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Call for papers — O’Reilly Open Source Convention

Feb 23, 2001 — by LinuxDevices Staff — from the LinuxDevices Archive — views

The O'Reilly Open Source Convention (July 23-27 in San Diego) is looking for speakers on Linux and Open Source development. Our audience comprises sophisticated developers and administrators, so we only want talks on solid technical subjects. Sample topics:

  • embedded Linux
  • GNOME application development
  • Samba
  • securing open source systems
  • corporate needs for open source… software
  • corporate experiences with the open source development model
  • using OpenSSL in other applications
  • the vast world of open source Java projects
  • tips on running Linux/FreeBSD/OpenBSD/NetBSD on laptops
  • migrating to FreeBSD 5.0
There are two types of presentations: tutorials and talks.
    Tutorials:
  • 3 or 6 hours 9 (half- or full-day)
  • take place in the first two days of the convention
  • are not “hands-on” (OScon tutorial attendees will not have computers in front of them unless they bring their own laptops)
  • earn $1500 per half-day, plus two days' hotel and food, travel, and free conference and tutorial registration.

    Talks:

  • 90, 40 or 25 minutes in length (talks will be grouped into 90 minute sessions)
  • take place in the remaining three days of the convention
  • earn free conference and tutorial registration, but *not* hotel, travel, etc.
Proposals should be emailed in plain text format (no attachments and particularly no Word files) to: [email protected].

You will have at least two months to prepare the full presentation materials. All proposals should include:

  • type of presentation proposed (talk or tutorial)
  • title
  • preferred length (note that in some cases we may ask you to shorten your talk to accommodate limited time)
  • description of the talk (250 words or less)
  • speaker name, affiliation, email address
  • speaker biography for the website and brochure
  • complete speaker contact information. If applicable, include administrative support (e.g., personal assistant) contact information.
In addition, tutorial proposals should include:
  • detailed (2 or more level) outline
  • target audience including any prerequisites (e.g., “a basic understanding of PHP is necessary”)
  • what attendees will learn–the knowledge or skill take-away attendees will have at the completion of the tutorial

 
This article was originally published on LinuxDevices.com and has been donated to the open source community by QuinStreet Inc. Please visit LinuxToday.com for up-to-date news and articles about Linux and open source.



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