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Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09

1900 SW Fourth Avenue
Portland, Oregon 97201, US (map)

Access Notes

Building is at 4th and College. Room 86-01 is in the basement, take the elevator or stairs down to basement and follow the signs.

Future events happening here

  • - No events -

Past events that happened here

  • Friday
    May 16 2014
    Thinking in Git

    Git is the most popular source code management and version control system in the open source community. Its complexity and power make it the best choice for most projects, while simultaneously giving it a daunting learning curve for newcomers. This talk will assume no background knowledge of version control, and will teach the basics of Git in order to give you an accurate mental model of what the tool doesv

    Speaker

    Emily Dunham is a sysadmin at the OSU Open Source Lab and founder of the DevOps Bootcamp open source training program.

  • Wednesday
    May 7 2014
    Into the Great Unknown: Modern Web Operations and Infrastructure at Yelp

    The field of web operations is changing quickly. Modern internet companies are evolving, and mastering availability and performance is no longer enough. Come and learn about the tools and methods Yelp uses to ship next-generation infrastructure at a breakneck pace, all while providing rock-solid reliability and blazing speed for more than 120 million users.

    Pizza will be provided. Thank you Yelp!

    ACM @ PSU

    Website
  • Friday
    Apr 18 2014
    Github Education

    Andy Delcambre from Github Education will be talking about Github and the technology behind it.

    The ACM will be providing pizza.

  • Intel Graduate Technical Talk

    Intel is Seeking MS and PhD students for OS Software Engineer positions

    Computer Science | Computer Engineering | Electrical Engineering | related disciplines

    Join Daniel as he discusses this exciting opportunity: “I love software. I love to create. I love to innovate. I'm fascinated by system architecture, and emergent complexity-by-necessity. I've been drawn into OS level work due to its fundamental similarities with any satisfyingly complex architecture. It is amazing how many patterns are shared between video games, robots, and operating systems. All of which, I love. I love working in the Windows Operating System (WOS) team at Intel, because of the intense technical effort required to be able to contribute in even the slightest manner. This effort, once exerted, begets unfathomable satisfaction.”

    OS Software Engineer Candidates must have: Strong knowledge of computer/processor architecture, OS fundamentals, OS internals, OS-level APIs, Kernel debugger, driver development, system level development / prototype, C/ASM programming, data structures and algorithms. Expertise in core technologies such as platform power mgmt, low power IO, sensor architecture, IO driver stacks, and virtualization is highly desired. Qualifications include: Some experience with OS development. Experience developing and/or debugging software for HW devices. Strong written and verbal communications skills a must. Testing experience a plus. Apply for these positions today: intel.com/jobs/students

  • Friday
    Oct 25 2013
    ACM Tech Talk - So you want to be an app developer?

    Adam Lorts is a sales and marketing professional at DevelopmentNow who focuses on business development in the digital space.

    Adam's day job involves creating sales materials, building agency partnerships, coaching resellers, handling direct inquiries and RFP's as well as other strategic duties to aid the growth and success of DevelopmentNow.

    Summary for talk: We've had some new younger hires so there's a lot of things we've learned on turning highly intelligent, educated CS grads into highly productive mobile developers. This focuses on doing what it takes there.

    Website
  • Friday
    Oct 18 2013
    ACM Tech Talk: Connecting Android to MySQL: An Interactive Tutorial

    In this talk, we will cover the basics of how to connect an Android device to a MySQL database. The technique used is adaptable to any database server (SQL Server, PostGRES, etc...)

    As you probably know, Android does not have a built in functionality to access remote databases, instead it uses SQLLite, a flat file system.

    However, using Java EE 7 and a simple PHP connectivity script, it is practically trivial to do the basic CRUD operations on a remotely hosted database.

    Bring a laptop with Java 7 and Android SDK with Eclipse installed, and get ready to code. Or just bring yourself, and a sheet will be passed to have the connection code EMAILED to you after the venue.

    About the speaker: Sean Walsh (aka Azadi) is the current vice chair of the Portland State Chapter of the ACM. Sean is currently finishing his Bachelor's of Computer Science with a Mathematics Minor at Portland State University, and has industry experience with deploying mobile apps for Android.

    Website
  • Friday
    Jun 7 2013
    PSU Tech Talk: Introduction to JavaScript
    javascript

    As the language of web browsers, JavaScript is pervasive in web application development. It also offers particular advantages in that it is well-suited to functional programming and has the flexibility of a dynamic language. This talk will give a taste of what JavaScript programming looks like, some practices for getting the most out of the language, and some some common pitfalls.

    Jesse Hallett is a Senior JavaScript Engineer at Jive Software. He is also an organizer of the Portland JavaScript Admirers, a local user group. Jesse has given talks on JavaScript and other topics at various user groups and conferences including Open Source Bridge, NodePDX, and Portland Code Camp.

    This event is open to the public.

    Questions email [email protected]

    Website
  • Friday
    May 31 2013
    PSU Tech Talk: Using Graphics Processors for everything but Graphics

    Back in 2001, researchers decided to try to use "the other" processor in their PC (the graphics card) for computation. These early, tedious efforts were promising and lead to a new type of computation called General Purpose GPU (GPGPU) Computing. NVIDIA vastly accelerated such efforts with the release of CUDA in 2007, that provided a much simpler interface to programmers wanting to use the GPU for general computation. Today, GPUs are being used to accelerate some of the most powerful supercomputers in the world (see top500.org). In this talk I'll describe the ideas behind this very different kind of computing, show some simple CUDA examples, and mention the open source alternative to CUDA (OpenCL). I'll give a bit more detail on our newly acquired NVIDIA K20, and briefly outline my GP-GPU Computing course for summer 2013.

    About the speaker

    Dr. Karavanic is an Associate Professor of Computer Science at Portland State, where she teaches courses in Operating Systems, performance measurement and modeling, and High Performance Computing. She was selected as an HPC Educator for the SC2012 Conference, where she offered a full-day tutorial on CUDA to faculty from around the U.S. Dr. Karavanic came to PSU in 2000 from Madison, Wisconsin, where she earned an M.S. and a Ph.D. in Computer Science.

    Website
  • Friday
    May 10 2013
    PSU Tech Talk: The software industry, big data, and analytics. Why these might be the most marketable skills you can learn.

    During this talk I'll discuss current trends in the software industry, how database systems are affecting growth and high value skill sets, and where the action is likely in the coming years. We'll focus on the same technical stack that has led to innovation and major products such as Facebook, Google Search, speech recognition, and context based advertising.

    About the speaker:

    The data architect for Netmotion Wireless, Inc., Jonathan Wiggs is an accomplished software architect with significant experience in the fields of big data, Bayesian analytics, enterprise architecture, and cloud computing. Jonathan has helped launch start-up companies including Jott Networks & RGB Labs, and has led engineering and research groups at companies such as Microsoft and Nuance. He enjoys writing, speaking, sharing his experiences with his peers, and giving back to the industry he has loved for more than twenty years. Jonathan lives in the country and spends his free time with his wife and several admirable dogs. Contact Jonathan at [email protected].

    Website
  • Friday
    May 3 2013
    PSU Tech Talk: AltOS — Building Amateur Rocketry Software

    AltOS — Building Amateur Rocketry Software

                             Keith Packard
                              Altus Metrum
                           [email protected]
    

    Amateur rocketry enthusiasts build rockets somewhere between Estes and NASA sizes. Operating as sounding rockets, fights range from 1000m to more than 30km and are generally passively fin stabilized. Two of the significant challenges are deploying the recovery system components (generally parachutes) and providing tracking to locate the rocket after flight. Altus Metrum is a project building hardware and software for amateur rocketry, and AltOS is the suite of software running in the rocket avionics and on the ground to track and analyze the flight.

    This talk will discuss the unique system challenges presented by rocketry, including high acceleration and speeds, automatic control of explosives and other flammable materials and the wide range of technical skills of the participants. Included will be a presentation of the hardware components used in the system and how that has driven the architecture of the AltOS flight software over four years of development.

    About the speaker:

    Keith Packard has been developing open source software since 1986, focusing on the X Window System since 1987, designing and implementing large parts of the current implementation. He is currently a Principal Engineer with Intel's Open Source Technology Center. Keith received a Usenix Lifetime Achievement award in 1999 and sits on the X.org foundation board.

    Website
  • Friday
    Apr 19 2013
    PSU Tech Talk: More with less: getting started building better systems with Clojure

    Clojure is a modern functional programming language. It's ecosystem is packed to the brim with tools that help you achieve more with less typing, less moving parts, and less (or no) mutable state.

    Come learn about functional programming, tips to getting started and being effective with Clojure, software transactional memory, and persistent data structures. Clojure is language built to tackle the complexity of the systems we face today, and this talk will take you on tour through its features, opinions, and approach.

