppose I’ll be expecting to learn a lot about things I currently take for granted.

Q: There seems to be a lot of interest in gaming on Linux at the moment. Why do you think that is?

The surge in Linux gaming honestly looks like the second year of a major console, where all the games suddenly start pouring in and there’s finally a reason to buy the darned thing. Except, instead of 2 years, it was more like 20. Hopefully it won’t be another 10 years to get to year 3 when the console starts to live a bit more comfortably, but we’ll see.

There are definitely other factors to consider in there (Windows 8, perpetual closedness of current console platforms, etc.), but none of that would have really mattered if game devs didn’t take that first step of making Linux versions of their games.

Q: What are you looking forward to most about GUADEC??

A: Meeting people who may actually know who I am! Particularly in Europe… I must confess, this will be my first trip to Europe ever, so I’m a bit glad that I’ve got some grand purpose for being there. Considering most of the e-mails I get are from Europe, it only feels right that my first speaking appearance as a Linux game developer happens over there.

It’ll also be interesting to be around the “hardcore” Linux software developers. Games are always put up as such a big deal, but then I look at some of the stuff that goes on at the level below mine and realize that pretty much everyone at GUADEC will likely be smarter than silly old me. Ah, now that’s something to expect from my keynote, I think: more “artsy” stuff over “technical”. I think I’d bore everyone with the latter. We want new, different things, right? Yeah, let’s do that.

Find out more about Ethan at his personal website http://www.flibitijibibo.com and come to GUADEC to meet him in person!

GUADEC 2013 Program Published

The core program for this year’s GUADEC conference has been announced. GUADEC is the premier GNOME conference, and is being held in Brno, Czech Republic from August 1st to 8th. A total of 40 talks will be held during the core conference days, as well as 4 keynotes and a number of lightning talk sessions.

The four core conference days will be followed by three days of working events and hacking sessions, which will give the GNOME community an opportunity to work and plan together.

More information about this year’s GUADEC can be found on the conference website.

Brno to host GUADEC 2013 and Strasbourg to host GUADEC 2014

It is with great pleasure that the GNOME Foundation announces that Brno, Czech Republic has been selected as the venue for GUADEC 2013. Each year, the GNOME User and Developer European Conference gathers GNOME community members from all across the world. We hope we’ll see you at Brno University of Technology from August 1-8, 2013.

During the bidding process, the GNOME Foundation received a second outstanding proposal. As a result, the Board of Directors is also pleased to announce that GUADEC 2014 will be held in Strasbourg, France. Selecting the venue earlier will give the Strasbourg local team more time to prepare the conference, which has been asked for by previous organizing teams.
For more information about GUADEC please visit the event website: www.guadec.org

Follow our updates via identi.ca / Twitter at: @guadec

Read the full press release

Call for GUADEC 2013 Proposals

The GNOME Foundation invites proposals to host GUADEC 2013. GUADEC is the biggest gathering of GNOME users and developers and includes a three-day conference, the annual general meeting of the members of the GNOME Foundation, and a week of coding, meeting, and discussion. Those who would like to host the next GUADEC are hereby invited to write a formal proposal to the board of the GNOME Foundation at board-list@gnome.org. Deadline for the proposals is July 20, 2012 and bidders are invited to present in person to the board of directors at this year’s GUADEC on July 24 or on another day during the conference.

Do you think your city would be a great place for GUADEC? Key criteria for a large GNOME event like GUADEC are:

  • Cost and ease of travel from major European cities and airline hubs
  • Local GNOME community with strong leadership and support for hosting the conference
  • Venue, cheap housing and nice hotels, and the distance between them
  • The budget for infrastructure and facilities required to hold the conference
  • The availability of restaurants or the organization of catering on-site, cost of food and drinks
  • Spaces for “hallway” tracks and social activities
  • Local industry and government support

The conference will require availability of facilities for one week, including a weekend, during summer. Dates should avoid other key free software conferences. See the GUADEC check list and How To for an overview of the kinds of things you should include in the proposal, and check out the bids from previous GUADECs for more information.

Organizing a conference of this size is a lot of hard work, but there are people in the community with experience who can help you. Feel free to contact board-list@gnome.org for more information or guidance.

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