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  <title>Tumbleweed Rants</title>
  <subtitle>Stefano's World</subtitle>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://tumbleweed.org.za/2007/07/10/lrl2007-roundup"/>
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  <updated>2008-01-02T19:55:13+00:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>LRL2007 Roundup</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://tumbleweed.org.za/2007/07/10/lrl2007-roundup" />
    <id>http://tumbleweed.org.za/2007/07/10/lrl2007-roundup</id>
    <published>2007-07-10T10:16:23+00:00</published>
    <updated>2008-01-02T19:55:13+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>tumbleweed</name>
    </author>
    <category term="linux" />
    <category term="lugradio-live" />
    <category term="me" />
    <category term="ubuntu" />
    <category term="wifi" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Lugradio live is now finished and done. It was well worth attending - I really enjoyed it. Wolverhampton is a shit hole of note, but the conference itself&nbsp;was&nbsp;good.</p>

<p>Notable talks I&nbsp;saw&nbsp;were:</p>

<ul>
<li>Malcolm Yates from Canonical: numerous talk on <em>anything</em> that he considered&nbsp;relevant&nbsp;:-)</li>
<li>Alan Cox on how to help in Open Source, and persuading hardware vendors to part with&nbsp;their&nbsp;documentation.</li>
<li>Matthew Garrett on&nbsp;Power&nbsp;Management</li>
<li>Scott James Remnant on 10 really cool things (quite a few of which didn&#8217;t&nbsp;work)&nbsp;:-)</li>
<li>Michael Sparks from the <span class="caps"><span class="caps">BBC</span></span> on Kamelia - a concurrent&nbsp;programming&nbsp;framework</li>
<li>Becky Hogge from the Open&nbsp;Rights&nbsp;Group</li>
<li>Gervase Markhams brilliant talk - <a href="http://www.gerv.net/presentations/lugradio2007">How to Win every argument</a>. He went through various fallacies, and how to use them to&nbsp;your&nbsp;advantage.</li>
<li>Joe Born&nbsp;from&nbsp;Neuros</li>
</ul>

<p>Talks that I missed, but want to catch up when they post the videos (any guesses why I&#8217;m blogging&nbsp;this&nbsp;:-)</p>

<ul>
<li>Flumotion</li>
<li><span class="caps"><span class="caps">IAAL</span></span> (I am&nbsp;a&nbsp;lawyer)</li>
<li>Telepathy</li>
<li>Gong&nbsp;a&nbsp;Thong</li>
<li>Chris&nbsp;diBona</li>
<li><span class="caps"><span class="caps">ELER</span></span></li>
</ul>

<p>I walked off with a free Nokia N800, as I&#8217;d come from so far away. A man who flew in from Singapore also won one. I have a suspicion that the Californians should have got it instead of me, but the WiFi was down so nobody could google&nbsp;distances&nbsp;:-)</p>

<p>On that topic, I really think that all geeky events like this should have pervasive WiFi coverage. Some of us are a long way away from home, and would like to be able to read our mail in-between talks. Also, it makes the <span class="caps"><span class="caps">GPG</span></span> key signing party easier. I didn&#8217;t pre-register for the signing, so only a couple of people signed my key, but I did get 2 <a href="http://www.cacert.org/">CAcert</a> assurances. I&#8217;ll try and get some more points while I&#8217;m in a part of the world, where you can <em>actually find</em>&nbsp;assurers.</p>

<p>The N800 is <em>very</em> cool. It&#8217;s <span class="caps"><span class="caps">ARM</span></span> based, runs Linux (Maemo), and has decent WiFi / bluetooth abilities. If you want to quickly check your mail, watch youtube (yes it has flash) or do some basic <span class="caps"><span class="caps">IRC</span></span> chatting in free wifi zone (i.e. a hotel reception area), then it rocks. The handwriting recognition isn&#8217;t great, and it&#8217;s quite different to what I&#8217;m used to on my P910. So I mostly use the on-screen keyboards (there is quite a good&nbsp;thumb-sized-keyboard&nbsp;option).</p>