    About the speaker:

    Paul deGrandis lives for magnificent engineering. Elegant, well-founded, useful solutions to problems that say something about engineering's beauty. Currently he is a scientist and co-founder at NDensity - an innovation lab. Previously he worked at Tutorspree (YC), PushButton Labs, Etsy.com, OurShelf (DreamIt), and SilverCloud Software as well as working in advanced research. He's also contributed, time, money, and effort to Code for America, PyPy, and Clojure. He is often speaking on Clojure, distributed systems, and dependable systems. http://www.pauldee.org/blog http://ndensity.com

    Website
  • Friday
    Apr 12 2013
    PSU Tech Talk: Indyandy Jones and The Project of Doom

    Over the years I've been on several different teams that have been formed around existing software projects. The original authors were no longer directly involved, if they were anywhere to be found at all. How do you navigate the pitfalls and traps in existing software projects and come out the other side with the gold? What matters, what doesn't, and how do you stay alive?

    About the speaker:

    Andrew Parker first started with computers on a Commodore 64 and has now been a professional software developer for over a decade. He has been self taught, school taught, and mentor taught by a range of individuals and institutions around the world. He is passionate about TDD, refactoring, and pair programming. Andrew Parker is a software developer at Puppet Labs.

    Website
  • Friday
    Mar 8 2013
    PSU Tech Talk: Overview of .NET C# 4.5

    This is a high-level overview of the capabilities and uses of C# 4.5 and the .NET framework, from a student, for students. Topics covered will include concurrency and multi-threading, lambda expressions and anonymous functions, LINQ, a basic GUI demonstration, regular expressions, and more. Comparisons to C++ will be made as well. Some mathematical models will be shown if time permits.

    About the speaker:

    Sean Walsh (AKA Azadi) is a senior undergraduate student in the Computer Science program at Portland State University. His interests include systems programming, databases, and machine learning.

    Website
  • Friday
    Mar 1 2013
    PSU Tech Talk: Write your own Bayesian Classifier: An Introduction to Machine Learning

    Through the implementation of an honest-to-goodness Bayesian classifier, we’ll tour the major topics of supervised machine learning: tokenization, feature selection and vectorization, model training and tuning, and execution. Time permitting, we’ll touch on other techniques and topics.

    About the speaker:

    John Melesky’s been programming on the web since gopher was a legitimate competitor. He is the team lead for the Analytics team at Janrain, where he gets to get his hands covered in all sorts of interesting data.

    Website
  • Friday
    Feb 22 2013
    PSU Tech Talk: Hadoop Hears a Who

    Hadoop is an important batch data processing framework in use by companies of all sizes. It has a very approachable architecture and can be applied to a large group of modern computing problems. In addition, the framework supports an implementation of mapreduce which allows users to run jobs on any size cluster to fit their data size. Come learn about the architecture of this framework, management of the cluster, and how to develop mapreduce jobs.

    About the speaker:

    Dan Colish is a Core Data Engineer at Urban Airship. He is also a maintainer and active open source developer for Xapian and other smaller projects. He resides in Portland with his family and enjoys snowshoeing and hiking around Mt. Hood.

    Website
  • Friday
    Feb 15 2013
    PSU Tech Talk: 12 Hours with Google Dart

    A high-level overview of the characteristics of Google's new web scripting language, from the perspective of a student who learned to use the language in under 12 hours. Does Dart have a chance to become a viable and heavily adopted alternative to JavaScript? The history, philosophy and intended purpose of the language will be discussed, and comparisons will be made to other languages and frameworks.

    About the speaker:

    Devin Quirozoliver is a senior undergraduate student in the Computer Science program at Portland State University. His interests include languages, user interface and wearable computing.

    Website
  • Friday
    Feb 8 2013
    Challenges in Developing the Portal Transportation Data Archive

    The Portal Transportation Data Archive is a ~2TB PostgreSQL database that has been in existence since 2004. Kristin will demonstrate the current state of Portal. She will discuss the various technologies used to collect the data and the complexities of getting the data from the sensors to the database. She will also discuss her experiences working directly with local transportation agencies (ODOT, Metro, Trimet, Cities of Portland and Vancouver) to produce a web site that is useful in their day-to-day operations.

    About the speaker:

    Kristin Tufte is an assistant professor of Computer Science and Civil Engineering at Portland State University. Kristin is a recovering database geek.

    Website
  • Friday
    Feb 1 2013
    The PSU ACM Presents "Collaborative chaos: what it means to write code, manage projects and work with people in open source communities" by Selena Decklmann of Mozilla

    Working in software and with computers means wildly different things depending on who you talk to. In open source, the work spans every aspect of software development -- from the marketing and documentation to the troubleshooting end-user systems.

    The "community manager" or "organizer" role in open source communities is probably the least-well defined in our industry, but is seen as a crucial part of open source software development.

    Selena will talk about her work as a serial user group starter, open source conference circuit speaker, conference organizer and contributor to PostgreSQL -- all roles considered part of community management. She'll also talk about other kinds of community management roles available at small and large companies, or as a volunteer in an open source project.

    About the speaker:

    Selena is a major contributor to PostgreSQL, she founded and runs the Postgres Open conference and keeps chickens. Selena has been working with open source software for over 15 years.She's keynoted at SCALE, DjangoCon and LISA, and regularly gives technical talks about Postgres, open source and trolling. She is currently a data architect at Mozilla, makers of the Firefox browser.

    Website
  • Friday
    Jan 18 2013
    The PSU ACM presents Git For Ages 4 And Up by Michael Schwern

    Bio: Michael G Schwern is the author of Test::More (the Perl testing system) and Gitpan, 21,000 repositories on Github representing every release of every Perl module on CPAN. Schwern does not push to master, master pushes to Schwern.

    Synopsis: Tinker Toys are the best illustration of a Git repository I’ve found. Side-by-side with issuing Git commands, we’ll build a Git repository out of kid’s toys to show what’s going on behind the scenes. Mind bending concepts like remote branches, rebase and the staging area become child’s play.

    Basic knowledge of git commands is expected of the audience (init, add, commit, diff, log, push, pull). If you’ve started using git, but are uncomfortable with it and don’t really get it, this is for you.

    WARNING: CHOKING HAZARD – Small Parts. Not For Children Under 4 Years.

  • Monday
    Oct 22 2012
    Robust-first computing: Beyond correctness and efficiency Colloquium

    Dave Ackley, Computer Science Department, University of New Mexico

    Efficiency and robustness are mortal enemies, inherently opposed on the value of redundancy, which robustness requires but efficiency eliminates. This talk argues that, by emphasizing efficiency alone, computer science is often optimizing the wrong thing, and we could do better, and should, by recognizing and managing the tradeoff explicitly. An illustration of efficiency's costs is presented, along with discussion of possible computing mechanisms when robustness is emphasized even over correctness.

    Bio:
    David H. Ackley is an associate professor of Computer Science at the University of New Mexico, with degrees from Tufts and Carnegie Mellon. Over twenty-five years his research contributions have involved neural networks and machine learning, evolutionary algorithms and artificial life, and biological approaches to computer security and computer architecture.

    Website
  • Monday
    Oct 15 2012
    Research Talk: Agile Tooling for C++

    Title: Test-Driven Development and Mock Objects for C++ in Eclipse

    Speaker: Prof Peter Sommerlad, Institute for Software at FHO/HSR Rapperswil, Switzerland

    Abstract

    At IFS Institute for Software, several plug-ins have been developed for the Eclipse C/C++ Development Tools (CDT), to assist Agile C++ developers. Some of the features have already been integrated into CDT, such as the refactoring infrastructure and some refactorings, such as toggling function definition and declaration. In this talk Prof. Sommerlad will explain how IFS's plug-ins make it easier to adopt an agile style of development, through code-generation for Test-driven Development (TDD), unit testing, test doubles and mock objects, quick feedback from static analysis tools, and quick-fixes for problems.

    Speaker Bio:

    Prof. Peter Sommerlad is head of IFS Institute for Software at FHO/HSR Rapperswil. Peter is co-author of the books POSA Vol.1 and Security Patterns. His goal is to make software simpler by Decremental Development: refactoring software down to 10% of its size with better architecture, testability and quality and functionality. Peter is the also the author of the CUTE unit testing framework. He inspired and leads several Eclipse CDT plug-in projects, such as the CUTE unit testing, Sconsolidator, Mockator, Linticator, and Includator. IFS contributed most of the CDT refactoring infrastructure and is employing it to develop further TDD and Refactoring support for Eclipse CDT.

