To: lweditors@linuxworld.com, lwn@lwn.net Subject: REMINDER: O'Reilly Linux Conference Deadline From: Matt Welsh <mdw@CS.Berkeley.EDU> Date: Mon, 08 Feb 1999 21:08:09 -0800 -- This is a reminder that the deadline for submissions to the O'Reilly Linux Conference, to be held August 21-24, 1999 in Monterey, California, is: * MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15th, 1999. * We're looking for talks from Linux developers and enthusiasts to present at this conference. We already have a strong tutorial program put together, as well as several good invited speakers (including Eric Raymond and other well-known Linux developers). All of the details are at: http://conferences.oreilly.com You can e-mail me if you have any questions or need other details. Thanks much! Matt Welsh, Program Chair University of California, Berkeley E-mail: mdw@cs.berkeley.edu Voice: +1 510 643 7566 --- Announcement and Call for Invited Talks Linux Conference August 21-24, 1999 Monterey, California http://conferences.oreilly.com Sponsored by O'Reilly & Associates Co-sponsored by Linux International (Confirm with maddog) Invited Talks Committee Matt Welsh, Chair, University of California, Berkeley Jon "Maddog" Hall, Linux International Andy Oram, O'Reilly & Associates Greg Hankins, Georgia Tech Russ Nelson, Crynwr Software Erik Troan, Red Hat Software Overview The O'Reilly Linux Conference will be held August 21-24, 1999 at the Monterey Conference Center in Monterey, California. There will be two days of tutorials followed by a two-day, multi-track conference including sessions for submitted invited presentations on practical and experimental uses of Linux; daily Q and A sessions with leading Linux developers, and evening breakaway sessions for special interest groups. Practical Presentations, Talks, and Panels This is not a traditional solicitation for academic papers. We seek presenters for talks and panels that demonstrate the diversity and strength of Linux. In the practical spirit of Linux, this means not just showing the clever and interesting ways you use Linux, but how your experience and code can help others. We're interested in large stories, small stories, silly hacks, case studies from the trenches ("Introducing Linux in an NT Shop"), philosophical perspectives ("Can Linux replace NT?") and even more traditional computer science pieces ("Distributed Computing with Linux"). We welcome presentations on every aspect of Linux, from new applications to case studies of Linux at work to panels. If you have a use for Linux that saves time, money, and headaches for your and your organization, we would like to hear about it. In short, we encourage submissions that highlight Linux's features and benefits. Some suggestions for talks follow --- but are not limited to these topics. If you've got an idea that will benefit the Linux community, please let us know. * Kernel development and device drivers * Networking and communications * Databases, data mining, and storage management * System and network administration * Programming environments (C, C++, Java, Perl, etc.) * Graphical User Interface toolkits (X11, GTK, KDE, GNOME, ...) * Ports to non-Intel architectures (SPARC, Alpha, PowerPC, ...) * World Wide Web and Internet applications * High-performance and parallel computing (Beowulf, Extreme Linux, ...) * Experiences with Linux: Using Linux for WWW, databases, large installations, enterprise applications, etc. * Philosophical musings on the future and role of Linux What, How, and Where to Submit Speakers should submit an abstract (250 words) about the talk and a short biography (a paragraph or so). The abstract should describe what your talk will be about, and be specific about problems, solutions, and conclusions. Both the abstract and biography will be used together to evaluate talks. All submissions will be held in confidence. Talks that do not include both an abstract and a bio will not be considered. Important deadlines: Submissions: February 15, 1999 Acceptances: February 22, 1999 Camera-ready presentations: June 30, 1999 Each submission must include: 1. An initial page with the: --complete title of the presentation --name and affiliation of a speaker who will be the primary contact --that person's complete contact information including phone, fax, email, postal address, --The names of all other speakers with their affiliations and email addresses B. An abstract as detailed above C. A short biography Abstracts should be sent to linuxabstracts@oreilly.com. Email inquiries should be sent to linuxextracts@oreilly.com. Registration Information Complete conference and registration information will be available in mid-April. Keep checking the conference web site for the latest information: http://conferences.oreilly.com/ About O'Reilly & Associates Sponsor of Geekfest, the OpenSource Conference, O'Reilly & Associates is the leading publisher of books for UNIX, X, the Internet, and other open systems, as well as a pioneer in on-line publishing. We also publish the leading web server for Windows NT and Windows 95, and are defining new ways to develop and sell software on and over the Internet. For more information about O'Reilly & Associates, visit our web site: http://www.oreilly.com/. O'Reilly & Associates 101 Morris Street Sebastopol, California 95472 707/829-0515 800/998-9938