<p>It uses Telepathy for Jabber <span class="caps"><span class="caps">IM</span></span>, and has a few VoIP options: Gizmo, Skype, Google Talk. But the best part is that because it&#8217;s an open platform, you can run most Linux software on it. I&#8217;ve installed Xchat, Mplayer, and an Xterm, so far&#8230; Because my amd64 laptop can&#8217;t run Skype / flash, this is a really handy device to&nbsp;have&nbsp;around.</p>

<p>My train back was re-routed, and in total, it took 5hrs to get home :-( (fortunately I had a movie to watch on&nbsp;the&nbsp;n800)</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Lugradio live is now finished and done. It was well worth attending - I really enjoyed it. Wolverhampton is a shit hole of note, but the conference itself was&nbsp;good.</p>

<p>Notable talks I saw&nbsp;were:</p>

<ul>
<li>Malcolm Yates from Canonical: numerous talk on <em>anything</em> that he considered relevant&nbsp;:-)</li>
<li>Alan Cox on how to help in Open Source, and persuading hardware vendors to part with their&nbsp;documentation.</li>
<li>Matthew Garrett on Power&nbsp;Management</li>
<li>Scott James Remnant on 10 really cool things (quite a few of which didn&#8217;t work)&nbsp;:-)</li>
<li>Michael Sparks from the <span class="caps">BBC</span> on Kamelia - a concurrent programming&nbsp;framework</li>
<li>Becky Hogge from the Open Rights&nbsp;Group</li>
<li>Gervase Markhams brilliant talk - <a href="http://www.gerv.net/presentations/lugradio2007">How to Win every argument</a>. He went through various fallacies, and how to use them to your&nbsp;advantage.</li>
<li>Joe Born from&nbsp;Neuros</li>
</ul>

<p>Talks that I missed, but want to catch up when they post the videos (any guesses why I&#8217;m blogging this&nbsp;:-)</p>

<ul>
<li>Flumotion</li>
<li><span class="caps">IAAL</span> (I am a&nbsp;lawyer)</li>
<li>Telepathy</li>
<li>Gong a&nbsp;Thong</li>
<li>Chris&nbsp;diBona</li>
<li><span class="caps">ELER</span></li>
</ul>

<p>I walked off with a free Nokia N800, as I&#8217;d come from so far away. A man who flew in from Singapore also won one. I have a suspicion that the Californians should have got it instead of me, but the WiFi was down so nobody could google distances&nbsp;:-)</p>

<p>On that topic, I really think that all geeky events like this should have pervasive WiFi coverage. Some of us are a long way away from home, and would like to be able to read our mail in-between talks. Also, it makes the <span class="caps">GPG</span> key signing party easier. I didn&#8217;t pre-register for the signing, so only a couple of people signed my key, but I did get 2 <a href="http://www.cacert.org/">CAcert</a> assurances. I&#8217;ll try and get some more points while I&#8217;m in a part of the world, where you can <em>actually find</em>&nbsp;assurers.</p>

<p>The N800 is <em>very</em> cool. It&#8217;s <span class="caps">ARM</span> based, runs Linux (Maemo), and has decent WiFi / bluetooth abilities. If you want to quickly check your mail, watch youtube (yes it has flash) or do some basic <span class="caps">IRC</span> chatting in free wifi zone (i.e. a hotel reception area), then it rocks. The handwriting recognition isn&#8217;t great, and it&#8217;s quite different to what I&#8217;m used to on my P910. So I mostly use the on-screen keyboards (there is quite a good thumb-sized-keyboard&nbsp;option).</p>

<p>It uses Telepathy for Jabber <span class="caps">IM</span>, and has a few VoIP options: Gizmo, Skype, Google Talk. But the best part is that because it&#8217;s an open platform, you can run most Linux software on it. I&#8217;ve installed Xchat, Mplayer, and an Xterm, so far&#8230; Because my amd64 laptop can&#8217;t run Skype / flash, this is a really handy device to have&nbsp;around.</p>

<p>My train back was re-routed, and in total, it took 5hrs to get home :-( (fortunately I had a movie to watch on the&nbsp;n800)</p>
    ]]></content>
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