    Website
  • Wednesday
    Jul 18 2012
    Inform 7 Interest Group

    This is the inaugural meeting of the PDX Inform 7 Interest Group.

    As our name implies, our principal interest is in the Interactive Fiction authoring language Inform 7. Inform 7 is designed to let anyone, programmer or no, write Interactive Fiction quickly and easily. You probably won't be surprised to learn that we are also interested in Interactive Fiction in general, in other Interactive Fiction authoring tools, and in most any related interesting topics.

    For our first meeting, I (Bart Massey) will lead a little bit of introductory discussion about Inform 7, and we'll make plans for future meetings and projects.

    Website
  • Saturday
    Jun 16 2012
    Debian / Ubuntu Bug Squashing Party
    linux

    Join us for another joint Debian / Ubuntu collaboration on bug-squashing!

    We'll be focusing on multi-arch, bitesized bugs, and more.

    Website
  • Monday
    Apr 16 2012
    Title: Information Discovery in Large Complex Datasets

    Abstract:

    The focus of my research is on enabling novel kinds of interaction between the user and the information in a variety of digital environments, ranging from social content sites, to digital libraries, to the Web. In the first part of this talk, I will present an approach for tracking and querying fine-grained provenance in data-intensive workflows. A workflow is an encoding of a sequence of steps that progressively transform data products. Workflows help make experiments reproducible, and may be used to answer questions about data provenance – the dependencies between input, intermediate, and output data. I will describe a declarative framework that captures fine-grained dependencies, enabling novel kinds of analytic queries, and will demonstrate that careful design and leveraging distributed processing make tracking and querying fine-grained provenance feasible. In the second part of this talk, I will discuss information discovery on the Social Web, where users provide information about themselves in stored profiles, register their relationships with other users, and express their preferences with respect to information and products. I will argue that information discovery should account for a user's social context, and will present network-aware search – a novel search paradigm in which result relevance is computed with respect to a user's social network. I will describe efficient algorithms appropriate for this setting, and will show how social similarities between users may be leveraged to make processing more efficient.

    Website
  • Friday
    Apr 13 2012
    Duckki Oe, Formally Certified Satisfiability Solving

    Abstract:

    Satisfiability (SAT) and satisfiability module theories (SMT) solvers are efficient automated theorem provers widely used in several fields such as formal verification and artificial intelligence. Although SAT/SMT are traditional propositional and predicate logics and well understood, SAT/SMT solvers are complex software highly optimized for performance. Because SAT/SMT solvers are commonly used as the final verdict for formal verification problems, their correctness is an important issue. This talk discusses two methods to formally certify SAT/SMT solvers. First method is generating proofs from solvers and certifying those proofs. One of the issues for proof checking is that SMT logics are constantly growing and a flexible framework to express proof rules is needed. The proposal is to use a meta-language called LFSC, which is based on Edinburgh Logical Frame with an extension for expressing computational side conditions. SAT and SMT logics can be encoded in LFSC, and the encoding can be easily and safely extended for new logics. And it has been shown that an optimized LFSC checker can certify SMT proofs very efficiently. Second method is using a verified programming language to implement a SAT solver and verify the code statically. Guru is a pure functional programming language with support for dependent types and theorem proving. A modern SAT solver has been implemented and verified to be correct in Guru. Also, Guru allows very efficient code generation through resource types, so the performance of versat is comparable with that of the current proof checking technology with a state-of-the-art solver.

    Website
  • Information Leakage from Encrypted Voice over IP: Attacks and Defenses

    Abstract:

    In this talk, I describe two side-channel traffic analysis attacks on encrypted voice-over-IP calls and a novel technique for efficiently defending against such attacks. We begin with a review of the basics of speech coding to understand how and why information can leak out of an encrypted VoIP call. We then discuss the techniques for recovering hidden information: first, how to identify the language spoken in the call, and then how to spot particular phrases. Our techniques are completely speaker-independent, and require no recorded examples of the target phrase. Nevertheless, we show that they achieve surprising accuracy on widely-used speech corpora. Finally, we consider methods for limiting this information leakage. Experimental results show that an intelligent, adaptive adversary can convincingly deceive such traffic analyses while incurring much lower overhead than previously expected.

    Website
  • Wednesday
    Apr 11 2012
    Motors, Voters, and the Future of Embedded Security

    Abstract:

    The stereotypical view of computing, and hence computer security, is a landscape filled with laptops, desktops, smartphones and servers; general purpose computers in the proper sense. However, this is but the visible tip of the iceberg. In fact, most computing today is invisibly embedded into systems and environments that few of us would ever think of as computers. Indeed, applications in virtually all walks of modern life, from automobiles to medical devices, power grids to voting machines, have evolved to rely on the same substrate of general purpose microprocessors and (frequently) network connectivity that underlie our personal computers. Yet along with the power of these capabilities come the same potential risks as well. My research has focused on understanding the scope of such problems by exploring vulnerabilities in the embedded environment, how they arise, and the shape of the attack surfaces they expose.

    In this talk, I will particularly discuss recent work on two large-scale platforms: modern automobiles and electronic voting machines. In each case, I will explain how implicit or explicit assumptions in the design of the systems have opened them to attack. I will demonstrate these problems, concretely and completely, including arbitrary control over election results and remote tracking and control of an unmodified automobile. I will explain the nature of these problems, how they have come to arise, and the challenges in hardening such systems going forward.

    Website
  • Tuesday
    Apr 10 2012
    Efficiently Learning Probabilistic Graphical Models

    Abstract:

    Probabilistic graphical models are used to represent uncertainty in many domains, such as error-correcting codes, computational biology, sensor networks and medical diagnosis. This talk will discuss two approaches to the problem of learning graphical models from data, focusing on computational challenges. The first is marginalization-based learning, where parameters are fit in the context of a specific approximate inference algorithm. This will include results on image processing and computer vision problems. The second is recent work on Markov chain Monte Carlo based learning, inspired by a computational biology project.

    Website
  • Monday
    Apr 9 2012
    Real-Life Learning Agents

    Abstract:

    Agents, defined as programs or robots that interact with their environment, are becoming increasingly common. However, the current generation of agents are often unable to robustly interact with each other, or with humans, severely limiting the number of tasks that they can accomplish. Furthermore, these agents typically are unable to adapt to their environment, a critical skill when programmers do not have full knowledge of agents' future environments or when the agents' environment may change over time. This talk will discuss recent work in combining autonomous learning of sequential decision making tasks with transfer learning, a general approach to sharing knowledge between agents with different capabilities, resulting in significant improvements to learning speeds and abilities.

    Website
  • Thursday
    Apr 5 2012
    Portland Linux/Unix Group (PLUG): Asterisk, FreePBX and Trixbox
    beer linux

    FreePBX - Asterisk - Trixbox

    Bill Ensley will give an introduction to Asterisk, FreePBX and Trixbox.

    Come learn some ins, outs, and gotchas of how each of these systems interact and build on top of eachother.

    We will cover (time permitting):

    System Requirements How to roll your own or go Appliance Basic Installation Trunk Setup IP Phones - User/Network Setup Echo Cancellation - Hardware and Software Manual Config Editing IVR and Advanced Call Routing

    Any other questions that come up that we think we can answer.

    See you there!

    Website
  • Thursday
    Mar 1 2012
    PLUG: OData Open Data and Interoperability
    ruby beer linux python

    Open Data and Interoperability by Arlo Belshee

    Lots of us want to expose our data via RESTful web APIs. We also want to consume data exposed via such APIs. REST + Json works well for this. However, we'd also like to mash up multiple data sources and build higher level tools. For example, it would be nice to create Business Intelligence (BI) tools that can point to any API and start charting the data, or create JavaScript control libraries that can be bound directly to data sources.

    Unfortunately, that isn't possible with just REST + Json.

    The problem is that each service is custom. No two services follow exactly the same rules. Sure, everything exposes sets of resources. But how do you get from a resource to its related resources? How do you ask the server to tell you about related resources? What, exactly should the server do when it gets a PATCH verb? Each server interprets these differently, which prevents making general tools.

    I'm going to talk about the OData protocol. This is an open standard that defines uniform semantics and modeling for RESTful web services. I'll show how this allows general tools to be built, and data from multiple sources to be combined together in interesting ways - without requiring custom code for each server. I'll also show how this enables people working in different languages. A single library can be written for each language which can then support all OData-compliant RESTful web services.

    Most of the examples will be with open source frameworks and tools, but I'll also show ways that you can use OData to break out data that is trapped in closed-source systems and expose it to the open source ecosystem.

    Agenda:

    7:00 - 7:30 Business We will discuss the status of our ongoing projects including PLUG's monthly Advanced Topics meetings, PLUG's monthly hands on clinics etc.

    7:30 - 8:30 Presentation and Questions

    See above

    9:00 - ... Beer The Lucky Lab Northwest Beer Hall 1945 NW Quimby Portland, Oregon

    Website
  • Thursday
    Feb 2 2012
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Intro to Salt / Salt Stack (saltstack.org)
    beer linux
                 Intro to Salt / Salt Stack (saltstack.org)
                              by Daniel Hedlund 
    

    Salt is a distributed configuration management and remote execution platform built on top of ZeroMQ and Python. Simple, fast, powerful and extensible.

    Daniel will give a presentation on the architecture of Salt and how it leverages ZeroMQ to provide a simple but highly scalable and parallel method of software deployment.

    "Salt is a distributed remote execution system used to execute commands and query data. It was developed in order to bring the best solutions found in the world of remote execution together and make them better, faster and more malleable. Salt accomplishes this via its ability to handle larger loads of information, and not just dozens, but hundreds or even thousands of individual servers, handle them quickly and through a simple and manageable interface."

    Website
  • Thursday
    Jan 5 2012
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: The xkcd1k Eve Celebration
    beer linux
                             PRESENTATION
                                  by
                            Keith Lofstrom
    
    
    
    
     Since 2005, Randall Munroe's xkcd.com, "A webcomic of romance,
     sarcasm, math, and language" has covered many topics dear to FOSS
     advocates and has been discussed on the PLUG list many times.
     The #1000 comic is expected to appear Friday January 6 just after
     midnight eastern time, making Thursday January 5 "xkcd1k eve".
    
     Join us for a celebration of XKCD1K eve at the PLUG general
     meeting.  We can display and discuss/explain some of the
     Free/Libre/Open source cartoons, the various weblogs and forums
     that have sprung up around them, draw our own cartoons (Keith
     will bring art paper and pens), perhaps discuss the technology
     of web comics.
    
     Homework:  bring your own list of favorite xkcd cartoons, and
     we will display them at the meeting.  Bring your artistic and
     "right brained" friends.  Bring your black porkpie hat.  If
     you are Richard Stallman, bring your katana sword.
    
     Afterwards, at the Lucky Lab Brew Pub at 1945 nw Quimby, we
     can welcome comic #1000, just after 9pm Pacific Time.  Or not,
     Randall is a trickster and may give us strip #1025, avoiding
     the definition the size of a "kilo" ( http://xkcd.com/394/ ) .
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Dec 1 2011
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Don't Fear the Autotools!
    beer linux
                             PRESENTATION
    
                      Don't Fear the Autotools!
    
                                  by
    
                             Scott Garman
    
    
     Autoconf. Automake. Libtool. This trio of build configuration 
     utilities (known as the Autotools) are used in a large majority 
     of compiled software applications for Linux, but they remain a 
     mystery to many of us.
    
     In this gentle introduction to the Autotools, Scott Garman will 
     help lift the veil of uncertainty most people have about them. 
     You'll also learn about the Gnu Coding Standards and the Filesystem 
     Hierarchy Standard, two specifications which explain a lot of the 
     "why" behind the Autotools (yes, there is a method to this madness!). 
     Finally, Scott will offer some practical tips for understanding 
     and fixing errors you may see when building an Autotools-based 
     package. It's sure to be a fun romp for the whole family.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Nov 3 2011
    PLUG November Meeting: Hands-on IPv6, Web Hosting with GitHub
    beer linux

    PRESENTATION ONE

    Hands-On IPv6 Networking by Ted Mittelstaedt

    Ted will wrap-up his multi-month series on IPv6 networking with some demonstrations of real-world DNS client and server configuration and web content serving.

    PRESENTATION TWO

    Daniel Hedlund will give an introduction to GitHub and demonstrate some command line tools for interacting with GitHub and how you can host a website on GitHub using Octopress (octopress.org)

    We will break for the Lucky Lab NW on Quimby after the meeting.

    Website
  • Friday
    Oct 28 2011
    Everything you know (about Parallel Programming) is wrong!: A wild screed about the future

    In the 1970’s, researchers at Xerox PARC gave themselves a glimpse of the future by building computers that, although wildly impractical at the time, let them experience plentiful fast cycles and big memories. PARC researchers invented Smalltalk, and the freedom afforded by such a dynamic, yet safe, language, led them to create a new experience of computing, which has become quite mainstream today.

    In the end of the first decade of the new century, chips such as Tilera’s can give us a glimpse of a future in which manycore microprocessors will become commonplace: every (non-hand-held) computer’s CPU chip will contain 1,000 fairly homogeneous cores. Such a system will not be programmed like the cloud, or even a cluster because communication will be much faster relative to computation. Nor will it be programmed like today’s multicore processors because the illusion of instant memory coherency will have been dispelled by both the physical limitations imposed by the 1,000-way fan-in to the memory system, and the comparatively long physical lengths of the inter- vs. intra-core connections. In the 1980’s we changed our model of computation from static to dynamic, and when this future arrives we will have to change our model of computation yet again.

    If we cannot skirt Amdahl’s Law, the last 900 cores will do us no good whatsoever. What does this mean? We cannot afford even tiny amounts of serialization. Locks?! Even lock-free algorithms will not be parallel enough. They rely on instructions that require communication and synchronization between cores’ caches. Just as we learned to embrace languages without static type checking, and with the ability to shoot ourselves in the foot, we will need to embrace a style of programming without any synchronization whatsoever.

    In our Renaissance project at IBM, Vrije, and Portland State (http://soft.vub.ac.be/~smarr/renaissance/), we are investigating what we call “anti-lock,” “race-and-repair,” or “end-to-end nondeterministic” computing. As part of this effort, we have build a Smalltalk system that runs on the 64-core Tilera chip, and have experimented with dynamic languages atop this system. When we give up synchronization, we of necessity give up determinism. There seems to be a fundamental tradeoff between determinism and performance, just as there once seemed to be a tradeoff between static checking and performance.

    The obstacle we shall have to overcome, if we are to successfully program manycore systems, is our cherished assumption that we write programs that always get the exactly right answers. This assumption is deeply embedded in how we think about programming. The folks who build web search engines already understand, but for the rest of us, to quote Firesign Theatre: Everything You Know Is Wrong!

    Website
  • Wednesday
    Oct 26 2011
    Braided Parallelism - A Programmers Perspective Benedict Gaster, Programming Models Architect, AMD

    GPU architectures are often described in confusing and overly optimistic terms. The AMD Fusion APU architecture provides improvements in communication latency and bandwidth between devices, so the problem of choosing the right core on which to execute code becomes both more acute and more flexible as communication between tasks becomes easier. But as the CPU and GPU become ever closer, how does one program these machines? This talk takes a look at these emerging architectures; touches on the current parallel programming models for CPUs and GPGPUs; and follows this with a perspective on what future programming models for heterogeneous architectures will look like.

    Website
  • Monday
    Oct 24 2011
    A New Approach to Temporal Property Verification, Byron Cook, Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research Cambridge and Professor of Computer Science at Queen Mary, University of London

    We will describe a new approach to the old problem of automatic temporal property verification. As well as leading to dramatic performance improvements over existing techniques, this approach also brings some light to a couple of age-old questions.

    Website
  • Monday
    Oct 10 2011
    AgilePDX: Jon Bach talks about exploratory testing

    Jon Bach is coming to our local agile users group to tell us about his specialty, exploratory testing. Pizza at 6:30, meeting at 7.

    Talk: "Exploratory Testing: Now In Session"

    The agile nature of exploration and the ability of testers to rapidly apply their skills and experience make exploratory testing a widely used test approach—especially when time is short. But exploratory testing is often dismissed by project managers who assume that it is not reproducible, measurable, or accountable. If you share these concerns, a solution may lie in a technique called Session-Based Test Management (SBTM), developed by Jon and his brother James specifically to address these problems. In SBTM, testers are assigned areas of a product to explore, and testing is time boxed in "sessions" which have mission statements called “charters” to create a meaningful and countable unit of work. Jon discusses—and you can practice—the skills of exploration and demonstrates a freely available, open source tool to help manage your exploratoration.

    Speaker Bio: Jon Bach has been in testing for 14 years, 12 of which has been as a manager. His experience includes managing teams at Microsoft, HP and LexisNexis, and is currently a managing consultant for Quardev, Inc. -- a Seattle test lab. He speaks frequently about test management and exploratory testing, and is the co-inventor (with his brother James) of Session-Based Test Management. He’s also written a few articles for testing magazines as well as a listed co-author of a Microsoft Patterns and Practices book on acceptance testing (available for free online). Find him on Facebook, Twitter, or his presentations and articles on http://www.quardev.com, where he also has a blog.

    Website
  • Thursday
    Oct 6 2011
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Arch Linux
    linux
                           PRESENTATION
    
                              Arch Linux
    
                                  by
    
                            Daniel Hedlund
                        <[email protected]>
    
     Arch Linux is an independently developed, i686- and x86_64-optimised 
     Linux distribution targeted at competent Linux users. It uses 
     'pacman', its home-grown package manager, to provide updates 
     to the latest software applications with full dependency tracking. 
     Operating on a rolling release system, Arch can be installed from 
     a CD image or via an FTP server. The default install provides a 
     solid base that enables users to create a custom installation. 
     In addition, the Arch Build System (ABS) provides a way to easily 
     build new packages, modify the configuration of stock packages, 
     and share these packages with other users via the Arch Linux 
     user repository.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Sep 1 2011
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Rapid Discussions on Any Topic
    linux
                                 PRESENTATION
    
                              Rapid Discussions
    
                                      on
    
                                  Any Topic
    
                                      by
    
                              Anyone & Everyone
    
      Instead of having a formal presentation, we will get together and
      discuss anything anyone wants to discuss in brief sessions of no
      more than a few minutes each.  If we have enough people involved
      we can break into smaller groups to handle each topic.
    
      AND YES - We are looking for speakers for upcoming months.
                We have been having trouble finding speakers lately.
                Volunteers and Recommendations are welcome.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Aug 4 2011
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: The Use of Open Source Software in State Agencies
    linux
                             PRESENTATION
    
                         Open Source Software
    
                                  in
    
                            State Agencies
    
                                  by
    
                            Michael Smith
    
      Michael Smith works for the State of Oregon.  He will discuss 
      his experience introducing and trying to introduce Open Source
      Solutions into state government agencies.
    
      Note:  We may update this description as we get more details.
    
    Website
  • Monday
    Jul 11 2011
    Portland Functional Programming Study Group

    ABOUT THE GROUP: Join programmers, researchers and enthusiasts to discuss functional programming. pdxfunc is a study/user group exploring the world of functional programming based in Portland, Oregon. The group welcomes programmers interested in all functional languages, including Haskell, Erlang, OCaml, Scala, and others. The group meets regularly and provides presentations, demos and discussions applicable to all skill levels, from newbies and experts. The meetings are usually on the second Monday of the month.

    Website
  • Thursday
    Jul 7 2011
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Rapid Discussions on Any Topic
    linux
                                PRESENTATION
    
                             Rapid Discussions
    
                                     on
    
                                 Any Topic
    
                                     by
    
                             Anyone & Everyone
    
     Instead of having a formal presentation, we will get together and
     discuss anything anyone wants to discuss in brief sessions of no
     more than a few minutes each.  If we have enough people involved
     we can break into smaller groups to handle each topic.
    
     One very short topic that I will be prepared to discuss for
     a few minutes will be:
          -  Open Source at Two Year Colleges
             Why are text books so damn expensive?
    
    AND YES - We are looking for speakers for upcoming months.
              Volunteers and Recommendations are welcome.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Jun 2 2011
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Introduction to OpenEMR
    linux
                             Presentation
    
                       Introduction to OpenEMR
                                  by
                            Tony McCormick
                         <[email protected]>
    
     Introduction to OpenEMR, maybe the most downloaded open source 
     Electronic Heath Records system in the world.   This presentation 
     will discuss how one of the first web based, php projects became 
     a government certified EHR.  We'll demo the system, talk about 
     the good, bad and ugly of a 10 year old project with ~500,000 
     lines of code and get feed back on ways to move forward with 
     out breaking the existing use.  ie: upgrade paths and models, etc.
    
    Website
  • Friday
    May 27 2011
    PSU CS Colloquium: Scrap Your Zippers: A Generic Zipper for Heterogeneous Types

    Scrap Your Zippers: A Generic Zipper for Heterogeneous Types

    Michael Adams, Indiana University

    Abstract

    The zipper type provides the ability to efficiently edit tree-shaped data in a purely functional setting by providing constant time edits at a focal point in an immutable structure. It is used in a number of applications and is widely applicable for manipulating tree-shaped data structures.

    The traditional zipper suffers from two major limitations, however. First, it operates only on homogeneous types. That is to say, every node the zipper visits must have the same type. In practice, many tree-shaped types do not satisfy this condition, and thus cannot be handled by the traditional zipper. Second, the traditional zipper involves a significant amount of boilerplate code. A custom implementation must be written for each type the zipper traverses. This is error prone and must be updated whenever the type being traversed changes.

    The generic zipper presented in this talk overcomes these limitations. It operates over any type and requires no boilerplate code to be written by the user. The only restriction is that the types traversed must be instances of the Data class from the Scrap your Boilerplate framework.

    Biography

    Michael D. Adams will be completing his Ph.D. in Computer Science at Indiana University this summer. He has a B.S. in Computer Science, a B.S in Computer Engineering and a Minor in Mathematics from the University of Kansas.

    His research interests are the implementation and construction of programming languages, compilers and software analysis tools that help programmers more easily implement, reason about, prove correct and improve the performance of their programs. This includes areas such as type systems, static analysis, control-flow analysis, compilers and optimization.

    In spring 2007, he worked on the X10 language for an internship at IBM Research. In summer 2007, he worked on the Glasgow Haskell Compiler at Microsoft Research. In 2008-2010 he worked for Cadence Research on the Chez Scheme compiler.

    He is an avid swing dancer and cyclist.

    Website
  • Thursday
    May 5 2011
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Comments on the IPv6 Transition
    linux
                            Presentation
    
                  Comments on the IPv6 Transition
                                 by
                          Ted Mittelstaedt
                                 of
                           Portlandia IT
    
    
    Ted Mittelstaedt of Portlandia IT will talk about IP addressing
    in general and how the IPv4 to IPv6 transition is being received
    by the Internet community. This talk is part of a series of
    timely IPv6 PLUG talks that Ted is giving over the coming months.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Mar 3 2011
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Free Content and the Data Revolution
    linux

    Presentation Free Content and the Data Revolution by Daniel Hedlund

    The amount of information available on the Internet has exploded in recent years and shows no sign of slowing down. Most of this information is freely available to anyone with a web browser --- but what does free mean? Daniel Hedlund will lead a discussion on the meaning of open data and explore how the open source movement is no longer constrained to the realm of software.

    Website
  • Thursday
    Feb 10 2011
    PDX11 Knowledge Network Group

    Second meeting of the PDX11 Working Group on Knowledge Networks - part of the City's Software Initiative to make Portland the most awesome place in the world to start and run your software business.


    For this meeting, we'll go over the "Ideal Meeting Room Features" list, finalize it, and then begin discussion on a directory of meeting spaces, perhaps built around the Features list.


    Subscribe to the discussion list: http://lists.pdx11.org/mailman/listinfo/pdx11-knowledge

    Website
  • Thursday
    Feb 3 2011
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: What is Open?
    linux
                                 Presentation
                                What is Open?
                                      by
                                 David Mandel
    
    
     David Mandel is interested in distilling the core ideas 
     from the philosophy of Open Source Software and extending
     these into other areas like music, publishing, farming, 
     and education.  In the past he has given presentations
     on Open Source Agriculture.
    
     In this presentation, David wants to discuss Open Source
     in education.  This is not a presentation about using 
     Open Source Software in traditional classrooms as much
     as it is a discussion about using Open Source Philosophy
     to change traditional classrooms.  We will discuss the 
     work of John Gatto author of "Dumbing Us Down", the Moore 
     Method of teaching mathematics, and David Mandel's personal 
     experience teaching mathematics and computer classes in 
     community colleges.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Jan 6 2011
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Mini-presentations on variety of topics
    linux
                                 Presentation
                              Mini Presentations
                                      by
                                Daniel Hedlund
                                     and
                               hopefully others
    
    
     Daniel Hedlund will give a little ad hoc mini-demo on 
     setting up a VPS on Linode.com.
    
     David Mandel will discuss a couple ways of using virtualbox
     in a teaching environment.
    
     We invite others to join in with their own short little 
     mini-presentations on simple little "hacks" that you find
     useful.
    
    Website
  • Tuesday
    Dec 28 2010
    PDX11 Knowledge Network Group

    Initial meeting of the PDX11 Working Group on Knowledge Networks - part of the City's Software Initiative to make Portland the most awesome place in the world to start and run your software business.


    Subscribe to the discussion list: http://lists.pdx11.org/mailman/listinfo/pdx11-knowledge

    Website
  • Thursday
    Dec 2 2010
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Open Source Desktop Publishing with Scribus
    linux
                                 Presentation
                        Open Source Desktop Publishing
                                     with
                                   Scribus
    
                                      by
    
                              John Jason Jordan
    
     Scribus is just a few years old, but has already achieved 
     most of the features of the expensive commercial desktop 
     publishing apps, and a few they don't have. If you need to 
     do fliers, brochures, or whole books, Scribus is now the 
     preferred tool.
    
     The presentation will start with a brief introduction to 
     some of the terms of desktop publishing, especially how to 
     get your computer to produce something that a print shop can 
     put on a press. This will include matters such as typography, 
     color management, banding and line screens, transparency, 
     imposition, and several other issues.
    
     Then we will spend a few minutes on an overview of Scribus, 
     how it is different from word processors, TeX, and advantages 
     and disadvantages.  This will include the basic features of 
     Scribus, including typographical controls, master pages, render 
     frames, PDF forms, PDF export options, scripting, collect for 
     output, and lots more. It will also cover how Scribus is the 
     end tool in a process that starts with other programs.
    
     Finally we will reproduce the PLUG flier that was created 
     in Scribus.  This will be presented on the screen showing 
     the steps and features of Scribus necessary to produce it. 
     Each member of the audience will have a paper copy of the 
     flier to assist in following the process.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Nov 4 2010
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Presentation by Allan Foster of Forge Rock
    linux

    A Presentation by Allan Foster of ForgeRock.com

    I will give a presentation on ForgeRock, how and why we were founded, and a little of the events and decisions that led up to the founding.

    I will also discuss some of the various Open Source Business Models, and why we chose ours.

    I will cover some of the unique situations in which we find ourselves, and how we chose to address them.

    I will also discuss how Open Source is becoming more relevant in Enterprise, and how this shift seems to be reaching a tipping point.

    Allan works at ForgeRock with former Sun Microsystems Chief Open Source Officer Simon Phipps. Visit www.webmink.com for more about Simon.

    Website
  • Thursday
    Oct 7 2010
    PLUG: Zentyal Linux Small Business Server
    linux beer

    October Portland Linux/Unix Group Meeting

    An Overview of Zentyal by Dale Zeutenhorst

    Zentyal (formerly eBox Platform) is an open source unified network server for small to mid size companies based on Ubuntu Linux. Zentyal can act as a Gateway, Network Infrastructure Manager, Unified Threat Manager, Office Server, Unified Communications Server or a combination of these.

    Dale Zeutenhorst is a long time consultant and small business owner. He is currently owner and manager of Adept I.T. Service of Camas, Washington. Before that he was Technical Manager at Microsharp where is was a key player in building the Netule family of server-appliances.

    Schedule:

    News Presentation Meet for beer at the Lucky Lab Beer Hall - 1945 NW Quimby

    Venue:

    Portland State University Fariborz Maseeh College of Engineering & Computer Science Building Room FAB 86-01 (This is in the basement.) The building is on SW 4th across from SW College Street. See location H-10 on map at http://pdxLinux.org/campus_map.jpg

    Website
  • Thursday
    Sep 2 2010
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Berkley DB
    linux

    PRESENTATION

                               An Overview of
                                  Berkley DB
    
                                      by
    
                                David Segleau
    

    Director Product Management - Berkeley DB

     Berkeley DB originated at the University of California, 
     Berkeley as part of the transition (1986 to 1994) from 4.3BSD 
     to 4.4BSD and of the effort to remove AT&T-encumbered code.
     It has evolved a great deal since then and is now part
     of Oracle where it is distributed with source code under 
     a dual use license.
    
     Berkeley DB (BDB) is a computer software library that provides 
     a high-performance embedded database, with bindings in C, C++, 
     PHP, Java, Perl, Python, Ruby, Tcl, Smalltalk, and other languages. 
     BDB stores arbitrary key/data pairs as byte arrays, and supports 
     multiple data items for a single key. BDB can support thousands 
     of simultaneous threads of control or concurrent processes 
     manipulating databases as large as 256 terabytes, on a wide 
     variety of operating systems including most Unix-like and 
     Windows systems, and real-time operating systems.
    
    Website
  • Wednesday
    Aug 11 2010
    Portland State University Haskell Interest Group [PHIG]

    The PSU Haskell Interest Group is intended to provide a meeting place for PSU students and others who are users and developers of the Haskell programming language. Nothing too structured; brief talks and a chance to meet and discuss.

    Website
  • Thursday
    Aug 5 2010
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Server Sky - Data Centers in Orbit
    linux

    PRESENTATION

    Server Sky - Data Centers in Orbit

               Power for computation on a Moore's Law schedule
    
                    Keith Lofstrom, http://server-sky.com
    
     The EPA estimates US data centers (not including desktops)
     consumed 1.5% of total US electrical consumption in 2006.
     They predict a doubling to 3% of base load by 2011.  Our
     work as programmers and technologists continues this
     runaway exponential growth, and we will be stopped by
     environmental and resource limits soon.
    
     Server sky is a proposal to use newly emerging solid state
     technologies to build large arrays of 3 gram paper-thin
     solar-powered computation satellites in 6400km Earth orbits.
    
     A single server-sat replaces 15 watts of ground-based
     electrical generation, cooling, and power conversion, as
     well as the computation and communication hardware itself.
     Orbital server farms may start out as expensive as current
     approaches, but design improvement and cheaper launch will
     decrease costs exponentially over time, much as transistor
     cost has plummeted over the last four decades.
    
     This is open technology, responsive to public input, and
     the project needs volunteer software and engineering help
     to stay that way.  Eventually, Server Sky will create
     thousands of open technology jobs in the Portland area,
     and permit unbounded computation growth in space, while
     reducing energy demand and environmental damage on Earth.
    
     Earth can return to what it is good at green and growing
     things while we fill space with gray and computing things.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Jul 1 2010
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Open Source Car Entertainment
    linux
                                 PRESENTATION
    
                        Open Source Car Entertainment
    
                                      by
    
                                 Kevron Rees
                            [email protected]
    
     This presentation will discuss the innovation and excitement 
     that open source software can bring to the car to make travelling 
     more enjoyable and also save you money. The session will go into 
     depth on what you need to do to turn your car into an open 
     source super-car including what hardware is available and the
     open source software needed to make it all work.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Jun 3 2010
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Puppet - An Introduction
    linux
                                 PRESENTATION
    
                           Puppet - An Introduction
    
                                      by
    
                                  Teyo Tyree
                              www.puppetlabs.com
    
     Puppet is a powerful configuration management tool that makes life 
     easier for people managing systems and applications. This tutorial 
     gives you an in-depth and hands-on introduction to Puppet that is 
     ideal for beginners to Puppet and configuration management.
    
     Teyo is Co-Founder of Puppet Labs and the former Director of IT 
     for 20/20 Research and professional systems administrator. Over the 
     past 12 years Teyo has been using and promoting the use of open 
     source tools to enable scaling and efficiency in IT operations. 
     Teyo joined Puppet Labs in July of 2008 and has been traveling 
     the world providing Puppet Labs’ customers with training and consulting.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    May 6 2010
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: How Linux Containers fit your cloud
    linux
                 PRESENTATION
    
             How Linux Containers fit your cloud
    
                      by
    
                 Alec Istomin
                  www.Parallels.com
    
     Linux, Cloud, Virtualization and hundreds other buzz words are out
     there to blow your mind. The session will share real life examples
     that actually make sense and deliver meaningful easy to use services to
     end users with minimum efforts from cloud administrators.
    
     A deeper introduction to Containers technology will be presented and
     will be helpful to anyone, especially for people familiar with any
     other virtualization solution for Linux.
    
     Overview of Parallels Commercial management tools for Containers and
     clouds with open command line and XML APIs will show how to put an
     infrastructure cloud solution to life.
    
     About the speaker:
     Alec Istomin is an Enterprise Solution Architect at Parallels, 
     Renton,WA and originally joined the company (called SWsoft at 
     the time) as a developer in early 2000. He has been involved 
     with Linux and Virtualization all these years and led numerous 
     cloud deployments. He has an M.S. in physics and applied 
     mathematics from Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology 
     (MIPT), Moscow.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Apr 1 2010
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Rapid Discussions on Any Topic
    linux
                                 PRESENTATION
    
                              Rapid Discussions
    
                                      on
    
                                  Any Topic
    
                                      by
    
                              Anyone & Everyone
    
      Instead of having a formal presentation, we will get together and
      discuss anything anyone wants to discuss in brief sessions of no
      more than a few minutes each.  If we have enough people involved
      we can break into smaller groups to handle each topic.
    
      Two topics that I will be prepared to discuss for a few minutes 
      will be:
           -  Subsistence Computing 
              How to do good computing on a low budget.
           -  Could we lose the internet to Government and Corporate
              interests?
    
     AND YES - We are looking for speakers for upcoming months.
               Volunteers and Recommendations are welcome.
    
    Website
  • Wednesday
    Mar 17 2010
    AgilePDX: Jon Bach talks about exploratory testing

    Jon Bach is coming to our local agile users group to tell us about his specialty, exploratory testing. Pizza at 6:30, meeting at 7.

    Talk: "Exploratory Testing: Now In Session"

    The agile nature of exploration and the ability of testers to rapidly apply their skills and experience make exploratory testing a widely used test approach—especially when time is short. But exploratory testing is often dismissed by project managers who assume that it is not reproducible, measurable, or accountable. If you share these concerns, a solution may lie in a technique called Session-Based Test Management (SBTM), developed by Jon and his brother James specifically to address these problems. In SBTM, testers are assigned areas of a product to explore, and testing is time boxed in "sessions" which have mission statements called “charters” to create a meaningful and countable unit of work. Jon discusses—and you can practice—the skills of exploration and demonstrates a freely available, open source tool to help manage your exploratoration.

    Speaker Bio: Jon Bach has been in testing for 14 years, 12 of which has been as a manager. His experience includes managing teams at Microsoft, HP and LexisNexis, and is currently a managing consultant for Quardev, Inc. -- a Seattle test lab. He speaks frequently about test management and exploratory testing, and is the co-inventor (with his brother James) of Session-Based Test Management. He’s also written a few articles for testing magazines as well as a listed co-author of a Microsoft Patterns and Practices book on acceptance testing (available for free online). Find him on Facebook, Twitter, or his presentations and articles on http://www.quardev.com, where he also has a blog.

    Website
  • Thursday
    Mar 4 2010
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: A Talk by Jeri Ellsworth
    linux

    A Talk by

    Jeri Ellsworth (Circuit Girl)

    Jeri Ellsworth is a native Oregonian, born in Yamhill and raised in Dallas, Oregon. Early on she became fascinated with electronics and 8-bit computers setting the stage for her unique approach to learning. Not being challenged in school, she skipped higher education to pursue a career in car-racing and chassis fabrication. After that, she opened a chain of computer stores in Oregon and Washington. She sold those to persue a career in chip design, which lead her to design the CommodoreOne - based upon the Commodore 64 - using reconfigurable logic and the C64 DTV 30-games-in-one joystick, selling, a quarter million units. She currently works as an Oregon based consultant.

    I'm not sure what Jeri is going to speak about yet, but judging from the talk she gave at Stanford, it should be very good indeed.

    See a video of her Stanford talk at: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-1053309060448851979#

    Also, see her webs sites at: http://www.jeriellsworth.com/ and http://www.fatmanandcircuitgirl.com/

    Website
  • Thursday
    Feb 4 2010
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: A Talk by Jeri Ellsworth (SICK: RESCHEDULING!)
    linux

    WARNING!!!

    Jeri is sick and can't do the talk tonight.

    Informal DorkBotPDX demo night instead!

    In place of Jeri, I have some offers to do demos of projects from DorkBotPDX land, including Simran Gleason about his Kepler's Orrery (a generative music system that composes music from gravity equations), I have a little stepper motor demo, someone suggested they could demo Luz (a ruby / opengl 4-d drawing software), and there may be others.

        CANCELLED PRESENTATION was ...
    
    
                    A Talk
                      by
    
                Jeri Ellsworth
                                (Circuit Girl)
    
     Jeri Ellsworth is a native Oregonian, born in Yamhill and raised
     in Dallas, Oregon.  Early on she became fascinated with electronics 
     and 8-bit computers setting the stage for her unique approach to 
     learning.  Not being challenged in school, she skipped higher 
     education to pursue a career in car-racing and chassis fabrication.
     After that, she opened a chain of computer stores in Oregon and 
     Washington.  She sold those to persue a career in chip design,
     which lead her to design the CommodoreOne - based upon the 
     Commodore 64 - using reconfigurable logic and the C64 DTV 30- 
     games-in-one joystick, selling, a quarter million units.
     She currently works as an Oregon based consultant.   
    
     I'm not sure what Jeri is going to speak about yet, but judging from
     the talk she gave at Stanford, it should be very good indeed.
     See a video of her Stanford talk at: 
     http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-1053309060448851979#
    
     Also, see her webs sites at:
     http://www.jeriellsworth.com/
     and
     http://www.fatmanandcircuitgirl.com/    
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Jan 7 2010
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Drupal! What is it good for?
    linux
                                 PRESENTATION
    
                                    Drupal
                             What is it Good For?
    
                                      by
    
                                  Lev Tsypin
    
     Drupal is growing leaps and bounds these days, powering everything 
     from ma and pa brochure sites to Obama’s recovery.gov. Does this 
     mean it’s a great fit for any website? Not exactly.
    
     Drupal has been defined as many things, including a content 
     management system, a web application framework, and community 
     plumbing. In some ways, this is both a blessing and a curse; 
     there’s so much you can do, in so many different ways, that new 
     users are crushed under the weight of the options and lack of 
     clarity. In addition, all of that flexibility does come with a cost, 
     in terms of performance and conciseness.
    
     This presentation will cover some Drupal basics including history, 
     core concepts, and system structure. From there, we will dig into 
     Drupal’s strengths and weaknesses, finishing off by discussing the 
     types of projects Drupal is best suited for, including specific 
     examples for each case.
    
     My hope is that developers new to the platform will gain a better 
     understanding of when to approach a new project with Drupal, more 
     experienced developers will gain a bit of insight on when not to 
     use it, and non-techies will have some help in choosing a platform 
     for their projects along with an understanding why developers they 
     work with select a given platform. Please note that this talk will 
     not delve deeply into the technical details of Drupal.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Nov 5 2009
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Unit Test Your Database!
    linux
      Given that the database, as the canonical repository of data, 
     is the most important part of many applications, why is it 
     that we don't write database unit tests? This talk promotes 
     the practice of implementing tests to directly test the 
     schema, storage, and functionality of databases.
    
     David E. Wheeler, Founder of Kineticode and Co-Founder of 
     PostgreSQL Experts hacks Perl, PostgreSQL, JavaScript, and Ruby. 
     I believe David is also the lead developer and maintainer 
     Bricolage which is a well known CMS. 
     David lives in Portland.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Oct 1 2009
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: BSD Virtualization
    linux

    Michael Dexter from Linux Fund/BSD Fund will give his EuroBSDCon 2008 presentation:

    Zen and the Art of Multiplicity Maintenance: An applied survey of BSD-licensed multiplicity strategies from chroot to mult.

    Topics of this survey include chroot, jails, Xen, sysjail, SIMH, NetBSD/usermode, kauth Jail, QEMU/kQEMU, GXemul, vkernel

    Website
  • Friday
    Sep 25 2009
    HacPDX: Portland Haskell Hackathon
    ruby python beer
    through
    Portland State University FAB, Room 86-09

    HacPDX is an opportunity to join Portland Haskell hackers in building and improving Hackage libraries and tools. If you've never been, Hackathons are typically not only a good opportunity for experienced devs to work together but also a great way for newcomers to get involved in the community.

    Visit this website for complete details: http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/HacPDX

    Website
  • Thursday
    Sep 10 2009
    Rose City SPIN seminar: Estimation - Understanding Project Environmental Effects

    Networking from 6-7, Seminar from 7-8:00 PM Event is open to anyone - this is a free talk. Come in early for free pizza provided by the Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference!

    Abstract: Estimates are required multiple times in a project. Project members need to make estimates for a variety of reasons, these include: • The amount of time for a task; • The cost for resources; • The cost of software, hardware and other materials; • The time required to finish a task. However, there are many problems with estimates. This presentation focuses on the sociological and psychological aspects of doing estimates. It teaches attendees the environmental issues that affect estimates and how to deal with their impact. Through class interaction, it shows both the psychological and sociological factors that affect how estimates are given and provides leaders with tools to help avoid the common pitfalls. By avoiding these situations, estimates become more representative of the project and more variation more predictable. Controlling both of these, help the Project Manager avert trouble. This a very interactive and fun presentation. It has a short exercise and throughout the presentation, attendees are asked to make estimates on doing the exercise again under a number of situations to help better learn from their own behavior.

    Speaker Bio: Todd Williams has thirty years experience as a Project Manager, Architect, entrepreneur and businessperson. He has spent twenty of those years recovering red projects. From this experience, he has developed a process to make the recoveries more efficient. His experience also provides a plethora of invaluable knowledge on avoiding project failure. He has worked in manufacturing and service industries for products used internally and externally to the companies developing them. The projects include large-scale system integration of manufacturing systems, equipment integration, web-based collaboration tools, thick clients with automated update via the internet and large-scale business systems integration. The projects have been in Taiwan, Singapore, Canada, the United States and Israel. The teams have been dispersed in as many as five countries, three continents and countless time zones. Some of these projects were captive in-house time and materials projects while others were outsourced fixed-priced projects.

    Mr. Williams is the President of eCameron, Inc., located in the Portland, Oregon metropolitan area, and specializes in recovering red projects. He is a published author and regularly publishes a Project Management Technique eZine.

    Directions: Room 86-01 is located between the Engineering Building and the Fourth Avenue Building on the PSU campus. Enter through the Engineering Building at 1930 SW Fourth Avenue, go down the stairs and through the hall directly ahead. Street parking is available.

    Rose City SPIN: The Rose City Software Process Improvement Network (SPIN) is a monthly forum for networking, mutual support, and promotion of effective software practices. We exchange practical experiences, ideas, knowledge, wisdom, and war stories about the technical, business, and human facets of software process improvement. The Rose City SPIN serves the software development community of the Portland/Vancouver metro area. Whether you work for a large company or a small one, corporate or self-employed, industrial or academic setting, you are welcome at the Rose City SPIN.

    Questions? Contact Rhea Stadick at [email protected]

  • Thursday
    Sep 3 2009
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Crash Reporting: Mozilla's Open Source Solution
    linux
                                 PRESENTATION
    
           Crash Reporting: Mozilla's Open Source Solution
    
                      by
    
                 K Lars Lohn
    
     Nothing exercises the limits of software like turning it 
     over to the end users. While in-house testing is invaluable, 
     the end users can often find the neglected edge cases or subtle 
     race conditions in a more reliable manner. However, once the 
     software is in the end user’s hands, postmortem crash information 
     is usually lost.
    
     By taking the Google Breakpad project and enhancing it with 
     Mozilla’s own Socorro project, Mozilla has a solution to this problem.  
     When Firefox goes down, in a last ditch effort, it lobs a 
     packet of crash information over the wall to Mozilla's Socorro 
     servers.  Socorro Servers, written in Python, can handle millions 
     of these crashes per day. Using Google Breakpad libraries to 
     reconstitute useful stack traces, Socorro Server saves its 
     work in a PostgreSQL database.  There statistics are gathered 
     and displayed under the Socorro UI, a PHP web application.  
     With this suite of tools, the Mozilla developers can track 
     trends and even drill down to look at specific instances of
     Firefox crashes.
    
     WARNING: during this talk, Firefox will be intentionally 
     crashed live on stage.  Those of delicate constitution may wish 
     to retire to the lobby prior to the spectacle.
    
                 about Lars
    
     Trapped at the triple point between a geek, a hippie and 
     a biker, Lars is a self proclaimed Cowboy Programmer at the 
     Mozilla Corporation.  Unintentionally specializing in programming 
     as performance art, Lars frequently jumps into projects on the 
     Thursday prior to a Monday deadline. Lars is proud of being the 
     only member of the Web Development team that does absolutely 
     no Web development.
    
     Lars prefers Python, PostgreSQL and Harleys, but is versed in C++,
     MySQL and Subarus.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Aug 6 2009
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Virtualize vs Containerize
    linux
                                 PRESENTATION
    
                      Virtualize vs Containerize: Fight!
    
                                      by
    
                              Irving Popovetsky
                           <[email protected]>
    
                                     and
    
                               Andy de la Lucha
    
     Everyone has a different reason to love virtualization: security,
     configuration isolation... the list goes on. But containerization 
     offers many of the same goodies as virtualization, alongside an 
     efficiency and performance advantage. Just what you need, more 
     options. There's no wrong answer. Andy de la Lucha and Irving 
     Popovetsky help you ask the right questions about what's right 
     for your environment.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Jul 2 2009
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Rapid Discussions
    linux
                               PRESENTATION
    
                            Rapid Discussions
    
                                    on
    
                                Any Topic
    
                                    by
    
                            Anyone & Everyone
    
    Instead of having a formal presentation, we will get together and
    discuss anything anyone wants to discuss in brief sessions of no
    more than a few minutes each.  If we have enough people involved
    we can break into smaller groups to handle each topic.
    
    Website
  • Thursday
    Jun 4 2009
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: What is Linux Fund?
    linux

    PRESENTATION

    What is Linux Fund? by Randal L. Schwartz and David Mandel

    A discussion of the administrative side of running an Open Source organization - legal standing, non-profit status, taxes and fees, accepting donations, international issues, etc.

    We will also discuss ways Open Source "Foundations"like Linux Fund, Apache Software Foundation, The Software Conservancy, The Free Software Foundation, The Open Source Geospatial Foundation, and others are helping particular projects minimize the overhead of running their own non-profit.

    A lot of the discussion will center on Linux Fund since both presenters are from Linux Fund and ways to become involved with Linux Fund.

    Website
  • Thursday
    May 7 2009
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Displaying HD Video Content with a PC
    linux
                                 PRESENTATION
    
                    Displaying HD Video Content with a PC,
                  Presented from a Linux User's Perspective
    
                                      by
    
                                Terry Griffin
                             <[email protected]>
    
    
         A discussion of issues associated with displaying
         High Definition (HD) video content using a PC,
         focusing on the data path from the PC to the display.
         Particular attention will be given to issues unique
         to Linux/FOSS but much of the presentation will be
         applicable to any HD video setup.
    

    Note: Randal Schwartz will do a live cast of this presentation at: http://www.talkshoe.com/tc/25652 You can follow along if you have a web browser, and if you register, you can also participate in the chat, and Randal might relay your questions to the speaker. The recording of the session will be available afterward at the same address.

    Website
  • Thursday
    Apr 2 2009
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Presentation by Bart Massey
    linux
                                 PRESENTATION
    
                               To Be Announced
    
                                      by
    
                               Barton C Massey
    
    
     I haven't gotten the topic yet from Bart; but Bart Massey
     who is with the Computer Science Department at PSU will
     be giving the presentation. 
    

    Note: Randal Schwartz will do a live cast of this presentation at: http://www.talkshoe.com/tc/25652 You can follow along if you have a web browser, and if you register, you can also participate in the chat, and Randal might relay your questions to the speaker. The recording of the session will be available afterward at the same address.

    Website
  • Thursday
    Mar 5 2009
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Fun with blktrace and seekwatcher
    linux
                                 PRESENTATION
    
                                   Fun with
                         "blktrace" and "seekwatcher"
    
                                      by
    
                            M. Edward (Ed) Borasky
                              <[email protected]>
    
    
     blktrace is a command that generates traces of the i/o 
     traffic on block devices such as hard drives.
    
     seekwatcher generates graphs from blktrace runs to help 
     visualize IO patterns and performance. It can plot multiple 
     blktrace runs together, making it easy to compare the differences 
     between different benchmark runs.
    
     Ed will show us how to install and use these cool tools.
    

    Note: (1) Randal Schwartz will do a live cast of this presentation at: http://www.talkshoe.com/tc/25652 You can follow along if you have a web browser, and if you register, you can also participate in the chat, and Randal might relay your questions to the speaker. The recording of the session will be available afterward at the same address.

    Website
  • Thursday
    Feb 5 2009
    Portland Linux/Unix Group: Intro to Digital Forensics
    linux
                                 PRESENTATION
    
                          Intro to Digital Forensics
                     (aka Groveling Through File Systems)
    
    
                                      by
    
                                 Hal Pomeranz
                             Deer Run Associates
    

    While it may not be as sexy as they make it look on TV, there are a number of powerful Open Source tools available for analyzing file systems and recovering data-- even data that may have been deleted by the attacker. This talk will start with an overview of the standard Unix file system architecture and discuss tools for imaging file systems, suggest a few useful tools and idioms for finding clues in your images, and cover how to discover "interesting" data from deleted files and re-assemble that data into an actual file image.

    Hal Pomeranz is the founder and technical lead of Deer Run Associates, and has been active in the system and network management/security field for over twenty years. As a senior member of the Faculty for the SANS Institute, Hal developed the SANS "Step-by-Step" course model and currently serves as the track coordinator and primary instructor for the SANS/GIAC Linux/Unix Security Certification track (GCUX). In 2001 he was given the SAGE Outstanding Achievement Award for his teaching and leadership in the field of System Administration.

    Note:

    (1)  The slides for the presentation are available at:
         http://www.deer-run.com/~hal/IntroToDigitalForensics.pdf
    
    (2)  Randal Schwartz will do a live cast of this presentation at:
         http://www.talkshoe.com/tc/25652
         You can follow along if you have a web browser, 
         and if you register, you can also participate in the chat, 
         and Randal might relay your questions to the speaker.
         The recording of the session will be available afterward 
         at the same address.
    
    Website